Morning Peeps 😊🫶
🖖
beige.party/@MAJ1/114731412320…
#MorningAll & #TZAG G’day Squirrel Fans, hope I find you bright eyed & bushy tailed!Monday has stormed in past the weekend like a tornado in a glass factory!
Changeable conditions here in deepest, darkest Yorkshire with the temperature back down to a much more comfortable high if 18ºC!
Nothing pressing on today so will take the day as it comes.
Have a cracking day #Today & remember #RuleNo1: Don’t let ‘em Cash-ew ! 😊🫶
🖖
@weirdfolks
#WeirdFolks #SquirrelsOfMastodon #TheMammutMoves
💜 Cynni 🏳️🌈 likes this.
#MorningAll & #TZAG G’day Squirrel Fans, hope I find you bright eyed & bushy tailed!
Monday has stormed in past the weekend like a tornado in a glass factory!
Changeable conditions here in deepest, darkest Yorkshire with the temperature back down to a much more comfortable high if 18ºC!
Nothing pressing on today so will take the day as it comes.
Have a cracking day #Today & remember #RuleNo1: Don’t let ‘em Cash-ew ! 😊🫶
🖖
💜 Cynni 🏳️🌈 likes this.
reshared this
weirdfolks group, Dgar, Cazimodo Creative, Pixy's Journey, The Lady (La Donna) and 💜 Cynni 🏳️🌈 reshared this.
It's a lot cooler today, and with a bit of rain expected later.
Good morning and enjoy your day 🙂 ☕
weirdfolks group reshared this.
We went from 30+ yesterday to 18 now and just had some rain... So we're having the same kind of weather changes here, it seems.
I hope that you'll have a lovely day today 🌻
@weirdfolks
weirdfolks group reshared this.
Good Morning ! Another chilly day here .. made and canned tea yesterday
It is 4c tonight .. heater on most of the day and probably tomorrow as well before she starts to go back up into the 20c...
weirdfolks group reshared this.
Nice! 🫶
It’s usually the “…keeping the vacuum on the outside” line that gets the attention, but mining crater ice is still something that’s being planned!
✌️😁🤘
weirdfolks group reshared this.
they weren't talking to each other to start with.
Two with windows 11 and one with windows xp.
weirdfolks group reshared this.
Yeah... Windy, wet, and colder here now... But it's a nice change from the heat. 😊
Fankoos 🫶🏻 I'll do my best. Hope you'll have a lovely day today 🌻 as well!
💜 🍀@weirdfolks
weirdfolks group reshared this.
We are being pushed significantly harder at gym now. There's usually a bit of grumbling and not much else achieved for the rest of the day. I know, it's doing me good. It just doesn't always feel like it! 🤔💪🏻
weirdfolks group reshared this.
You were workin all the time mining crater ice!
When I met you
I picked you out, I shook up and turned you around
Turned you into someone new
Now five years later on, you've got the world at your feet
Success has been so easy for you
But don't forget, it's me who put you where you are now
And I can put you back down too
Don't, don't you want me?
You know I can't believe it when I hear that you won't see me
Don't, don't you want me?
You know I don't believe you when you say that you don't need me
It's much too late to find
You think you've changed your mind
You'd better change it back, or we will both be sorry
Don't you want me, baby?
Don't you want me? Oh
Don't you want me, baby?
Don't you want me? Oh
I was workin all the time mining crater ice!
That much is true
But even then, I knew I'd find a much better place
Either with or without you
The five years we have had have been such good times
I still love you
But now, I think it's time I live my life on my own
I guess it's just what I must do
Don't, don't you want me?
You know I can't believe it when I hear that you won't see me
Don't, don't you want me?
You know I don't believe you
When you say that you don't need me
It's much too late to find
You think you've changed your mind
You'd better change it back, or we will both be sorry
Don't you want me, baby?
Don't you want me? Oh
Don't you want me, baby?
