Typical Amurrican WN opinion, expect him to spam gay nigger porn in the coming days.
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Forwarded from Deleted Account
Hizbullah is like the guy that gets punched in the face, stays on the ground while the aggressor tells him to and then when the assailant goes far away yells "it didn't hurt"
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Lol TRS is complaining about White guys moving up the food chain by getting a brown gf.
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Forwarded from Stay Free (Khidr 🇱🇧)
Stay Free
Israeli attacks on the Healthcare system in Lebanon over the past 5 days @stayfreeworld
"our capabilities aren't limited"
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Forwarded from Khomeinichan (Dvbism)
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No Words
Forwarded from Nifaq Watch
Sobhi Al-Tufayli, Hezbollah's founder and its first leader split from the main stream Hezbollah movement after a dispute with Nasrallah’s faction.
Al-Tufayli wanted Hezbollah to be solely dedicated to fighting Israel, while Nasrallah, along with the new Ayatollah, wanted to shift the movement’s focus to engaging within the Lebanese and regional political scene instead.
Nasrallah’s faction emerged victorious and began engaging politically within Lebanon. This came at a time when Lebanon was engulfed in a civil war (near its end), and eventually saw Hezbollah transition from being a movement that is focused purely on resisting Israel, to one that involves itself in other conflicts with support from Iran and other allies (March 14 alliance and the Syrian civil war).
While Hezbollah benefited financially and garnered regional influence, it had also effaced the image of the 1980s anti-Israel resistance movement it had so long touted. Hezbollah was now largely viewed by the Lebanese majority as yet another player in the dysfunctional and thoroughly corrupt “confessionalism” style of government that has so long plagued Lebanon and allowed its neighbors to easily engage in proxy conflicts within the country.
In the current Lebanese political climate, both sectarianism and perceptions of corruption have produced widespread discontent with Hezbollah as an organization. Hezbollah’s involvement in politics has rather ironically resulted in its being constrained with regard to how much it can escalate against Israel. The lack of legitimacy and a mandate to operate in the eyes of the Lebanese people, has forced Hezbollah to carefully maneuver its engagements with Israel so as to not invite a potentially destabilizing pushback from its own countrymen. A fact that Israel has extensively taken advantage of when formulating the “Dahiya Doctrine,” which seeks to supercharge the already existing antagonism against Hezbollah into rebellion against the movement for having “invited” Israel’s war crimes upon Lebanon.
Israel’s exploitation of the discontent and grievances against Iran’s proxies, often along sectarian lines, has done far more to bind the hands of Israel’s enemies than direct military confrontation. The intransigence, corruption, and brutality of Iran’s various militias and allies have resulted in a situation where these groups are more concerned with maintaining control against the dissenting majority, than on confronting Israel.
Take note of how the “Dahiya Doctrine,” has never once worked on the Palestinians while Israel massacred them for the greater part of a century. It has, however, worked and harmed resistance in both Lebanon and Syria.
Arab vs Persian, Christian vs Muslim, Sunni vs Shia. Rather than focusing on subduing one’s countrymen by force, engendering a sense of unity and rejection of sectarianism such that there would be no grievance left for Israel to exploit is a far more palatable and successful message and strategy. One cannot massacre their way into a consensus, and without consensus one cannot hope to defeat Israel.
Al-Tufayli wanted Hezbollah to be solely dedicated to fighting Israel, while Nasrallah, along with the new Ayatollah, wanted to shift the movement’s focus to engaging within the Lebanese and regional political scene instead.
Nasrallah’s faction emerged victorious and began engaging politically within Lebanon. This came at a time when Lebanon was engulfed in a civil war (near its end), and eventually saw Hezbollah transition from being a movement that is focused purely on resisting Israel, to one that involves itself in other conflicts with support from Iran and other allies (March 14 alliance and the Syrian civil war).
While Hezbollah benefited financially and garnered regional influence, it had also effaced the image of the 1980s anti-Israel resistance movement it had so long touted. Hezbollah was now largely viewed by the Lebanese majority as yet another player in the dysfunctional and thoroughly corrupt “confessionalism” style of government that has so long plagued Lebanon and allowed its neighbors to easily engage in proxy conflicts within the country.
In the current Lebanese political climate, both sectarianism and perceptions of corruption have produced widespread discontent with Hezbollah as an organization. Hezbollah’s involvement in politics has rather ironically resulted in its being constrained with regard to how much it can escalate against Israel. The lack of legitimacy and a mandate to operate in the eyes of the Lebanese people, has forced Hezbollah to carefully maneuver its engagements with Israel so as to not invite a potentially destabilizing pushback from its own countrymen. A fact that Israel has extensively taken advantage of when formulating the “Dahiya Doctrine,” which seeks to supercharge the already existing antagonism against Hezbollah into rebellion against the movement for having “invited” Israel’s war crimes upon Lebanon.
Israel’s exploitation of the discontent and grievances against Iran’s proxies, often along sectarian lines, has done far more to bind the hands of Israel’s enemies than direct military confrontation. The intransigence, corruption, and brutality of Iran’s various militias and allies have resulted in a situation where these groups are more concerned with maintaining control against the dissenting majority, than on confronting Israel.
Take note of how the “Dahiya Doctrine,” has never once worked on the Palestinians while Israel massacred them for the greater part of a century. It has, however, worked and harmed resistance in both Lebanon and Syria.
Arab vs Persian, Christian vs Muslim, Sunni vs Shia. Rather than focusing on subduing one’s countrymen by force, engendering a sense of unity and rejection of sectarianism such that there would be no grievance left for Israel to exploit is a far more palatable and successful message and strategy. One cannot massacre their way into a consensus, and without consensus one cannot hope to defeat Israel.
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Nifaq Watch
Sobhi Al-Tufayli, Hezbollah's first Secretary General (predecessor to Nasrallah) and co-founder of the movement discusses the hypocrisy of Muslim leaders (specifically the "Axis of the Resistance") in their cowardice and unwillingness to aid and fight along…
AlogsAnonymousAscended
https://x.com/RabbiShmuley/status/1839792494931812731
Daughter was possibly killed according to Shmuley
Forwarded from 🌴 Mael 🌴
If anything, Nasrallah’s death would be well-deserved for his squandering golden opportunities at the beginning of October 7th, and for his abysmal mismanagement of what could have been a truly formidable Islamist militia that prioritized fanatical anti-semitic/anti-Zionist principles, just as Hezbollah’s original leader, Al-Tufayli had tried steering the organization in the direction of before Nasrallah’s faction removed him from power. Incompetence and betrayal of such epic proportions is worthy of severe punishment, and if that comes in the form of an IDF air strike, I’m not gonna shed tears for the guy.
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Forwarded from Middle East Spectator — MES
— ❗️🇮🇱/ 🇱🇧 BREAKING: One hour ago, a huge Hezbollah barrage targeted northern Israel; the damage is being assessed
@Middle_East_Spectator
@Middle_East_Spectator
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Forwarded from Kalibrated (Scott)
Israel is censoring everything in the north.
Kalibrated
Israel is censoring everything in the north.
Ok so Hizbullah have become official Qtards
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Forwarded from Alogs Anonymous 4
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Middle East Spectator
— ❗️🇱🇧 Hezbollah full statement on the death of Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah:
In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful:
'His Eminence, the Sayyed, the Leader of the Resistance, the righteous servant, has moved to the abode of his Lord and His…
In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful:
'His Eminence, the Sayyed, the Leader of the Resistance, the righteous servant, has moved to the abode of his Lord and His…
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Whenever someone still "trusts the plan" when it comes to Iran and Hezbollah, I'm reminded of this