@TiborPNagyJr@WilliamsRuto
Not condoning anyone insulting anybody else but if I may ask the honorable ambassador felt the same way when president Trump called entire nations “a**hole nations”. If not, it shows a lack of consistency in a moral outrage.
@ISLANDERWORLD gets SUPENDED
WHERE IS FREE SPEECH ?? !!!
An account that was generating the best of news.
20 million plus views a week !!!
72,000 followers
MAKE THIS GO VIRAL
FREE SPEECH @elonmusk. !!
GIVE BACK @IslanderWORLD !+
Is Iranian leadership Arabic?
No, the Iranian leadership is not Arab; they are Persian. While Iran is a Muslim-majority country in the Middle East, its population, language (Farsi), and culture are predominantly Persian, distinguishing them from the neighboring Arab world. The Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, is Iranian-Azeri, born in Mashhad,
@ShaykhSulaiman Yes, UAE’s drones are decimating children of Ethiopia as well as the Sudan. The man is protesting UAE’s involvement. Unfortunately, the West has no regard for children any more.
@emuti1222 @AdonisLo A friend told me about a moment a lesbian police officer asked for her number while doing searches on her body. She wanted to connect😜
𝑬𝒎𝒑𝒆𝒓𝒐𝒓 𝑴𝒆𝒏𝒆𝒍𝒊𝒌 𝑰𝑰 𝒂𝒏𝒅 𝑩𝒍𝒂𝒄𝒌 𝑪𝒐𝒏𝒔𝒄𝒊𝒐𝒖𝒔𝒏𝒆𝒔𝒔
Surrounded by white colonialist powers,
Emperor Menelik II understood black struggle and black consciousness, and this is evident in the letter he sent to Khalifa Abdallahi (leader of the Mahdist state in Sudan).
In the letter one statement stands out, where Menelik II states,
“𝐈 𝐚𝐦 𝐛𝐥𝐚𝐜𝐤 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐲𝐨𝐮 𝐚𝐫𝐞 𝐛𝐥𝐚𝐜𝐤, 𝐥𝐞𝐭 𝐮𝐬 𝐮𝐧𝐢𝐭𝐞 𝐭𝐨 𝐡𝐮𝐧𝐭 𝐨𝐮𝐫 𝐜𝐨𝐦𝐦𝐨𝐧 𝐞𝐧𝐞𝐦𝐲” (𝐉𝐨𝐧𝐚𝐬 𝟐𝟎𝟏𝟏, 𝟐𝟕𝟏).
This was Menelik appealing to shared racial identity (“blackness”) to encourage cooperation with the Mahdists, despite religious and historical difference and animosity.
Emperor Menelik II possessed a deep understanding of geopolitics. Politically astute and intellectually sharp, he knew when to apply leverage and how to leverage and maneuver among competing colonial powers. He skillfully balanced alliances, often playing rival colonialists against one another, all the while keeping Ethiopia’s sovereignty and national interests at the center of every decision.
Source-Jonas, Raymond. 2011. The Battle of Adwa: African Victory in the Age of Empire. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
#Adwa #BattleOfAdwa
#AdwaVictory #Adwa1896
#VictoryOfAdwa #March1st1896
#EmperorMenelikII #EmpressTaytu
#MenelikII #TaytuBetul
🚨A Real Risks to America If We Attack Iran🚨
Fellow Americans, 🇺🇸
This is not about politics, emotions, or foreign loyalties. This is a clear-eyed warning about what could happen to our country, our families, and our homeland if the U.S. government launches military strikes on Iran, especially if framed as defending Israel.
It’s the full combination: Russia, China, and North Korea, plus the likely support from Pakistan, Yemen’s Houthis, Syria, and the newly formed diplomatic coalitions (including the Global Alliance for the Two-State Solution backed by major Muslim nations like Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Qatar, Egypt, Jordan, Indonesia, and the OIC) that have rallied around Palestine.
Russia and China alone completely rewrite the math. Any notion of a quick, low-risk “success” without direct threats to American soil evaporates.
