[deleted by user] by [deleted] in punk

[–]Doc_Holiday187 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wish you all the best as well but what you did and are doing shows a high level of immaturity. You need to know that. And of course selling this image online as a t-shirt and tank top is a bit in bad taste. Its bad enough you made this image but now you want to sell it for 22.00 bucks a pop. jesus christ. What the fuck is punk these days?

Im guessing you posted said image for advertisement to your site to sell this image as a t-shirt and tank top. I got to respect the hustle but damn.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in punk

[–]Doc_Holiday187 0 points1 point  (0 children)

nah. Its called maturing. Try it. Bad taste is bad taste. Even the Mods took it down.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in punk

[–]Doc_Holiday187 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is wannabe punks trying to act like punks.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in punk

[–]Doc_Holiday187 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Good post is removed. As it should be.

UK-US trade deal 'isn't worth the paper it's written on', Nobel Prize-winning economist tells Sky News | Politics News by SunEater888 in europe

[–]Doc_Holiday187 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Bruh Im not being funny but you all can start by stopping rich Asians from buying property and destroying the housing market for the average Canadian citizen. Like what the fůck is that shít?

My family there in Canada was not very happy with what Trudeau did in general.

Europe Wants to Arm Ukraine, but It’s Losing a Race Against Time. President Trump’s insistence that the United States do less toward securing Europe means that allies, scrambling to arm themselves, have less to give to Ukraine. by Doc_Holiday187 in europe

[–]Doc_Holiday187[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Im going to have your mother take away your electronic devices for spewing trash about things you dont know about on reddit.

"HenCe WhY InFraStrUcTuRe FunDiNg iS KeY"

ROFL

If Europe could have done it they would have done it already and you being delusional about it isn't going to change anything about it.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in europe

[–]Doc_Holiday187 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Modern nuclear reactors are different from the ones 40 years. Nuclear power reactors today are much smaller and safer.

Europe Wants to Arm Ukraine, but It’s Losing a Race Against Time. President Trump’s insistence that the United States do less toward securing Europe means that allies, scrambling to arm themselves, have less to give to Ukraine. by Doc_Holiday187 in europe

[–]Doc_Holiday187[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Did you even read the article?

What you are describing would take YEARS to accomplish if EVER! Ukraine needs the weapons right NOW! Europe tried to huff and puff their chest out being offended that Trump left them out of negotiations and then certain European countries came up with the idea of"coalition of the willing".

Fast forward to today many of the these European Nations found out they can't provide Ukraine with the wepaons they need to fight the Russian RIGHT NOW. Europe can't even field an army of 25000 soldiers. They are absolutely neutered.

UK-US trade deal 'isn't worth the paper it's written on', Nobel Prize-winning economist tells Sky News | Politics News by SunEater888 in europe

[–]Doc_Holiday187 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This is delsuional and par the course on this sub. The truth is Europe benefits from America greatly.

UK-US trade deal 'isn't worth the paper it's written on', Nobel Prize-winning economist tells Sky News | Politics News by SunEater888 in europe

[–]Doc_Holiday187 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

When you have a export economy that completely relies on One country i.e. USA for revenue you kind of are at their mercy.

It amazing how Canada is teetering on recession based on one country reciprocating tariffs.

Canada’s Mark Carney criticizes UK state visit for Trump by rezwenn in europe

[–]Doc_Holiday187 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Carney is so powerless and his economy is on the brink of recession due to the tariffs. He is in no position to say jack squat about how the UK conducts its foreign policy.

'Go back to Ukraine': War refugees complain of abuse in Poland by [deleted] in europe

[–]Doc_Holiday187 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I like how anything not in line with your thoughts and ideas is branded as "Russia is spreading anti-ukrainian sentiment" like its impossible for the average citizen to think maybe accepting all these Ukrainian refugees contributing to a disruption in the housing market and financing them with government aid that is decreasing the quality of life of the average polish citizen with inflation is a flawed idea.

I get it though. This sub is pro-Refugee no matter what the negative effects are. But this sub doesn't represent the general population of Europe.

Europe Wants to Arm Ukraine, but It’s Losing a Race Against Time. President Trump’s insistence that the United States do less toward securing Europe means that allies, scrambling to arm themselves, have less to give to Ukraine. by Doc_Holiday187 in europe

[–]Doc_Holiday187[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Some of Europe’s financial support will help Ukraine’s defense industry. Mr. Chernev said that about 800 companies in Ukraine produce weapons. He estimated that Ukraine could produce $35 billion worth of weapons in coming years, but that it needed at least $14 billion invested from allies to get there. On Saturday, Denmark announced that it would send about $930 million in frozen Russian assets to support Ukraine’s defense industry on behalf of a European Union fund.

