This is what I get on the coast, art gallery, the lady upfront, wanting me to tell her why I rail and why if ACAB and FBI/SS are watching me I expect anyone to follow me, to fight on the streets!
Mar 06, 2026

Nah, interesting times? Any different than Hitler, than Bush, than LBJ, JFK, GWB, RR, Bubbha, Oh-Bomber, Genocide Joe, or Holocaust Congress/Senate?
Snake charmers and speaking in tongues, interesting times?


Why aren’t people on the streets, piling high pallets and old tires, dragging junkers into the road and firebombing the homes of the dirty snakes of America, one and all?
Cuz it’s on the Podcast, the answers to our frustrations:

Oh, time is on their side?

Is it time on their FUCKING SIDE?

The Israeli-American strike on a school that killed at least 165 children, most of them girls aged between 7 and 12, on the first day of the illegal war on Iran was deliberate, an investigation by Al Jazeera has revealed.
The Shajereh Tayyebeh (The Good Tree) school in the city of Minab, in Hormozgan province of Iran, near the Strait of Hormuz, started as an institution primarily to serve the children of Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Navy personnel. It initially formed part of a larger military complex.

Here’s where all, or most, the hippies went:
In today’s world, culture is increasingly influenced by commercialization, visual noise, and consumerist behavior. We face a paradox: there has never been so much content, yet such a lack of meaning. In this context, the noospheric concept offers not only a philosophical reevaluation of culture but also a practical path toward its renewal.
The noosphere, as a space of collective intelligence, suggests that culture is not entertainment, but a means of shaping consciousness, transmitting meaning, and uniting humanity around shared values. In the noospheric paradigm, art, literature, music, and theatre are tools for human and societal development—not just commodities for the market.
This mindset also transforms the role of the artist. The creator is no longer simply a producer of “images,” but a guide of deeper ideas that resonate with collective ethics, planetary challenges, and the quest for harmony between technological progress and the human soul. Creativity in the noospheric dimension becomes a form of responsibility for the future.
The noospheric approach also reshapes cultural policy: instead of focusing on “mass appeal,” it emphasizes the support of meaningful, innovative, and integrative projects. Rather than isolated festivals or grants, it envisions the creation of sustainable cultural ecosystems where everyone can be a creator—not just a consumer.
Digital culture represents a particularly vital area of noospheric transformation. The internet is not just a technology—it is a new “noosphere,” a space where contemporary consciousness is formed. And it is here that the key question is being decided: will digital culture become a tool for development—or another instrument of manipulation?
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Ahh, those interesting times!

Yeah, fucking interesting game theorists giving us a fucking lesson with Chinese accent from his Canadian pedestal?
Faggotry: How Iran can CRIPPLE the West in One Move – Prof. Jiang Xueqin. So, he’s telling us with glee that food will triple and gasoline will be gone. Yeah, nobody in the streets, now those are interesting TIMES.

Real INTERESTING. Israel expands its war into Lebanon, Saudi Arabia and Iran reach an understanding, and Europe’s role grows as U.S. brutality clashes with Iranian mettle. Here’s a recap of the news from the last day.

Oh, these are interesting times: Paul Cudenec , China and the same old global mafia


Hillard writes that China is the final piece in the jigsaw puzzle of globalist control. [36]
He describes its notorious use of facial recognition technology linked to a social credit system, which rewards or punishes behaviour as the state sees fit.
“China is a dream model for the global oligarchy eager to roll out these methods across the planet… officially, for our security”. [37]
Just to ram home the real and serious role played by China in the globalists’ bid for worldwide tyranny, I would refer readers to a talk given in Beijing at the Chinese state’s Lanting Forum by foreign minister H.E. Wang Yi, who is a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China’s Central Committee, on October 27, 2025.

Featured on the website of the CPIFA, China’s Chatham House, it is entitled “Implementing the Global Governance Initiative for a Community with a Shared Future for Humanity”.
Wang Yi claims that “over the past 80 years, the international system with the UN at its core has been standing as a bedrock of world peace and development”.
He says that in the face of obstacles, President Xi Jinping “solemnly put forth the Global Governance Initiative (GGI), offering the Chinese answer to this question of our times”.

This was obviously drawn up by the same networks that are behind similar efforts in “The West” because we hear all the same sickening language!
It is all about “international rule of law for a just and orderly global governance system”, “a people-centred approach for universally beneficial and inclusive outcomes of global governance” and “real results for a pragmatic and efficient global governance process”.

