Miscellaneous News

Chevalier

Captain
Registered Member
And the purge continues, this time with the traitor Pence
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if Trump wanted to improve relations with China immediately he should go after pompeo as well.


really the only place these former US officials can go into exile is China; NATO is in a deficit state of war with Russia and Putin wants to keep trump sweet whereas China most likely IDGAF and might offer asylum if these exiles can provide good intel or are world class scientists with the K visa, which I doubt that individuals would be.


perhaps MAGA are intent on installing a Trump Dynasty as king after all
 

Ringsword

Senior Member
Registered Member
I don't think that will be the case.

With more economic pain, immigrants and visible minorities will be blamed even more
The west is "welcoming" to many immigrants <esp non-white>at first for cheap labour etc, but because they've forgotten the maxim,"demography is destiny",-there is trouble today and in that golden time there was an unwritten caste/system in the west where the lower castes get to eat on the scraps after the white upper class has eaten its fill first -but now after the socio-economic upheavals starting from the 1960's ,everything has been upended and white upper class has been out competed by China on the national /geopolitical scale and burdened by endless schisms/ social turmoil domestically leading to the Great Replacement Theory,massive debt,dumb-down school system etc-hence the rise of Trump,who simply grifted these unhappy.resentful,fearful,ultimately stupid MAGA losers to their detriment.
 

Puss in Boots

New Member
Registered Member
Was China not an empire too? Everyone killed everyone else back then. Everyone else took land. That's the price of being weak. Don't sound like a Mongol nationalist. They whine all the time and sound pathetic for whining about China conquering Inner Mongolia.

They don't realize that by whining about China conquering and colonizing them they just make us feel more powerful.

The trap is to get caught up in morals. never get caught up in moral debates, they're all junk and subjective. Capability and immediate interest is what matters.
When others discuss China's history of conquest or colonization, China doesn't gloss over it to claim a moral high ground.
A common Western tactic is to claim that terrible things are happening in the region, and that they simply occupied these territories out of goodwill, seeking to end conflict. Russia's narrative of expansionism reminds me of Japan's sophistry regarding its invasion of China. This is the hypocrisy of these countries.
China's common excuse for territorial expansion is self-defense counterattacks against harassment from other regions along its borders. Of course, we all know that these counterattacks can sometimes be quite severe.
There's a stark difference between these two narratives: one is unwilling to admit expansion for profit, while the other is determined to convince others that it's expansion for profit. This is the difference between a hypocrite and a true villain, and the Chinese hate hypocrites even more.
Many Chinese people have tried to use Western narratives to justify China's occupation of Tibet, which has had a certain effect on public opinion. However, this narrative has actively abandoned China's historical sovereignty over Tibet and even indirectly weakened China's legitimacy in occupying Tibet. This is a very costly act.
 
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Ringsword

Senior Member
Registered Member
The best example I can think of is the Beijing wall.
https://www.reddit.com/r/ArchitecturalRevival/comments/f55gvt https://www.reddit.com/r/Lost_Architecture/comments/kpfbnc
These fucking westerners try to lecture Chinese on demoliting the walls when they ignore the fact that they destroyed the walls themselves and Beijing was literally in ruins along with wall being already destroyed so it made no sense to preserve it when they needed to rebuild.
Next these westoid assholes will say,"look at how the Chinese destroyed their magnificent Imperial Summer Palace"-of course they-British/French troops did ,but how many of these totally ignorant white idiots would know that fact and swallow this garbage propaganda?BTW I do remember when the 3-Gorges Dam was being built that all of sudden the westoids were complaning about China's disregard about the local ecology/flora/fauna and made it sound like local villagers were being rounded up and herded away like Nazis' victims to death camps.-full of shit as usual .Now Bessent is issuing a worldwide clarion call for a united action against China trade war and otherwise -FFS another 8-nation alliance to attack China??Arm up to the max China.
 

Heliox

Junior Member
Registered Member
Still remember last month I took a cockroach airline (CX), some white guy got priority boarding together with First Class passengers and skipped the whole line with the help of the airline staff, while everyone else got shouted to be in a more orderly line. Turns out the white guy was an economy passenger this whole time, I found out when I went to the lavatory and walked around and I saw him sitting in economy.

May be more innocuous than you view it to be. tldr - Airline Frequent Flier Tiers.

I don't fly CX but I won't doubt it's the same for CX as it is for most premium airlines. When you get to the pointy end of membership tiers, Diamond for CX or Solitaire PPS for SQ (which I'm familiar with), you get boarded with First Class regardless of what cabin you are flying on that segment.

