xiaohongshu [none/use name]

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Joined 2 months ago
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Cake day: August 1st, 2024

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  • Israel is betting on Iran not wanting to be dragged into a regional war. The economic situation has’t been great for Iran with all the sanctions, it’s going to get even worse if a war is to happen (not to mention that many will be looking to flee the country if economic conditions continue to deteriorate). Most countries are not like Russia that can sustain itself and possess conditions that render it highly immune to Western sanctions (and even then, the impact is not insignificant).

    So you end up in a situation where everyone is dragging their feet because they don’t want to start a war. And this is precisely what allows the US and Israel to keep calling everyone’s bluff and getting away with it.

    Besides, everyone knows what the Zionists are capable of doing if they are truly on the brink of defeat. It is an ideology of ethnosupremacy with ethnic cleansing the Palestinians as their end goal, and the defeat of Israeli military would certainly mean the end of its ideology.

    What do you think the believers would do when they have come to realize that their ethnosupremacist ideology can no longer be allowed to exist, that their dream of an Israeli state without Palestinians would have to be abandoned? Blowing up the world with nukes becomes the only option left for them. It is a rational decision for the irrationals.


  • Trivia time:

    Hunter Biden met his business associate Devon Archer through Christopher Heinz, John Kerry’s stepson and heir to the food company.

    Archer and Heinz were friends in Yale and founded the private equity firm Rosemont Capital together.

    Archer, Heinz and Hunter Biden then founded Rosemont Seneca Partners together.

    Hunter Biden and Devon Archer would then go on to serve on the board of Burisma Holdings, a Ukrainian energy firm. Heinz reportedly ended his business relations with both because of this.

    In 2016, Vice President Joe Biden got the Ukrainian Prosecutor General Viktor Shokin dismissed by threatening to withhold a $1 billion dollar loan to Ukraine. Shokin had been the top prosecutor investigating the corruption case of Burisma Holdings.

    In 2019, Trump would get impeached by the Democrats for threatening to withhold a $400 million military aid to Zelensky unless he agreed to investigate the Bidens and their connections to Burisma.

    It’s crazy to think about the whole connection between the Heinz food company, the Democrats and the war in Ukraine.


  • I wasn’t going to respond, but let’s not throw around accusations here about “bait” and whatnot.

    That question was inspired by Trueanon’s latest episode that covered how RT was recently caught trying to fund American right wing grifters like Tim Pool and his likes in a most incompetent and hilarious manner.

    It wasn’t so much about how Russiagate made Trump win, but the fact that Russia is indeed trying (and failing) to influence the American political right. How hard is it to believe that some incompetent Russian intelligence officer named “Eduard Gregoriann” came up with some half baked plans that the Republicans fell hook, line and sinker for?

    I simply asked if Project 2025 (which I don’t take nowhere as seriously as libs as I don’t think it will ever be realistically implemented) somehow had a Russian connection given its naming conventions (something I picked up on reading Soviet military history), but that was enough to invite a whole load of angry comments from Russia defenders on Hexbear which I truly did not expect.









  • Slightly unrelated, does anyone knows why podcasts like this never bothered to release their transcripts?

    These episodes were scripted after all, so it’s not like they have to do extra work to get it down in written form. I’d even pay good money to purchase them but this has never been an option.

    As someone who much prefer reading than listening because it’s so easy to miss small details when your attention wanders off for just a few seconds, it’s kinda frustrating. The same with the Revolutions podcast - so much details are packed into every episode and it would have been so much better to just being able to read them.




  • Follow up to the IMF mission to Russia:

    IMF scraps its mission to Moscow, Russian media reports

    The IMF has indefinitely postponed its first official visit to Russia since President Vladimir Putin ordered the full-scale invasion of Ukraine following criticism from several of Kyiv’s European allies, according to Russian state media.

    The IMF’s leadership scrapped plans to begin a review of the Russian economy this week ahead of a trip to Moscow later this month because the mission was “technically not ready”, Alexsei Mozhin, the IMF’s executive director for Russia, told Tass news wire on Wednesday.

    Mozhin said the last-minute decision was taken on Monday, the day preliminary talks were supposed to start. He suggested the U-turn had been prompted by objections from European countries to the IMF’s renewal of its ties with Russia.

    In a letter seen by the Financial Times and signed by Poland, Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, and non-EU members Iceland and Norway, ministers spoke about the “reputational risk” to the IMF and implied that such a visit would “diminish donors’ efforts and actions in supporting Ukraine through IMF initiatives”.

    The visit “would be a sign for the international community that the IMF is ready to go back to business as usual, taking a step towards normalising relations with the aggressor”.

    The European libs have prevented the reconciliation between Washington and Moscow lol. What a twist.

    Once again the Russian libs get betrayed by their European “allies” who they love so much but that one-sided affection has never been reciprocated.


  • Do you seriously think that the consequences of Khrushchev’s reversal of Stalin’s policies would manifest immediately and not take years to culminate?

    Stalin had built a strong industrialized economy that was growing exponentially and on the rise by the 1950s. It would take 30 years after Khrushchev’s policies for the USSR economy to stagnate, and eventually fail.

    For example, when the USSR defaulted under Khrushchev in 1957, the seeds that would lead to “empty shelves under communism” stereotype had already been sown, as both industrial and agricultural production were brought to stagnation. Many policies under Stalin that made the USSR the most rapid growing economy in history were reversed en masse by Khrushchev.

    Reagan and Clinton’s financial deregulations culminated in the subprime mortgage crisis in 2007 and the global financial crisis in 2008 - 7 years after Clinton had stepped down as president.