- Dołączono
- 4 Mar 2019
Please stop talking about things you don't understand.It is stated that fuel is depleted after 23 years.
Obejrzyj poniższy film, aby zobaczyć, jak zainstalować naszą witrynę jako aplikację internetową na ekranie głównym.
Uwaga: Ta funkcja może być niedostępna w niektórych przeglądarkach.
Please stop talking about things you don't understand.It is stated that fuel is depleted after 23 years.
This week would be a good time optics wise though perhaps not logistics wise if they actually wanted the second carrier group in the region.New News: the early-warning aircraft have arrived in the region, and, more importantly, the combat search-and-rescue squads have. Seems like it's show time.
Which one is the churro flotilla?The Churro Flotillo is about a quarter of 'regular' US Navy surface fleet strength (we aren't fighting WW3 so a decent chunk of the Navy is sitting at home port doing nothing at any given time), they're gonna wait for it to show up
Mexico should've been part of America a long time ago but unfortunately we are in the everything is gay and retarded timeline. Cuba as everyone has mentioned is falling apart. As for Canada. honestly, i wouldn't be surprised if most canaoids just accept American rule without question.
FLOTILLOWhich one is the churro flotilla?
I used to think we should've at least taken Baja California but now thinking about it all that extra coastline in the Gulf of California would make border security an even bigger pain in the ass.Outside of a handful of tourist areas, like Acapulco and Cabo San Lucas, the rest of Mexico is a shithole. I don't want it as part of the US, and I certainly don't want Mexicans as US citizens. Even without all the beaners occupying it, it wouldn't be worth it to have as part of the US.
I have a feeling that if iran doesn't come to an agreement today then it's bombs tomorrow.Aviation weather forecast for Tehran tomorrow (Tuesday) night:
0% lunar illumination
Sunset 17:49 local/14:19 Zulu
Clear skies, 8km windspeed from Northwest
1/3 of the deployed US Navy (not counting the submarine fleet) will be in theater when the Churro Flotillo arrives in a week. That will more than double the amount of ships there. They will wait for the Flotillo to arrive before doing anythingI have a feeling that if iran doesn't come to an agreement today then it's bombs tomorrow.
Is there a live fleet tracker?1/3 of the deployed US Navy (not counting the submarine fleet) will be in theater when the Churro Flotillo arrives in a week. That will more than double the amount of ships there. They will wait for the Flotillo to arrive before doing anything
Subs tend to have smaller reactors with less 'slack' fuel because you want the smallest ammount of radioactive mass you can manage in the small tin can you have sealed your sailors inside of, so if anything goes wrong they can hopefully fix it before they all die of radiation poisoning. Outside of refueling, subs need to hit the dry dock more regularly so its not a huge burdeb.Subs are the ones that tend to have shorter refuelling schedules, because they operate under much more extreme conditions. The reactor is refuelled and refurbished as part of a general maintenance overhaul.
So much this.Outside of a handful of tourist areas, like Acapulco and Cabo San Lucas, the rest of Mexico is a shithole. I don't want it as part of the US, and I certainly don't want Mexicans as US citizens. Even without all the beaners occupying it, it wouldn't be worth it to have as part of the US.
Friday. Trump isn't going to upset the market mid-week.I have a feeling that if iran doesn't come to an agreement today then it's bombs tomorrow.
Does their digital surveillance machine have an Achilles Heel's?Iran’s digital surveillance machine is close to completion, as reported by Wired. Governments don’t build surveillance systems because there is an actual need to watch 75 million citizens. They build them because power always seeks leverage over society. It is not unique to Iran. This is the inevitable endpoint of every state that believes it can manage dissent, control information, and pre-empt opposition with technology rather than address the real causes of social unrest.
The regime has massacred over 40,000 civilians over the past several weeks. That is a staggering number of deaths—more than all casualties in the Russia-Ukraine war or Palestine-Israel conflict—but we are talking about a government slaughtering civilians here. The regime plans spy on all citizens in real-time to prevent another uprising.
The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps owns or is a partial owner of all telecom systems in the country. Removing internet access was one of the first measures the regime took when protests emerged. Wired describes an integrated, constantly expanding digital control grid. That is the same model now being tried in Beijing, discussed in Brussels, and quietly adopted everywhere that elites feel threatened by inconvenient political movements or crisis-driven instability. In Iran’s case, the “Digital Nation Plan” consolidates messaging, biometric tracking, traffic monitoring, and app control into a unified architecture that can identify, categorize, and punish behavior.
Of course, just steal the hamster powering Iran's govt servers.Does their digital surveillance machine have an Achilles Heel's?
I don't know if you should put much trust in a supposed economics publication that can't math. If the 40,000 number is the correct number of Iranians killed by the government that's about half the official Israeli count from Gaza, and I haven't kept up with Ukraine in a while but I know that's less than a quarter of official numbers when I last checked, and a smaller percentage of various estimates. The only way that statement is accurate is if they are talking about civilians in Ukraine, or the total number of casualties from Oct 7.Tehran have decided to go full big brother.
Does their digital surveillance machine have an Achilles Heel's?
40000 is an estimation, but it doesn't seem impossible. We know the IRGC is shooting civilians in mass, they executes the survivors in the hospitals, and they called Islamic terrorist groups to help them massacre the protestors. They could have killed 40000 persons in a 100 millions people country without it being absurd.I don't know if you should put much trust in a supposed economics publication that can't math. If the 40,000 number is the correct number of Iranians killed by the government that's about half the official Israeli count from Gaza, and I haven't kept up with Ukraine in a while but I know that's less than a quarter of official numbers when I last checked, and a smaller percentage of various estimates. The only way that statement is accurate is if they are talking about civilians in Ukraine, or the total number of casualties from Oct 7.
Is this supposed to be in just the last couple months? I'm under no illusion that the IRGC are good guys, but I thought the recent protests weren't cracked down on as hard as the ones a couple years ago. They also were facing water shortages in Tehran, and the recent fight with Israel. I could believe it cumulatively, but 40,000 is a lot in such a short period of time without some major action.We know the IRGC is shooting civilians in mass, they executes the survivors in the hospitals, and they called Islamic terrorist groups to help them massacre the protestors.
Yes, in only 2 months. The protests are now millions of people in the street and the regime is using everything it has in order to survive. Before they blocked Internet, the estimation was already at 10000 dead, and every news we have shows it's a humanitarian disaster. I can't affirm 40000 is the real number, maybe it's lower, but it's not impossible.Is this supposed to be in just the last couple months? I'm under no illusion that the IRGC are good guys, but I thought the recent protests weren't cracked down on as hard as the ones a couple years ago. They also were facing water shortages in Tehran, and the recent fight with Israel. I could believe it cumulatively, but 40,000 is a lot in such a short period of time without some major action.