You wanna talk vandalism? Ok. Let’s talk vandalism. Arrogant white men vandalized our, Lakota, sacred mountain Pe Sla (the Black Hills.)
The U.S. desecrated every single Indigenous sacred site imaginable.
So (Mr. Trump) please stop with your faux “vandalism” nonsense.
The Dialog leaks are just a window into a much more dangerous structure.
Peter Thiel, Elon Musk & the extended PayPal Mafia are building a parallel government designed to swallow the United States from the inside out. They have created a Trojan state.
https://t.co/hmEox7BG2w
@Erlibert08@Faktencheck2030 Die Aufbauten der LKWs wurden von der Firma Gaubschat in Berlin-Neukölln gefertigt, der eigentliche Umbau zu Gaswagen (Gasleitung) erfolgte größtenteils in einer RSHA-Werkstatt.
https://t.co/ooqvDVgIeZ
Abscheu und Ekel empfinde ich bei dieser Abstimmung gegen jegliches Menschenrecht!
Manfred Weber, Angelika Niebler, Markus Ferber, Monika Hohlmeier, Christian Doleschal und Stefan Köhler.
Pfui! #DieUnionIstDasGrundproblemUnsererGesellschaft
@Faktencheck2030 "Magirus-Deutz war ein Hersteller von Lastkraftwagen, Omnibussen .. der zur Klöckner-Humboldt-Deutz AG (KHD) gehörte und dessen Ursprung in der Ulmer Feuerwehrgerätefabrik Magirus liegt."
https://t.co/JSqY7CVfDT
Krass: Nach Norwegen bricht gerade auch der dänische Markt komplett für unsere Vebrenner-Autos weg. Der Anteil von E-Autos bei Neuzulassungen lag im Februar bei 81,6%. Bei Privatkunden sogar bei 94,4%! Der Grund: In Dänemark gibt eine „Luxussteuer“ für Verbrenner. Diese beträgt je nach Modell 25-150% des Fahrzeugswert. Für E-Autos fällt diese Luxussteuer (noch) weg, daher der Run. Die Dänen schaffen es so gut, mit klugen Anreizen, die Menschen zu klimanfreundlichem Verhalten und Kaufentscheidungen zu bringen. Warum muss das bei uns immer so ein völlig blöder Kulturkampf sein?
Russia is pulling air defenses from across the country to shield Moscow. Ukraine’s drone and missile strikes last week just forced the Kremlin into a major defensive redeployment. While this will protect Moscow, it will leave Crimea to fend for itself.
Fresh OSINT today show the same pattern: low-level Ukrainian drones over Moscow Oblast + Russian air defense units repositioned on highways and even placed on residential rooftops. This drains resources from other fronts and distant strategic sites. Other reports highlight that strikes on 6/22/26 took out the Pansirs and S-400s protecting the Kerch Bridge.
On the one hand, this makes significant sense. Many of Russia's defense and dual use factories are in the Moscow metro area. Furthermore, Moscow is the political center of gravity of Russia overall. More air defenses equals a higher density of missiles/interceptors and guns. This means Russia can withstand larger waves of drones before being overwhelmed and saturated.
The higher elevation really helps as well. A Pansir on the surface similar to the posted image has line of sight to an FP-1/2 to about 18 miles with no obstructions. The Pansir on top of a building has a line of sight out to about 28 miles with many fewer obstructions. While that doesn't seem like much, that additional detection provides time for the Pansir and surrounding systems and fire units to get much more capable shots.
On the other hand, this will have significantly negative impacts for Russia elsewhere which we are already seeing. Ukraine appears positioned to exploit the gaps.
Occupied Crimea appears to have no air defenses beyond some ad-hoc gun systems on trucks escorting fuel trucks. Yesterday's attacks on fuel terminals, ferries, and air defenses show that Crimea has next to no air defenses. Groups such as @414magyarbirds are hitting targets uncontested. Crimean occupation authorities have suspended fuel sales to civilians and restricted many services. It appears no one can get out and the lucky few are queued in long lines for inspections to enter the Kerch Bridge.
However, the biggest impact of the change is how Russia has reduced defenses elsewhere in industrial areas. Ukraine got multiple missile strikes on production facilities in Voronezh that produce Pansirs and other facilities that produce electronics for the Iskander ballistic missile and Kh-101 cruise missile. Fewer Pansirs means Russian air defense will continue to degrade. Fewer Iskanders and Kh-101s reduces Ukraine's demand for ballistic and high end air defenses it desperately needs.
Usually, Ukrainian strikes hit one factory at best in these strikes. Multiple more power strikes are more efficient overall in terms of saturation. Larger/multiple hits on the same facility take significantly longer to repair.
Looking forward, I expect this trend to continue. A greater focus on political protection in Moscow while the rest of Russia and the front are left more vulnerable. This gives Ukraine a window to do as much damage to Russia's defense industrial base and fuel infrastructure as possible. Combining those over months will affect the battlefield.
Ukraine may not be able to quickly retake territory due to manpower shortages. Ukraine will likely be able to make local successes and relieve pressure on strained fronts.
However, there are two outliers. If the severe shortages in Crimea cause a major domestic political crisis, we may see Moscow make some shift.
Images via @tvrain and @Maks_NAFO_FELLA
"Украинская пропаганда цинично врёт, что в России нет ПВО.
Россияне, давайте выложим фотографии мест, где дислоцируются подразделения и бригады ПВО, чтобы разоблачить украинскую пропаганду"
Это знаковое фото. Рассейский танк. Или что от него осталось. Оно было сделано практически в начале войны.
Теперь же, поля, лесопосадки и прочие места Украины, куда стремятся русские шизофашисты и черносотенцы тщетно проникнуть - усыпаны их черепами, костями, скелетами. На языке английских пиратов, скелеты, которые никто не хоронил, называли раньше - Весёлый Роджер.
The Volhynia massacre is one of the most difficult subjects I’ve ever tried to understand🇵🇱🇺🇦
The more I read, the less interested I become in simple answers.
Yes, Ukrainians had real historical grievances against the Polish state.
Yes, the mass murder of Polish civilians was a horrific crime.
Yes, Polish retaliatory killings of Ukrainian civilians were also wrong.
The problem begins when each nation remembers only its own suffering and forgets the suffering it caused the other. That’s exactly how history becomes a prison instead of a lesson.
Today, Poland and Ukraine have a choice. They can spend the next hundred years proving whose grandparents suffered more.
Or they can tell the truth about all of it, honor every innocent victim, condemn every crime, and refuse to let the dead decide the future of the living.
History should unite us in wisdom. Not trap us in endless revenge.