https://t.co/nG0puxQepm is now self-hosted. Same domain, permanent infrastructure.
New investigations publish there first, war crimes documentation, extremist networks, surveillance.
Seven articles live now. No platform controls it.
#OSINT#WarCrimes#Mali#Sahel#Investigations
@Rispaa__ No problem, It is a really hard balance, and compared to other music genres unless you run a discord server etc. It's hard to get feedback. The songs come from a real place, it comes through. I hope you keep making music, there is no pressure, just talented in your own niche.
Congratulations, I am glad your breakcore music is getting appreciated. I really love your song Love Sick it's very pretty in a melencholic way and also Colourblind from the same EP which reminds me a bit of Yellow Clax by Aphex Twin but anime.
You balance experimental with more conventional structure well. Without going overboard into technical Breakcore territory loosing the pretty nature of your sound or to far into pure EDM wartering it down. That is a hard balance while still keeping the core style that is you.
I probably should have posted this on an alt account but I am very passionate about breakcore music. It helps me cope with high stress chaotic environments. I hope you continue makeing pretty music.
#JNIM's use of #Starlink and LEO satellite connectivity across #Mali 🇲🇱and the wider Sahel isn't surprising from a military operational standpoint, it's predictable.
In terrain where cellular infrastructure is absent or actively contested, terrestrial communications are unreliable and exploitable. Any lightweight, persistent connectivity outside the radio spectrum is a significant tactical and strategic gain. For non-state armed groups operating across northern Mali's distances, LEO internet offers something few alternatives match: commercial availability, low hardware cost, and operational reliability in areas where conventional signals fail entirely.
Starlink is currently among the most reliable LEO providers on the market. That is why it's being used, not brand preference, not ideology. The same logic explains why the AK-47 is still the most widely distributed assault rifle on earth, sixty years after its introduction. In a conflict environment, reliability outweighs every other consideration. If a cheaper or more accessible alternative performed better, they would use that instead.
The technology doesn't distinguish its users. That has always been true of every communications advance in warfare.
There was no "plot," except on the part of the 12 FBI informants, 2 undercovers, and 3 handling agents who manufactured it. The only person in the case who did anything violent was FBI agent Trask who beat and strangled his wife. Half the men have already been acquitted by 2 separate juries, one in Antrim County, Whitmer's hometown. Let's cut the shit already.
The structural picture goes deeper than the FLA's optics problem. France and Russia both need this insurgency. France needs it to maintain a Sahel security rationale against post-colonial pressure that would otherwise be terminal. Russia needs managed instability to validate Africa Corps and keep Mali dependent on external provision. Neither has a material interest in the insurgency actually ending — only in controlling who benefits from it.
That makes the jihadist presence self-sustaining. The feedback loop is cynical and Mali pays for it continuously.
That's not a conspiracy — it's a pattern visible across the Sahel wherever competing powers have overlapping interests in keeping states weak.
The one interest nobody with external leverage is optimizing for is what Mali's own people actually need.
@SerasTNDenjoyer According to some Russians and Ukrainians, me as a Serbian (South Slav) is to quote one verbatim "Kian you are no more white to me than a Filipino". Such is the hard life of a Slavic conflict reporter.