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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
25 m

RA was never god. He was a warning.
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RA was never god. He was a warning.

RA was never god. He was a warning.
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Salty Cracker Feed
Salty Cracker Feed
26 m

Woman Caught Stealing During a Job Interview
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saltmustflow.com

Woman Caught Stealing During a Job Interview

The post Woman Caught Stealing During a Job Interview appeared first on SALTY.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
27 m

Solemn Salute: Trump attends dignified transfer of fallen US soldiers and interpreter
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Solemn Salute: Trump attends dignified transfer of fallen US soldiers and interpreter

Follow NewsClips channel at Brighteon.com for more updatesSubscribe to Brighteon newsletter to get the latest news and more featured videos: https://support.brighteon.com/Subscribe.html
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
27 m

Europe’s Three Lies About Ukraine
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www.theamericanconservative.com

Europe’s Three Lies About Ukraine

Foreign Affairs Europe’s Three Lies About Ukraine The European bloc’s reasons to keep the war grinding are unsound at best. (Photo by Danylo Antoniuk/Ukrinform/NurPhoto via Getty Images) As the negotiations for a diplomatic settlement to end the war in Ukraine gain momentum, European leaders insist on slowing them down by repeating three lies. These are, essentially, the same lies they have been telling since the war began.  The first is that the Ukrainian armed forces have not lost the war, the situation on the battlefield is not so desperate as the Russians are telling Trump, and there is no necessity for Ukraine to cede territory. The second is that there is still an open NATO door for Ukraine, and Europe is committed to the irreversible path to Ukrainian membership. And the third is that the Ukraine war is Europe’s war; Ukraine is the line that must be held because, if the U.S. forces Ukraine to capitulate, the dam will break, and the Russian army will pour into Europe and NATO will be next. None of these claims is grounded in reality or the recent historical record. Each of them is a lie designed to maintain support for Ukraine and keep the war going. But not one of the lies will change the reality that each day it is told, dozens, and perhaps hundreds, of Ukrainians die. The war has taken a decisive and irreversible turn. The situation on the battlefield is every bit as desperate as the Russians are telling Trump. The public continues to be told that the fall of Pokrovsk will not lead to the collapse of the Ukrainian defenses, and its significance is only in how Russia will use it to shape Trump’s perception. It has also been claimed that, since Russia has only taken 1 percent more of Ukraine since the end of 2022, the struggling Russian army at the current pace will take at least another year to conquer the remainder of Donbas. At that pace, the argument goes, there is no rush for Ukraine to concede unconquered territory.  This message is deceptive. The method of measuring Russian advances and rate of capture ignores Russia’s strategy. Russia has not pursued rapid advance, but rather attrition that devours Ukrainian weapons and troops until the line is stretched so thin and weak that it collapses under unrelenting Russian pressure. That time seems to be nigh. Lacking sufficient troops, plagued by multiplying desertions, Ukraine is facing the real risk of collapse and a more rapid Russian advance. As the Ukrainian armed forces scramble to redeploy troops to knit together the porous Donetsk line, it creates holes in other fronts, allowing the Russian armed forces to make rapid advances in other regions like Zaporizhzhia, where Russia quickly captured 75 square miles in November. And even the slow, grinding advance argument is no longer scoring big points. Citing Ukrainian sources with ties to the military, the New York Times concedes that the “incremental moves have started to add up.” They report that the Russian armed forces doubled their pace, capturing 200 square miles of territory in November, compared to 100 square miles in October. In 2025, Russia has gained territory 80 percent faster than in 2024. The pace is quickening. Prolonging the war, even if it leads to an increase in financial and military support for Ukraine, will not turn the tide in Ukraine’s favor. It will only cost Ukraine more land and more lives. The European deception will not stop Ukraine from ceding territory: it will only increase the cost in lives of that concession. The second lie is that the war must be fought