Donald #Trump hat seit seinem Amtsantritt Anleihen für über 100 Mio. Dollar gekauft. Und wie sieht es bei Friedrich #Merz und seinen Minister:innen aus? Das bleibt geheim - die meisten verweigern Angaben zu ihrem Aktienbesitz

abgeordnetenwatch.de/recherche….

in reply to Emmanuel Florac

Exactement. Pour bien comprendre, voici un fondateur de ce qui est devenu le MR : Jean Gol.
Bon, en Flandre, l'électorat de Bart De Wever, les Juifs sont orthodoxes (comme les ministres d'extrême-droite de Netanyahou), au MR, ils sont plus libéraux. Ces deux partis, c'est Israël dans la politique belge.

Gaza to Donbass: How Israel and Ukraine Built a Fascist, Transnational War Machine ddgeopolitics.substack.com/p/g…

ISRAELI PEDO FLEES??? Jewish US Attorney Allows Israeli PEDO ESCAPE!

Last Night's America First Show with Nick Fuentes (Begins at 1:33:16)

rumble.com/v6xv3ma-america-fir…

in reply to Cinquante-et-Un

Vous êtes partis. Quelle bonne nouvelle. Vous devez être soulagés.

(Ça me fait penser qu'on doit toujours répondre au mail de la belle-mère, un brouillon imprimé puis passé de main en main jusqu'à nous au milieu de Schokobons fondus (cadeau pour les gones), le week-end du rassemblement religieux. C'ÉTAIT TOUT À FAIT LA BONNE MÉTHODE ET LE BON MOMENT PUTAISE 🤬)

Home school your kids folks

As the d.s. government, and so-called elites are poisoning kids minds through DIE-versity programs, your kids are also being tracked and traced

bitchute.com/video/TG8m3UZpTDd…

Sensitive content

Water Crisis Deepens in Occupied Territories As Ashdod Pumping Station Fails tn.ai/3380379

Belarus, Brazil set to expand business cooperation eng.belta.by/economics/view/be…

80 Level just posted:

Character Design Development: From Concept to Final Illustration

Vita Shapovalenko has offered an in-depth look at the process of character design development, covering silhouette development, the architecture of character storytelling, fundamental design principles, and technical principles.

80.lv/articles/character-desig…

#gamingNews

Meet Trump’s CDC Director: Susan Monarez unlimitedhangout.com/2025/08/i…

IGN just posted:

gamescom 2025: All the Biggest Reveals So Far

gamescom 2025 is fully underway and there have already been a ton of huge reveals that have given a glimpse at the future of video games. We've already had Opening Night Live and a full day of previews and interviews and news, and we've decided to gather all the biggest moments right here to ensure you don't miss a thing.

ign.com/articles/gamescom-2025…

#gamingNews

The War Was The Easy Bit. - by Aurelien


#Ukraine #war #imperialism

The story of how Eu will be fucked by the US, then by Russia, then fucked again, and again. And Ukraine will be a failed mafia state, too.

On the US side, it’s clear that Mr Trump has decided that the game is over, and that, whilst he’s still saying several different things in public, he’s not going to stand in the way of a Russian-imposed solution, which is in any case the only one there will be. Indeed, he will use the influence he has with other countries to push them in that direction. (No country can “negotiate” on behalf of others of course, so that idea was always nonsense.) On the Russian side Mr Putin has apparently decided that, in spite of the US sponsorship of Ukraine, and its supply of weapons, there is no point in continuing with a confrontational attitude, and that it is best to start work now towards a stable long-term relationship with Washington. This has the added effect of driving a wedge between the US and Europe: a point I return to. Assuming that analysis is correct, and I think it is, then that’s a decent, if modest, outcome for a couple of hours of talks, even if there are suggestions that other potential areas of agreement were not successful, which would hardly be surprising. But of course even such a modest outcome raises very significant questions of implementation both for the US and Russia, which we’ll get onto in a second, never mind for Ukraine and Europe.


aurelien2022.substack.com/p/th…

Outlaw: Non-Profits & Repression with Veryl & Dylan
itsgoingdown.org/outlaw-non-pr…

"The Outlaw Podcast speaks with Veryl Pow and Dylan Rodriquez to speak about state repression and the role of liberal counter-insurgency. Veryl Pow and Dylan Rodriguez join Outlaw for a rich discussion about non-profits and state repression–from the liberal non-profit taming of the rebellious ’60s to the fascist gutting of those same non-profits today. Veryl is a...

in reply to LisPi

The current conservative moral panic around Internet porn only leads to less speech and more authoritarianism. If parents are concerned about porn, they can block it in the house. Some might say, "Well the kids will get to it anyway."

