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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
5 w

Election Integrity Showdown: Senate Republicans Under Fire Over SAVE America Act & DHS Funding
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Election Integrity Showdown: Senate Republicans Under Fire Over SAVE America Act & DHS Funding

Election Integrity Showdown: Senate Republicans Under Fire Over SAVE America Act & DHS FundingFollow 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
5 w

“TAKE BACK YOUR COUNTRY” — President Trump Calls on Iranian Patriots
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“TAKE BACK YOUR COUNTRY” — President Trump Calls on Iranian Patriots

“TAKE BACK YOUR COUNTRY” — President Trump Calls on Iranian PatriotsFollow 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
5 w

Iran War Enters Fourth Day
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Iran War Enters Fourth Day

The war with Iran, which began on Friday night when the U.S. and Israel launched joint strikes against Tehran, entered its fourth day Tuesday, with CENTCOM reporting at least six U.S. servicemen killed. Reports suggest that number is an undercount. The Iranian Red Crescent Society reported that the death toll in Iran is already at least 787 people.  Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Monday night confirmed what the New York Times had reported earlier in the day, that the U.S. made the decision to bomb Iran to support a war that Israel had decided to launch. “We knew that there was going to be an Israeli action” against Iran, Rubio told reporters on Capitol Hill, adding that “we knew that that would precipitate an attack against American forces” from Iran.  The State Department urged Americans in 14 different countries in the region to immediately evacuate due to safety risks. The U.S. Embassy in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday morning warned of an “imminent” attack on the Saudi city of Dhahran, the site of Saudi Aramco headquarters.  “Do not come to the U.S. Consulate [in Dhahrab],” the embassy announced. “Take cover immediately in your residence on the lowest available floor and away from windows.” The United States is weighing the possible relocation of air defense assets, including THAAD and Patriot batteries stationed with U.S. Forces Korea, to the Middle East if operations against Iran extend beyond the four- to five-week timeline projected by President Donald Trump. In a Monday evening post on Truth Social, Trump claimed the United States’ medium and upper-tier munitions stockpiles are at historic highs and sufficient to sustain prolonged conflict.  “Wars can be fought ‘forever,’ and very successfully,” he wrote, while acknowledging that top-end weapons inventories are “not where we want to be.”  Israel sent ground troops into southern Lebanon on Tuesday morning and told residents of more than 80 villages to evacuate. According to a senior Israeli official cited by Fox News, Israeli forces struck a meeting of Iran’s Supreme Council as members gathered to select a successor to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. During a visit to a site struck by an Iranian missile on Monday evening, Israel’s Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu invoked Amalek to rally IDF soldiers for war. “We read in this week’s Torah portion, ‘Remember what Amalek did to you.’ We remember—and we act.” Global stock markets spiraled on Tuesday morning while the price of oil surged. The price of gasoline increased 11 cents overnight, AARP says. The Strait of Hormuz, an important shipping route for oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) is currently shut down. The EU has asked Ukraine to allow an inspection of its Druzhba pipeline with Russia, seeking to renew European access to Russian oil. The post Iran War Enters Fourth Day appeared first on The American Conservative.
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5 w

After Iran, It’s Turkey
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After Iran, It’s Turkey

