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Israel/iran

I wonder what she was saying?
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Pakistan 'tells Iran they may nuke Israel'​

Pakistan has threatened to drop a nuclear warhead on Israel if Benjamin Netanyahu uses nuclear weapons against Iran, according to a top Iranian officer. General Mohsen Rezaee (Pictured), a senior officer in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and a member of Iran's National Security Council, said in an interview: 'Pakistan has assured us that if Israel uses a nuclear bomb on Iran, they will attack Israel with a nuclear bomb.'
Is there a down side to this?
 
Iran shot down an F-35.
The photo show the aircraft to be the size of a C-130. :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: 🤡 🌎
Or Iranians that small?

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Looks like you could put about 30-40 of the surrounding people in the cockpit, but look how big the people are compared to the white bus and house. Using the bus, this F35 is like 2000' long. You could only get half a person in the white bus though! Google says aircraft is 51' long. If we laid those people on top of the craft, you could put more than 10 of them end to end. This picture is BS!
 
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As for “Israel stealing land” biblically speaking that is the land that God gave them. They came out of slavery in Egypt and marched through the desert till they crossed the Jordan river into present day Israel. It’s the land that God told Abraham that his seed would inhabit. Now if you don’t believe the Bible, the fact still remains that Israel did inhabit that land several thousand years ago.
OK, so, thanks for the 2 sentence summary of the book of Joshua. Cool story. Now wow us with your biblical knowledge and do the same with Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and Daniel.
 
You underestimate the Zionists, but it is all a stupid chess game. This is what I was talking about. They did the same to a friends farm in Amherst County Virginia. He was going to start killing county supervisors until we talked him out of it.

City Gov to Seize 175-Year-Old Farm by Eminent Domain, Replace with Affordable Housing​

Family fights township attempts to replace historic farm with government project​

Chris Bennett

June 11, 2025 06:53 AM
lead GOOGLE HENRY FARM.jpg

In the bull’s-eye of development, Andy Henry’s family farm has survived for 175 years. “All the other farms disappeared,” he says. “We did not. We will not.”
(Photo by Google Earth)
For three decades, Andy Henry has declined $20-30 million offers for his 21-acre, 175-year-old farm. Ironically, local government is using his perseverance to take the entire property via eminent domain and replace pasture with affordable housing.
Grass for concrete? Legacy surrendered? No deal, Henry says. Period. Full stop.
On South River Road, in Middlesex County, N.J., warehouses and industrial buildings have replaced the once abundant farms of yesteryear—except a lone holdout.
“My family sacrificed on this land for 175 years,” Henry adds. “All the other farms disappeared. We did not. We will not.”
Sell, or Else
In 1850, Joseph McGill—Andy Henry’s maternal great-grandfather—bought 21 acres of farmland in Cranbury, tucked almost dead-center between New York City and Philadelphia.
McGill broke ground and began growing crops immediately, alongside construction of a farmhouse. In 1879, the home burned. McGill rebuilt in 1880. One crisis of many endured.
“They survived hardship after hardship,” Henry says. “In 1936, my grandfather died, leaving my grandmother and mother to run the farm. It was struggle after struggle, but they held on to the land, and again survived, leaving something for the next generation.”
Henry, alongside his brother, Christopher, grew up on the family farm and watched the surrounding landscape dramatically change form. In 1952, the New Jersey Turnpike was laid down a stone’s throw from their property, and in 1972, an adjacent Turnpike exit was constructed, opening the floodgates on development.
In rapid succession, domino-style, the surrounding farms were sold. Warehouses and distributorships birthed metal and concrete; land values skyrocketed; and the industrial world ringed the Henry operation. Through it all, the family’s 21 acres remained intact as a working farm.
1880s ANDY HENRY FARM.jpg

The Henry family’s rebuilt home in the 1880s. “The generations before us had to fight to save this farm,” Henry says. “They sacrificed. So will I and my brother.”
(Photo courtesy of Henry family)
In 2012, Henry (in tandem with Christopher) fully inherited the property. The siblings invested $200,000 in upkeep on the farm—all while buyout offers ballooned to $20-30 million.
“Didn’t matter how much money we were offered,” Henry says. “We saved the farm no matter what. We turned down all the offers to preserve the legacy for our family, city, and even state.”
Henry currently resides in New Mexico, but makes frequent returns to his family home.
“Our farm in now leased for raising cattle and sheep. The town loves driving by and seeing something besides warehouses. Keeping this legacy intact and passing it to the next generation has been, and is always, our plan.”
Cranbury Township Committee also has a plan: Cover Henry’s farm with housing units.
On April 24, 2025, Henry’s mailbox clinked with an official letter of notice from the Committee, tagging his farm as an affordable housing site. “It was incredibly stunning,” he says. “The letter said if I didn’t agree on a price—they’d take my land by eminent domain.”
Sell, or else.
Standing on Principle
On May 12, the Committee officially approved a plan to take the Henry family farm. Timothy Duggan, an eminent domain specialist and attorney representing Henry, says the Committee’s intentions are “misguided and rushed.”
“Government behavior should be the opposite—preserve instead of destroy,” Duggan contends. “This is not a proper, reasonable use of eminent domain. No way.”
ANDY HENRY.jpg

