131 Arrests

We can start making bets on the maximum number of arrests some of these recidivists clock up until the justice system finally puts them behind bars.

6 thoughts on “131 Arrests

  1. ” the maximum number of arrests”

    Well if they’d managed to abolish the police then he wouldn’t have been arrested…

    Less crime!

    (yeah, I do think a lof of leftists think this way).

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    1. I’m going to a talk about Iran here on campus. It’s advertised as “the conflict in Iran”, so there’s that. I’m very interested in hearing what the official leftist position on the war is and whether it’s different from Nick Fuentes’s.

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      1. Speaking on the war in Iran, I spotted something interesting today. One of the bloggers? I read every day is Vox Day. This morning he had a quote from the Jerusalem Post stating that hundreds of Kurdish fighters had launched a ground offensive in Iran.

        Now why I wanted to bring this up was the issue of timing. It was Tue or Wens when the US and Israel started talking about arming Kurds and trying to spark a civil war.

        This timeline does not match. Even assuming the Kurds already had weapons, which we cannot assume, but even if they did. Planning and staging a ground offensive is not a one or two day affair.

        You have to get all your ducks in order as it were. Assign targets, plan what units go where so as not to have units running into each other throwing a wrench into things. You have to gather your troops up in their staging points without revealing this. You also have to supply them with weapons, ammo, maps, medical supplies, etc. And a thousand more things, including and especially making damn sure your opposition doesn’t discover what your about to do.

        Basically you can launch an individual battle in a day or two, using local forces. That’s not really an issue. Granted that your going to either need to win quickly, or have ammo and reinforcements streaming into your AO in short order. But an actual offensive. That takes time, and a day or two certainly is not going to cut it.

        So to me, I think this was planned weeks ago, and we are just being told that this was spontaneous. Which to be fair would match every bit of how this disaster is being run.

        Also one more interesting thing I heard on Vox Day’s site. Apparently the Iranian military was given orders to follow through even if the leadership was killed, even before the opening decapitation strike. Which while not great for strategic coordination, does mean that their military does actually have a plan for the short term. Its likely less good in the long term, as they currently lack strategic level coordination, but I suspect they were thinking the US and Israel will run out of missiles before they get to a point where that level of coordination is required once more.

        • – W

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        1. I’m very grateful for this comment. I was thinking the same thing about the Kurds’ involvement but since I don’t know much about the region I didn’t want to say anything. This confirms that I’m not going insane.

          Thank you so much for your very insightful discussion of the war in Iran. I’m going to see what out resident specialist on Iran tells us at his talk today.

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  2. A short explanation from an Israeli expert on the Middle East [dated May 2025] regarding Israel’s view of Iran:

    Over the past 20 years, two camps have emerged in Israeli intelligence and politics regarding Iran:

    Fanatical Iran (the position of Netanyahu, Ya’alon, and others):
    ▫️ The regime is obsessed with ideology. ▫️ It is willing to sacrifice its economy and population for the sake of Israel’s destruction. ▫️ A nuclear bomb is not an instrument of deterrence, but a step toward Armageddon.

    Rational Iran (the position of Meir Dagan, Tamir Pardo): ▫️ Iran is a state with pragmatic elites who desire survival. ▫️ The bomb is needed as a security guarantee and regional leverage, not for an immediate strike. ▫️ Deterrence works if you understand the enemy’s logic.

    🔥 Note: both positions lead to different practical strategies.


    What should we do in practice, given the latest IAEA data?

    Stop viewing Iran in black-and-white terms. Even if the regime is ideological, it weighs the risks—and therein lies the danger. This is rational irrationality.

    Don’t underestimate the regional impact.
    ▫️ If Iran acquires nuclear weapons, Saudi Arabia and Turkey will not stand idly by. ▫️ This will be the end of the NPT, the beginning of a nuclear chain reaction in the Middle East.

    📣 Conclusion for Israeli policy:
    We can’t rely solely on the hope that “the Iranians are rational and won’t take risks.” But panic due to fanaticism is not a strategy either.

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    1. I only wish somebody explained what any of this has to do with us, given that we have people with 131 arrests setting people on fire and it’s hard to figure out why we need to be burning billions of dollars to create a similar mess in Iran to what we already created in Iraq and Libya.

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