China has the industrial, technological, and economic power to defend Iran while delivering devastating blows to Israel if it chooses. More critically for us: China can choke off key technology components, rare earths, electronics, and trade flows that our economy now depends on. With America’s manufacturing base still hollowed out, that single move would spike prices, crash supply chains, and hit every household overnight, all while China races ahead in AI, leaving us permanently behind.
Add Russia’s nuclear arsenal and asymmetric weapons. Their Poseidon nuclear-powered underwater submarine is stealthy, massive, and designed to evade detection, carries warheads and can pair with hypersonic missiles that no existing defense (including Israel’s Iron Dome) can reliably stop. We have no equivalent nationwide shield.
America still lacks a true Iron Dome equivalent. (The proposed “Golden Dome” for America is nowhere near operational.) Remember the Chinese spy balloon that drifted across our country unchallenged? Or the repeated cartel drone incursions across our southern border that forced airspace closures like the recent El Paso shutdown? These incidents repeatedly expose our vulnerabilities at home.
If the U.S. attacks Iran, for Israel, and it escalates into the broader conflict many experts fear (with Russia-China-Iran drills already happening in the region, including naval exercises in the Strait of Hormuz), expect retaliation designed to split our forces. A direct strike on American soil or interests (from any player in this axis) would force an immediate recall of our naval carriers, air wings, and troops to defend the homeland, because unlike Israel, we have no Iron Dome.
That pullback leaves Israel facing overwhelming retaliation from Iran’s allies: Yemen, Syria, Hezbollah remnants, and others who have endured years of conflict. The Middle East explodes, oil markets seize, and global supply lines collapse.
This isn’t a video game or political theater where loud speeches and tariffs magically fix everything. War is brutal, unforgiving, and escalatory. Nations fight to survive. No remorse.
In this scenario, America faces the greatest catastrophic consequences in our modern history: economic ruin, homeland attacks, stretched military, and lives lost… all to bomb a nation halfway around the world on behalf of a foreign ally that has never sent combat troops to fight side-by-side with American soldiers in any U.S. war (Iraq, Afghanistan, or otherwise).
All sentiment aside: America must step back. Let the Middle East sort its own conflicts. Our priority is securing our borders, rebuilding our strength at home, and avoiding a war that could dwarf anything we’ve seen before.
Contact your representatives today. Demand America First, no more blank checks for endless foreign wars that put American lives and prosperity at risk.
Share this if you agree. The cost of silence could be far higher than any of us want to pay.
Peace and security for Americans must come first. Always. 🇺🇸 🫡
Marco Rubio said:
“For five centuries before the end of the Second World War, the West had been expanding. Its missionaries, its pilgrims, its soldiers, its explorers, pouring out from its shores to cross oceans, settle new continents, build vast empires. But in 1945, for the first time since the age of Columbus, it was contracting.…”
And we in the ex European colonies say:
“For five centuries, Europeans, in search of food and resources after witnessing centuries of famine and pandemic plagues, and on the verge of collapse and self destruction through endless wars and genocide, decided to seek new lands with better climates and greater resources. They settled in the Americas, massacred millions of natives, burned down entire kingdoms, captured and killed millions of Africans, and forced millions of others into slavery for four centuries. After losing control over these colonies in the Americas, they turned to other continents such as Asia, Oceania, and Africa, where they replicated the same model. They were eventually pushed out through wars in which tens of millions died, from Vietnam to Algeria, from Cameroon to Angola, where they were defeated by people who would rather die than continue being enslaved by Europeans.”
Thank you, Marco Rubio, but you cannot rewrite history. You may teach your children this B.S. you call the expansion of Western civilization, but our children from the Global South will be waiting when they show up at our doors with that reckless naivety, believing they will encounter docile fools to “civilize.” Keep deceiving your people. If you of European descent miss colonialism, we of African descent do not miss slavery, and we shall not bow to the “civilization of rape, plunder, genocide and barbarity”….
Belgium Marched. America is tweeting.
Belgium, 1996.
Marc Dutroux rapes and murders little girls.
Police fumble. Tips vanish. Elites whisper.
What did the people do?
They didn’t tweet.
They didn’t doomscroll.
300,000 Belgians poured into Brussels in white.
Silent. Seething. Flowers and balloons in hand.
One in thirty citizens.