for the principle—a principle that was never true—that NATO has an open-door policy, and any country has the right to determine its own choice of allies and enter that door. Europe continues to insist that Ukraine must have an irreversible path to NATO membership. But the irreversible path was never a promise. Ukraine realized that at the start of the war; it has been confirmed in its realization by the U.S. and Europe’s calibrated refusal to become directly militarily involved with Russia, and the insistence of both the Biden and Trump administrations that World War III was not to be fought over Ukraine. Ukraine has also known since the start that Russia went to war for the primary purpose of barring the NATO door to Ukraine. “As far as I remember, they started the war because of this,” Zelensky said in his first interview after the Russian invasion. Nearly four years later, Ukraine realizes that Russia is not going to surrender this demand. On December 14, Zelensky said that he is prepared to surrender Ukraine’s demand for NATO membership in exchange for NATO “Article 5–like” security guarantees from the U.S. and Europe.  Any hope that the Trump administration might pressure Russia to give up that demand died with the policy priority of “ending the perception, and preventing the reality, of NATO as a perpetually expanding alliance” expressed in the recently released 2025 National Security Strategy of the United States of America. The third lie was most recently restated by NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on December 11, when he said that “we need to be crystal clear about the threat. We are Russia’s next target, and we are already in harm’s way.” Rutte’s warning that, after Ukraine, Russia would march through Europe in a war with NATO is just the latest reiteration of the constantly repeated warning that “If Putin takes Ukraine, he won’t stop there,” that he will march through Europe and “reconstitute the Soviet empire”—despite the inconvenient fact that the U.S. does “not have indicators or warnings right now that a Russian war is imminent on NATO territory.” The Washington Post reports, “Rarely a week goes by now without a European government, military or security chief making a grim speech warning the public that they are headed toward a potential war with Russia.” Germany’s Chancellor Friedrich Merz compared Putin to Hitler: “If Ukraine falls, he won’t stop. Just like the Sudetenland wasn’t enough in 1938.” There is absolutely nothing in the historical record to suggest that Putin is bent on going to war with NATO, conquering Europe, or acquiring territory beyond the goals of the war with Ukraine. Putin has insisted since the beginning that the war in Ukraine is not about territory but about the root causes and “principles underlying the new international order,” namely, NATO expansion, Ukrainian neutrality and protection of the ethnic Russian citizens of Ukraine. The historical record suggests the opposite, namely that Putin went to war to avoid war with NATO. Three weeks before the invasion, Putin said, “Suppose Ukraine is a NATO member…. Suppose it starts operations in Crimea, not to mention Donbass for now…. What are we supposed to do? Fight against the NATO bloc? Has anyone given at least some thought to this? Apparently not.” Just three days before the invasion, Putin expressed the same need to avoid war with NATO: “The reality we live in” is that if Ukraine is “accepted into…NATO, the threat against our country will increase because of Article 5” since “there is a real threat that they will try to take back the territory they believe is theirs using military force. And they do say this in their documents, obviously. Then the entire North Atlantic Alliance will have to get involved.” The historical record suggests that Putin decided to invade Ukraine in large part out of concern that a NATO-member Ukraine might attack Donbas or Crimea and draw Russia into a war with the alliance. If Putin went to war in Ukraine to prevent a war with NATO, then it makes little sense that he would use the war in Ukraine as a means for starting a war with NATO. These lies are intended to continue the war in Ukraine in order to attain more leverage for Ukraine at the negotiating table and to further Europe’s own goals, neither of which will be achieved. The only achievement of the lies will be to kill more Ukrainians in pursuit of impossible goals. Ukraine cannot win the war; they will be forced to concede territory; they will not join NATO; Europe will not face Russian tanks. It is time for Europe to drop the lies, align with reality, encourage and assist the negotiations and, at last, bring peace to the continent. The post Europe’s Three Lies About Ukraine appeared first on The American Conservative.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
27 m

