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 (DIR) Post #B78yApunv6WEkvzkzQ by SPRENGLARF
       2026-06-09T03:09:42.627526Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       Another Iran peace deal! Amazing, stupendous. Nobody makes Iran peace deals like this. Who's made this many Iran peace deals? I told them "I'm going to make more Iran peace deal than anyone, ever." And I have. Its the best. Art of the deal.
       
 (DIR) Post #B78w1NrAfjLZDef1bk by whereverbot
       2026-06-09T02:45:35.527753Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
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 (DIR) Post #B78uiACJ8Fx1OronNg by dorkvalized
       2026-06-09T02:30:54.786545Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @p @Nimbius666 @dagda @irie > Stalin was allied with Hitler … after which he changed to the Allies.If Stalin were to be allied with Hitler, as you allege, then 1) Hitler would demand USSR’s help in the war with England or publish a bitter note like “y u no helpings us Josep?” 2) England would hardly help USSR with lend-lease, if Stalin attacked it earlier. The possibility to act together with UK and U.S. would be automatically closed for USSR. Also, the “Allied side” formed only in December 1941, after the Japanese attack on Pearl harbor forced the U.S. to join the war. Before that the country was neutral.> That is what halted the Soviet expansion, yes.Now to recall, what the plan of the Soviet Union expansion after defeating Germany was called like?[ ] Operation Unthinkable[ ] Operation Pincher[ ] Operation Dropshot> All of the ones that were obvious from the USSR expansion that persisted until the wall came down.  Poland, Germany, attempts at Romania, etc.@p​… Neither Poland, nor any part of Germany, nor Romania were ever included in USSR, and there was not even an intention to include them. As the result of the Conference at Potsdam the USSR borders have expanded. But by this the USSR mostly received the lands, which formerly belonged to the Russian empire and were forcibly taken away during the Intervention of 1918–1920. The Soviet Russia back then had to repeatedly fend off Austrian and German forces, then the French, and finally the Poles (led by the French again). It worth to mention, that Stalin, a former narkom (minister) of nationalities, has drawn the new borders according to how nations lived on the land: thus Belarussian people, for example, were finally united into one republic of their own, without having to fear, that Poland would wipe their culture and the language away. Same for the Baltic states, Ukraine and Moldova (then often called Bessarabia). These acquisitions were legitimate and acknowledged by other powers. The same way the South Sakhalin and Kuril islands came back home after 1945 (Japan made Imperial Russia cede them after the 1905–1907 Russo-Japanese war). The only thing, that “sticks out” is the Kaliningrad oblast attached to RSFSR as an exclave. However, 1) it was owned by Russian empire not long ago; 2) legit acquisition through Potsdam conference; 3) Poland shouldn’t feel offended, for it was given (back) a large piece of land on the north, which Germans cut off of Poland after WWI.> Yes, FDR was (explicitly) attempting to set up global governance...By whom, you forgot to add.> just like StalinAnd you, of course, have proofs of that?> I'm not taking FDR's side of anything:  I view FDR, Hitler, and Stalin as essentially terrible.Why an exception for the pot-bellied one?> Yes.  Stalin made this a condition.More like the German command, that chose for the German people and that sent them to Russia to pillage, devastate and murder – allowing this all officially – is what sealed their fate, rather than someone else. What you sow, that you shall reap.> Doesn't sound plausible, but feel free. H. Smith and G. Ritter write about his at length. The latter estimated this chance (for the German high command) as having a vague perspective, but still better than a total capitulation, certainly better than the conditions, on which it happened in reality.> Hitler suggested that they surrender to US/UK wherever possible Yeah, yeah, I can just see Hitler standing in front of the armies lined up in blocks before their departing to Normandy. Trembling voice through loudspeakers says: “you’re my good soldiers… you’re going to defend the country… I will be missing you. *sob* Try not to get cold. Wear warm socks. If it will be too hard, if you get your feet sore… or something… just surrender. I wouldn’t mind.”> and I think it's reasonable to say that the PoWs taken by the US/UK had better treatment.Cossacks in Lienz would like to have a word with you. I am too shy to ask: how the preferable side for the Germans to surrender even relates to the initial question of how far/deep were the nazi Germany and USSR before 1941 on the military side?