"So what?!" .. Parents can instill values, maybe even a sense of guilt. But in the end, kid is going to have to make their own moral decisions eventually. If a parent looks at porn but wants it blocked, on the State level, because it's bad for kids: the parent is a damn hypocrite and is also unable to parent without State intervention. Everyone suffers as a result of the moral panic.

in reply to Caleb James DeLisle

@cjd @djsumdog I don't have kids.

I'm working off a mix of readings, comparison with my own experience (granted I have to extrapolate some because the Internet became meaningfully available fairly late here) and just how hostile familial relationships would've turned with some differences.

Frequently I hear of experiences online of others' childhoods that make me think it is no wonder just how common familial estrangement is, as I would also have cut contact as soon as possible with the treatment I hear of.

I had my own issues, but fortunately most of them were outside of the home environment (instead many of them in school environments using outdated practices known (at the time to anyone actually keeping up with research) to be harmful or ineffective).

All to say that I can't give concrete "do this thing" or "I do XYZ" recommendations or annecdotes, I can mostly say "don't do XYZ".

in reply to LisPi

I acknowledge that child abuse is a real thing that sometimes does happen. But I generally never tell another parent how to raise their children, and this is for the same reason I never tell a person how to invest their money.

If they take my advice and I turn out to be wrong, then it's their money that gets lost; or in the case of child-rearing, it's their bloodline that ends.

Most of the people that say there's a right and wrong way to raise a family wouldn't dare breath a word against Muslims or Orthodox Jews.

And what's more, these groups seem to have their houses in order much better than the average westerner who might have things to say about them.

The most opinionated investment advisor always seems to be the person with the worst finances of their own.

War “Outing” of Old “British Empire” Will Not End in Pleasant Journey: KCNA Commentary #DPRK kfauk.com/war-outing-of-old-br…

TheGamer just posted:

Lego Batman: Legacy Of The Dark Knight Will Cover The Arkham Games, Too

A new poll from the official DC YouTube account hints that we'll get ArkhamVerse story, not just gameplay.

thegamer.com/lego-batman-legac…

#gamingNews

GUERRINI César, docteur en droit, anarchiste italien réfugié à Genève.
anarchiv.wordpress.com/2025/08…

"Ministère de l’Intérieur Police des chemins de fer Commissaire spécial d’Annemasse Haute-Savoie N° 99 Anarchistes GUERRINI* César Annemasse, le 29 …Lire la suite →"

A alguien le funciona la web o la aplicación de pedir Cita Previa en atención Primaria en Madrid?

Llevo varios días sin ser capaz de acceder a la web, ni para pedir cita o ver las que tengo. En el centro de salud me sugirieron probar la app y me funcionó... Un día, pero no sé si soy yo el único con problemas.

Alguien más?

#CitaAtencionPrimaria #ComunidadDeMadrid #CitaMedicaMadrid

elsaltodiario.com/palestina/co…

Apple Can't Figure Out AI Because There's Nothing To Figure Out | by Andrew Zuo - Freedium


#AI #Apple #bubble

But for the majority of things AI hasn't lived up to the hype. And, honestly, Apple has already achieved all the low-hanging fruit in AI. There's really only two main uses of AI: summarizing things and explaining things.


freedium.cfd/andrewzuo.com/app…

Trump’s Ukraine endgame - UnHerd


#geopolitics #Ukraine #war

All is said in this article. Trump knows NATO has lost. EU will foot the humongous bill and collapse under its weight; Ukraine will be pillaged and a cesspool of corruption and crime, but that's too a EU problem; finally the US will make some agreements with Russia on the back of the EU. Russia wins, US wins, EU loses everything, and Ukraine disappears and dies.


Though this week’s White House meeting between Donald Trump, Volodymyr Zelensky and a bunch of European leaders yielded no tangible outcomes, it nonetheless marked an important step towards peace in Ukraine. For the first time, the Ukrainian leader and his counterparts in Europe agreed to discuss the war on the basis of realities on the ground, rather than wishful thinking. Up until just a few months ago, Kyiv’s accession to Nato was regarded as non-negotiable by European diplomacy and Nato. Now, not only does that prospect appear to have been definitively set aside, but for the first time the discussion has shifted from Ukraine’s “territorial integrity” to potential “territorial concessions”.

