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Agree or disagree with Daddy?

HHusky
HHusky Member Posts: 23,897
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Comments

  • EverettChris
    EverettChris Member Posts: 7,946 Standard Supporter

    ”indicate”

    “Signal”

    English major is at it again.

    Moron obviously didn’t even read the article he posted … again. There is nothing in it that says the US does not consider Russia to be a cyberattack threat.

    Another week with this Retard starts now.

  • Bendintheriver
    Bendintheriver Member Posts: 7,006 Standard Supporter

    Quit with the shitty news sources. The guardian is not reputable and it just wastes time. They were one of the biggest lie tellers during Trumps first term and all through bidens 4 miserable years.

  • thechatch
    thechatch Member Posts: 7,220 Standard Supporter

    The Gaurdian

    MSN

    Waiting for HH to say fuck it and start linking Palmer Report or New Republic.

    He loves his stories about DADDY.

  • Sources
    Sources Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 4,332 Founders Club

    I'm sure everything in that article is true. Our cyberterrorism resources are well known for publicizing their work

    Help me himmler. believe everything anti-daddy, and reject everything pro-daddy. do I have that right?

  • HHusky
    HHusky Member Posts: 23,897
    edited March 3

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2025/03/02/pentagon-hegseth-orders-spies-russia-cyber-threats/?msockid=228779281e6767b5190c6c1e1f4a669e

    US spies ordered to halt work countering Russian cyber threats

    Pete Hegseth’s instructions to focus on China and Iran rather than Moscow emerge despite warnings of high risk of attacks

  • EverettChris
    EverettChris Member Posts: 7,946 Standard Supporter

    H links an article that regurgitates the original article he posted. This is “Don’t learn to read until first grade” in action.

    Basic trolling.

  • pawz
    pawz Member, Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 22,436 Founders Club

    But what did Hillary Clinton suggest? I need to hear from her first to know what is true.

    TIA.

    .

  • HHusky
    HHusky Member Posts: 23,897

    Sorry Chrissey.

    The real takeaway here is that Vlad must really have something on Daddy.

    But you keep flyspecking any qualifiers. That's about your speed and pay grade.

  • Bob_C
    Bob_C Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 12,652 Founders Club

    The takeaway is that it’s in our interests to normalize relations with Russia and get them out of China’s orbit.

  • Bendintheriver
    Bendintheriver Member Posts: 7,006 Standard Supporter
    edited March 3

    Imagine ignoring the bribes biden and family took from our biggest threats: China and Russia. Then re-read his post from two bullshit sources.

    An online source called "Techspot" and another named "The Record". Maybe they should cite real sources next time?

    "A source that is familiar with the matter"

    "the person said"

    "According to a US official familiar with the matter (via The Record)"

    So weak and just pathetic hh. Is this what you are relegated to? FFS man, grow a set of balls and think for yourself.

  • HFNY
    HFNY Member Posts: 5,386

    Zelensky is not a very likeable person. Trump isn't either but Trump isn't the nearly 6 year President of Ukraine and begging for more money and arms.

    What was Zelensky thinking? Now he refuses to apologize and in fact doubled down today by saying the war will continue for a long long time. How long is that? 3 more years? 5 years? 10 years? Zelensky is not reading the room and realizing that the USA is tired of being involved in endless wars. Afghanistan went on for 20 years!

    It is no longer the primary responsibility to make sure that Russia does not take more land from Ukraine. The UK and France are stepping up but where is Germany? It is just a 748 mile flight from Berlin to Kyiv.

    I think the Europeans are mad that they have to up their spending by $50 to $100 billion a year and that the USA will no longer do it for them. I'm not sure how that is switching sides and backing Putin, very ridiculous and silly.

    On the flip side, I hope Trump doesn't cut muscle with fat. It is in the USA's best interest to have soft power in Europe.

    Lastly, China and Iran are the biggest threats to the USA. Iran planned to have our President killed and I could write multiple paragraphs as to how China has screwed the USA. When you're running $2 trillion in deficits and have $37 trillion in debt, you can't fight / fund everywhere.

  • WestlinnDuck
    WestlinnDuck Member Posts: 17,556 Standard Supporter

    Toss in the irony of the leftards' ostensible concern for the Ukraine border and their very real support for the invasion of the US by millions and millions of illegal aliens and demanding they be put on US welfare.

  • AOG
    AOG Member Posts: 2,650

    Why doesn't Comrade Trump just change his name to like Ivan Trumpikoff?

  • haie
    haie Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 23,696 Founders Club

    One of the first countries you blacklist off of your VPC is Ukraine.

    Like, even before thinking about blocking China, Brazil, and Russia.

  • WestlinnDuck
    WestlinnDuck Member Posts: 17,556 Standard Supporter

    Why didn't the dementia patient? Biggest favor that the dems pulled for Putin was drive up the world's oil and gas prices for the benefit of the Russians and the Middle East arabs and Iran. Exporting US LNG to Europe is stopped because having the Euros consume Russian natural gas means that the US is morally superior or something.

