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  • Jun 22, 2025
    wishing
    https://twitter.com/sentdefender/status/1936837649697841656

    This current administration thinking bombing another country will suddenly lead to peace is hilarious.

  • I got muted for months because I called @Snowboy a b**** but other than that she’s actually really nice no sarcasm

  • Jun 22, 2025
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    cant believe hes only been in office for a lil feels like years tbh

  • Jun 22, 2025
    aauraa

    cant believe hes only been in office for a lil feels like years tbh

    It’s because the news have been building up his term to be a dizaster (on purpose) so they can point their fingers om Trump after it’s all said and done.

    It doesnt matter whos the running man, the outcome would of been the same, it’s all preplanned. What we see is just a show

  • Jun 22, 2025
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    1 reply
  • Jun 22, 2025
    Willie Wildcat
    https://twitter.com/medvedevrussiae/status/1936725544017567860https://twitter.com/medvedevrussiae/status/1936725778701701276
  • Jun 22, 2025
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    Pretty sure someone from his cabinet said burning the last 12 hours that they aren’t looking for regime change but I guess they are now (obviously)

  • Jun 22, 2025
    Everest

    Pretty sure someone from his cabinet said burning the last 12 hours that they aren’t looking for regime change but I guess they are now (obviously)

    Narrative will pick up soon cus they'll find another thing to blame Iran on.

    The second Trump himself started tweeting about potentially killing a head of state of a sovereign country all bets were off.

  • aauraa

    cant believe hes only been in office for a lil feels like years tbh

    Crazy how there’s been a different ‘crisis’ every week

  • Jun 22, 2025
    Everest

    Pretty sure someone from his cabinet said burning the last 12 hours that they aren’t looking for regime change but I guess they are now (obviously)

    Dude wants to make every country great but America

  • Jun 22, 2025
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  • Jun 22, 2025
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    The trap of attacking bases is that the U.S. wants Iran to do this. That's the whole point

    How else do you have a green light to continue attacks? Iran either needs to pull back or focus on just Israel. Actually if we're being real they can tell us there was an "attack on bases" even if Iran didn't order one

    Trump's 4 min speech was all about establishing consent to continue if this happened

  • Jun 22, 2025
    YANDHI

    The trap of attacking bases is that the U.S. wants Iran to do this. That's the whole point

    How else do you have a green light to continue attacks? Iran either needs to pull back or focus on just Israel. Actually if we're being real they can tell us there was an "attack on bases" even if Iran didn't order one

    Trump's 4 min speech was all about establishing consent to continue if this happened

    it would be smart to solely focus on israel, they’re running out of counter missiles. but the IRGC promised retaliation if the U.S. attacked so i would be shocked if they didn’t follow through

  • Jun 22, 2025
    Smacked Voodoo

    Would be pretty nice if someone would k**l Netanyahu before WW3 kicks off

  • Jun 22, 2025
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  • Jun 22, 2025
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    1 reply
    afterimage

    I’m using conservatives to talk about establishment politicians and conservative voters who are more likely to fall into “Zionists control America, Jews run the world” pipelines and who are more openly antisemitic in other ways, like mentioning “Communist-Globalists” (obviously a dog whistle for Jewish people as well) as a problem for inevitable contradictions in the era of monopoly capitalism-imperialism

    Liberals can be anti-Semitic too of course, but they tend to mainly fall back on rhetoric of Israel being “the only democracy”, or containing the excesses of settler violence to individuals like Netanyahu or current regimes rather than just blantant racism

    So without an anti-semitic tilt and drenching it in Alex Jones conspiracy lenses, I think there’s valid questions to be asked:

    why is there bipartisan agreement on the principle of israel…just starting as a principle not in terms of strategy of how to preserve israel but in terms of supporting a colonial apartheid state post cold war. Is every establishment politician just naturally pre-disposed to just lock step with israel across generations?

    why is there a significant change in the average American’s perception of israel that heavily coincides with legacy media no longer being the only source of information on palestine and israel?

    I think you can make very valid and logically sound deductions about Zionist influence in American policy that is not anti-Semitic.

