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Everything posted by Trump_is_Mentally_fit
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MAGA tell us about DT virtues
Trump_is_Mentally_fit replied to TH3's topic in Politics, Polls, and Pundits
Criminal organization This, along with Putin, is the type of POS Trump likes. -
Wooooo! Full stop! Biden with the lowest unemployment like ever? No stupid idiotic trade wars, no licking up to Putin. Biden was way better than this stupid ass clown who has no clue what he is doing. You think Trump is so good that only a nuclear war would make him worse than an actual successful President? Wow 🤷♂️
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They are all losers trying to rip apart society to hurt the people that are better than them
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He Is a Sick Diseaed Old Man
Trump_is_Mentally_fit replied to Trump_is_Mentally_fit's topic in Politics, Polls, and Pundits
That it attracted you -
He Is a Sick Diseaed Old Man
Trump_is_Mentally_fit replied to Trump_is_Mentally_fit's topic in Politics, Polls, and Pundits
Dude, he is shot The tariff war he is starting is a symptom of a diseased mind, as is his sucking up to the mass murderer Putin -
https://www.the-sun.com/news/13620496/trumps-bruised-hand-macron-bromance-handshake/
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https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2025/02/25/ukraine-drone-warfare-russia/ KYIV — “Really cheap stuff is killing really expensive stuff,” Deborah Fairlamb tells me. Fairlamb is co-founder of Green Flag Ventures, a venture capital firm based here and in Los Angeles. It invests in early-stage Ukrainian companies pioneering artificial intelligence and cyber products that are dual-use, meaning with both military and civilian applications. We’re chatting in the lobby of the Intercontinental Kyiv hotel, which is hosting the Defense Tech Innovations Forum, a conference on defense industry technologies. It looks like a Silicon Valley tech-bro gathering, except it’s full of middle-aged Ukrainians in Steve Jobs-style black turtlenecks and men in military fatigues, with a handful of women in attendance, too. The lobby has become an upscale version of Rick’s Café in “Casablanca” — sit there long enough, and you’ll see former CIA director and retired Army Gen. David Petraeus being hailed like a returning hero, or a group of German soldiers headed to a meeting in the restaurant. The topics discussed at the forum cover a wide array of technology developments, including encryption and electronic countermeasures, but the buzz is focused on drones. A rep from Brave1, the Ukrainian government-run coordinating platform for the rapidly growing drone sector, told me that sometimes a new development goes from a proposal to design to prototype to field-testing to front-line deployment in a matter of weeks. And then, he added, Russian countermeasure efforts begin, and Ukrainian tweaks are made, in an escalating game of cat-and-mouse. “In terms of what this means for America, this doesn’t mean you have to get rid of the old stuff” — meaning heavy-duty traditional military hardware — “although the old stuff, the tanks, there are some huge vulnerabilities in those,” Fairlamb says. “There are all kinds of stories of $500 drones killing $5 million tanks, on a very regular basis.” She adds that these cheap kills are occurring on both sides of the battlefield. With the United States’ continued role as the guarantor of European security now in doubt, given recent statements by President Donald Trump, Vice President JD Vance and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, the good news for Ukraine is that defense ministries in Europe — primarily from Nordic countries and the Baltics — are in attendance and absorbing the dizzying pace of change in battlefield technology. Russia has its own visitor studying new military tech: North Korea. “The Russians aren’t just bringing the North Koreans to the front lines; they’ve got them in a number of the Russian drone production facilities, learning and telling them to go build them at home,” Fairlamb says. Last November, North Korean’s state-run news agency reported that dictator Kim Jong Un wanted his country to begin mass production of self-detonating explosive drones. Earlier this month, Japanese public broadcaster NHK reported that “North Korea is expected to start producing drones this year that will be codeveloped with Russia,” adding that Pyongyang will receive “technical help from Russia to develop multiple types of drones to be mass manufactured.” Also this month, North Korean government aviation officials toured Russia’s premier drone training facilities and attended a major aviation expo in Moscow. The delegation visited Moscow State Technical University of Civil Aviation’s advanced technology park for drones. Kyrylo Budanov, head of Ukraine’s military intelligence agency, told the South Korean Chosun Daily last week that “the North Korean military of the future will be fundamentally different from its past. … North Korean soldiers are fast learners, adapting to modern combat tactics and strategies in just a few months. Their combat effectiveness has improved dramatically — not only with conventional weapons like tanks but also with advanced systems such as drones.” And the Russian-Ukrainian war is increasingly a fight of drones. A recent report by Britain’s Royal United Services Institute concluded that tactical unmanned aerial vehicles, or UAVs, as drones are known, “account for 60 to 70 percent of damaged and destroyed Russian systems.” The report cautioned that Ukrainian officers emphasized the need to combine artillery with drone warfare as the most effective tactic, but it is not an overstatement to say that drones are what’s keeping Ukraine in the war. Ukrainian forces almost invariably field a mix of UAVs that includes light and heavy bomber drones and first-person view, or FPV, drones. Sometimes, that might be all the Ukrainians field. In December, Ukrainian soldiers near Lyptsi, about six miles from the Russian border in the Kharkiv region, launched a successful nothing-but-drones assault on a Russian position. Based on interviews with military officers, the Ukraine-based Counteroffensive news site reported on what it called a “first attack of its kind,” involving “dozens of FPV, recon, turret-mounted, and [self-detonating] drones all working in tandem on the ground and in the air. … No drone swarm technology was used, which meant that each individual drone was piloted by an individual pilot.” Picture being a Russian soldier, seeing the enemy advancing upon you, and there’s not a single human being among them. It must have felt like some far-off future imagined by James Cameron had arrived early. For Ukraine, the fervent hope is that it hasn’t arrived too late.
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YOU'RE FIRED: Joy Reid Edition
Trump_is_Mentally_fit replied to BillsFanNC's topic in Politics, Polls, and Pundits
She kept that person busy for sure!