Monday’s summit earned Trump praise even from usually critical mainstream outlets. “It was the best day Ukraine has had in a very long time… President Donald Trump offered tantalizing glimpses of how he could approach presidential greatness by saving Ukraine, securing Europe and genuinely deserving the Nobel Peace Prize,” CNN enthused. Yet the meeting would not have occurred had it not been for Trump’s summit with Putin in Anchorage, Alaska, just two days earlier — which instead drew near unanimous criticism from Ukraine supporters for “legitimizing” Putin. But this carefully staged “de-demonization” of Putin injected a much-needed dose of realism and pragmatism into the discussion.

The Alaska meeting formally reestablished direct dialogue between the world’s two largest military and nuclear powers. It marked the first face-to-face meeting between a US and Russian president since the outbreak of the war in Ukraine, and the first such encounter on American soil in nearly two decades. It also marked a turning point in US-Russia relations which, since 2022, had reached levels of hostility not seen since the Cold War.

The symbolism was carefully staged: from the red-carpet reception and the ceremonial ride in the American presidential limousine to Trump’s informal reference to “Vladimir”. It was all intended to signal a new chapter in US-Russia relations. But for Moscow, it meant even more. The summit was a political victory. The sight of Trump hosting Putin exposed the failure of the Western strategy of “isolating Russia” and “crippling its economy”. Far from being marginalized, Russia has emerged stronger: it has deepened its strategic relationship with China, expanded its influence among Global South states, and weathered the sanctions regime that was supposed to destroy its economy. Simply by shaking Putin’s hand, Trump acknowledged that Russia remains a power to be reckoned with, not a pariah state.

More importantly, the summit amounted to an indirect acknowledgment that the West has effectively lost this war. Ukrainian forces cannot retake the territories annexed by Russia. On the contrary, Moscow continues to make incremental advances on the battlefield. This reality makes a negotiated settlement the only possible exit from the conflict — one that would necessarily involve territorial concessions: Crimea, plus the four annexed eastern and southern oblasts.

This perhaps explains why Trump quietly backtracked on the various threats he has leveraged at Russia over the past weeks. In July, he announced a 50-day deadline for Russia to halt the war or face “severe economic consequences”. Putin ignored it. Trump shortened the deadline to 12 days. Putin did not respond. Even on the eve of the Alaskan summit, Trump was still insisting on a ceasefire as a minimum outcome. Yet Putin had been clear: Russia has no interest in a ceasefire that would allow Ukraine to rearm and bolster its defenses with Western support.

Moreover, Moscow’s demands have always extended well beyond the question of territorial recognition, seeking a comprehensive settlement that addresses the “primary roots of the conflict”, as he repeated in Anchorage: that Ukraine will never join Nato, that the West will not transform it into a de facto military outpost on Russia’s border, and that a broader “balance of security in Europe” be restored. As even the hawkish New York Times recently acknowledged: “The Russian leader’s overarching goal is primarily to secure a peace deal that achieves his geopolitical aims — and not necessarily to conquer a certain amount of territory on the battlefield.”

In an effort to strong-arm Putin, Trump also threatened to impose secondary sanctions on purchasers of Russian oil — including China and India. Yet both countries swiftly dismissed the threat, making it clear such measures would be ineffective. Far from isolating Moscow, the sanctions would only have pushed Beijing and New Delhi even closer to Russia.

After Anchorage, Trump abandoned both of his original positions. He said that a peace deal was preferable to a ceasefire, and that secondary sanctions were off the table. For Putin, this was a major win. For the US, it was an implicit admission that Washington lacks the leverage to impose terms. In Trump’s words, it simply “doesn’t have the cards”. This was a blunt recognition of the diminished military and economic clout of the United States and the collective West.

”For the US, it was an implicit admission that Washington lacks the leverage to impose terms.”

A comprehensive peace deal, however, remains elusive. No terms were agreed in Alaska, largely because Europe — and Zelensky himself — remain opposed to any settlement on Russian terms. European leaders are so heavily invested in the narrative of “victory” that conceding even part of Russia’s demands would be suicidal. Having spent two years assuring their citizens that Ukraine was winning the war, they cannot suddenly pivot without facing public outrage — especially given the dramatic economic repercussion of the war on European economies.

But the deeper issue is structural: European leaders have come to rely on the specter of a permanent Russian threat to justify their ongoing erosion of democracy — from expanding online censorship to persecuting dissenting voices, and even canceling elections, all under the pretext of combating “Russian interference”. Zelensky, too, has reasons to resist peace. Ending the war would mean lifting martial law in Ukraine, exposing his government to pent-up discontent over corruption, repression and the catastrophic handling of the war. Indeed, a recent poll revealed that Ukrainians themselves increasingly favor negotiations over endless fighting. No wonder the Alaska summit triggered panic in European capitals as well as in Kyiv.