  • Jun 22, 2025
  • Jun 22, 2025
    fun guy

    anyone else stocking up on supplies? costco line was out the door this morning. get it while it lasts

    im not ed, so no

  • Jun 22, 2025
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    1 reply
    Shabazz999
    https://twitter.com/spectatorindex/status/1936899919325094299

    the calls are coming from inside the house

  • Jun 22, 2025
    Harlem

    the calls are coming from inside the house

    tbh “prepared to attack” sounds like inside job lingo if i ever heard it

  • Jun 22, 2025
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    If we’ll be replacing the current abusive, narcissistic government then…

  • Jun 22, 2025
    Puma

    Wish I could bet the over on ““terrorist””attacks in the US with this nigga in charge

  • Jun 22, 2025
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    Palestinian Oozi

    So without an anti-semitic tilt and drenching it in Alex Jones conspiracy lenses, I think there’s valid questions to be asked:

    why is there bipartisan agreement on the principle of israel…just starting as a principle not in terms of strategy of how to preserve israel but in terms of supporting a colonial apartheid state post cold war. Is every establishment politician just naturally pre-disposed to just lock step with israel across generations?

    why is there a significant change in the average American’s perception of israel that heavily coincides with legacy media no longer being the only source of information on palestine and israel?

    I think you can make very valid and logically sound deductions about Zionist influence in American policy that is not anti-Semitic.

    I don’t think anyone can deny Zionist influence over American politics is quite large compared to other lobbies

    To answer your first point, the bipartisan agreement extends to pretty much every US foreign policy issue, not just Israel. We can look at how both parties talk about their goals in the Pacific for example, and containing China. Both parties have now been forced to reckon with China being an economic threat, however the Democrats angle pushes toward talking about the “rules based order” and the post-WW2 liberal democracy structure being a threat, Xi being an authoritarian, while Republicans are much more concerned direct and will call out China as a economic and military threat without relying on any talks about liberal rules and norms, even though both parties are acutely aware of the unique position America was in to largely shape the global institutions in the post-WW2 setting.

    When it’s implied bipartisan that doesn’t necessarily mean every single politician if polled is going to give the exact same answer or has the same motivations behind supporting Israel behind closed doors, but naturally establishment politicians are heavily encouraged to not stray from any policy that would hurt their chances of getting positive media coverage, hurt chances of re-election. the benefits of large donors, networking among other politicians which entails having to fall in-line with the status quo. So for some evangical hard-line conservatives, they may actually believe in the Biblical reasons for supporting the modern-nation state of Israel, while maybe some “progressive” candidates on the DNC line may not necessarily buy into the evangelical, holy land idea but they see a pragmatic, two-state solution as the best outcome for the Jewish diaspora post-Holocaust. These stem from two different perspectives ideologically but when it comes down to policy, it will still manifest in some fashion of continue support for Israel, including funding and the necessity of eradicating any “threats” to US hegemony/Israeli state interests in the region, which will entail going after other groups labeled as terrorists, like Hezbollah or Hamas, and of course “state sponsors” of terrorism like Iran and subsequently their alliances with Russia and China.

    I don’t think it’s correct to say “naturally” just that to advance your career in US politics at that level, alongside the ideological influences that most Americans are starting from across the spectrum (Christian Evangelicalism, or “rules based democracy”) it will lead to how they craft their own policies. Either one ends up ultimately serving the interests of US imperialism which is the larger point.

    For your second point, I’m not sure how broad you mean “perception of Israel” mainly because I don’t have enough polling data across a variety of sources to make an informed answer. I think overall most Americans still support Israel in the sense that they believe the Zionist state should still exist, whether that be a two-state solution, a one state solution with Israeli supremacy, or even Israeli expansion into further areas of the MENA (this is probably the smallest fraction tbf)

    However I don’t think being anti-war or being against any current boots on the ground conflict can be coincided with being against Israel altogether. A lot of the anti-Zionist sentiment if I had to make an educated guess is still reduced to younger cohorts within the American electorate, probably an even smaller amount that may vote in a way that shows it (considering there is no true anti-Zionist establishment politician). and to the why? Well, regardless of how Americans feel about supporting foreign entities, they can largely agree the past several decades of American adventurism in foreign places combined with the economic decline of the first world relative to pre-1970s hasn’t increased the propserity of anyone at home. Being “anti-war” is a huge boom now when voting, seeing how every President (and especially Trump both times) ran on opposing the MENA wars in Afghanistan and Iraq which were publicly broadcasted to the Americans in the following years as being “forever wars” with again, no immediate material benefit (the War on Terror being proceeded by a large global recession) (COVID economic slump proceeded by another US-led conflict in Ukraine)

    However, to end I don’t think Americans being against war in practice (which tbf most civilians of any nation probably are) doesn’t mean they have a firm grasp on the conditions and policies that even enable the US to need constant warfare or maintain imperialist outposts around the globe in the first place. They can only articulate what the legacy media or more acutely, their direct experiences- which for most Americans have been just seeing images of far away lands, soldiers being sent off to die, trillions being greenlit time and time again by both parties- and a general decline in their own economic prosperity.

  • Jun 22, 2025
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    1 reply
    wishing

    for what

    Is this a trick question?