Every nigger and race traitor that threatened this woman on social media should be tracked down and charged with inciting violence. Imminent violence. Those people put the lives of the Hendrix woman and her family in immediate danger.
I live in a quiet old neighborhood not far from farmlands - full of older conservative whites with Hispanic renters. Thanks to the democrats, there is section 8 housing on the outskirts of town.
Anyway, my neighbors car was broken into over night and I heard the alarm. Police were outside this morning. Now, as much as I'd like to put on a ghillie suit and camp out in my driveway to merc the niggers trying to break into my truck, I'd like to ask for more practical advice. My wife and I made sure to remove anything of value in the cars and will be leaving the porch lights on. Thinking of installing cameras.
India is aligned ostensibly with the west. India claimed pakistan was the sponsor of the terrorist attacks. India put out a war-preps video.
We can conclude war prep videos by western-aligned nations are therefore used as an intelligence signal either ahead of actual strikes, or as a sort of bluff. We can further conclude that this is therefore a western playbook.
As an aside, what other nations have put out 'war preps' videos? Germany, France, and a few others.
Now germany has promised taurus missiles to ukraine. And the candidate who promised them has won election (somehow) after losing the initial vote. What a turn around.
But conspiracies aside, an annihilating war between india and pakistan would be a great way to force india to choose a side (they've been waffling a lot, esp. with respect to brics). A lot like turkey actually, but I digress.
The war has now expanded from kashmir to punjab. Arguably it was a fly over, but then if fighting is happening in that region, it is a lot more than a fly over on the way to kashmir.
They say they're striking terrorists, which is a reasonable, perhaps even honest, statement. Assuming thats who they actually hit.
Pakistan claims otherwise.
And all of this out of the blue over a terrorist attack no one is claiming responsibility for. Terrorists don't typically refuse to take responsibility for their attacks. Usually attacks are explicitly about making a message heard by as many people as possible. Two reasons for that: the people authorities claim did it aren't actually responsible, or they did in fact do it, but under coercion or as mercenary work for another group or nation.
Chatter came out right after the attack in india that pakistani terrorist groups (sponsored by the pakistani government or not) have, along with the government of pakistan, worked as mercenaries for western intelligence for some time, if only reluctantly (though how reluctant or enthusiastic about it is anyone's guess).
Were they responsible, and the pakistani government is disclaiming responsibility first we have to conclude that of course pakistan is going to claim they're not responsible. But second, if pakistan was ordered to do it on behest of another power, say russia, china, or the u.s. it would explain the chatter. And if not responsible why would the pakistani government not be vigorously going after the groups responsible? And thats the big tell.
Face-saving not-withstanding, if they were innocent, they'd be looking to be proactive to prevent war.
And if india weren't involved in a provocation they would have commenced with strikes against the terror groups rather than going the round-about way by cutting off strategic water supplies first.
Thats arguably something you might do to pressure a government to go after terrorists, which pakistan wasn't doing, but its not the FIRST thing you do, as a matter of policy, especially before diplomacy, especially if you enter the crises with good-faith or good intentions, which as far as diplomacy goes, goes without saying--good faith being required at minimum on a surface level.
But they didn't because they had no intention of entering with good faith.
Which would explain why pakistan didn't go after the terrorists, or if they did, the western media didn't publish as much: Precisely because the pakistani government was blindsided and couldn't definitely determine which group was responsible. Which explains why no group claimed responsibility. Because none of the groups in pakistan were responsible. And how do we know this?
Because if it was a non-pakistani intelligence operation, the operation would have tried to claim it was a pakistani group as cover. Which tells me most of the terror groups in pakistan are either heavily monitored and/or well-known and tightly coupled to pakistani intelligence.
Which means by implication any outside party committing an attack in india wouldn't be able to easily claim the attack was committed by a pakistani-sponsored terror group. They'd be found out too quickly and the conflict would be resolved before it began between india and pakistan.
Hence no pakistani terror group claiming responsibility. Hence why india escalated quickly past strictly diplomatic measures to strategic water supply cutoffs, which is a move, taken in context, thats way too fast considering they didn't have all the facts.
Which means they entered it with that outcome in mind.
So now we know the players and who intended what, but not why. So theres either elections, politics, or money involved somewhere, and the government of pakistan is in the dark.
But you know who isn't in the dark? India.
If I was a gambling man I'd be looking at the odd pick of JD Vance, with his indian wife, and how perfectly these events line up with that VP pick in hindsight, especially in relation to the isolation of china, but thats just one interpretation, and by all means, not the only thread.
he Houthis have confirmed there will be a ceasefire in the Red Sea with the United States. The deal was mediated by Oman, and this looks like a 'mission accomplished' moment for Trump where he's ready to grasp onto a way out of the quagmire the US found itself in. Wisely, he is getting the US out, and Israel appears to be stepping up in terms of its own defense.
Mideast war correspondent Elijah Magnier observes, "The US intelligently stopped the bombing on Yemen due to the lack of objectives, the empty outcome and the high cost versus no gain." Others have noted this is essentially a declare 'mission accomplish' and cut and run moment, amid no better alternatives.