Lying through his teeth, Wang Yi declares: “The GGI responds to the needs of the world and wishes of the people.
“Together with the Global Development Initiative (GDI), the Global Security Initiative (GSI) and the Global Civilization Initiative (GCI), it promises much needed stability and provides certainty for this volatile world, and has received swift and clear support from more than 140 countries and international organizations”.
Here he is confusing the vile aims of globalist-controlled states and entities with “the needs of the world and wishes of the people”.

Fucking Jewish Pepe: The Mosaic of Death by a Thousand Cuts
Iran’s Decentralized Mosaic Defense – the official denomination – keeps being tweaked 24/7: that’s the IRGC’s long-term strategy of a death by a thousand cuts designed to bleed the Empire of Chaos dry.
Let’s wade through the interconnected canals permeating the unconstitutional, unwinnable, strategically catastrophic Empire of Chaos-built swamp.
Iran’s mosaic resilience and long-term strategy; the temptation for that ghastly death cult in West Asia to go nuclear; the approaching, inexorable Interceptor Hell; China’s relentless drive to ditch the old order (hoarding gold, dumping dollars); the BRICS’s progress in creating a parallel financial system; the collapse of American vassals, in several latitudes: all that is accelerating a radical system reset.
And then, there’s Vladimir Putin, just casually, almost like an afterthought, annoncing there may not be any Russian gas to be sold to the EU after all:
“Maybe it would make more sense for us to stop supplying gas to the EU ourselves and move to those new markets, and establish ourselves there (…) Again, I want to stress: there’s no political motive here. But if they’re going to close the market to us in a month or two anyway, maybe it’s better to leave now and focus on countries that are reliable partners. That said, this isn’t a decision. I’m just thinking out loud. I’ll ask the government to look into it together with our companies.”

Nearly 90% of deaths from wars in the first decade of the 21st century included civilians, a significant number of whom were children.


Game Motherfuckng Theory MY ASS:







Up to 2016! NOW? Oh my fucking game theory living in interesting fucking TIMES.


Reem’s Story, 13-year-old Yemen.

“An airstrike hit my village when I was at home doing my homework. Suddenly part of the ceiling fell, and the bomb came through a hole in the ceiling and exploded in the room. I could not breathe because of gas and smoke. I was injured in my thigh, head and back, and most of my family members were injured too.
“I walked to the hospital while I was bleeding. The doctor gave me medicine for one month only, and asked us to go back home because there was no space. They asked us to pay money to provide us with a room in the hospital which we didn’t have. So, I left.
“When I arrived home I could not see any of the damage because of the darkness. I went to bed but I could not sleep because of the pain in my body. The next morning, I saw shrapnel everywhere in the walls and furniture.
“Since that airstrike, I don’t go to school and I feel worried about missing a year of education. Our life before was wonderful – but the war and airstrikes make me feel sad and scared. I still feel the pain in my thigh and back and I wish the war would stop.”
* Not her real name.

The Sexual Violence in Armed Conflict (SVAC)26 database, which includes rape, sexual slavery, forced prostitution, forced pregnancy, forced sterilisation/abortion, sexual mutilation and sexual torture, shows that globally roughly 35 percent of conflicts involved some forms of sexual violence against children between 1989 and 2009 – but the real numbers are likely to be much higher.

They tied my mother to a tree and eventually shot her. When they had killed everyone else they told me to come with them.



HAD ENOUGH of game theory and these cunts on Podcasts, and the minute-by-minute war porn, another drone shot down, another building razed? Enough of these fucking COCKSUCKING interesting TIMES?

NO??????????????
[A view of destruction after the Israeli military launches airstrikes on the Dahiyeh district in Beirut, Lebanon on March 5, 2026.]

Paris of the Middle East?