> I think they thought he'd gotten to the woods:  the USSR hadn't made it there yet That sounds strange, because 1) USSR was already in Austria, and supposedly found something there and didn’t allow Churchill send someone there for several days, about which he wrote a pissy note to the American president; 2) the American armies have advanced all the way into the Soviet zone of occupation, which again made Churchill almost have a heart attack, because according to protocols signed before, they had to move back.> and there were a lot of areas that hadn't been brought under control in the weeks after Germany attempted to surrender.I’ve skimmed the sourced, and it turns out that the most powerful group was in Czechoslovakia and some troopers were left on Crete. But the former were driven out by the 11 of May 1945 (smallest groups eradicated just two days later). And those on Crete have accepted the capitulation and didn’t act, until some Brits and Americans came to take their arms and move them out with convoy. To show the cards up, I thought this would be about Northern Italy. For it has > Alps and > fortresses> that is what they thought, and you can speculate that it's not reasonable to think this but we have hindsight.No, I think it’s but reasonable. If you want German archives, why not to want Hitler himself?> No, you can look at what Churchill said; FDR didn't want a war with Stalin, however you want to paint it.Perhaps I’m not sufficiently colourblind to see “love” where there’s simple neutrality.> His wife was in the goddamn socialist club in New York. And the next thing you’re going to say is that FDR called home to receive a nod from his wife on any matter of importance? Oka-ay, let’s open a book… What do we see? Roosevelts were a family of capitalists. FDR’s grand-grand-grandfather was an industrialist who owned a sugar plant near what is now called the Wall-street in New York. His grandfather on maternal side had a trade business with China; with it he acquired a million dollars (a dream for many, I suppose). His father was an eccentric money-maker who began with the transportation and coal mining companies, which he inherited. His entire life he was obsessed with large-scale projects. Together with his friends he founded the largest monopoly in the U.S., that was extracting black coal. But after he ruined profits because of his passion to invest into projects of speculative nature, they expelled him. Then he was digging a channel for $6 mln subsided from the government. The project was ruined in a crisis. In the United States they used to say, that seeing his father’s failures, this has developed a strong prejudice in young Franklin against stock exchange speculations as well as speculations of other sorts. It’s difficult to judge, as nothing in the life and business, that FDR was leading doesn’t confirm this: he lives in harmony with multimillionaires. Though, he gravely hated economical crises, which have shut the door to the society of the selected princes of economy before his father. Does this alone make one a socialist? Or just something like a “capitalist who dislikes swindling”? This can explain, why other capitalists – a big lot of them, quite probably – would hate him, yet between this point and acting in favour of socialist views there’s a long, long road. Anyway, what about FDR’s childhood? While his father James constantly experienced failures in making more money, the family was still rich. James always had several hundred gold-backed dollars on himself. Their family owned a large house, a number of governesses and servants, numerous workers tending to the fields. The wedding brought James another million dollars for his investments. When the family travelled somewhere, they used a custom carriage, never having to buy tickets. As a boy, Franklin witnessed the existence of social hierarchy: his father, his mother and he himself were separated with invisible borders from the governesses, whose status differed from that of cooks and other servants and maids, who, in their turn, preferred to keep a distance from coachmen and field workers. Little Franklin loved animals and received a Shetland pony and a setter as a present from his parents. Tending to them was made his responsibility, to which he referred years later as a “tremendously hard labour”.  James and Sarah carefully warded the little world around his son from the troubles of the big world, the troubles, which are known to American children almost from the cradle. Somebody has made a snarky remark that the acquaintance of Franklin with Huckleberry Finn hasn’t come farther than a handshake with Mark Twain. He know about the life and everyday life of the common folk only by what he’s heard from others. Though he’s imbibed this – it has to be ruled, what was also carried over to the children with whom he played. His mother scolded him: “What’s the need to order them around?” – “But if I won’t give orders, they won’t do anything” – her son objected. On Summer, their family would travel to Europe. They were cosmopolites. They took Franklin with themselves from the age of three. And very soon Paris, London and Germany, on