Posted on 02/24/2024 5:59:01 AM PST by SpeedyInTexas
US guilty of slavery, but no mention of African Muslim people involved in slave trade(still)
Slavery is “legal” in Islam which is why it persists in muslim countries
lol yes, but their part in slavery now and then are never discussed.
Who captured the people, who sold the people…..
The guilt of slavery only begins at US shores…
And let’s not bring up that nearly every population and/or were enslaved or owned slaves 1619 baby
Now may be wrong but my understanding is first purchaser of spaces in the colonies was a black man lol
And of course there is camel toe’s grandfather who was a slave owner🤔
Yep a black was the very first slave holder in the US.
And muslim was the first to be skinned alive by the Indians for trying to rape the chief’s daughter.
Ukrainian strikes on frontline air defenses created a dilemma for Moscow - leave its troops exposed or pull replacement systems from Russia, exposing rear facilities.
https://x.com/EuromaidanPress/status/1884972379337568706
Kudos to UKF target intel.
Who is this TURD, and why did Trump order Mike Johnson to disappear him?
We won’t talk about that😎
WHY THE ELECTION WAS BANNED IN ROMANIA!
Romanian leading presidential candidate Calin Georgescu says:- “Ukraine is an invented state, which will be divided”
He then suggest that Ukraine will be divided:
🇷🇴 Romania also takes Northern Bukovina (now Chernivcy), Budjak… pic.twitter.com/ziJd2gn7zQ— Lord Bebo (@MyLordBebo) January 30, 2025
https://x.com/Maks_NAFO_FELLA/status/1885073715248992308
Now “falling debris “ makes sense
Russia continues recruiting prisoners to fight against Ukraine. Ukraine's Main Military Intelligence Directorate (GUR) reported on January 30 that Russia plans to recruit 126,000 personnel from detainees in prisons or pretrial detention centers, under criminal investigation, or have outstanding loans, and that Russia needs to recruit at least 280,000 personnel in 2025 to maintain its replacement rate.[69]
https://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/russian-offensive-campaign-assessment-january-30-2025
Feeding the meat grinder...
Falling debris attacked again, all of which were shot down twice, or more.
Kyiv Independent reports:
“Ukrainian drones attacked Russia’s Volgograd Oblast overnight on Jan. 31, targeting an oil refinery owned by Lukoil, one of the largest Russian oil producers, Governor Andrey Bocharov said.
The wreckage of a downed drone fell on the refinery, causing a fire that was quickly extinguished, the governor of the southwestern Russian region claimed. According to Bocharov, one employee was injured and hospitalized.
Russian air defenses shot down 49 Ukrainian drones throughout the night, according to Russia’s Defense Ministry. Russian forces downed 25 drones in Rostov Oblast, eight in Volgograd Oblast, six in Kursk Oblast, and four in Yaroslav Oblast. Two drones each were destroyed over Krasnodar Krai, Voronezh, and Belgorod oblasts.”
Source please.
Reporting From Ukraine:
https://www.youtube.com/@RFU/videos
Reporting From Ukraine Uncensored Combat Footage (from this and past Reports) is found on Telegram:
https://t.me/RFUEnglish or @RFUEnglish
[ You need to have the Telegram app to view the larger videos. ]
The complete transcript.
—
[ 3 Air Defense Divisions Wiped Out in 3 Days! Nothing Left to Stop the Strikes!]
Today [ Jan 29, 8 pm ], there are important updates from the Russian Federation.
Here, Ukraine’s continuous strike campaign on air defense assets, in combination with deep rear strikes, has placed Russia in a dire dilemma: whether to defend its critical rear infrastructure or protect its military assets at the front. Either choice could potentially expose Russia to systematic destruction, leaving them increasingly vulnerable.
The most significant Ukrainian strike targeted the Ryazan oil refinery, one of Russia’s top five largest refining facilities, processing 17,000,000 tons of crude oil annually, and a vital component of Russia’s military logistics and economy, supplying fuel essential for civilian and military operations. The drone attack triggered massive fires, forcing a shutdown of operations, and severely disrupting fuel supplies.
Achieving such deep strikes required neutralizing Russian air defense networks, which Ukraine executed with remarkable effectiveness. Since destroying well-protected air defense systems in the deep rear is more difficult, Ukrainian forces focused instead on destroying those deployed closer to the front.
In a single day, Ukrainian forces destroyed a staggering number of Russian air defense systems: 2 Pantsir-S1s, 2 S-300 systems, 1 OSA system, and 1 BUK-M1 system.
