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Darkman Fanpage
Jul 4, 2012
wait when did iran steal the eiffel tower... not complaining just finding it interesting.

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i say swears online
Mar 4, 2005


hahahahahaha

A Big Fuckin Hornet
Nov 1, 2016

by Nyc_Tattoo

lmao

420 Gank Mid
Dec 26, 2008

WARNING: This poster is a huge bitch!


:vince:

OhFunny
Jun 26, 2013

EXTREMELY PISSED AT THE DNC

Rumor has it that the one who can claim Gaddifi's golden gun, cap, and sunglasses will be a knowledged as Libya's true leader.

Spergin Morlock
Aug 8, 2009

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rWRnv45L5ig

Addamere
Jan 3, 2010

by Jeffrey of YOSPOS
La protesta valiente brota desde la boca de un fusil.

Fizzil
Aug 24, 2005

There are five fucks at the edge of a cliff...



Im the guy smoking the pipe before being executed by the shahs execution squad

Only registered members can see post attachments!

Ardennes
May 12, 2002
Granted, it seemed Trotskyism itself was used as a way to in a way to remain a leftist while opposing the Soviet Union. This niche was then largely filled by Maoism or Eurocommunism, until everyone become a liberal/neo-con by the 80s.

The irony is the split happened to over the NEP in the first place, which honestly was justifiably necessary at least for a couple years. Looking over what he was writing, I don’t think Trotsky really had s firm idea of what to do about trade and he went back and forth on collectivization, which wasn’t going to work without tractors.

Kurtofan
Feb 16, 2011

hon hon hon

Darkman Fanpage posted:

wait when did iran steal the eiffel tower... not complaining just finding it interesting.

khomeini was living in France during his exile

Kurtofan
Feb 16, 2011

hon hon hon
like in some bumfuck rural french village in the middle of nowhere

Kurtofan
Feb 16, 2011

hon hon hon
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neauphle-le-Ch%C3%A2teau

apparently he had a good time there, the street where the french embassy is in iran has been renamed after the village

cool dance moves
Aug 27, 2018



This is like if Ben Garrison was Iranian

Which is to say, it owns

Sheng-Ji Yang
Mar 5, 2014


cool dance moves posted:

This is like if Ben Garrison was Iranian

Which is to say, it owns

wheres hillarys shoe??

Darkman Fanpage
Jul 4, 2012

Kurtofan posted:

khomeini was living in France during his exile

ah i knew that i thought he might have stolen the tower too...

Kurtofan
Feb 16, 2011

hon hon hon

Darkman Fanpage posted:

ah i knew that i thought he might have stolen the tower too...

yeah he did we've been using a fake one since then, please dont tell people

Darkman Fanpage
Jul 4, 2012
you should ask iran nicely and maybe offer to help fight america when the time comes. im sure they'll give it back then.

comedyblissoption
Mar 15, 2006

https://twitter.com/EmpireFiles/status/1155631562571935744

Nothus
Feb 22, 2001

Buglord
https://twitter.com/nytimes/status/1157335794740269056?s=19

I wonder what this is in preparation for.

Pener Kropoopkin
Jan 30, 2013

by Jeffrey of YOSPOS

(and can't post for 21 days!)

Neom Genesis Evangelion

Addamere
Jan 3, 2010

by Jeffrey of YOSPOS
gonna own in like 20 years when every tinpot dictatorship has more freedom and social welfare than the united states but we still claim to be the best country ever

Aziz of Arabia
Jul 19, 2019

by R. Guyovich

Addamere posted:

gonna own in like 20 years when every tinpot dictatorship has more freedom and social welfare than the united states but we still claim to be the best country ever

Has the US bone sawed any journalists in an embassy on foreign soil yet?

e: meant to type "bone seen*"

Aziz of Arabia has issued a correction as of 23:45 on Aug 2, 2019

Addamere
Jan 3, 2010

by Jeffrey of YOSPOS

Aziz of Arabia posted:

Has the US bone sawed any journalists in an embassy on foreign soil yet?

we outsource that kind of thing

steinrokkan
Apr 2, 2011



Soiled Meat

Aziz of Arabia posted:

Has the US bone sawed any journalists in an embassy on foreign soil yet?

e: meant to type "bone seen*"

Let's not pretend that Kashogi was anywhere near to being the greatest crime of the Saudis. It was barely a blip on their bloodstained legacy. And even if the US did the same thing, it would also be barely a blip on the radar, given we are talking about a country where the police has systematically hunted down and murdered BLM leaders in staged car fires while supported by the judiciary, etc.