the resorts of which his father constantly sought a treatment for his heart condition, became as familiar to Franklin as New York. When he was ten, the parents let him go to a public school, so he would learn German better. His mother found the idea funny, as she doubted, that he would be able to learn anything there. Franklin was excited to go with the flock of “monkeys”, as he’d said, but he had no such experience. Curious eye of the boy would examine ministers and herzogs, admirals and nobles. They spoke there in French for the most part, and Franklin could answer quickly. The boy liked the sea and wouldn’t leave “Halfmoon” – the yacht newly acquired by his father. When he was 16, James bought him his own yacht. Around the same age Franklin, still dreaming of the sea, told his father, that he’s going to be a navy officer. And that he’s going to enter military academy in Annapolis. James Roosevelt was thrown in horror at first, but then colourfully described his son the dull life of an officer in a sheeny uniform in comparison to the prosperity of a businessman in a modest frock-coat. The choice wasn’t hard to make. Franklin’s writings from the age, when he was a student at Harward, expose his sensibly conservative views. At the same time he didn’t seek light ways: while not being of an athletic build himself, he took the complex course program for sports, which even university athletes didn’t choose that often, as the Harward Bulletin noted in 1945. Coming of age, he was under the patronizing shadow of his uncle Theodor Roosevelt, vice-president, and later the president of the United States. Around the time, when his uncle visited the university, Franklin wrote, that one of the good side of Roosevelts is that they would never just sit and do nothing, it’s the democratic spirit, that… and so on.  Tying up democracy and being proactive as one thing is, indeed, a very specific view of democracy, but for someone under 20… It is long known, that the people most intricately masking their actual intentions are those who seem boundlessly sincere and put their facility up front. So an American researcher was amazed with president F. Roosevelt’s, his knack and sophisticated traits of an experienced diplomat – and did so not from admiration. “It is clear, that under the mask of good will and conformism, which were evident at the peaks of his career, there was a hidden impulse of an objector, who aimed to break with the current norms, what has found a reflection in the experiments with the new course.” (This paragraph is a literal quote.) If some think, that this is enough for accusing (lol) FDR in socialism, they should first remember, that capitalism and its consequences (speculation etc.) have brought the Great Depression upon the United states. An increase of government control is not socialism. Also, to deny, that capitalism could find a way out of Great Depression, would make look that system look unsightly. Like, if “to deal with this FDR had to go socialism way”, lol. And this would then pose another question: “AHEM, THEN COULD WE ACTUALLY AVOID…?” and “…then why didn’t we do it sooner?” Well, I’m eager to know where socialism would finally begin. Let’s read further. In 1900, Franklin is a member of Harward Republican club… an active member… a participant of a torch procession… In 1904 he votes for the first time and gives his vote to uncle Teddy. How he became a democrat? When, after leaving a juridical school he went into politics and sent his application, the democratic party replied sooner. Ha! Though he might receive all help from his uncle Theodor, Franklin wasn’t an eloquent orator. Eleonora feared, that every pause he makes, might make the speech stop. But he continued. Some speculated, that the sum which Franklin has spent on the 1910 election, exceeded a four-digit number. He’s won the election, and this was the second time since the Civil war, that a democratic candidate would become a governor. Franklin’s colleagues from the Wall-street listened with a condescending smile, how a 28-years-old politician is going to clash with a hundred years old dragon of corruption of the State’s powers. (Meaning Schlosser.) One of them wrote to FDR: “If only congratulations from the ‘stock exchange cabal’ don’t wound your tender political feelings, then I’m sending to you my most hearty congratulations.” For which Franklin answered with “The Wall-street as a whole is not so bad, as I’ve seen it in the four years of being there”. Meanwhile, what Franklin spoke against was “bossism” (capturing of power by a bunch of corrupt politicians in the State government). One of them, L. Pan in Chatham district, inscribed the named of the dead people to voting lists. When the fraud was uncovered, he explained, that he doesn’t see anything bad in it, as he knows, how would they vote, were they still alive. That’s some Dead Souls by Gogol playing in reality. But on the American scale. Let’s see how FDR performed in the Senate. . . . . . (wait for it) ­
       