Norman Podhoretz, Friend and Foe
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Norman Podhoretz, Friend and Foe

It is possible to admire Norman Podhoretz, who died on Tuesday, as a beacon of eloquently expressed, relentlessly honest moral clarity. Or to loathe his influence as a prime feeder of self-destructive militaristic hubris, an intellectual spawn of unnecessary killing. I have, in different decades, done both. But both views flow from the same departure point: Norman’s influence as an essayist made him one of the most consequential American intellectuals of the second half of the 20th century. When joined to his editorship of Commentary from 1960 to 1995, in pre-internet days when a serious magazine could still be enormously consequential, he had a fair claim to be considered the most important of all. In his important memoir Breaking Ranks, published in the late ’70s to explain his and Commentary’s shift from a liberal and slightly proto-New Left countercultural stance in the early ’60s to waging a full-blown intellectual war against the New Left and more or less founding neoconservatism, Podhoretz touts his radical temptations of the early ’60s. No doubt they existed, but if you were enough of a Podhoretz fan to go back and read some his 1950s essays and reviews (written in his 20s), you will find a shockingly grown up and conservative young man, eager to get on quickly with a professional career and fatherhood, with an atypical (for intellectuals) scorn for beatniks, and much readiness to accept that the America of the 1950s was essentially and deeply good. Before his rightward shift actually happened, he published in 1963 “My Negro Problem—and Ours,” which, under liberal guise of condemning his own racism, sought to understand it. If you grew up around blacks, as Podhoretz did in Brooklyn in the 1930s and ’40s, it was natural enough to admire their swagger and fear their violence. Published in a time when all good-thinking Americans, except for Southern racists, understood that only segregation laws and white racism stood in the way of successful racial integration, Podhoretz was the first and more or less only Northern intellectual voice to say that it was more complicated than that.   By the late 1960s, Commentary was in full revolt against every aspect of the New Left and the counterculture, which was ascendant and often powerful in most of the country’s old-line intellectual and media institutions. Coming from the milieu of Jewish intellectuals in New York, then universally understood as liberal, Commentary was a shooting star, a running back reversing field and scoring against an entire defense going in the other direction. Over time it brought many with it, liberals who felt uncomfortable with the “excesses”  of the ’60s but didn’t have the vocabulary or a sense of their like-minded allies to express it—liberals who would never before have imagined thinking of themselves as conservative, liberals who realized that the only way to protect the rights and liberties of traditional liberalism was to become conservative.  Norman and Commentary were seriously anticommunist, even as the ’60s had faded. It’s possible that communism was already a dying star by the time Ronald Reagan came to power; but, if so, it was anything but obvious at the time. And Norman and his allies at Commentary and elsewhere were able—at a time after the United States had been defeated in Vietnam—to raise high a banner proclaiming that communism was an evil system and opposing it was a moral and necessary calling. They resurrected the term “the Free World,” which had fallen into derision after overuse to justify the war in Vietnam, and helped a younger generation of Americans recognize it still had meaning. It is doubtful that without Commentary, Ronald Reagan could have acquired enough intellectual support to win.  Many have written about the conservative crack-up over immigration and the resurrection of the America First voices after the collapse of communism. By the late 1990s, I was no longer publishing in Commentary; by 2002, Norman considered me a political foe and told me so when I was seated at his table at a dinner party. As with so much of his writing, certain arresting phrases stand out and stick in the mind; shortly after 9/11, he wrote for the Wall Street Journal arguing how the United States could now go through the Middle East and topple governments “willy-nilly”—perfectly encapsulating the madness of “democracy expanding” neoconservatism regnant in George W. Bush’s first term. As a retired editor at that point, Norman was an avid cheerleader for “World War IV,” as he called it, but unlike in the creation of neoconservativism, he did not play a decisive role. He had wielded influence by forceful writing and argumentation; the neoconservative successor generation, less talented but often comfortably immersed in government, could use more subtle measures to get the state to do what they wanted.   He was of course a great friend of Israel, where one of his daughters lives. I think that affection is at the root of his enthusiasm for overreaches regarding American policies in the Mideast. It is an understandable affection, particularly for a Jew who grew up in the last century, but really for anyone capable of observing Israel’s accomplishments; Norman told me that he took his affection for Israel very seriously (in the same conversation where he told me I was a foe). As always, one remembers decades later arresting Podhoretz phrases; during one of his attacks on Yitzhak Rabin for seeking to make peace with Yasser Arafat’s PLO, he wrote that if Israel gave the Palestinians full control over the West Bank, it would inevitably have to invade it all over again after the Palestinians used it as a base to launch attacks. I deplored the essay, but it’s less than obvious that this conclusion is mistaken. Norman Podhoretz was a towering figure in American life in the last half of the 20th century. History would have been different without him. Despite our differences, I am deeply honored to have known him. The post Norman Podhoretz, Friend and Foe appeared first on The American Conservative.
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
29 m

The album Janis Ian thought was perfect: “There wasn’t a bad song on it”
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faroutmagazine.co.uk

The album Janis Ian thought was perfect: “There wasn’t a bad song on it”

A masterpiece. The post The album Janis Ian thought was perfect: “There wasn’t a bad song on it” first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
30 m

HHS Should Advance Medicine, Not Expand the Deaths of the Unborn
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townhall.com

HHS Should Advance Medicine, Not Expand the Deaths of the Unborn

HHS Should Advance Medicine, Not Expand the Deaths of the Unborn
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
30 m

Put Dems on the Spot With Small but Popular Affordability Hacks
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townhall.com

Put Dems on the Spot With Small but Popular Affordability Hacks

Put Dems on the Spot With Small but Popular Affordability Hacks
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
30 m

‘Mamdani-Marts’ Won’t Give New Yorkers a Free Lunch
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townhall.com

‘Mamdani-Marts’ Won’t Give New Yorkers a Free Lunch

‘Mamdani-Marts’ Won’t Give New Yorkers a Free Lunch
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
30 m

The One and the Many
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townhall.com

The One and the Many

The One and the Many
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