Forwarded from Tabz - Alternative Media (TabZ)
The United States is concerned by recent events in southeastern Yemen.
We urge restraint and continued diplomacy, with a view to reaching a lasting solution.
We are grateful for the diplomatic leadership of our partners, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates and remain supportive of all efforts to advance our shared security interests.
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FLOCK Cameras and PALANTIR surveillance has already been rolled out.
Forwarded from The Conspiracy Hole (Brody Hyde)
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Tim Walz criticizes JD Vance for saying “it’s okay to be White,” while accusing the Trump administration of “White supremacy.”
Forwarded from 𝐏⃥⃒̸𝐒⃥⃒̸𝐘⃥⃒̸𝐖⃥⃒̸𝐀⃥⃒̸𝐑⃥⃒̸ 𝐂⃥⃒̸𝐈⃥⃒̸𝐍⃥⃒̸𝐄⃥⃒̸𝐌⃥⃒̸𝐀⃥⃒̸
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Without double standards they would have none.
Forwarded from Enjoy the Decline
Media is too big
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Forwarded from Accidents & Idiots
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India
Forwarded from Accidents & Idiots
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India
Forwarded from Frihet23
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Sheboons outside of western civilization
Forwarded from The Conspiracy Hole (Brody Hyde)
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gooners in shambles
Forwarded from Fragile Communism (FeelsGood)
Forwarded from /CIG/ Telegram | Counter Intelligence Global (FRANCISCVS)
⚖️ 🇺🇸 🏛 He Who Decides the Exception: Trump Should Disregard the Supreme Court’s National Guard Ruling
⬛️ Judicial overreach mustn’t be permitted to trample the public necessity.
🔶️ The Supreme Court has again reminded the country that, in the American system, the judiciary can halt executive action with the stroke of a pen—this time keeping in place a lower-court order blocking President Trump’s attempt to federalize and deploy National Guard forces to protect besieged immigration enforcement operations in and around Chicago.
🔶️ The point was that a republic cannot outsource its highest political judgments to a tribunal without hollowing out self-government. Put those threads together—Cicero’s salus populi, Aquinas’ equity, Locke’s prerogative, Hamilton’s executive energy, Jefferson’s coordinate construction, Jackson’s independence, Lincoln’s warning—and you get a tradition that modern progressives and libertarians alike often deny exists: an argument that the executive office is not merely an administrative convenience but a constitutional instrument designed for decision under pressure. So what does that imply for the case at hand? First, it implies that the Court’s emergency posture is not neutral. By keeping the deployment blocked while litigation drags on, the judiciary effectively chooses a policy: it prefers the risk of executive incapacity to the risk of executive overreach. That may be defensible in some cases. But it should be recognized for what it is: not a purely legal determination, but a choice about which dangers the regime is willing to tolerate.
🔶️ The Chicago dispute will be litigated in briefs and orders. But the constitutional question will be answered elsewhere: in whether Americans still believe that self-government means the people, through politics, can authorize decisive action for the common good—or whether “vital questions affecting the whole people” will be “irrevocably fixed” by the judiciary alone.
https://www.afpost.news/editorials/He-who-decides-the-exception
⬛️ Judicial overreach mustn’t be permitted to trample the public necessity.
🔶️ The Supreme Court has again reminded the country that, in the American system, the judiciary can halt executive action with the stroke of a pen—this time keeping in place a lower-court order blocking President Trump’s attempt to federalize and deploy National Guard forces to protect besieged immigration enforcement operations in and around Chicago.
🔶️ The point was that a republic cannot outsource its highest political judgments to a tribunal without hollowing out self-government. Put those threads together—Cicero’s salus populi, Aquinas’ equity, Locke’s prerogative, Hamilton’s executive energy, Jefferson’s coordinate construction, Jackson’s independence, Lincoln’s warning—and you get a tradition that modern progressives and libertarians alike often deny exists: an argument that the executive office is not merely an administrative convenience but a constitutional instrument designed for decision under pressure. So what does that imply for the case at hand? First, it implies that the Court’s emergency posture is not neutral. By keeping the deployment blocked while litigation drags on, the judiciary effectively chooses a policy: it prefers the risk of executive incapacity to the risk of executive overreach. That may be defensible in some cases. But it should be recognized for what it is: not a purely legal determination, but a choice about which dangers the regime is willing to tolerate.
🔶️ The Chicago dispute will be litigated in briefs and orders. But the constitutional question will be answered elsewhere: in whether Americans still believe that self-government means the people, through politics, can authorize decisive action for the common good—or whether “vital questions affecting the whole people” will be “irrevocably fixed” by the judiciary alone.
https://www.afpost.news/editorials/He-who-decides-the-exception
AF Post
He Who Decides the Exception: Trump Should Disregard the Supreme Court’s National Guard Ruling | AF Post
Judicial overreach mustn’t be permitted to trample the public necessity. by Richard Rodgers
Forwarded from /CIG/ Telegram | Counter Intelligence Global (FRANCISCVS)
🏹 🇺🇸 🇳🇬 Appears that at least 3 Tomahawk warheads failed to explode from these strikes.
📝 Carolina Lion: "If they fired 12 missiles that is a 25% failure rate. So in addition to our Tomahawk supply being limited 1 in 4 might not work properly."
📎 Trevor Ball
📝 Carolina Lion: "If they fired 12 missiles that is a 25% failure rate. So in addition to our Tomahawk supply being limited 1 in 4 might not work properly."
📎 Trevor Ball