Plutonis
Mar 25, 2011

The US embassies in Latin America had torture schools during the cold war for the locals to learn how to best electrocute someone's balls

420 Gank Mid
Dec 26, 2008

WARNING: This poster is a huge bitch!

Plutonis posted:

The US embassies in Latin America had torture schools during the cold war for the locals to learn how to best electrocute someone's balls

I think you mean "US Embassies provided adult learning courses available in a plethora of marketable skills"

Addamere
Jan 3, 2010

by Jeffrey of YOSPOS

Plutonis posted:

The US embassies in Latin America had torture schools during the cold war for the locals to learn how to best electrocute someone's balls

Had?

Azathoth
Apr 3, 2001


Gotta fly to Langley for that now. They brought in some efficiency expert back in the 90s and now it's all centralized. They keep talking about video conferences and webinars, but there wasn't money for it in the budget. loving bureaucrats.

Addamere
Jan 3, 2010

by Jeffrey of YOSPOS

Azathoth posted:

Gotta fly to Langley for that now. They brought in some efficiency expert back in the 90s and now it's all centralized. They keep talking about video conferences and webinars, but there wasn't money for it in the budget. loving bureaucrats.

Wonder what they're using the space in the embassies for now.

Azathoth
Apr 3, 2001

Addamere posted:

Wonder what they're using the space in the embassies for now.

UFO maintenance, fentanyl storage, some cryptocurrency mining. Usual stuff.

comedyblissoption
Mar 15, 2006

https://twitter.com/NegarMortazavi/status/1157430437989556224

BrutalistMcDonalds
Oct 4, 2012


Lipstick Apathy
reminds me of something said on RWN how the yazidis underwent a kind of social revolution as a result of the genocide. they have female fighters now, for one, although the yazidis have historically been conservative (in a "let's keep our heads down" kind of way)

https://twitter.com/RISEUP4R0JAVA/status/1157563793863577607

Darkman Fanpage
Jul 4, 2012
yeah that interview with the photographer was very interesting and provided a lot of on the ground perspective to things in kurdistan.

Atrocious Joe
Sep 2, 2011

Surprisingly good article from the AP about how US sanctions on Syria are making life incredibly tough in government controlled areas.
https://abcnews.go.com/Lifestyle/wireStory/western-sanctions-push-war-weary-syrians-deeper-poverty-64727064

quote:

Mohammed Haji Abed drives his yellow taxi through the busy streets of the Syrian capital for about 12 hours a day, toiling in the sweltering summer heat but earning barely enough for his family of five to get by.

It was easier for him to make ends meet at the height of his country's civil war, when rebels regularly lobbed mortars into Damascus from their strongholds on the outskirts of the city.

In the past year, as the Trump administration tightened sanctions on Syria and re-imposed sanctions on its chief regional ally, Iran, living conditions have become steadily worse, compounding the daily struggles of a worn-out population that has lived through eight years of conflict.

"The economic sanctions are affecting the whole country," said Haji Abed, sitting behind the wheel of his car in an eastern Damascus neighborhood that until last year was a front-line with insurgents. "People can't take any more," added the gray-haired man in his late 50s.

Sanctions by the U.S., European Union and some Arab countries have been in place since 2011, after President Bashar Assad's security apparatus cracked down on protests against his rule. The sanctions targeted the oil industry, money transfers and a number of institutions and officials, including Assad.

The Trump administration has hiked up the punishment, particularly by moving to stop oil exports by Iran — including its shipments to its ally Syria. In November, the U.S. Treasury Department added a network of Russian and Iranian companies to its blacklist for shipping oil to Syria and warned of "significant risks" for sanctions violators. In early July, a supertanker likely carrying around 2 million barrels of Iranian crude was detained in Gibraltar on suspicion of violating EU sanctions against oil shipments to Syria.

The results have hit hard on a population traumatized by a civil war that has killed nearly half a million people and displaced half the population over the past eight years.

Once an oil exporter, Syria now relies on imports, and higher fuel costs caused by the sanctions have pushed up prices in nearly every sector. The currency lost a third of its value in 2019 alone, and now stands at 600 Syrian pounds to the dollar, compared to 47 at the onset of the conflict. Eight out of 10 Syrians live below the poverty line, making less than $100 a month, according to the U.N.

Haji Abed says he makes 12,000 pounds ($20) a day, but after paying for fuel he is left with only about $5 a day. His rent is $35 a month. What's left after that is barely enough for food and other expenses, he said.

He used to be able to buy unlimited subsidized fuel. But since the new U.S. sanctions, the government set a monthly cap — private car owners can buy 100 liters a month, taxi drivers 350 liters. Those who want more must pay the market price, which is double.