Don't you want me? Oh
Don't you want me, baby?
Don't you want me? Oh
Don't you want me, baby?
Don't you want me? Oh
Don't you want me, baby?
Don't you want me? Oh
Don't you want me, baby?
Don't you want me? Oh
Don't you want me, baby?
Don't you want me? Oh
Don't you want me, baby?
Don't you want me? Oh
Don't you want me, baby?
@dgar
sorry to bastardize what i presume are your lyrics.
is it not that time of year for the music competition?
thanks, nothing planned. was going to apply for jobs but then the turbo moron* bombed iran and i don't see the point really.
*a @Kierkegaanks's special.
You too. I thought I did a COMPLETE
backup
But did not have my follows
and followers at Pebble
apparentley
Did not back those!
🤔😟😖....
Good to see you too
my 🐿️
friend!
take care urself
and have you follow and hit the bell 🔔
weirdfolks group reshared this.
lol
SPELL CHECKER strikes again
it's like...
" I'll just take a guess at it 🎯
couldn't
HIT
the
broad
side
of
a
🤣🤣💯👍🏼
* corrected my spelling,
but it sure comes up w/ some strange guesses
🤔
weirdfolks group reshared this.
That was a big reason, especially with the exponential number of entrants due to the popularity of the Fediverse.
I'm late as per usual but this time because I've been up-an-at-'em. Though, in the current (political) climate up-an-atom feels more appropriate.
Morning Maj1 👋😃🖖😎.
Monday - Shmonday, bah-humbug I say to that.
Have a fun surviving & glad it's a bit cooler.
😎
weirdfolks group reshared this.
I keep trying to cage time but then slippery bastard keeps running away from me 🤷😂.
Cheers friend 😀👍
weirdfolks group reshared this.
reshared this
weirdfolks group and The Lady (La Donna) reshared this.
Sometimes I think 🤔💭
people reading what it puts
or guesses
makes you look like an idiot
or are 🥴😵
🤣🤣🤣🤣😆😁
weirdfolks group reshared this.
Habit now
just 'copy/ pasta ' < (* pun intended 🤣
my Bio
it is finding my friends
again
that hurts
I enjoy good conversations with friends
and keeps life interesting
never know what people will you~see or say
Keep it international
😍 to explore other cultures and points of view 💯👍🏼😁
weirdfolks group reshared this.
Thanks, Maj1
just to say, LGBQ
We as humans are a mix of sugar and lots of spice! 🌶️♨️🔥
makes it all the more interesting!
Take care and blessings 🙏🏼
weirdfolks group reshared this.
lol 🤣🤣😁👍🏼
Welcome to the CLUB!
funny..
was 🤔💭 the same
about me!
hehee 😋😂....🫣
😁👍🏼
weirdfolks group reshared this.
ICE deports teen soccer star with no criminal record after graduation, shocking community
For 19-year-old Emerson Colindres, it was supposed to be a routine check-in with Immigration and Customs Enforcement.Daniella Silva (NBC News)
Tehran’s Next Move after the US Strike: Calculated Deterrence or Escalation?
The US strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities in Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan—announced with characteristic bravado by President Donald Trump—was framed as a “highly successful” operation. But beneath the surface of military theater, the strike carries deeper messages and calculated signals. Timing, tone, and restraint reveal more than the explosions themselves.
Trump, ever the showman, punctuated the announcement with an odd yet telling declaration: “Now is the time for peace.” That statement wasn’t just rhetorical flourish—it was strategic punctuation. It framed the strike not as a prelude to war, but as its endpoint. In other words: message sent, escalation contained—for now.
But the aftermath is anything but resolved.
A Message in the Timing
Sunday was no coincidence. With US markets closed, the strike landed softly on the domestic front—shielding Wall Street from immediate tremors. It was a game of optics and damage control: shake the chessboard abroad, but keep the boardroom calm at home.