For that matter, as a Solitaire PPS member, you will get the full First Class treatment even if you are booked into Economy (Y);
  • access to priority immigration/security clearance - SQ (SIN) and LH (FRA) have a totally seperate annex for their F passengers to check in, sight unseen from everybody else.
  • access to First Class lounge - which is why some airlines maintain 2 separate F lounges - one for actual ticketed F passengers and another, more crowded lounge, for status passengers enjoying F lounge privileges.
  • priority boarding with F cabin.
  • luggage is tagged "First Class" for priority handling so it comes out faster after you deplane - which leads to the strange situations of luggages tagged "First Class" even when the flight has no F cabin.
  • SQ goes as far as to block adjacent seats in Y so you're not (literally) rubbing shoulders with the hoi polloi. Yes, you also get better treatment in Y than other passengers in the cabin (big hint - they address PPS members by name, unlike the rest of the "cattle").
Quite a lot of people earn status on corporate flights paid for by the company. That said, it doesn't mean that everyone is willing to pay 3x for J (Business) or 7x for F for an air ticket, especially if it's a short flight. So, if you observe carefully, you will see a lot of these status members moving with the F/J crowd but seated in Y. No biggie

Next, at the hotel, when you see people getting whisked aside for separate check-in, escorted to the lounge floor, enjoying welcome drinks/gifts/fruit baskets and upgraded to suites even though they booked run of house. Don't get upset. :cool: It's just hotel membership tiers at work.
 
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antiterror13

Brigadier
Word on weibo on what happened is during the meeting between Bessent and Li, Li picked up the phone right then and called up MOFCOM back home and told them to sanction Nvidia. Then after putting the phone down he then asked his translator to translate what he just said over the phone into english for Bessent.

Bessent was extremely triggered by this.

I've never heard of China sanction Nvidia ? more like Discouragement via Procurement Guidance
 

FriedButter

Brigadier
Registered Member
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In surprise move, head of US military for Latin America to step down​

WASHINGTON, Oct 16 (Reuters) - The admiral who leads U.S. military forces in Latin America will step down at the end of this year, two years ahead of schedule, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced on Thursday, in a surprise move amid escalating tensions with Venezuela.

A source familiar with the matter told Reuters that there had been tension between Admiral Alvin Holsey and Hegseth over operations in the Caribbean and questions about whether he would be fired in the days leading up to the announcement.

The top Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, Senator Jack Reed, called Holsey's unexpected resignation troubling given mounting fears of a potential U.S. confrontation with Venezuela.

"Admiral Holsey's resignation only deepens my concern that this administration is ignoring the hard-earned lessons of previous U.S. military campaigns and the advice of our most experienced warfighters," Reed said in a statement.

Hegseth, in a social media post, did not disclose the reason for the departure of Holsey, who is one of two Black four-star officers leading a U.S. combatant command.

On X, Holsey said he would retire on December 12, but did not give a reason.

"It's been an honor to serve our nation, the American people and support and defend the Constitution for over 37 years," he said.
Holsey's departure comes against the backdrop of a military buildup in the Caribbean that includes U.S.-guided missile destroyers, F-35 fighter jets, a nuclear submarine and around 6,500 troops as President Donald Trump escalates a standoff with the Venezuelan government.

U.S. military strikes against suspected drug boats off Venezuela have killed at least 27 people, raising alarms among some legal experts and mostly Democratic lawmakers, who question whether they adhere to the laws of war. The Trump administration argues it is in a war with narcoterrorist groups from Venezuela, making the strikes legitimate.

On Wednesday, Trump disclosed that he had authorized the Central Intelligence Agency to conduct covert operations inside Venezuela, adding to speculation in Caracas that the United States is attempting to topple President Nicolas Maduro.

Holsey is the latest in a series of flag officers to leave their positions since Hegseth took over the Pentagon. Some firings have been abrupt, including those of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, C.Q. Brown, who was Black, and the top naval officer, Lisa Franchetti, who was the first woman to hold the position.

"The Department thanks Admiral Holsey for his decades of service to our country, and we wish him and his family continued success and fulfillment in the years ahead," Hegseth said on X.

Less than a week ago, the Pentagon announced its counter-narcotics operations in the region would not be led by the Miami-based Southern Command, but by II Marine Expeditionary Force, a unit capable of rapid overseas operations that is based at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina.

That decision came as a surprise to U.S. military-watchers, since a combatant command like Southern Command would normally lead any high-profile operations.
will step down at the end of this year, two years ahead of schedule
A source familiar with the matter told Reuters that there had been tension between Admiral Alvin Holsey and Hegseth over operations in the Caribbean and questions about whether he would be fired in the days leading up to the announcement.

Venezuela is next.
 
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