“I doubt the township sees the irony, but they can only try to take it by eminent domain because we saved it from development offers in the first place,” Henry says.
(Photo courtesy of Henry family)
“Andy Henry could sell out for tens of millions of dollars to developers and walk away. It’s mind-boggling in this day and age to think you have someone genuinely standing on principle, but that’s who Andy Henry is, and that’s how much he wants his 175-year-old farm protected. He’s preserving history at no cost to the public.”
“We live in a heavily populated state with family farms lost at a fast and steady rate, and now someone wants to remove another, even though this special one still produces livestock and hay, with 21 acres and a historic home,” Duggan continues. “Literally, there is an architect from upstate New York scheduled to visit the house and look at the porch because he wants to be accurate in one of his rebuilds. That speaks to the amazing historic condition of Andy’s place, and to think the city government chooses to erase it defies common sense.”
What is the public’s reaction to the Committee’s eminent domain grab? “I can’t find anyone who supports the township’s action, on two levels,” Duggan notes. “One, everyone loves the Henry farm and appreciates it so much. Two, there are other places to build, and you don’t put up house complexes beside industrial complexes.”
Per New Jersey law, Cranbury must build 265 affordable housing units over the next decade. “We support affordable housing,” Duggan says, “but not dropped in the middle of a bunch of warehouses. The whole thing lacks common sense.”
(Cranbury Township Committee has not revealed what type of affordable housing is slated to replace the Henry farm. The Committee did not respond to Farm Journal interview requests.)
Echoing Duggan, Henry says public support is overwhelmingly positive. “I spoke at a council meeting in opposition to what they were doing, and the whole town has gotten behind me. We have a long history here in Cranbury and love this place and the people.”
175-Year Legacy
Legally, what happens next?
Henry will file a complaint to challenge the township in court. Ultimately, if the township proceeds, Henry will challenge eminent domain at every step, according to Duggan. “There are other places to build,” Duggan emphasizes. “Why take a 175-year-old farm?”
Unbowed, Henry insists he will fight to save his legacy. “I never dreamed the township would try to take our farm. I doubt the township sees the irony, but they can only try to take it by eminent domain because we saved it from development offers in the first place.”
“The generations before us had to fight to save this farm,” Henry concludes. “They sacrificed. So will I and my brother.”
Eminent (fucking) domain

Destroyed out neighbor hood out by the bayou. All my friends homes were taken over. At least they enumerated the families whose homes were taken down. One home was a log home that probably dated 100 + years old (that was the 1960’s) bulldozed it right over. Put up college dorms that have been torn down and rebuilt at least twice. Drained sewage in Chauvin Swamp, my all time favorite playground after the bayou. What a fucking mess. The community on the other side of the water is a slum area, virtually worthless. Actually higher and dryer than what they confiscated. Eminent domain. Ought to be a law against it.

And with all that said, I have actually seen one location where it SHOULD be implemented.

Watson’s Brake. A 5000 + year old site, that is the oldest known settlement in the Americas. It predates Poverty Point, a World Heritage site, by 2000 years. It predates all of western civilization as we know it. One family owns half of it and won’t sell to the state. Give them a bonus cash and make it available to the World just as has been done with Poverty Point.


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i demand that you suck my dick.


they demand? love it. lets see the response from US. guess the Jews want to let someone else destroy us so they have an open field. hope the Putin to Trump "we will stay out" is for real. if not,don't think the end will come later than 12/25.
i am in a weird place. not anti Semitic at all. have had numerous Jewish friends and acquaintances. have developed a recent major hate for Israel. but,i must admire their operational skill is managing our gov and bending it to their desires.
China gotta be loving this shit.
 
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i am in a weird place. not anti Semitic at all. have had numerous Jewish friends and acquaintances. have developed a recent major hate for Israel. but,i must admire their operational skill is managing our gov and bending it to their desires.
China gotta be loving this shit.
Exactly
 
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they demand? love it. lets see the response from US. guess the Jews want to let someone else destroy us so they have an open field. hope the Putin to Trump "we will stay out" is for real. if not,don't think the end will come later than 12/25.
i am in a weird place. not anti Semitic at all. have had numerous Jewish friends and acquaintances. have developed a recent major hate for Israel. but,i must admire their operational skill is managing our gov and bending it to their desires.
China gotta be loving this shit.
Stolen, with a gut wrenching laugh.

Fuck you (Israel) not one American life. Not one dollar.

You on yo own nigga.
 
Its not the bunker buster bombs it's about the need to fly a bunch of B2 over the targets to drop them bumker busters , to even have remote chance of success against most Underground facilites, F35 or even F15 just cant drop anything sieable enough to dent these facilites. Bibi's plan was always dragging US into the war.

Gtlm5iGa8AAnyt9


The conflict between Israel and Iran has entered the phase of a war of attrition: Tel Aviv hopes to drag the United States into it, - The Economist.Israeli strikes on Iran's nuclear and missile sites since June 13 have so far affected only a third of the infrastructure. Deep underground nuclear centers, including Fordow, remain intact - without American "bunker" bombs, Israel may not cope.The main thing for Israel now is to maintain momentum: if it manages to maintain the appearance of success, this could push President Trump to participate in the war. But if the rate of destruction of nuclear facilities slows down and the number of victims increases, Trump may try to end the war before Israel achieves its goals, writes The Economist.
 
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