Digging the fucking war PORN?
Attacks on Lebanon
- Casualty counts: The death toll from Israel’s assault on Lebanon has risen to at least 217, with 798 wounded, according to Lebanon’s Health Ministry.
- Israeli strikes hit southern Lebanon and Beirut suburbs: Israeli warplanes bombed Dahiyeh, a southern suburb of Beirut, on Friday, with the Israeli military saying it conducted 26 rounds of attack on the area. Israel also bombed towns in southern and eastern Lebanon, including the southern coastal city of Sidon where five people were killed and seven wounded, according to Lebanon’s health ministry. It marked the second day of heavy airstrikes on Dahiyeh, with strikes also reported in the towns of Ghobeiry and Haret Hreik on Thursday, according to Al Jazeera. Across Lebanon, at least 10 people were killed on Thursday, including a family of four in southern Lebanon and a village mayor and his wife.
- Southern suburbs of Beirut forcibly evacuated as Israel threatens destruction: In the wake of intensifying strikes, and forced displacement orders issued by the Israeli military, residents of Beirut’s southern suburbs have begun to flee. This includes residents of the Dahiyeh area, home to roughly 400,000 people. Israel also issued an evacuation order for residents in the Baalbek region, which could affect up to 80,000 people. Bezalel Smotrich, leader of the far-right National Religious Party, said on Thursday that “Dahiyeh will look like Khan Younis,” the city in Gaza that Israel has burned to the ground. Yair Lapid, the centrist leader of the Israeli opposition, said that Israel should “depopulate and destroy every village in southern Lebanon, with the Yellow Line in Gaza as the model.” “It may not be pleasant,” he said, “to scrape off two or three Lebanese villages, but they brought this upon themselves.” For a sense of what Lebanese people are expecting, listen to a voice message sent to journalist Jeremy Loffredo in the Dahiyeh area, describing fears of imminent carpet-bombing.
- ICRC: Hundreds of thousands displaced in Lebanon: Hundreds of thousands of people in Lebanon have been displaced since Monday, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), said Hachem Osseiran, ICRC spokesperson for the Middle East, according to AP. “The intensification of hostilities, coupled with evacuation orders covering entire districts in Beirut, southern Lebanon, and the Bekaa Valley, has sown panic and confusion. Many people have fled, some on foot, with nothing but the clothes on their backs and no clear sense of where to go.”

BASMA’S STORY
Basma* is an 8-year-old girl from Syria:
“I am from a town near Damascus city; my home was there and my school too. I really loved my school back home, it was pretty, my teacher loved me and I had a lot of friends. I was in class when my school was hit. We ran out of the school right away and I went back home, but I later found out that many children had been injured. I have never seen my school or my friends again; I miss them a lot.
“We moved to different places and began to rent a house in a new town. I never once stopped going to school but in this new town my school was hit, and this time 20 children died.
“After this, my family decided to move further to the north because at the time it was safer. But the first school we went to was so bad, and the teachers used to hit us even for little things like if I forgot my homework. The teachers used to leave us most of the time alone in the class doing nothing. I hated it.
“Now I am in this new school and I feel much better. I love the drawings and the colours on the walls. I love the English teacher the most, he is so kind and he teaches us so well.”
* Not her real name
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More porn: Smotrich’s Son Wounded: Did Israel Underestimate Hezbollah South of the Litani?

U.S. and Israeli airstrikes pound Iran for a seventh day. Over 3,600 civilian sites damaged in U.S.-Israeli strikes. U.S. and Israeli officials hint at escalation in coming days. Evidence grows that the U.S. is responsible for deadly strike on elementary school. President Donald Trump demands Iran’s “unconditional surrender.” Iranian strikes hit Bahrain. Iran launches attacks on Kuwait, where U.S. suspends embassy operations. Fighter jet appears to crash in Iraq. U.S. and Qatar discuss acquiring Ukrainian interceptor drones. U.S. continues to eye Kurdistan for help in war on Iran. Israeli strikes hit Beirut suburbs as bombardment intensifies across Lebanon. Mass displacement in southern suburbs of Beirut as Israeli leadership threatens destruction. IDF says two soldiers wounded in fighting in southern Lebanon. Hezbollah deploys elite Radwan fighters to southern Lebanon. Trump again calls for a Netanyahu pardon. Trump dumps Noem. House blocks resolution that would have limited Trump’s war on Iran. Stephen Miller calls for military campaign against drug cartels. Trump says U.S. action against Cuba could follow Iran war. Afghans rally in border provinces as fighting with Pakistan displaces tens of thousands. Sudanese army retakes strategic city, shelling continues in Kordofan. Islamist militants kill at least 14 Nigerian soldiers in attacks on army bases. Landslide at Rubaya coltan mine in eastern Congo kills more than 200. Iran war postpones new round of Russia-Ukraine peace talks.

