Notices by イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org), page 2
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Saturday, 01-Mar-2025 05:12:34 JST イリエ
TRUMP VANCE ZELENSKY ARGUE
HAPPENING RIGHT NOW
Tusky_1740764638450_6XHD2IJOJU.mp4 -
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Saturday, 01-Mar-2025 04:04:14 JST イリエ
The Trump-Vance double takedown of Jewlensky in front of the nation has never happened in international diplomacy. You are watching historic footage.
A timely reminder that many of you here suffer from schizoid detachment from the world, that's the nihilistic core of the nothing ever happens crowd. -
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Friday, 28-Feb-2025 14:58:20 JST イリエ
@waltercool @p not an expert but "to help you navigate, experience, and interact with online content" could literally mean "the browser uses the information you put into it in order to surf the net." If that's the case, then their law department could not have used words more confusing and aggravating. -
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Thursday, 27-Feb-2025 02:05:39 JST イリエ
@teto @disclosetv are they part of the same Masonic Lodge -
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Tuesday, 25-Feb-2025 13:24:03 JST イリエ
@RealRaul many don't know this but aryan comes from ajian -
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Monday, 24-Feb-2025 21:11:45 JST イリエ
How can we eliminate Ayn Rand's ideas from the American Right? For that matter, from the European Right too.
>collectivism bad
>worship of individualism
>faith bad
>radical self-interest
>helping others bad
>muh capitalism
I understand this may sound good to some people, but these ideas undermine any attempt to resist Globalism as they essentially promote a form of Liberalism (freedom from, atomization) which is the backbone of Globalism. For Globalism to work, Liberalism has to smash a nation into individuals, liberating them from racial, religious, cultural, even gender collectives.
I know Libertarians are natural allies to every anti-Globalist (anti-Liberal) group, by mere virtue of their dedication to personal freedom and free speech; but the inherent drive for atomization prevents a substantial resistance, which has to be the resistance of a collective; and in the case of opposing Globalism, it even has to be the resistance of ethnic collectives (Multipolarity). -
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Monday, 24-Feb-2025 17:08:43 JST イリエ
@p I must also add these attitudes (arrogance, feelings of superiority) are more emphasized in Liberal demographics, the establishment. Counterpoints to it are Orban's conservative Hungary, openly friendly to MAGA and America; similar sentiment from Italy's Meloni who welcome Trump's victory, also conservative; and, yes, also Germany's AfD, who accepted Musk's support with open arms. -
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Monday, 24-Feb-2025 16:49:24 JST イリエ
@p I don't know where it's coming from but in Germany especially (not exclusively) there is this image of the simpleton American. My guess is the prevailing cynicism that operates like mortar, filling every gap and fissure, in the construction of German perspective. That cynicism is seen as realism, and they don't see it in the American mentality. While Germans have a knack for solid engineering and quality production, looking at recent history, it is often Americans who innovate, create, and steer the winds of time. Making me wonder whether that European cynicism is just a different form of delusion, on the other end of the spectrum. -
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Monday, 24-Feb-2025 16:32:53 JST イリエ
@p Same. I asked another bot and it gave the same explanation. I think Reuters used weird wording, making it sound as if parties directly mandate what's on the news lol
The second explanation
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"Setting the news agenda" here refers to the ability to influence what political and social issues dominate public discourse by using institutional power, in this case, parliamentary committees of inquiry. These committees can investigate government actions, summon witnesses, and generate media coverage, shaping what topics receive attention and how they are framed. If a party like the AfD secures enough seats to form such committees, they can push their preferred narratives into the mainstream, forcing other parties and media to engage with them, even if only to respond or refute. This is a significant tool for political influence, even if the party remains excluded from government. -
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Monday, 24-Feb-2025 16:18:11 JST イリエ
@p I asked Llama
In this context, "setting the news agenda" refers to the ability of a political party or entity to influence the topics, issues, and stories that are covered by the media, particularly in the context of parliamentary committees of inquiry.
In Germany, parliamentary committees of inquiry (Untersuchungsausschüsse) have the power to investigate specific topics, summon witnesses, and gather evidence. By controlling or influencing these committees, a party can effectively decide which issues are investigated, which witnesses are called to testify, and which topics are prioritized.
As a result, the party can shape the narrative and focus of the media's coverage, influencing what stories are reported, how they are framed, and which aspects are emphasized. This, in turn, can impact public opinion, policy debates, and the overall political discourse. -
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Monday, 24-Feb-2025 16:12:04 JST イリエ
Yesterday Germans (assumed all was fair) voted overwhelmingly (80%) for a continuation of current policies: de-growth, deindustrialization, mass immigration, geopolitical isolation, more war in Ukraine, crime in the streets, impoverishment, feminist diplomacy, and Green stifling of free speech.
