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61,235 次观看 • 2 年前 •via X (Twitter)

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CB 的头像
CB2 年前

Olla waktu masih di kandungan mpok eril

June 的头像
June2 年前

Kegiatan ibu2 kontrakan ketika yg laen dah pd brgkt skolh/kerja😂😂😂

Garden 💐🫶 的头像
Garden 💐🫶2 年前

😭 @F_FeniJKT48 kamu ngapain heyy

melan 的头像
melan2 年前

rempong amat😭

บ י 的头像
บ י2 年前

@SW_RaishaJKT48 @Delynn_JKT48 Lu Bocah Dua Ngapain ? 😀 🤣🤣 Masih Inget Gak Lu Pada ... 🤣

Zkr 的头像
Zkr2 年前

Wkwkwkw, kumpulan ketika emak" lagi ngegosib random

xadboi 的头像
xadboi2 年前

Team J gini amat 😭

-R- #BLOH 的头像
-R- #BLOH2 年前

perut mami aya gede segitu karena didalamnya ada Chika dan Christy itu🤣

haykal 的头像
haykal2 年前

@drnprmdts

Kansa Tanta 的头像
Kansa Tanta2 年前

Istri padaa akur

相关视频

Hegseth’s message to Europe could hardly be clearer: the US is pivoting toward the Asian model of alliance management - pragmatic, interest-driven, and results-oriented - rather than the old European model of values-based diplomacy laced with moralizing and lectures on human rights and the “rules-based order.” For Asian countries (Singapore, Philippines, etc.), relations with the US have always been structured more on common interests than common values. Singapore and Asian states are pragmatic and are willing to work with whoever occupies the White House because America’s role as the balancer in Asia remains indispensable. Even non-aligned countries such as India and former adversaries such as Vietnam now recognize this. They appreciate hard power and credible deterrence more than pretty speeches, which is perfectly in line with the US's new national security strategy. Managing the South China Sea, Taiwan Strait, and other hotspots requires credible deterrence and military capability far more than human rights resolutions. Asia’s focus on this aligns with the need to impose costs on revisionist behavior. Basing your foreign policy on human rights and democracy, you risk losing nations that don't exactly hold the American variant of democracy in high regard. Hegseth praised “model allies” who are “capable, clear-eyed, and ready to defend their national interests.” His use of "clear-eyed" is important here. It means that to be an ally, you must agree on what the threat is. That should be the starting point. From there, national interests converge. Note how European "allies" diverge from this framework. You have many European nations now characterizing the US as the threat to the global order instead. This is the opposite of clear-eyedness. In a world where China presents a serious, long-term challenge to the regional order, utility and resolve matter more than shared ideology. Asia adapted after the collapse of the TPP by building CPTPP and RCEP; it managed Trump’s hard-power instincts and Biden’s style alike by staying focused on interests. The US, facing its own fiscal and strategic realities, is now explicitly choosing to reward and prioritize that same pragmatism. Western Europe would indeed do well to take note.

Melissa Chen

95,459 次观看 • 1 个月前

"We're not Asian in mentality, we're Russian. It's a completely different mentality, a different view of ourselves in world history, different values. And that's important. And that's what modern Europeans can't understand." - Vladimir Solovyov in an interview with Swiss journalist Roger Keppel on the West's failure to understand what's happening in Ukraine. "Unfortunately, Americans have absolutely no understanding or knowledge of the Russian people. The problem is that we look like Europeans or Americans; we're Caucasian. But in reality, we think as if either we or they came from another planet. We have completely different worldviews. So, when you look at Russians and try to predict our next move, you're always wrong. It would be much easier for you if we dressed differently. Then you'd say, 'Ah yes, as Kipling said, Russians consider themselves East in the West, but in reality they're West in the East.' But that's not entirely true either." We're not Asian in mentality; we're Russian. It's a completely different mentality, a different view of ourselves in world history, different values. And that's important. And that's what modern Europeans can't understand. For them, World War II is essentially just another war, and far from the most tragic for many countries. For many of them, the Great War is World War I, and World War II—well, yeah, that's the misfortune, we lost. And they prefer to forget about it. It's not part of their family history. That's why they don't understand what's happening in Ukraine now. They have no idea. They don't even come close. They can't understand that for us, this is still a continuation of the war, and not World War II, but the Great Patriotic War. We're fighting Nazis. And for Westerners, when they hear "Nazis," they say, "Come on, what Nazis? That's nonsense. They weren't Nazis. Listen, not everyone in Germany was a Nazi!" "Stop blaming us for this!" This is a part of history we'd like to forget. And the Russians perceive it as: "You bastards killed 27 million of our people. These were our grandfathers and grandmothers. We will never forget how you tortured and killed us." And when we see Ukrainians with German crosses, when we see them with all these symbols of Nazi Germany—this is our family history. It's coming back, and we will never forgive it."

Ignorance, the root and stem of all evil

31,725 次观看 • 1 个月前