Foreign Affairs After Iran, It’s Turkey The final hegemonic war in the Middle East is coming, and preparations are being made to drag America into it. (Photo by ADEM ALTAN/AFP via Getty Images) One puzzle historians have to grapple with is the causality of the Second World War and the timing of British involvement. Britain had far stronger commitments to Denmark in 1864, or Belgium in 1914, than it had with Poland in 1939. Czechoslovakia was a liberal democratic power, much closely aligned with Britain, than a reactionary Catholic Poland with increasing ethnic enmity with both Germany and Russia. Yet it wasn’t the collapse of Prague that prompted Britain to join the war, but the attack on Poland. Realist theories of course explain this paradox. After Poland, there was only one balancer state left in the continent, France. Defending France was therefore paramount to British interests. Similar logic predicated in America’s involvement, as the collapse of the British empire would have meant Nazi Germany controlling Canada, an unthinkable proposition for Washington (which was, by the way, prompted to take control of Greenland even before an official entry to the war).  One would assume that the grand strategists in Ankara are well versed with the same logic of balance of power, and are reading the tea leaves. Turkey is the next big threat for Israel, as the former Israeli prime minister Naftali Bennett said recently in a conference, arguing that Israel should not “turn a blind eye” and must act simultaneously against threats from both Tehran and Ankara.  “Turkey is no longer a partner on the periphery. It is positioning itself as a central power, one that views the weakening of Iran not as a shared strategic gain but as an opportunity to expand its own influence,” the former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant wrote in his blog. “Ankara now provides critical backing to Syria’s transitional government and is positioning itself as the country’s primary external power broker. Its forces control territory in northern Syria and its influence extends into the Damascus area, just tens of kilometers from Israel’s border.”  Certain think-tankers are already prepping the ground with tweets in Turkish asking whether Ankara in 2036 will be like Tehran in 2026. At the time of writing Greek warships were heading to Cyprus after Cyprus was targeted with Iranian drones. Given the recent military alignment among the Greeks, Israelis, and Greek Cypriots, this naval buildup will be noted by Turkey.  The probability of further escalation between the United States and Iran remains significant, and it is obviously Iran’s most logical play to spread the war and drag this conflict out. It will thereby enjoy a rally around the flag effect at home, push oil prices up abroad, and directly poke the antiwar appetite in Europe and the U.S. Historically, confrontations between the two states have involved carefully calibrated signaling, with Tehran responding to American pressure in ways designed to preserve deterrence while avoiding uncontrolled escalation. But the current confrontation appears more destabilizing because it is widely interpreted by Iranian elites as a campaign aimed at regime decapitation following strikes that reportedly killed the country’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei. When a regime perceives a threat as existential rather than coercive, incentives for restraint decline sharply, making maximal retaliation and prolonged conflict more likely.  Operationally, the United States retains sufficient air and naval capabilities to sustain a large punitive campaign, even if it lacks the political will or force posture for a major ground invasion. Early stages of the campaign, reported as striking more than thousands of Iranian targets, have relied primarily on air power, naval assets, and long-range strike systems intended to degrade missile, naval, and command infrastructure.  But punitive air campaigns face structural limitations. Without clearly defined war aims or termination criteria, they risk becoming open-ended bombardments that damage capabilities without fundamentally changing the strategic balance. The conflict has already produced the first confirmed American casualties, with six Americans killed and more seriously wounded during retaliatory Iranian attacks on regional bases. (The last thing Vice President J.D. Vance needs to defend as his legacy in 2028.) At the same time, the broader strategic risks may stem less from direct confrontation than from the consequences of weakening the Iranian state itself. A severely degraded or collapsing Iran could generate fragmentation dynamics comparable to those seen after the collapse of Libya in 2011, potentially unleashing proxy conflicts and ethnic or sectarian violence across neighboring states such as Lebanon, Iraq, and Pakistan. The paradox of the current strategy, therefore, is that even a militarily successful campaign could create a more unstable regional order than the one it seeks to transform.  Yet Iran is a small power bound by structural deficiencies. Iranian allies are Shiite, which means they don’t have the demographic advantage in the Middle East on their side. Iranian weakness is therefore not a cause of equilibrium, but of hegemonic competition between Israel and Turkey. Currently, around half a million Turkish troops are based in and around Iran and Northern Syria, an armored thrust away from Israel should Syria and Iraq once again collapse into civil war.  The war on Iran is an American war of choice. There were no immediate threats. The administration has given four different reasons, from historic terrorism, to regime change, to Iranian freedom, to nuclear weapons and ballistic missile tech. The real reason is perhaps the same as always. “In the briefing on Tuesday for the Gang of Eight, which consists of the leaders of the House, the Senate and each chamber’s intelligence committees, Secretary of State Marco Rubio indicated to lawmakers that the mission’s timing and goals were shaped by the fact that Israel was going to attack with or without the United States, according to a person familiar with the administration’s outreach to lawmakers,” the Washington Post reported.  Given the steady drift of the Israeli–Turkish rivalry, it is logical to therefore speculate not when but how we should soon see a coordinated effort in narrative manufacturing about how Turkish secularism is in jeopardy, how Recep Tayyip Erdogan is the gravest threat in the Middle East since Suleiman the Magnificent, and how “Western Civilization” informs us that Turkey is the real enemy. Given the situation in Syria and Cyprus, the real war will start over one catastrophic miscalculation. Ankara now finds itself in the same predicament that London was in, around 80 or so years back. The collapse of Iranian power is therefore not the end, but the beginning of a hegemonic spiral.  The post After Iran, It’s Turkey appeared first on The American Conservative.
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Clips and Trailers
Clips and Trailers
5 w ·Youtube Cool & Interesting

YouTube
To a New World of Gods and Monsters (Ernest Thesiger) | Bride of Frankenstein
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Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
5 w

7 Hit Songs You Didn’t Know Were Written by The Beatles’ Lennon and McCartney
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7 Hit Songs You Didn’t Know Were Written by The Beatles’ Lennon and McCartney

From David Bowie to Kanye West, these chart-topping tracks were actually penned by Beatles legends John Lennon and Paul McCartney.
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
5 w ·Youtube Prepping & Survival

YouTube
Top Credible Threats to U.S. from Iran: Operation Epic Fury
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
5 w ·Youtube Prepping & Survival

YouTube
Urgent: The Iran Strike Just Changed Everything
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
5 w

“I like that a lot”: The one band George Harrison said would live on forever
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faroutmagazine.co.uk

“I like that a lot”: The one band George Harrison said would live on forever

The best kind of rock and roll. The post “I like that a lot”: The one band George Harrison said would live on forever first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
5 w

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spectator.org

The Spectator P.M. Ep. 196: A Concerning Number of Truck Drivers Failed the English Test

The Trump administration is enforcing the English proficiency requirement for commercial drivers, of whom over 200,000 are immigrants. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration found that over 10,700 CDL drivers could not sufficiently read or speak the English language and were disqualified from holding their license. (RELATED: Keep On Truckin’ — If You Are Rightly Licensed)  The Spectator P.M. Podcast hosts Ellie Gardey Holmes and Lyrah Margo discuss the findings and talk about the importance of the English proficiency tests for these truckers. They discuss recent fatal incidents involving truckers who could not understand English, and how this standard should be common sense. Tune in to hear their discussion! Read Ellie and Lyrah’s writing here and here. Listen to the Spectator P.M. Podcast on Spotify. Watch the Spectator P.M. Podcast on Rumble.
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