I asked ChatGPT what it takes for Germans to reach a breaking point and vote for a political change, comparing today's conditions with the conditions found before Hitler's election.
ChatGPT
Life in Weimar Germany before Hitler’s rise was marked by crisis after crisis, an endless cycle of instability that left much of the population exhausted, humiliated, and desperate. The nation was saddled with the Treaty of Versailles, which imposed unbearable reparations and territorial losses, stripping Germany of its colonies and reducing its power to that of a broken state. The economy was a disaster zone—hyperinflation in the early 1920s saw middle-class savings evaporate overnight, with banknotes so worthless they were used as wallpaper or fuel for stoves. A brief economic stabilization in the late 1920s, fueled by American loans, was wiped out by the Great Depression in 1929, which brought mass unemployment, bank failures, and complete social despair. Starvation, homelessness, and radicalization became widespread.
Politically, Weimar was a sickly republic from the start. It had been born in defeat, despised by both the left and the right—the former seeing it as a betrayal of a true socialist revolution, the latter viewing it as an illegitimate regime imposed by foreign victors and domestic traitors. It was a republic that no one truly loved. The streets were battlegrounds between communist and nationalist militias, with assassinations, riots, and political terror becoming routine. Weak coalition governments struggled to govern, relying on emergency decrees that only made the republic seem more autocratic, further eroding faith in democracy. The cultural sphere, especially in Berlin, became infamous for excess and decadence, with cabarets, drugs, and radical art reflecting a civilization losing its grip on itself.
The people who turned to Hitler’s NSDAP were not all ideological zealots at first. Many were simply Germans who had reached a breaking point. They saw a government incapable of defending their interests, an economy that crushed them, and a world that treated Germany as a permanently guilty nation. Hitler promised national revival, economic stability, and an end to the shame of Versailles. His rise was not immediate—his failed 1923 putsch showed that Germans were not yet ready—but by 1933, after the Great Depression and constant political dysfunction, many felt they had nothing left to lose.
Germany today, despite its problems, is far from this level of desperation. The economy remains one of the strongest in Europe, despite inflation and energy concerns. Political instability exists, but not to the degree of Weimar’s street battles and assassinations. However, there are echoes—economic dissatisfaction, cultural fracture, a government increasingly reliant on restrictions rather than persuasion, and an undercurrent of anger at perceived foreign control and national decline. The key difference is that today’s Germany lacks the absolute collapse of Weimar, and the historical consciousness of the Third Reich makes any revival of similar politics much more difficult. The question is whether today’s crises continue to escalate or whether the system can adapt before reaching a point where people, once again, feel they have nothing left to lose. -
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Monday, 24-Feb-2025 15:42:14 JST イリエ
@l1nktw1nk we got cyber-bees before we got cyborgs
3f3015cbe26bcd8beb2063813a494018.jpg -
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Sunday, 23-Feb-2025 14:47:36 JST イリエ
Apologies for Twitter SS
It fills me with so much joy to see Americans turn against Ukropigs. It's glorious in the replies. US-Russia team up to CRUSH Ukropigs when?
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Sunday, 23-Feb-2025 10:00:01 JST イリエ
@verita84 does it have a restrictive character limit? (I hope not 😵💫) -
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Saturday, 22-Feb-2025 19:22:01 JST イリエ
@p So postmodern if you think about it. Not bound to any meaning or precedent in history. Make it sound quirktechy enough and you're good to go. -
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Saturday, 22-Feb-2025 17:52:15 JST イリエ
On X you can now see the masses catching up with information that those who cared about the war in Ukraine were familiar with in 2022. A en-masse dissolving of lies and fake narratives. -
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Friday, 21-Feb-2025 17:54:44 JST イリエ
smol
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Friday, 21-Feb-2025 11:15:43 JST イリエ
Perhaps we can find a middle-ground between defending everything Trump, Musk, or Milei does, and categorically rejecting their credibility and long-term goals? -
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Friday, 21-Feb-2025 05:56:05 JST イリエ
I just watched half a minute of Avowed dialogue and I think I can see why people hate it: It has that snarky sarcastic vibe that is inherent to Liberal Nihilism. In other words, it is postmodern: Nothing matters, there is no truth, and with the vile implication that neither do people (you or others) matter,
Isn't that inspiring? :vomit:
The problem with such nihilist views is that people who think like that have nothing meaningful to say, convey, or create. Building shallow nonsense based on cynical assumptions that will make you feel dumb and exploited in the end: They think you are a stupid animal, and that's how they design.
Just the right approach to create a meaningful experience. -
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イリエ (irie@fsebugoutzone.org)'s status on Thursday, 20-Feb-2025 23:14:01 JST イリエ
@Humpleupagus @eriner @YeetLibs had to deal with one acquaintance a few years ago, 'unfounded arrogance and feelings of superiority' is how I would describe her. But I guess that applies to liberals in general