This is classic Trump-era strategic theater: assert dominance, project unpredictability, then leave the world guessing. But even behind the curtain of calculation, this act carries very real implications for the region—and for Iran in particular.
Iran Holds the Next Move
The strike forces Tehran into a tense, high-stakes decision. Does it absorb the blow, treat it as a closing note in a failed negotiation symphony, and preserve its nuclear advances? Or does it strike back—risking a spiral that could pull the United States further into a conflict it likely cannot sustain?
Iranian strategy has never been rooted in impulsive retaliation. Its playbook is built on ambiguity, asymmetry, and patience. A direct attack on a US base might rally domestic pride, but it also opens the gates to broader confrontation. Conversely, a calculated strike against Zionist assets could signal strength without triggering American wrath—a balancing act Iran has perfected over decades.
Then there’s the Strait of Hormuz. Iran has long kept this vital oil artery in its back pocket as a pressure valve. Total closure would invite international retaliation, but a slow-burn campaign of maritime harassment and ambiguity? That’s well within Tehran’s wheelhouse. Expect maneuvers, signals, and shadow games before any talk of outright closure, or else if it’s national security was at stake expect the unexpected.
Following the United States’ airstrikes on Iranian nuclear facilities, senior Iranian lawmakers have raised the possibility of withdrawing from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and closing the strategic Strait of Hormuz in retaliation.
Esmail Kowsari, a prominent member of Iran’s National Security and Foreign Policy Committee in Parliament, affirmed that the country had already implemented protective measures to safeguard its nuclear infrastructure. He dismissed allegations of severe damage to Iran’s nuclear program, calling them “baseless claims,” and insisted that “Tehran has accurate intelligence disproving such assertions.”
Kowsari revealed that authorities are actively weighing a possible exit from the NPT. “We are reviewing the option of withdrawing from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty,” he said, noting that the parliamentary committee would soon hold an emergency session to assess the American attack and formulate Iran’s official response.
Reiterating Iran’s commitment to Resistance, Kowsari warned that “our armed forces will certainly continue striking the Zionist entity,” adding, “US military bases across the region will not remain secure. Hitting them will be far easier than targeting the Israeli regime.”
He further cautioned that Iran is prepared to escalate militarily if necessary, stating, “The closure of the Strait of Hormuz is on the table. We will definitely implement it if the situation requires.”
The Familiar Script of US–Zionist Policy
For Washington and Tel Aviv, this isn’t new terrain. The strategy toward Iran has always been one of coercion without commitment—crippling sanctions, covert operations, cyber sabotage, and the occasional kinetic jab. The idea isn’t to win a war, but to prevent Iran from ever dictating peace on its own terms.
The Zionist regime plays provocateur. The United States plays referee. The rhythm is familiar.
What’s changed is Iran’s ability to rewrite the tempo.
Just days before the strike, veteran journalist Seymour Hersh suggested a limited US operation was imminent—a “strike without engagement,” designed to recalibrate deterrence without crossing into quagmire territory. He was right. The move was surgical, symbolic, and strategically ambiguous.
And yet, Iran was ready. A senior official confirmed that much of the highly enriched uranium at Fordow had already been moved before the strike. The lesson: Tehran was anticipating.
The Netanyahu Mirror
One can’t help but recall the conundrum Benjamin Netanyahu faced in Gaza: repeated escalations with no strategic exit, a cycle of provocation and retaliation that left little but rubble and rhetoric. Has Trump now walked into the same strategic cul-de-sac?
Without a credible exit strategy or diplomatic off-ramp, Washington risks setting itself up for a familiar frustration: applying overwhelming pressure without achieving decisive outcomes.
Iran Bombards the Occupation Continously
A new wave of Iranian ballistic missile strikes targeted central and northern parts of occupied Palestine on Sunday, marking the first such attack since US airstrikes hit Iran’s nuclear facilities on Sunday at dawn. Sirens were activated across multiple areas, with Zionist authorities urging settlers to remain in shelters.