Perhaps this explains why Monday’s discussion carefully sidestepped the most sensitive question — territorial concessions — with Zelensky and the Europeans instead pressing for “Article 5-style” security guarantees for Ukraine, effectively treating Ukraine as a Nato member even if it is not formally one. While Russia has signaled general openness to the concept of Western security guarantees, the devil lies in the details. European leaders demanded legally binding US participation and backing — something neither Moscow nor Washington is likely to provide, given the risk of being drawn into direct confrontation with each other. Even less acceptable to Russia is any arrangement involving a Nato military presence in Ukraine, as floated by Britain and France. It seems European leaders have adopted a strategy of expressing openness to a settlement while ensuring, through their conditions, that no such agreement can realistically materialize.

More fundamentally, though, it’s unlikely that Trump himself is prepared to concede to Putin’s demand for a wholesale reconfiguration of the global security order — one that would reduce Nato’s role, end US supremacy, and acknowledge a multipolar world in which other powers can rise without Western interference. For all his rhetoric about ending “forever wars”, Trump continues to embrace a fundamentally supremacist vision of America’s role in the world — albeit a more pragmatic one than that of the liberal-imperialist establishment. His administration continues to support Nato rearmament and even the redeployment of US nuclear weapons along multiple fronts, from the UK to the Pacific. Trump’s policies toward China, Iran and the broader Middle East confirm that Washington still sees itself as an empire whose global dominance must be preserved at all costs — not only through economic pressure, but also through military confrontation when deemed necessary.

Within this framework, Russia remains a central challenge. As a pivotal ally of both China and Iran, it is embedded in the architecture of the emerging multipolar order that threatens US hegemony. For Washington, Moscow is not simply a regional actor but a key node in a broader strategic realignment.

Trump, however, appears willing — at least temporarily — to put the “Russia problem” on hold, focusing instead on the larger confrontation with China. But this indicates a shift in priorities rather than principles: the logic of American supremacy ensures that Russia will remain on the list of adversaries, even if the spotlight briefly shifts elsewhere.

In this sense, Trump would probably be content with a scenario in which the US extricates itself from the Ukrainian debacle while leaving Europe to shoulder the burden a while longer — possibly until conditions on the ground deteriorate so severely that a settlement on Russian terms becomes unavoidable. Indeed, JD Vance and Pete Hegseth said as much, arguing that the US will stop funding the war, but Europe can continue if it wishes — buying American weapons in the process. This “division of labor” would allow Washington to reallocate resources to the coming confrontation with China, while leaving Europeans stuck in an unwinnable war.

The Russians are well aware of all this. They likely harbor no illusions about the real objectives of the US imperial establishment. And they know full well that any deal struck with Trump could be overturned at any moment. However, Putin’s short-term goals align with Trump’s. one could say that Russia and the United States are strategic adversaries whose leaders nonetheless share a tactical interest in cooperation.

Seen in this light, one might postulate that the purpose of the Alaska summit was never to secure a final peace agreement. Both Trump and Putin doubtless understand that such a deal is currently impossible. Rather, the meeting was about allowing the US to step back from Ukraine without admitting defeat, while Russia continues to advance. For Washington, this creates political cover: Trump can claim he tried diplomacy, while offloading the burden of war onto Europe. For Moscow, the advantage lies in Ukraine’s gradual weakening as US logistical support fades. Indeed, in order to encourage an American exit, Russia might even agree to a temporary ceasefire and possibly also to vague US “security guarantees” — with Russia and the US presenting these as significant concessions and victories, respectively — though such a truce is unlikely to hold.

The most likely outcome will be a temporary thaw in US-Russia relations, though the broader geopolitical struggle will go on. And the real losers will be Ukraine and Europe. Ukrainians will continue dying in a war they cannot win, while Europeans will continue to foot the bill. Eventually, they too will be forced to accept a deal on Russian terms — but only after further suffering. Even then, Europe will remain trapped in a hostile and militarized relationship with Russia, with the potential for renewed conflict at any time. At best, the Alaska summit and its aftermath signals a temporary relaxation in an ongoing confrontation between the West and the emerging multipolar order. At worst, it ensures that Europe and Ukraine continue to pay the price for a war that the US has already chosen to leave behind.

unherd.com/2025/08/trumps-ukra…