  • HFNY
    HFNY Member Posts: 5,386
  • AOG
    AOG Member Posts: 2,650

    You do realize that Trump is aligning with Russia, whose main allies are North Korea and Iran? You saw the dumbfuck is actually following through on those 25% tariffs, unless it's another ruse? Keep trying Duck.

  • PurpleThrobber
    PurpleThrobber Member Posts: 48,034

    Zelensky watched too many 80's movies where the nerd confronts the star QB and comes away with the hot chick.

    In real life, that's not how it works.

    The dork gets stuffed in a garbage can.

  • EverettChris
    EverettChris Member Posts: 7,946 Standard Supporter

    If Trump is “aligning” with Russia, then what does Germany right now buying a large chunk of their natural gas from Putin mean?

    Is that also “aligning,” since that money is used to fund the war with Ukraine.

    It appears to be impossible for a Simpleton like you to think in anything other than binary terms.

  • AOG
    AOG Member Posts: 2,650

    Einstein, you do realize that purchasing gas is not the same thing as being an ally?

  • AOG
    AOG Member Posts: 2,650

    North Korea is an ally of Russia, for example: NK soldiers are dying for Russia. It doesn't matter if they happen to purchase gas or not.

  • Bob_C
    Bob_C Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 12,652 Founders Club
  • AOG
    AOG Member Posts: 2,650

    I put the worst in, esp since George W called them the Axis of Evil.

  • RaceBannon
    RaceBannon Member, Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 113,801 Founders Club
  • EverettChris
    EverettChris Member Posts: 7,946 Standard Supporter

    Tell me how Trump is “aligning” with Russia.

    Also tell me how Germany helping fund Russia’s killing of Ukrainians via natural gas purchases isn’t de facto “aligning” with that country, at least economically.

    Again, simpletons have simple takes.

  • Bendintheriver
    Bendintheriver Member Posts: 7,006 Standard Supporter

    The rats on here can't answer that. It would expose to themselves what dumbshits they are.

  • AOG
    AOG Member Posts: 2,650
    edited March 4

    The reality of Europe's dependence on Russia for energy is quite nuanced. So, if you post a single stat and say "you're an idiot" it works as a specious argument. The reality is that all of these issues don't work well with an argument you can put in one sentence. I gathered some bullet points:

    Overview

    • Europe has struggled to fully cut off its reliance on Russian gas, despite efforts since the Ukraine invasion in 2022.
    • Russian energy was a major geopolitical tool, but Europe responded with diversification efforts.
    • The transition away from Russian gas has been uneven across European nations.

    How Russia Gained Control Over Europe’s Gas Supply

    • Russia used long-term pipeline contracts to dominate Europe’s natural gas market.
    • Nord Stream pipelines to Germany were key, bypassing Ukraine and other transit nations.
    • Russia’s involvement in Germany’s gas storage deepened dependency.

    Russia’s Weaponization of Energy & Europe's Response

    • After the invasion of Ukraine, Russia reduced gas supplies to Europe.
    • Russia demanded payments in rubles to counteract Western sanctions.
    • Europe rapidly adjusted by securing new suppliers and reducing demand.

    Current State of European Gas Supply

    • Before the war: 40% of EU gas came from Russia.
    • In 2023: Russia still supplied 14.8% of Europe's gas.
    • Some EU countries, like Austria and Hungary, remain highly dependent.
    • LNG (liquefied natural gas) imports have increased, especially from the U.S.

    Regional Adjustments in Energy Supply

    • Germany: Shifted to Norwegian gas and LNG, but still faces high energy costs.
    • Poland & the Baltics: Secured alternatives through pipelines from Norway and LNG imports.
    • France & the Netherlands: Rely on LNG but still buy Russian gas under old contracts.
    • Italy & Greece: Import more from Algeria, Libya, and Qatar while building new LNG terminals.
    • Spain & Portugal: Least affected due to reliance on LNG and North African gas.

    Challenges & Remaining Dependencies

    • Some Russian gas still enters the EU via Turkey and Ukraine.
    • The Ukraine transit agreement for Russian gas ends in 2024, creating uncertainty.
    • Russian LNG imports to the EU have ironically increased.
    • LNG is more expensive than pipeline gas, affecting industrial competitiveness.

    U.S. Role & Political Considerations

    • The U.S. has become Europe’s top LNG supplier, but future exports depend on U.S. politics.
    • Biden paused new LNG export approvals, raising concerns.
    • A potential Trump presidency may alter U.S. energy policies, impacting European security.

    Key Takeaways & Future Outlook

    • Europe’s energy shift is incomplete and costly, affecting industries and consumers.
    • Energy security remains fragile, with risks from geopolitical shifts and market volatility.
    • The EU is balancing energy security, climate goals, and affordability in its transition.
    • Future policies must address infrastructure gaps, market integration, and energy sovereignty.
  • Bob_C
    Bob_C Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 12,652 Founders Club

    My support for NATO is also nuanced.