According to the occupation’s military, around 30 missiles were launched from Iran in two salvos toward Gush Dan and the north. On its part, Iranian state television reported strikes on at least 10 separate sites. Sirens were reportedly not activated in several areas, mainly Haifa, prior to impact, raising concerns over the entity’s early warning system.
Confirmed missile impacts were recorded in Haifa, Tel Aviv, Ness Ziona, Beer Yaakov, Ramla, and the settlement of Bat Yam, where a fire broke out in a residential building. In Haifa, one missile struck without any prior alert, prompting internal outrage over the failure of the alarm system.
Meanwhile, Iranian media reported that over 20 missiles landed in various locations across the occupied territories.
86 Settlers Injured
Zionist media reported that medical teams are assessing the affected areas for damage and casualties. In a related development, Israeli media reported, citing Magen David Adom (MDA), that emergency responders are attending to at least 86 settlers injured in the Iranian ballistic missile strikes on central and northern occupied Palestine, including some in critical condition. 30 injuries were reported in Tel Aviv alone.
MDA added that its teams are continuing to survey the reported impact sites, Zionist media reported.
Zionist authorities instructed settlers in impacted areas to remain in shelters until further notice, particularly in Haifa and al-Jalil, where sirens were also triggered.
This missile campaign marks Iran’s first attack since the United States, in coordination with the occupation, launched airstrikes on the Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan nuclear sites, an action Tehran has condemned as illegal and escalatory.
In the aftermath of the attack, the Zionist military’s spokesperson called on the public and media to refrain from sharing footage or images of the impact zones. Despite this, footage continued to come in from the impacted areas, showcasing the massive destruction. Emergency teams and military units remain on high alert as the situation continues to unfold, as per Zionist media.
abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=…
#alAqsaFlood #antiColonialism #antiImperialism #iran #palestine #resistance #westAsia
Tehran’s Next Move after the US Strike: Calculated Deterrence or Escalation?
abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/198…
"The US strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities in Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan—announced with characteristic bravado by President Donald Trump—was framed as a “highly successful” operation. But beneath the surface of…"
Tehran’s Next Move after the US Strike: Calculated Deterrence or Escalation?
The US strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities in Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan—announced with characteristic bravado by President Donald Trump—was framed as a “highly successful” operation. But beneath the surface of military theater, the strike carries deeper messages and calculated signals. Timing, tone, and restraint reveal more than the explosions themselves.
Trump, ever the showman, punctuated the announcement with an odd yet telling declaration: “Now is the time for peace.” That statement wasn’t just rhetorical flourish—it was strategic punctuation. It framed the strike not as a prelude to war, but as its endpoint. In other words: message sent, escalation contained—for now.
But the aftermath is anything but resolved.
A Message in the Timing
Sunday was no coincidence. With US markets closed, the strike landed softly on the domestic front—shielding Wall Street from immediate tremors. It was a game of optics and damage control: shake the chessboard abroad, but keep the boardroom calm at home.
This is classic Trump-era strategic theater: assert dominance, project unpredictability, then leave the world guessing. But even behind the curtain of calculation, this act carries very real implications for the region—and for Iran in particular.
Iran Holds the Next Move
The strike forces Tehran into a tense, high-stakes decision. Does it absorb the blow, treat it as a closing note in a failed negotiation symphony, and preserve its nuclear advances? Or does it strike back—risking a spiral that could pull the United States further into a conflict it likely cannot sustain?
Iranian strategy has never been rooted in impulsive retaliation. Its playbook is built on ambiguity, asymmetry, and patience. A direct attack on a US base might rally domestic pride, but it also opens the gates to broader confrontation. Conversely, a calculated strike against Zionist assets could signal strength without triggering American wrath—a balancing act Iran has perfected over decades.