[Children, like this Rohingyagirl in Bangladesh, are incredibly resilient. With the right support they can recover from their experiences, but this becomes less likely when communities and services are crippled by conflict.]
– U.S. and Israeli airstrikes pound Iran for a seventh day: Intense U.S. and Israeli airstrikes hit Tehran and cities across Iran on Friday as the war entered its seventh day. Huge explosions were reported in residential areas of the capital and in the vicinity of Tehran University. Witnesses in Tehran told the AP the airstrikes were particularly intense, shaking homes in the area. Blasts were also reported in Shiraz, Qom, Isfahan, and Kermanshah. At least 20 civilians were killed and 30 injured after U.S.-Israeli strikes hit the Zibashahr residential district in the city of Shiraz, according to ISNA. Two paramedics are among the dead, according to the Tasnim news agency.
– Casualty counts: The death toll in Iran has reached at least 1,332, according to the Iranian Red Crescent Society. Children account for about 30% of those killed in the U.S. and Israeli attacks, government spokeswoman Fatemeh Mohajerani said.
– Over 3,600 civilian sites damaged in U.S.-Israeli strikes: The U.S.-Israeli attacks have damaged 3,643 civilian sites, including 3,090 homes, according to the head of the Iranian Red Crescent Society, Pir Hossein Kolivand. In addition, 528 commercial and service centers, 14 medical or pharmaceutical facilities and nine Red Crescent facilities, have also been damaged.
– U.S. and Israeli officials hint at escalation in coming days: U.S. and Israeli officials both suggested on Thursday that strikes on Iran would escalate. War Secretary Pete Hegseth said at a press conference Thursday that “the amount of firepower over Iran and over Tehran is about to surge dramatically.” Meanwhile, Israeli army chief of staff Lt. Gen Eyal Zamir said the Israeli military “will intensify the strike on the foundations of the regime and its military capabilities.” The Israeli military also issued a displacement order for residents of an industrial area of Qom, a seminary city south of Tehran.
– Evidence grows that U.S. is responsible for deadly strike on elementary school that killed 180 children: There is growing evidence that the U.S. military carried out Saturday’s strike on a girls’ elementary school in Minab that killed around 180 children, including 168 schoolgirls, the majority of them aged between 7 and 12. An investigation by The New York Times using satellite imagery, verified videos, and social media posts, found that U.S. forces were most likely to have carried out the strike as they were attacking Iranian naval targets near the Strait of Hormuz. In a separate report, Reuters, quoting U.S. officials, reported that U.S. military investigators believe it was likely that U.S. forces were responsible for the strike, but had not yet reached a final conclusion. War Secretary Pete Hegseth on Wednesday acknowledged the US military was investigating the attacks, which ranks as one of the deadliest cases of children being killed in a single strike in memory.
– White House posts movie montage glorifying war: As the war continues to escalate, the White House posted a video on Wednesday evening under the words “JUSTICE THE AMERICAN WAY” of what appeared to be footage of real military strikes and statements by War Secretary Pete Hegseth interspersed with a montage of famous movie clips including from including “Gladiator,” “Braveheart,” “Top Gun,” “Tron,” “John Wick,” “Superman,” “Transformers,” and “Deadpool.”

