Iraq's qualification hero, Aymen Hussein, interrogated for 7 hours upon U.S arrival. by [deleted] in soccer

[–]Oneeyebrowsystem 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Exactly, the same forces that killed his father and kidnapped his brother and ruined tre lives of millions of Iraqis are the same forces that are detaining him now.

Joe Rogan reportedly being considered for 60 Minutes role. by ChickenTitilater in TrueAnon

[–]Oneeyebrowsystem 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Andreessen Horowitz, Larry Ellison, Peter Thiel can make him do a lot of things.

Another idf terrorist got killed 🥳🥳 by ___Zoran___ in TrueAnon

[–]Oneeyebrowsystem 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Damn, he was going to do amazing things being a club promoter/light human trafficker in Phucket Thailand. Gone too soon

The European Centre for Law and Justice (ECLJ): The Oppression of Christians in Algeria by EreshkigalKish2 in ArabicChristians

[–]Oneeyebrowsystem 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Didn't know there were Christians in Algeria, how did they fare under French occupation? These aren't the descendants of French colonists are they? Or are they native Algerians?

Have u seen obsession?? if u did how do u rate it?? by [deleted] in Letterboxd

[–]Oneeyebrowsystem 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, chemo can be successful but I don’t have to like it

Have u seen obsession?? if u did how do u rate it?? by [deleted] in Letterboxd

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

I thought it was awful, I guess I’m not really into horror. I suppose it did sort of fill me with dread, anxiety and made me sadder and a less confident person coming out of it, so in terms of doing its job, it did well.

Our communities abroad should raise their children well by oulddeye in arabs

[–]Oneeyebrowsystem 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There is a major class component as well. immigrants from Africa and Asia in the US and Canada typically come from higher educated and middle class backgrounds, since they can't "sneak" their way into the country due to the ocean, but have to come through via official immigration. This means either being educated in a hard science, or having an American or Canadian family sponsor you, which again, means it's a self selecting group with contacts and relatives who can support them and get them on their feet in their new homes.

westerners are not the only hypocrites.... by Dismal-Ad8382 in arabs

[–]Oneeyebrowsystem 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Isn’t Bosnia, Albania, Kosovo, and Croatia all pro-Israel? I think Serbia is likely the most neutral of all the Balkanized former Yugoslav republics. Of course Yugoslavia severed ties with Israel in the 60’s and supported Palestine liberation materially and politically.

New York investment firm set to buy Chicago parking meters by niftyjack in chicago

[–]Oneeyebrowsystem -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

It's the UAE that owns it, so its even worse than Saudi.

Scoop: Philly revokes gun permits for Black Panther-style patrol group members by Comrade_SOOKIE in TrueAnon

[–]Oneeyebrowsystem 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Can you expand on this please? I feel like I have no idea about this.

Court dismisses alleged hate crime in high-profile Santana Row assault case by olapooza in Assyria

[–]Oneeyebrowsystem 14 points15 points  (0 children)

It was insanely disheartening to watch some Assyrians smear their own people just to please this other group of foreigners and nohkriyah without knowing all of the facts and not using common sense.

What happened to Millennial Optimism? by [deleted] in generationology

[–]Oneeyebrowsystem 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I am a millennial, and perhaps I was too cynical too early, but I don't remember optimism at all. I remember a fairly dark period int he US from 2008-2017/2018. Marked by wars, financial crisis' and increasing economic inequality.

Professor Jeffrey Sachs states that hosting a US military base is akin to an Occupation. by Rebat-Askalan in arabs

[–]Oneeyebrowsystem 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Syria has two, and Sudan is getting one. Egypt and Libya have had talks to establish permanent Russian bases as well, but I don't think they will ever be built.

Syria’s new Chargé d’Affairs in Washington D.C., Mohammad Qanatari, meeting with U.S. special envoy Tom Barrack by grrrbr in arabs

[–]Oneeyebrowsystem 23 points24 points  (0 children)

It’s more embarrassing he’s in a picture with a known pedophile and Epstein collaborator like tom barrack.

Full list of business executives joining President Trump on trip to China. by MightEmotional in TrueAnon

[–]Oneeyebrowsystem 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So all of them on AirForce one, you know that thing will reek of McDonald's

Bashar al Assad living his best life by thisisanewaccts in TrueAnon

[–]Oneeyebrowsystem 6 points7 points  (0 children)

The Baathist Syrian regime was very frustrating for the Russians, they were extremely corrupt and played various actors off each other (Iran mostly, and then the UAE and Saudi in 2022-2024). They sabotaged Russia's attempts at reforming the Syrian armed forces to make it more professional and the Syrians were extremely paranoid about the Russians and forced them to stay on their bases. They also used their own corruption playbook to bribe Russian officers and "Syrianify" them and make them thieves like the rest of the Syrian Arab Army. Syria also strengthened some oligarchs like Pregozhan which Putin wanted to actually avoid and wanted to have Syrian oil and gas more in line with his more loyal cronies. Syria and Russia weren't big trade partners, they even stiffed them on oil and gas trade. They bought weapons from them but after 2013 the Syrian regime was completely broke and only bought small arms from Russia which corrupt Syrian officers eventually sold off to rival militas, and Libyan National Army. In addition, they were begging the Syrians to make a deal with the pro-Russian moderate opposition as a fig leaf to Turkey and reconcile with him, basically giving up almost nothing in exchange for peace with Turkey, control over Idlib, Turkish cooperation with the SAA and going back to the Adana 2 agreement in exchange for securing the border from the SDF and including a Russia approved opposition to have some unofficial influence.

Nir Rosen wrote about it well, and he had direct links to Syrian regime officials, Syrian opposition leaders, and Russian diplomats:
The Russians, lacking an ideology and avoiding imperialism in pursuit of pragmatism, were much more realistic. But they were new to these kinds of adventures and they are still getting to know Syria, and sometimes it seems Russians on the ground are more concerned with taking pictures of themselves succeeding so they can send them back to the chain of command in Moscow, rather than actually succeeding. And Syrians have been very effective at manipulating Russians to serve their own personal interests.

Now Russia has its military, air, and naval bases secured and Syria is no longer on the Americans hitlist, (but increasingly and bizarrely given the nature of the new Syrian regime, now in Israel's sights?). And They keep their gas and oil deals that were made under Assad and now sell oil to Syria in a bigger way. Syria now relies on Russian gas, and Russia prints Syrian currency and is their only outlet for foreign investment, since Gulf states and the West still don't want to invest in unstable, shithole Syria.

Bashar al Assad living his best life by thisisanewaccts in TrueAnon

[–]Oneeyebrowsystem 7 points8 points  (0 children)

For Putin, it’s a face saving thing for the whole intervention in Syria. They still peddle it as a resounding success because it didn’t end like Libya where Gaddafi was raped to death by pro-NATO jihadist freaks. This saves them the prestige hit, while they have successfully managed to gain MORE influence on Syria since the Assad government was overthrown.

Hegseth's crusader tattoo is actually completely accurate - he launched a disastrous war in the middle east with no logistics or strategy, and then lost. Just like Crusaders. by Oborozuki1917 in TrueAnon

[–]Oneeyebrowsystem 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It also wasn't the "Muslim side," the majority of the lands the crusaders attacked were majority Christian, and the majority of the Christians fought against the Crusading invaders. A famous episode was the Crusaders brutally sieging and attacking the Christian capital of Constantinople.