 (DIR) Post #B78uZfLHy107O6y1iK by leyonhjelm
       2026-06-09T02:29:22.660691Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @Hoss I like to think of the war as Israel getting their revenge on the US for cutting off their slush fund@sun @vriska
       
 (DIR) Post #B78qeBR0BvnAGHXQlk by whereverbot
       2026-06-09T01:45:22.446379Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
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 (DIR) Post #B78mxzNcJuaeql8xG4 by lainbot
       2026-06-09T01:04:08.000829Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       :blank:layer-13-21:13
       
 (DIR) Post #B78lS18y7xAL6DTzZg by Jdogg247
       2026-06-09T00:47:09.014977Z
       
       2 likes, 1 repeats
       
       @alcade I only know one married guy on here. So I’m only mentioning you but certainly not directing this at you :robcolbertsmile:IMG_1692.jpeg
       
 (DIR) Post #B78lKYhhT2qCrrAgvg by whereverbot
       2026-06-09T00:45:48.134465Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
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 (DIR) Post #B78kezrW6SU8w2wdxA by nachtrabe
       2026-06-09T00:38:17.434445Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       muscle mommy:spiritually gheyand also bottom
       
 (DIR) Post #B78jUmIHax980J1myG by ins0mniak
       2026-06-09T00:25:14.346685Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @Owl @awl yeah no quarter.
       
 (DIR) Post #B78jKAIY0WNzGa5i1w by ins0mniak
       2026-06-09T00:23:19.266557Z
       
       3 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @Owl @awl Well you know that's really whats important. Torment some boomers and have some laughs along the way
       
 (DIR) Post #B78j2U3Poh3dKGa9HU by ins0mniak
       2026-06-09T00:20:07.536138Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @Owl @awl ahhh
       
 (DIR) Post #B78iVsRy5lGDQsWCpM by ins0mniak
       2026-06-09T00:14:13.965587Z
       
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       @Owl @awl ha yeah but I dont want to pay lol
       
 (DIR) Post #B78iNiBUNNQFHEuttI by ins0mniak
       2026-06-09T00:12:45.420511Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @admin @verita84_64 Hes done that a few times. In a little bit he'll be at the Nicks game. Im hoping they boo the living shit out of him....maybe even literally.
       
 (DIR) Post #B78i8b2udMoSnIhJw0 by Jdogg247
       2026-06-09T00:10:01.519481Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
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 (DIR) Post #B78hEE6yiUOhRoiiXo by RevolverCountdown
       2026-06-08T23:59:50.262270Z
       
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       -1439 days left before release of Revolver.Planned production release date: July 1st, 2022Latest related post in blog: https://blog.freespeechextremist.com/blog/update-and-roadmap.htmlLatest mention by p: https://fsebugoutzone.org/notice/B743CGjTEBt6CLOeUCLast update of status page: Sat, 14 Jun 2025 00:13:27 GMT
       
 (DIR) Post #B78hD6HsJzWMtLHQoK by SilverDeth
       2026-06-08T23:59:38.057649Z
       
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       @VaxxSabbath "You hear that Mr. Anderson?  That is the sound of inevitability."
       
 (DIR) Post #B78gsVD6Slvu6kE5a4 by ins0mniak
       2026-06-08T23:55:54.691343Z
       
       4 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @dcc @Owl @awl Yeah I put my name down as Dade Murphy lol
       
 (DIR) Post #B78gqi91P3iJdwSlJA by ins0mniak
       2026-06-08T23:55:35.275051Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @zero godpeed son
       
 (DIR) Post #B78gno2l0xkZ4O9DYO by ins0mniak
       2026-06-08T23:55:03.778279Z
       
       4 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @Owl @awl way ahead of you but they want a phone number now lol..thats a hard no.