Dear @SecRollins: You lie. The average life cycle of a Screwworm ranges from 14 to 54 days depending on temperature and humidity.
The trump Administration has been in office over 500 days.
If you can’t accept responsibility, or even apologize for messing up, you need to resign.
The Mayor is spreading misinformation.
Ballots are counted if they are postmarked BY Election Day so long as they are received up to 7 days after — you know, cause this is a big state and mail can take some time.
Magyar: the length of the one-way ticket train has grown by another 20 refrigerated and medical cars in just six days. Worm by worm, brigade by brigade.
A full 2k has been sent to the swamps by the @usf_army during the first six days of June.
☠️ 1,006 KIA
🩸 1,090 WIA
That’s the complete assault strength of a regular worm brigade.
At the same time, 10,000 enemy targets have been added to the ledger. Full breakdown available in the USF Dashboard:
https://t.co/dXVBeQSP9U
The night of June 7 was warm, deep inside enemy operational rear areas.
A total of 26 targets were visited across the temporarily occupied territories of Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, Crimea, and Russia’s Bryansk region.
One air defense system was destroyed. Three locomotives were pecked. Two fuel train consist were hit. Four electrical substations were taken offline. Six telecommunications towers were brought down. And a portion of military cargo heading from the rear to the front never made it there.
USF Online Dashboard “PIDRAKHUYKA”
https://t.co/dGuQnteiUl
MAGYAR 🇺🇦
07.06.26
D-Day commemoration at Omaha Beach, June 6, 2024.
A D-Day veteran to Ukrainian President Zelensky:
“You’re a savior of the people. My hero.”
Zelensky: “No, no, you saved Europe. You are our hero.”
The fighting on DDay, 82 years ago today, was so intense that up to 4% of the sand on Omaha beach is now made up of shrapnel. 🪖
The shrapnel, broken down into tiny pieces, remains in the sand due to the hardness of the metal and its resistance to erosion. 🔬
Staggering levels of corruption.
They’re using every possible lever of power to enrich themselves and their friends and families.
And the “party of fiscal responsibility” simply doesn’t care.
The compounding returns of that classroom are staggering: since then, China has commissioned the Shandong (2019), commissioned the revolutionary EMALS-equipped Fujian (2025), and aggressively fielded the KJ-600 AEW and J-35 stealth alongside an entire generation of naval aviators. When you contrast this velocity with regional rival India, the strategic divergence is striking. New Delhi has successfully operated carriers since 1961 - holding decades of flat-top experience before Beijing even started - yet in just over ten years, China has bypassed generations of development to build a massive carrier enterprise at a speed few predicted. Yes, I know, ships can be bought, but operational experience cannot - but China is rewriting the playbook on how to fast-track naval matters. 2/2
Ossoff: This is what small men like Donald Trump and JD Vance and Stephen Miller will never understand—that our national greatness flows not through our blood or our genes, but through our ideas.
Americans are not a race, we're a people united not by ethnicity, but by our shared convictions, and that is what makes us exceptional
Kyiv is using the Lima electronic warfare system to divert attacks by Russian drones and missiles.
Via POLITICO
🇺🇦
Lima, developed by Cascade Systems, a Ukrainian defense startup, generates powerful jamming fields that disrupt satellite navigation.
If satellite signals are blocked, Russian long-range weapons can continue flying using inertial navigation systems, but their accuracy can deviate by about 2 kilometers for every 100 kilometers traveled — meaning they are less likely to hit their targets.
Lima’s appeal lies partly in its scale and cost. Unlike many other tactical jammers, Lima can cover large swaths of territory, protecting critical infrastructure. Each unit costs up to 3 million hryvnia (€58,000) to produce, depending on the iteration, according to Cascade. The company estimates that it takes 30 to 100 units to protect a major city — around €5 million.
Cascade has already supplied more than 400 Limas. The military began using them in July 2024, and their use was broadened to also defend civilian infrastructure in October 2025.
According to the company, Limas jammed 20,500 Shahed drones and misdirected dozens of ballistic and cruise missiles in the last 18 months.
The latest iterations of Lima can suppress long-range weapons — including ballistic missiles — which rely on systems such as Russia’s GLONASS satellite navigation, said Maksym Skoretskyy, the head of the electronic warfare department of the land forces of Ukraine.
Lima spoofs satellite navigation signals used by Russian missiles and drones, feeding them false coordinates. According to developers, some past attacks were diverted by making the incoming weapons think they are in Peru.
The Lima system can also create a "dead zone" where a Russian drone loses its guidance signal.
Glide bombs — a conventional bomb equipped with winglets to give it more range — were harder to counter, as Russia uses them mostly against the frontline areas. It's more difficult for Ukraine to create signal dead zones there, as it controls only part of those areas. But once engineers found ways to overcome newer Russian anti-jamming antennas, Lima began diverting glide bombs as well.
In early 2025, Russian forces introduced upgraded anti-jamming Kometa antennas that rendered existing Ukrainian electronic warfare systems, including earlier versions of Lima, ineffective.
After three months, engineers developed a new version called Lima Quant, designed specifically to overcome the upgraded Russian defenses by combining traditional spoofing with new high-frequency signals to confuse Kometa.
“We constantly change Lima based on characteristics of Russian weapons, analyze hits, and provide recommendations to the general staff on where to put it and how," Alchemist said. "War evolves all the time.”
The ocean doesn’t recognize borders, and neither should our efforts to protect it. Proud to partner with Azores President Bolieiro in @Reuters to share how CA & the Azores are proving that ocean protection is an investment, not a cost.
Read our story: https://t.co/cu4tCq4GKq
Poland spends nearly 5% of its GDP on defense and has done what we ask of our NATO allies. Blindsiding them while canceling a U.S. armored brigade deployment sends a weak message to Putin and a terrible message to our allies.
82 years ago today, on a mountain in central Italy, the most extraordinary army in WWII was about to make history.
The Polish II Corps under General Władysław Anders had spent two days assaulting the ruins of Monte Cassino monastery. They'd been thrown back with horrific losses. They were preparing to attack again.
Who were these men?
In 1939, Stalin invaded eastern Poland and deported hundreds of thousands of Polish soldiers and civilians to Siberian gulags. Many died of cold, starvation, and execution.
Then Hitler invaded the USSR in 1941. Suddenly Stalin needed allies. He released the surviving Poles.
What followed was one of the longest military journeys in modern history. These men, emaciated, sick, many without boots, marched south. Out of Siberia. Through Kazakhstan. Across Iran. Iraq. Palestine. Egypt. Picking up weapons, training, and strength as they went.
Two years and 6,000 miles later, they arrived in Italy. Most had lost their families to Stalin's camps. They had no homeland to return to. By 1944, everyone knew Poland would fall behind the Iron Curtain.
They had nothing left except a chance to kill Germans.
On May 18, 1944, three days after this date, they raised a Polish flag over the ruins of Monte Cassino. The German Fallschirmjäger had finally been broken.
924 Poles died on that mountain. They are buried there to this day, in a cemetery that overlooks the monastery.
The inscription on their memorial reads:
"We Polish soldiers, for our freedom and yours, have given our souls to God, our bodies to the soil of Italy, and our hearts to Poland."