En el campo Lamine Yamal nos jode a los del Atleti. Pero fuera de el gestos como este le hacen ser una persona muy valiente, ya que la presión economica y mediatica que tiene el cancer del sionismo en la sociedad pueden hacerle perder muchos contratos pero aún así a el le da igual porque sabe que ondear esta bandera siendo lo famoso que es, hace despertar muchas consciencias.
Very bullish piece on Malaysia by Bloomberg
Malaysia = safe heaven
1. Foreign central banks now own a record 36% of Malaysia's sovereign bonds, from 29.4% a year ago.
2. These bonds returned nearly 12% to dollar investors over the last year.
3. The ringgit has surged over 14% against the dollar since early 2025.
4. Malaysia's status as a net energy exporter protects it from global oil shocks.
5. Local bond yields moved only 15 bps during recent Middle East volatility.
6. The government raised its 2026 growth forecast after the economy beat expectations.
7. The World Bank now views the nation as a regional safe haven.
8. Fuel subsidy costs hit $1.8 billion in April due to regional conflict.
9. The central bank maintained interest rates at 2.75% during its last meeting.
10. Global funds bought $947 million in local notes during the month of April.
Huat ah
“Muslim men get 72 virgins in heaven.”
That line went viral.
But there’s one problem:
The Qur’an never says that.
Not once.
And the real story is way more interesting.
Prophet Mohammed’s rules of war
• Do not mutilate dead bodies
• Do not kill women or children
• Do not cut down trees
• No treachery, or breaking pledges
• No mutilation of the dead
• No torture or excessive cruelty
This is why “Sharia Law is incompatible with the west.”
JUST IN: Malaysia just declared the U.S.-Malaysia trade deal null and void.
Not suspended. Not under review. Null and void.
“It is not on hold. It is no longer there.” Those are the words of Malaysia’s Investment, Trade and Industry Minister, Datuk Seri Johari Abdul Ghani. On the record. This week.
The deal was signed five months ago in Kuala Lumpur by President Trump and Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim at the ASEAN Summit. It cut tariffs from 47 percent to 19 percent. It was presented as proof that reciprocal trade works. It was the template.
It no longer exists.
The trigger was a Supreme Court ruling on February 20 in Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump. The Court held that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act does not authorise presidential tariffs. IEEPA was the legal foundation beneath virtually every reciprocal tariff deal the administration signed. The Court pulled the foundation. Malaysia looked at the structure standing on nothing and walked away.
No other country has done this yet. But fifteen nations are now under new Section 301 investigations launched March 11 and 12, covering structural excess capacity across sixteen economies and forced labour practices across sixty. The USTR pivoted to Section 301 within weeks of the ruling because it is the only remaining statutory vehicle for broad tariff authority. The pivot tells you the administration knows the legal ground shifted.
The question every trade desk should be asking this morning is not whether Malaysia matters. Malaysia covers 12 percent of its exports to the US under the deal. The question is who follows.
Every reciprocal trade agreement signed under IEEPA authority between 2025 and February 2026 now sits on the same voided legal foundation. Every counterparty government has the same option Malaysia just exercised. Every trade minister in every capital that signed one of these deals is reading the same Supreme Court opinion and asking the same question: is our agreement still enforceable?
The answer, as of February 20, is that the legal basis no longer exists. The deals were signed under authority the Court has since ruled the President did not have. Malaysia is the first government to say that out loud. It will not be the last.
The cascade risk is not theoretical. Roughly $500 billion in annual US trade flows run through the nations now under Section 301 investigation or bound by IEEPA-era reciprocal agreements. If even a fraction of those counterparties follow Malaysia’s precedent, the result is a simultaneous renegotiation of America’s trade architecture during a period when the Hormuz crisis is already driving energy and food inflation, the Fed is trapped at 3 percent core PCE with no room to cut, and US farmers cannot afford $900-per-ton ammonia.
Carl Quintanilla posted the headline with the kind of brevity that tells you even CNBC does not know how to frame this. Because the frame is uncomfortable. The administration built a tariff architecture on a legal authority the Supreme Court ruled it never had. The first country to notice just tore up the deal on live television.
The trade architecture, the fertiliser supply chain, the insurance market, the naval coalition, the planting calendar. One by one, the systems the global economy assumed were stable are revealing themselves as fragile.
Malaysia just pulled another thread.
https://t.co/iFmUcarGdV
"**Eye-Opening Reality — A Lesson for African Leaders**
Former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad says:
In 2004, Malaysia purchased 8 F/A-18 Hornet fighter jets from the United States, which were among the most advanced aircraft at the time. The value of this deal exceeded $640 million.
After receiving the aircraft, Malaysia formed a team of experts and engineers to conduct a detailed study of their features and combat capabilities.
👈 The Malaysian experts discovered that the aircraft was transmitting every flight's information to a US military base, such as:
- Flight altitude
- Speed
- Location
- Route
- Mission details
- And the pilot's communication with the ground control room
Not only that, but the aircraft's operating system and autopilot feature could also be controlled from the US base. This means that if a US officer on the ground simply presses a button, the aircraft's route can be changed, it can be crashed, or even the target of its attack can be altered.
When Malaysia tried to modify the aircraft's operating system, the United States and manufacturer McDonnell Douglas strongly objected. They even threatened to stop supplying parts and maintenance, and impose restrictions.
Even when Malaysia requested specific parts to activate certain capabilities of the aircraft, the company rejected that as well.
Ultimately, Malaysia realized that it had bought aircraft that could not be used in actual combat without US approval.
This issue is not limited to Malaysia alone; many Arab and Muslim countries face the same reality.
**The lesson is clear:**
Until a nation develops its own defense technology, it will remain dependent on others."