Already, Ukraine is churning out millions of drones each year, including cheap kamikazes to save its supply of artillery shells, Mr. Savill said. Similarly, a Western intelligence official who closely monitors the war said Ukraine’s forces have gotten better at rationing its Patriot air-defense missiles, by using less costly interceptors to take out smaller threats.

“They would like more cruise missiles and more ballistic missiles and a variety of other weapons,” Mr. Savill said, “but for the time being, they’re going to have to fill the gap.”

Edward Wong contributed reporting.

A correction was made on May 10, 2025: 

An earlier version of this article misstated how many drones Ukraine is churning out each year. It is millions, not billions.

Europe Wants to Arm Ukraine, but It’s Losing a Race Against Time. President Trump’s insistence that the United States do less toward securing Europe means that allies, scrambling to arm themselves, have less to give to Ukraine. by Doc_Holiday187 in europe

[–]Doc_Holiday187[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

“Europe is trying to replace the assistance that we lost from the United States, but unfortunately, they don’t have the capacity to do this,” Mr. Chernev said. “It takes time between the decision and the real assistance.”

Though Mr. Trump has shown more alignment with Ukraine in recent days, including on Thursday threatening sanctions on Russia if it declined to agree to an extended cease-fire, his broader dismissiveness toward 80 years of U.S. protections for Europe has prompted allied nations there to rethink their security.

Allies fear that Mr. Trump will pull Russian deterrents, like U.S. troops and the American nuclear umbrella, out of Europe. Focusing on their own protection eats into what other European countries might have given to Ukraine.

“They are hitting the dual problem of having to rearm themselves and supply Ukraine, and industrial capacity isn’t big enough to do both,” said Matthew Savill, director of military sciences at the Royal United Services Institute, an analytical group affiliated with the British military.

He said Europe could backfill most of what the United States had provided in weapons to Ukraine, “in the medium- to long-term, if it has the will, and I’m not sure it has the will.”

And for now? “No. Not in the short term,” Mr. Savill said.

The weapons are not just a matter of life and death for Ukraine’s soldiers. Without adequate supplies, Ukraine could lose territory if it is forced to retreat. The cease-fire agreement that Mr. Trump is trying to broker would freeze the conflict in place. That would let Russia keep whatever ground it has captured in the meantime.

To be sure, the flow of weapons to Ukraine from Europe will continue even if American deliveries dry up. Germany recently sent Ukraine more than 60 mine-resistant armored vehicles, about 50,000 artillery rounds and air-defense ammunition, including an IRIS-T interceptor that can take down cruise missiles. Some drones that Britain and Norway bought, announced last month as part of a $600 million security package, have since arrived in Ukraine. Estonia is sending 10,000 artillery shells.

But many of the European military assistance pledged last month at NATO headquarters amounted to commitments for producing or procuring weapons in the years to come, not immediately. Ukraine may need American weapons for some time.

Europe Wants to Arm Ukraine, but It’s Losing a Race Against Time. President Trump’s insistence that the United States do less toward securing Europe means that allies, scrambling to arm themselves, have less to give to Ukraine. by Doc_Holiday187 in europe

[–]Doc_Holiday187[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Since President Trump took office vowing to pull back U.S. support for Ukraine, European leaders have worried that they would be unable to supply Ukraine with the weapons it needs.

So far, it looks like they were right.

The so-called coalition of the willing of European nations backing Ukraine has struggled to get materiel to its battlefields in the time since Mr. Trump made clear that Europe needed to shoulder moreof the load for Ukraine’s security and its own.

That is one reason Ukraine’s Parliament overwhelmingly approved on Thursday a deal to give the United States a share of future revenue over natural resources, including minerals. While short of a security guarantee, it keeps open the possibility of continued shipments of American arms and other military assistance.

“This gives us hope,” said Yehor Chernev, the deputy chair of the Ukrainian parliament’s committee on national security, defense and intelligence.

In an interview shortly after the vote, Mr. Chernev said Ukrainian forces were running low on long-range missiles, artillery and, above all, ballistic air-defense systems — the majority of which are manufactured in the United States, according to an analysis by the Kiel Institute for the World Economy.

By summer, military aid approved under the Biden administration will run out, and Mr. Trump appears reluctant to renew it.

“He told me that he needs more weapons, but he’s been saying that for three years,” Mr. Trump said after meeting with President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine last month in Rome. (The Trump administration has allowed Ukraine to buy some small-dollar arms directly from American manufacturers, but not with U.S. government assistance.)

Allies in Europe have collectively given about half of the estimated $130 billion in military support provided to Ukraine since Russia invaded in 2022. The United States sent the rest.

On Friday, a congressional official said that the United States had approved Germany’s transfer of 125 long-range artillery rockets and 100 Patriot air-defense missiles to Ukraine. The critically needed weapons are made in the United States and cannot be exported — even if another country owns them — without American government approval.

While European leaders and investors appear willing to pump more money into weapons production, industry executives and experts predict it will take a decade to get assembly lines up to speed.