5D chess with no navy, no air defense and no army? Castrated. Remember, even if the Iranian people are still persecuted by the Islamic Regime, if the middle east is safer and Iran cannot get nukes...thats a win. The BIG win would be freedom for the Iranians but thats a much bigger win
Your "America First" LARP ignores reality: Israel’s intel/tech has saved American lives and dollars for decades—far more value than the aid. No blank check; it’s a strategic investment against shared enemies (Iran, China proxies). Pollard was decades ago; today’s cooperation is mutual.We fund allies because great powers project strength, not retreat into fantasy borders-only defense while adversaries encircle us. Vets deserve better—fix that domestically without torching alliances that deter bigger wars.Your rage is emotion, not strategy. Touch grass and read a history book. America leads or loses
Lol im younger than you are bu the looks of it! Boomer indeed! No, I won't ... I'll keep responding to dumb twits with big mouths as long as i like! You think you are right and can cuss people out just because you don't agree with them? Fine. Waste your time 🙂 Im happy to live rent free, you don't bother me at all.
@encyclopath@jconricus I have to agree. But even with God, timing is sometimes not as quick as we would like, I pray that Iranians will one day be free again. Whether it be next month or next decade is not for me to decide.
A young Scottish girl who defended her sister from Muslim invader/predators has been vindicated by a British court. She should have a statue erected in her honor rather than have been charged in the first place. She has more heart than the leftist politicians destroying the UK.
The United Nations and Hamas: A Toxic Relationship? A close friend of mine from Gaza City, tortured nearly to death by Hamas, a well‑known activist against the group, and someone I helped evacuate during the war, was featured in the UN Human Rights Council’s report documenting Hamas’s abuses against Palestinian civilians: executions, torture, beatings, the misuse of medical facilities, and the terrorizing of women and children.
When he met with the UN investigation team, one investigator was openly sympathetic to Hamas and the “resistance” narrative, signaling from the start that she doubted his testimony. He then spent five hours convincing the rest of the team that Hamas had, in fact, tortured him, despite extensive evidence of his injuries circulating on social media and a medical examination confirming blunt‑force trauma consistent with organized abuse, not random violence or Israeli bombardment. He even had to walk the investigators, including Ms. pro‑Hamas, through how his case fits into hundreds of others across Gaza, and how Hamas itself has filmed and publicly released its own executions, beatings, and torture to terrorize the population.
Imagine that: Hamas documenting its own crimes on video, and supposedly serious investigators refusing to believe what is right in front of them. Imagine a human rights inquiry that includes someone openly aligned with the very group under investigation. It forces a hard question: why are parts of the UN system so compromised when it comes to Hamas that they cannot think beyond Israel’s actions long enough to examine the crimes of Palestinian actors, crimes that are equally harmful, shameful, and deserving of condemnation? And why are some so eager to believe Palestinians when the accusation is against Israel, yet so reluctant when the accusation is against Hamas, even when the evidence is overwhelming?