The government says Syria's losses from sanctions are in the billions of dollars.

The ban on money transfers and other measures have particularly hurt medicine and pharmaceutical industries, a stinging loss for a country that once produced 90% of what its people needed. Syria now relies on imports of vaccines, medicines for cancer, blood derivatives and dialysis supplies.

This triggers sporadic shortages. "Three months ago, there was no baby formula available," said a pharmacist, Samir Aftimos. "People with children ran from one pharmacy to another to search for it." The crunch was relieved when Iran sent supplies.

Because of shipping restrictions, most medicine imports must be brought by land from Lebanon, increasing costs, Assistant Health Minister Habib Abboud told The Associated Press. Companies have a hard time collecting or making payments abroad and several foreign medical companies that used to work in Syria are canceling their licenses, Abboud said. Syria is looking to firms in Russia, China, Iran and India to step in.

Around 25 of Syria's 70 medicine factories were destroyed or badly damaged during the conflict, Abboud said. He said many have been repaired as government forces regained large parts of Syria over the past three years. That has brought production nearly back up to pre-war levels, according to the Health Ministry.

One of the largest Syrian companies affected by the war is The Arabian Medical Co., or Thameco, whose factory in the eastern Damascus suburbs of Mleiha was taken by insurgents and heavily damaged during the war. The state-owned company now works out of a Damascus building that used to be a storage space, where dozens of employees produce painkillers, antibiotics and other medicines.

But it is difficult to obtain raw materials and spare parts, said Thameco's general manager, Fidaa Ali. "Most foreign companies complied with the conspiracy of the economic sanctions and the imposed embargo on Syria," he said.

EU and U.S. sanctions also target hundreds of entities and individuals, many of them businessmen close to Assad's leadership. Washington adds names to the list each year. The most recent, added in June, was businessman Samer Foz and his family, and their Aman Holding company. Washington accused Foz of making a fortune by developing lands confiscated from Syrians who fled the country.

Fares Shehabi, a lawmaker and prominent industrialist, calls EU sanctions on him "unfair" and says they have cost him millions of dollars.

"No one can claim not to have been affected by the sanctions. It is not only the people who are under sanctions like myself," said Shehabi, who is based in Aleppo, Syria's largest city and once its commercial center.

Tayseer Darkalt, who owns a factory in Aleppo producing machines that make potato chips, says that because of sanctions he can't import or export products or spare parts. With no money transfers, he travels abroad to collect payments in cash, but that adds airplane and hotel costs. And he's wary of carrying a lot of cash.

"The sanctions are harming normal citizens. They are not punishing the government. They are punishing us."

Helsing
Aug 23, 2003

DON'T POST IN THE ELECTION THREAD UNLESS YOU :love::love::love: JOE BIDEN

Ardennes posted:

Granted, it seemed Trotskyism itself was used as a way to in a way to remain a leftist while opposing the Soviet Union. This niche was then largely filled by Maoism or Eurocommunism, until everyone become a liberal/neo-con by the 80s.

The irony is the split happened to over the NEP in the first place, which honestly was justifiably necessary at least for a couple years. Looking over what he was writing, I don’t think Trotsky really had s firm idea of what to do about trade and he went back and forth on collectivization, which wasn’t going to work without tractors.

The most largest and most active group of Trots I have interacted with (lol) officially believe that the failure of the revolution to successfully spread beyond Russia made Stalinism more or less inevitable. This seems like either a tacit admission that Stalin was right or a tacit admission that the critics of Bolshevism were right but they weren't losing any sleep over it.

Goon Danton
May 24, 2012

Don't forget to show my shitposts to the people. They're well worth seeing.

My understanding was they felt any revolution that isn't global is doomed to failure, yeah. Not so much an admission that the anti-Bolsheviks were right so much as saying the Bolsheviks were right to try but ultimately didn't really win.

RealityWarCriminal
Aug 10, 2016

:o:
Sanctions [Huh!]
What is it good for

THS
Sep 15, 2017

BrutalistMcDonalds posted:

reminds me of something said on RWN how the yazidis underwent a kind of social revolution as a result of the genocide. they have female fighters now, for one, although the yazidis have historically been conservative (in a "let's keep our heads down" kind of way)

https://twitter.com/RISEUP4R0JAVA/status/1157563793863577607

hell yeah

praise malek taus

Smirking_Serpent
Aug 27, 2009

https://pagesix.com/2019/08/05/whats-going-on-between-lindsay-lohan-and-the-crown-prince-of-saudi-arabia/

please

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Addamere
Jan 3, 2010

by Jeffrey of YOSPOS

idk

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