In the following days, Ukrainians destroyed 1 S-400 system in Kursk, and several BUK-M3 and TOR-M2 systems in the Belgorod region. Then, Ukrainians targeted an electronic warfare system in the Kherson region, and 1 radar, 1 TOR-M2, and 1 BUK-M3 system through FPV drone strikes in the Zaporizhia region.
Ukrainian special operations forces were also able to destroy 2 additional Russian BUK-M2 air defense systems, together with their crews, repairmen, and accompanying service vehicles.
Ukrainians accomplished this through the work of resistance groups, like Atesh, operating behind enemy lines, providing real-time intelligence on Russian defenses. They relay precise coordinates for strikes and document results, ensuring no Russian system is truly safe.
Such losses forced Russian commanders to make difficult choices: either leave frontline troops exposed to Ukrainian strikes or pull more systems from the rear, exposing strategic sites deep inside Russia, as each destroyed system further weakens Russia’s ability to intercept Ukrainian drones and missiles, compounding the effectiveness of long-range strikes.
Ukraine has leveraged these gaps in the Russian air defense network to launch additional drone and missile strikes against key Russian civilian and military infrastructure, striking the command posts of the Russian 29th and 2nd Combined Armed Armies in Donetsk, undermining Russian command and control structure in their offensive operations here.
Ukraine then continued its strikes on Russian rear assets, including another devastating strike on the Ryazan refinery to finish the job after the last strike. As this ensured the facility would suffer prolonged damage, this tactic of waiting for Russian emergency response teams to contain the fires, before launching another wave of drones, maximized the destruction.
Ukrainians also launched another secondary strike on the Kremniy microelectronics plant in Bryansk, days after the initial attack. This crippled one of Russia’s key military electronics manufacturers, which supplies critical components for S-300, S-400, and Iskander missile systems.
Next, a drone strike on an oil depot in Voronezh ignited fires that burned for days, only for a secondary strike to cause further destruction.
The Smolensk aviation plant, responsible for producing and upgrading Russian combat aircraft, was also successfully hit by Ukrainian drones, significantly disrupting operations.
Another strike targeted a key storage facility in Orel, where Russia stockpiles Shahed drones used daily against Ukrainian civilians. Over 200 enemy drones were reportedly destroyed, dealing a major blow to Russia’s strategic striking capabilities.
The last strike occurred in Kazan, where overnight, Ukrainian drones hit a military airfield, an aviation college, and an aircraft plant, where Tu-160 and Tu-22 strategic bombers are produced and repaired.
Overall, Ukraine’s strike campaign is carefully designed to force Russia into an impossible choice. Russia must either prioritize defending its strategic rear infrastructure, such as oil refineries, microelectronics plants, and defense industry facilities, leaving frontline troops vulnerable, or focus on protecting military assets inside Ukraine, exposing vital economic and military infrastructure deep inside Russia to devastating strikes.
By systematically degrading Russian air defenses Ukraine has reduced Russia’s ability to protect both fronts simultaneously putting them in front of a dreadful dilemma which leaves key strategic targets more vulnerable to Ukrainian drone and missile attacks.
this thread has 11,000 posts and not one Ukrainiac has explained to the American taxpayers why they should hate Russia, as currently constructed.
This is insane! Zelensky has gone mad!
Zelensky’s body snatchers are now conducting raids in villages at night, kidnapping every man they see walking on the streets.
The poor man seen in this video tried to escape but was caught, beaten unconscious, dragged into a van, and most… pic.twitter.com/HhwcL7zcHq— Gabe (@GabeZZOZZ) January 31, 2025
‼️ Biden Administration Attempted to End Putin Once and For All — Tucker Carlson
▪️ In an interview with journalist Matt Taibbi, Carlson claimed that the extremists in Biden’s circle were willing to take any steps to escalate the conflict between the U.S. and Russia.
▪️ He… pic.twitter.com/FOG9WBLefq— Zlatti71 (@Zlatti_71) January 28, 2025
The non-existent Nork troops have been retired. Whether they receive non-existent pensions from the Russian state is an open question. Future historians will use this as an example of how desperate the propaganda became under the late-liberal regime. 🇰🇵👻 pic.twitter.com/xlQHEJFodM— Philip Pilkington (@philippilk) January 31, 2025
Journalist Nick Shirley traveled to Kyiv, Ukraine and asked Ukraine citizens where they think the money is going when the United States sends aid
They say that 100% Ukraine government officials are stealing money into their personal accounts, “because it's a lot corruption here” pic.twitter.com/F7bVCmxgtq— Wall Street Apes (@WallStreetApes) September 26, 2024
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