– Trump demands Iran’s “unconditional surrender”: President Donald Trump said on social media that there would be no deal with Iran without “UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER!”
– Iranian strikes hit Bahrain: Iranian strikes hit state oil facilities in Bahrain, including Bapco Refining’s Sitra refinery, the country’s only refinery and a major regional energy hub, Bahrain’s Interior Ministry confirmed. Another strike hit a high-rise in Manama, the country’s capital, and appeared to be a precision strike, targeting a specific apartment in a luxury tower where expatriates and business travelers often stay.
– Iran launches attacks on Kuwait, where U.S. suspended embassy operations: Iran launched a new wave of missiles and drones toward Kuwait, with the Kuwaiti Army saying its air defenses were responding to hostile projectiles that breached the country’s airspace. Air raid sirens sounded and explosions were heard during interception attempts, while sources said the incoming weapons appeared to target U.S. military installations in the country, according to a statement on X. The U.S. State Department announced it had suspended operations at the U.S. Embassy in Kuwait City and urged U.S. citizens to leave the country if possible or to shelter in place. Kuwait’s Defense Ministry said two Kuwaiti Army personnel have been killed in attacks and 67 people have been injured.
– Fighter jet appears to crash in Iraq: A fighter jet crashed in the southern Basra province of Iraq, according to local police, with the pilot ejecting before impact. Authorities say the pilot had not yet been located. Iranian outlet Fars News described the aircraft as an “aggressor fighter jet,” though it remains unclear whether it was American or Israeli. United States Central Command denied reports that a U.S. jet had been shot down over Basra, calling the claims “baseless and NOT TRUE.”
– IRGC says it has more weapons, U.S. targets missile launchers: Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said the country is prepared for a prolonged conflict and has not yet used many of its newest weapons systems, with IRGC spokesman Brigadier General Ali Mohammad Naeini saying “the enemy should expect painful blows in every operational wave” and that “new innovations and weapons” have not been used on a wide scale. It was also reported Thursday that the U.S. and Israel are racing to destroy Iran’s missile launchers and drone systems before their own air-defense interceptor stockpiles dwindle, according to The Wall Street Journal. War Secretary Pete Hegseth described the approach as “shooting the archer instead of the arrows,” with U.S. and Israeli aircraft monitoring subterranean bases to strike mobile launchers as they emerge. U.S. Central Command reports that launches have fallen by 86 percent over the first four days of the conflict despite Iran’s use of dispersed “mosaic defense” tactics and modified trucks to conceal its missile launchers.
– U.S. and Qatar discuss acquiring Ukrainian interceptor drones: The United States and Qatar are in early discussions with Kyiv about acquiring Ukrainian interceptor drones to counter Iranian Shahed UAVs, according to Reuters. The talks are reportedly focused on Ukrainian technology capable of detecting incoming drones and disrupting their communications signals. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy confirmed that Washington had requested assistance in countering Shahed drones and said Kyiv would consider such cooperation only if it does not weaken Ukraine’s defenses against Russia.
– Araghchi discusses Iranian war aims: Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi appeared on NBC News once again, where he discussed Iran’s war aims and outlook. He said, categorically, that Tehran is not seeking a ceasefire or talks with the U.S. Aragchi said that Iran sees no reason to negotiate after the second round of negotiations did not prevent an increase in American aggression. Araghchi said that Iran has no intention to strike the U.S. homeland, and is focusing its attacks on the extensive U.S. military presence in the region. He also said that Iran has no plans to close the Strait of Hormuz, which he insists remains open, but that “all scenarios” remain possible if the war continues. “This is not our war,” he emphasized. “This is a war of choice by the United States.”
– Trump touches on Iranian missiles, gas, and leadership: President Donald Trump echoed the claim of his military’s top leadership that the U.S.-Israeli campaign has rapidly degraded Iran’s military capabilities, claiming that “as soon as they set off a missile, within four minutes the launcher gets hit.” He claimed that roughly 60% of Iran’s missiles and 64% of its launchers have been eliminated. When asked about the effect of the war on the U.S. energy market, he told Reuters that he does not “have any concern about” rising gas prices. “They’ll drop very rapidly when this is over, and if they rise, they rise, but this is far more important than having gasoline prices go up a little bit.” In the same interview, Trump said the United States must be involved in selecting Iran’s next leader, saying Washington would “have to choose that person along with Iran.” Trump added that it was too early to determine who might lead Iran next, saying “everybody’s in the mix,” including exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi. According to a report from The Washington Post, U.S. intelligence has seen “no signs of uprisings or defections” during the early days of the campaign.
– U.S. continues to eye Kurdistan for help in Iran war: Nearly half of documented U.S.-Israeli strikes in Iran’s Kurdish regions have targeted Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps facilities and police command centers, according to a strike map compiled by journalist Evan Hill. The sites are concentrated in West Azerbaijan, Kurdistan, Kermanshah, and Ilam provinces. On the topic of the role of the Kurds in the conflict, Trump told Reuters on Thursday that it would be “wonderful” if Iranian Kurdish forces based in Iraq crossed into Iran to attack security forces there. When asked about the possibility of the U.S. providing air cover for Iranian Kurdish forces, Trump responded, “I can’t tell you that,” but added that the goal for the Kurds would be “to win.”
– War drives large-scale displacement across the region: The World Health Organization said the conflict is triggering mass displacement across multiple countries. Around 100,000 people have fled Iran since the fighting began, according to WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who said that up to 1 million people in southern Lebanon could be forced to move after recent evacuation orders, with another 700,000 in Beirut’s southern suburbs facing possible displacement. The WHO also said it has verified 13 attacks on healthcare infrastructure in Iran since the start of the U.S.-Israeli military campaign, and has confirmed the deaths of 4 medics, along with injuries to 25 others.
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Interesting lobotomized, Disneyfired, Jew-ly-wood, McDonald’sized, INFANTILIZED times?
Jews and the Axis of Evil, Is-RAY-Hell and U$A/I have WON.