Then there’s the Strait of Hormuz. Iran has long kept this vital oil artery in its back pocket as a pressure valve. Total closure would invite international retaliation, but a slow-burn campaign of maritime harassment and ambiguity? That’s well within Tehran’s wheelhouse. Expect maneuvers, signals, and shadow games before any talk of outright closure, or else if it’s national security was at stake expect the unexpected.
Following the United States’ airstrikes on Iranian nuclear facilities, senior Iranian lawmakers have raised the possibility of withdrawing from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and closing the strategic Strait of Hormuz in retaliation.
Esmail Kowsari, a prominent member of Iran’s National Security and Foreign Policy Committee in Parliament, affirmed that the country had already implemented protective measures to safeguard its nuclear infrastructure. He dismissed allegations of severe damage to Iran’s nuclear program, calling them “baseless claims,” and insisted that “Tehran has accurate intelligence disproving such assertions.”
Kowsari revealed that authorities are actively weighing a possible exit from the NPT. “We are reviewing the option of withdrawing from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty,” he said, noting that the parliamentary committee would soon hold an emergency session to assess the American attack and formulate Iran’s official response.
Reiterating Iran’s commitment to Resistance, Kowsari warned that “our armed forces will certainly continue striking the Zionist entity,” adding, “US military bases across the region will not remain secure. Hitting them will be far easier than targeting the Israeli regime.”
He further cautioned that Iran is prepared to escalate militarily if necessary, stating, “The closure of the Strait of Hormuz is on the table. We will definitely implement it if the situation requires.”
The Familiar Script of US–Zionist Policy
For Washington and Tel Aviv, this isn’t new terrain. The strategy toward Iran has always been one of coercion without commitment—crippling sanctions, covert operations, cyber sabotage, and the occasional kinetic jab. The idea isn’t to win a war, but to prevent Iran from ever dictating peace on its own terms.
The Zionist regime plays provocateur. The United States plays referee. The rhythm is familiar.
What’s changed is Iran’s ability to rewrite the tempo.
Just days before the strike, veteran journalist Seymour Hersh suggested a limited US operation was imminent—a “strike without engagement,” designed to recalibrate deterrence without crossing into quagmire territory. He was right. The move was surgical, symbolic, and strategically ambiguous.
And yet, Iran was ready. A senior official confirmed that much of the highly enriched uranium at Fordow had already been moved before the strike. The lesson: Tehran was anticipating.
The Netanyahu Mirror
One can’t help but recall the conundrum Benjamin Netanyahu faced in Gaza: repeated escalations with no strategic exit, a cycle of provocation and retaliation that left little but rubble and rhetoric. Has Trump now walked into the same strategic cul-de-sac?
Without a credible exit strategy or diplomatic off-ramp, Washington risks setting itself up for a familiar frustration: applying overwhelming pressure without achieving decisive outcomes.
Iran Bombards the Occupation Continously
A new wave of Iranian ballistic missile strikes targeted central and northern parts of occupied Palestine on Sunday, marking the first such attack since US airstrikes hit Iran’s nuclear facilities on Sunday at dawn. Sirens were activated across multiple areas, with Zionist authorities urging settlers to remain in shelters.According to the occupation’s military, around 30 missiles were launched from Iran in two salvos toward Gush Dan and the north. On its part, Iranian state television reported strikes on at least 10 separate sites. Sirens were reportedly not activated in several areas, mainly Haifa, prior to impact, raising concerns over the entity’s early warning system.
Confirmed missile impacts were recorded in Haifa, Tel Aviv, Ness Ziona, Beer Yaakov, Ramla, and the settlement of Bat Yam, where a fire broke out in a residential building. In Haifa, one missile struck without any prior alert, prompting internal outrage over the failure of the alarm system.
Meanwhile, Iranian media reported that over 20 missiles landed in various locations across the occupied territories.
86 Settlers Injured
Zionist media reported that medical teams are assessing the affected areas for damage and casualties. In a related development, Israeli media reported, citing Magen David Adom (MDA), that emergency responders are attending to at least 86 settlers injured in the Iranian ballistic missile strikes on central and northern occupied Palestine, including some in critical condition. 30 injuries were reported in Tel Aviv alone.