(Source: TV interview on Al Jazeera with Mahathir Mohamad)
Top 100 most repeated words in the Qur’an
1. From – مِن – min – 3,226 times
2. Allah (God) – اللَّه – Allah – 2,699 times
3. What / that – مَا – ma – 2,177 times
4. In – فِي – fi – 1,701 times
5. Not / no – لَا – la – 1,691 times
6. Indeed – إِنَّ – inna – 1,682 times
7. Who / which – الَّذِي – alladhi – 1,464 times
8. On / upon – عَلَىٰ – 'ala – 1,445 times
9. Lord – رَبّ – Rabb – 975 times
10. Who / whoever – مَن – man – 824 times
11. To / toward – إِلَىٰ – ila – 742 times
12. If – إِن – in – 697 times
13. Except – إِلَّا – illa – 663 times
14. That / to – أَن – an – 625 times
15. That – ذَٰلِكَ – dhalika – 520 times
16. About / concerning – عَن – 'an – 465 times
17. Earth / land – أَرْض – ard – 461 times
18. When – إِذَا – idha – 409 times
19. Already / surely – قَد – qad – 406 times
20. Day – يَوْم – yawm – 405 times
21. People / nation – قَوْم – qawm – 383 times
22. Sign / verse – آيَة – ayah – 382 times
23. That – أَنّ – anna – 362 times
24. All / every – كُلّ – kull – 359 times
25. Did not – لَم – lam – 353 times
26. Then – ثُمّ – thumma – 338 times
27. Messenger – رَسُول – rasul – 332 times
28. Punishment – عَذَاب – 'adhab – 322 times
29. This – هَٰذَا – hadha – 318 times
30. Sky / heaven – سَمَاء – sama' – 310 times
31. Soul / self – نَفْس – nafs – 295 times
32. Thing – شَيْء – shay' – 283 times
33. Or – أَو – aw – 280 times
34. Between – بَيْن – bayn – 266 times
35. Book – كِتَاب – kitab – 260 times
36. Truth / right – حَقّ – haqq – 247 times
37. Before – قَبْل – qabl – 242 times
38. People – نَاس – nas – 241 times
39. When – إِذ – idh – 239 times
40. Those – أُولَٰئِك – ula'ika – 204 times
41. Believer – مُؤْمِن – mu’min – 202 times
42. If / if only – لَو – law – 200 times
43. After – بَعْد – ba'd – 199 times
44. With / near – عِند – 'ind – 197 times
45. Good / better – خَيْر – khayr – 178 times
46. Way / path – سَبِيل – sabil – 176 times
47. Command / matter – أَمْر – amr – 166 times
48. Knowing – عَلِيم – 'alim – 163 times
49. With – مَع – ma'a – 159 times
50. Some – بَعْض – ba'd – 157 times
51. When / not yet – لَمَّا – lamma – 156 times
52. Last / hereafter – آَخِر – akhir – 155 times
53. O you – أَيُّهَا – ayyuha – 153 times
54. God / deity – إِلَٰه – ilah – 147 times
55. Paradise / garden – جَنَّة – jannah – 147 times
56. Other than / not – غَيْر – ghayr – 147 times
57. Fire / hellfire – نَار – nar – 145 times
58. Without / besides – دُون – dun – 144 times
59. Until – حَتَّىٰ – hatta – 142 times
60. Or – أَم – am – 137 times
61. Moses – مُوسَىٰ – Musa – 136 times
62. Heart – قَلْب – qalb – 132 times
63. Servant – عَبْد – 'abd – 131 times
64. Wrongdoer / oppressor – ظَالِم – zalim – 129 times
65. Disbelievers – كَافِرُون – kafirun – 129 times
66. People / family – أَهْل – ahl – 127 times
67. Rather / but – بَل – bal – 127 times
68. Perhaps / so that – لَعَلّ – la‘alla – 123 times
69. Great / mighty – عَظِيم – 'azim – 120 times
70. Hand – يَد – yad – 120 times
71. Clear / evident – مُبِين – mubin – 119 times
72. Merciful – رَّحِيم – rahim – 116 times
73. Worldly life – دُنْيَا – dunya – 115 times
74. Mercy – رَحْمَة – rahmah – 114 times
75. Reward – أَجْر – ajr – 105 times
76. Knowledge – عِلْم – ‘ilm – 105 times
77. Will not – لَن – lan – 104 times
78. Mighty – عَزِيز – ‘aziz – 101 times
79. Wise – حَكِيم – hakim – 97 times
80. Possessor of – ذُو – dhu – 93 times
81. Is / are / do – هَل – hal – 93 times
82. Religion – دِين – din – 92 times
83. Saying / word – قَوْل – qawl – 92 times
84. Forgiving – غَفُور – ghafur – 91 times
85. Satan – شَيْطَان – shaytan – 88 times
86. Example – مَثَل – mathal – 88 times
87. Angel – مَلَك – malak – 88 times
88. Wealth – مَال – mal – 86 times
89. Protector / guardian – وَلِيّ – waliyy – 86 times
90. Guidance – هُدًى – huda – 85 times
91. Bounty / grace – فَضْل – fadhl – 84 times
92. Night – لَيْل – layl – 84 times
93. Prayer – صَلَاة – salat – 83 times
94. How – كَيْف – kayf – 83 times
95. First / former – أَوَّل – awwal – 82 times
96. More / most – أَكْثَر – akthar – 80 times
The US Navy actually backed out of the International Fleet Review in Sri Lanka.
The crew of the Iranian ship actually marched in the parade there.
So we knew Iran was going to be there, backed out of the event ourselves, knew Iran's ship would be unarmed, waited until the ship left the review, sunk the ship, didn't help the crew then bragged about it all over social media.
We're just operating like deceptive insecure beta Jews at this point.