They forced resignations.
They forced reforms.
They refused to let monsters hide behind power.
Now America.
Jeffrey Epstein.
Underage girls trafficked like property.
Presidents. Princes. Billionaires. Celebrities.
Flight logs. Victim testimonies. Files still dripping out.
And the streets?
Empty.
Quiet.
Why?
The masses are kept as enslaved labour—wage slaves grinding 60-hour weeks just to survive.
Zombified by football Sundays, fentanyl in the streets, Netflix binges till 3 a.m.
Kept divided: red vs blue, vax vs anti, race against race, gender war after gender war.
Pitted against each other so no one looks up at the real predators.
“They’re all in on it.”
“Nothing ever happens.”
Outrage fizzles in comment threads.
Belgium marched because people still believed the system could crack and bleed change.
America > is scrolling because the cage is comfortable, the distractions perfect, the divisions razor-sharp.
When children are the prey and the powerful are the clients,
which nation truly honors the victims?
The one that floods the streets with rage?
Or the one that drowns the truth in memes, opioids, and scripted division?
Choose your chains carefully.
They scream louder than any march ever could.
In America, the oligarchs do not fight the president—they fund him.
They do not hide. They sit in the front row.
They donate, they lobby, they dine in the White House.
Then they return to their corporations and write policy like their own personal diary.
The revolving door never stops spinning.
Regulators become executives.
Generals become board members.
Senators become lobbyists.
It is not corruption—it is the system.
It is not a scandal—it is the design.
In Russia, there was a different story.
In the 1990s, the oligarchs owned the country.
They took factories, oil, gas, media.
They sat above the law. They chose presidents from menus.
Then Putin arrived.
He did not negotiate. He did not compromise.
He looked at the men who had swallowed Russia and said: enough.
Some fled. Some surrendered. Some never made it to the airport.
The Kremlin was no longer for rent.
The oligarchs were put back in their cages—
free to make money,
but forbidden to touch the state.
They still have yachts. They still have London mansions.
But they do not command armies. They do not write laws.
They do not sit in Parliament and vote themselves immunities.
The leash is short. The hand on it is steady.
China went further.
Here, oligarchs were never born.
Here, the state did not wait for thieves to accumulate power—
it locked the door before they arrived.
Business exists to serve the nation, not capture it.
Wealth is permitted. Empire is not.
A Chinese businessman does not sit beside the President at dinner and whisper policy into his ear.
He does not fund political campaigns. There are no campaigns to fund.
He does not own television networks to shape public opinion.
He does not place his sons in ministries and his daughters on central bank boards.
The separation is not polite—it is absolute.
Money and power breathe the same air, but they do not sleep in the same bed.
The Party watches. The law watches. The people watch.
In the West, this is called authoritarian.
Perhaps they should look at their own reflection.
Who really lives under authoritarianism?
The citizen who must obey?
Or the billionaire who owns the politician who owns the law?
In America, a man with enough money can buy a senator.
In Russia, a man with too much ambition can lose everything.
In China, a man with wealth never imagines owning power—
because he knows, from the first dollar,
that is not how this country works.
So the West lectures.
But the West's oligarchs still roam free.
Still funding elections. Still shaping courts. Still owning truth.
Still untouched. Still untouchable.
Russia caged its beasts.
China never allowed them in the room.
The West still feeds them at the table.
And calls it democracy.
Lastly, an open letter ለታላቁ እስክንድር ነጋ,
This time not to defend you but to thank you…millions who rarely speak in public debates or social media have followed your work with quiet respect. They understand the cost, the vision, & your insistence on institutional thinking & systemic change. They recognize the core of your ideology, your method, & your direction, & they are inspired by your courage & resilience. I am one of those millions.
Thank you for the years you gave, the risks you took, for staying when leaving was easier & for knowing when to fight, & when to step back. Thank you for every wound, every scar & every sacrifice. None of it would be possible without those who stood beside you imprisoned, exiled, & martyred. Our gratitude is to them for giving this struggle its weight. Their endurance, like yours, belongs to the long walk to freedom. Thank you for giving everything you had.
This is not a farewell.
Amandla Awethu!
https://t.co/TL1UaDfVsG