MDA added that its teams are continuing to survey the reported impact sites, Zionist media reported.
Zionist authorities instructed settlers in impacted areas to remain in shelters until further notice, particularly in Haifa and al-Jalil, where sirens were also triggered.
This missile campaign marks Iran’s first attack since the United States, in coordination with the occupation, launched airstrikes on the Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan nuclear sites, an action Tehran has condemned as illegal and escalatory.
In the aftermath of the attack, the Zionist military’s spokesperson called on the public and media to refrain from sharing footage or images of the impact zones. Despite this, footage continued to come in from the impacted areas, showcasing the massive destruction. Emergency teams and military units remain on high alert as the situation continues to unfold, as per Zionist media.
abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=…
#alAqsaFlood #antiColonialism #antiImperialism #iran #palestine #resistance #westAsia
It’s Trump’s War Now
counterpunch.org/2025/06/23/it…
"President Trump announced that the US had bombed three Iranian nuclear sites. Then he messaged that “now is the time for peace.” No, it is time for war. No negotiating, just giving Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu precisely what he wanted–the bunker-busting bombs that the Israeli leader had been dreaming of being used. Trump now More
The post It’s Trump’s War Now appeared first on Count"
It’s Trump’s War Now - CounterPunch.org
President Trump announced that the US had bombed three Iranian nuclear sites. Then he messaged that "now is the time for peace." No, it is time for war.Mel Gurtov (CounterPunch.org)
summer solstice
a perfect day for
a garden picknick
#dailyhaikuprompt - solstice, picknick, garden
#haiku
#poetry
#poetrycommunity
#writing
#writingcommunity
#solstice
#summer
#garden
bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cy0w94…
By Lyse Doucet
What the US and Iran do next could be even more momentous
The "tortuous" US-Iran relationship was tested at least once before, but this is of far greater magnitudeLyse Doucet (BBC News)
CW for the article: contains image of bloody child: hawarnews.com/en/22-martyred-6…
I believe it was on Public Service radio of Sweden I heard ISIL/Daesh had claimed the massacre as their deed. Not 100% sure where it was, but it was somewhere.
ISIL, the continuation of the group then in Iraq which sent al-Sharaa from Iraq to strive to impose their theocratic reactionary opinions in Syria, now self-imposed President al-Sharaa of Syria.
Why America is at War With Iran
counterpunch.org/2025/06/23/wh…
"The Neocon logic for needing to defeat Iran and break it into ethnic parts Opponents of the war with Iran say that the war is not in American interests, seeing that Iran does not pose any visible threat to the United States. This appeal to reason misses the Neocon logic that has guided U.S. foreign More
The post Why America is at War With Iran appeared first on CounterPunch.org."
Schade bij nucleaire doelen in Iran nog onbekend, maar Trump claimt ‘monumentale’ ondergrondse schade: ‘Bulls eye‘
Hoewel de schade van de Amerikaanse aanvallen op nucleaire doelen in Iran nog altijd niet vast te stellen is, heeft de Amerikaanse president Donald Trump zich daar al wel over uitgesproken op sociale media.Lotje van den Dungen (NRC)
Evolution over time of the number of occupational deaths by European country, where France led with 16% of the total between 2010 and 2022 #deaths
humanite.fr/en-debat/regard-de…
Morts au travail en Europe : la carte qui révèle le triste record de la France
Pour ce nouveau regard de cartographe, Nicolas Lambert nous propose de suivre dans le temps l’évolution du nombre de morts au travail par pays d’Europe.Nicolas Lambert (L'Humanité)

Merry Christmas
in reply to Tim McTuffty • • •Tim McTuffty
in reply to Merry Christmas • • •@lyndamerry484 Morning Lynda 🤗🥰
Have a most excellent day Lovely 😊🫶
🖖