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𝐒𝐓𝐑𝐄𝐀𝐌𝐄𝐑 𝐒𝐈𝐋𝐄𝐍𝐂𝐄𝐃 𝐈𝐍-𝐆𝐀𝐌𝐄 𝐀𝐅𝐓𝐄𝐑 𝐁𝐎𝐓 𝐌𝐀𝐒𝐒 𝐑𝐄𝐏𝐎𝐑𝐓 Bot buster and WoW Classic streamer, Greek Wario, has been silenced in game after bots took advantage of Blizzards automated report system. The orchestrated mass report was in response to Greek disrupting their botting network which has had a stronghold on the...

177,099 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce •via X (Twitter)

10 Yorum

Greek Wario profil fotoğrafı
Greek Wario1 yıl önce

I've been in maraudn for almost 40 hours in the last three days. THIS IS OUR GAME. EVERYONE NEEDS TO TAKE A STAND. NO MORE BOOSTING NO MORE BOTS

King of the Creek profil fotoğrafı
King of the Creek1 yıl önce

@Greekwario Crazy thing is, Blizzard doesn't care.

baked frames profil fotoğrafı
baked frames1 yıl önce

@Greekwario crazy, when the video ended i heard a eagle crying out in the distance

Regis Philbin profil fotoğrafı
Regis Philbin1 yıl önce

@Greekwario Crazy if Blizzard had a single human CS rep this would be fixed already

Javier Garcia profil fotoğrafı
Javier Garcia1 yıl önce

@Greekwario @wowclassicdevs Anything to say? Or this will be also checked by a machine

Josh Kendall profil fotoğrafı
Josh Kendall1 yıl önce

@Greekwario This happened to a guildie while they were working on the fragment part for the bug mount of the AQ chain in sod. He was automated reported for hacking and was banned. He's still working on appealing it.

Sarthe profil fotoğrafı
Sarthe1 yıl önce

@Greekwario I don't doubt this at all. Bot Farmers go HARD on people messing with their $$, they are a Mafia

Chris Pallante profil fotoğrafı
Chris Pallante1 yıl önce

@Greekwario Find a new game already. Blizzard doesn't care, will never care again, and you'll just keep getting pissed on.

ThoR294 profil fotoğrafı
ThoR2941 yıl önce

@Greekwario Rise up brothers and sisters. Kill any 60 mages at mara! Make azeroth great again!

Kevin Arellano profil fotoğrafı
Kevin Arellano1 yıl önce

@Greekwario I lost my 7years account bc of this same reason on retail. Massive fake "bot" reports, ang got perma banned... I did an appeal, didnt work. They said "they have enough evidence i am guilty"...

Benzer Videolar

Tucker Carlson has never read about the pogroms against the Greek Christians of Constantinople carried out by Muslim Turks that took place in 1955, just 70 years ago. These events took place roughly 30 years after the Greek-Armenian-Assyrian genocide, which was motivated by both religious and racial hatred. By then, the goal was to completely erase every remaining Greek element from Asia Minor. Their next target was the once-Greek Constantinople. It was a warm September evening in 1955, in the heart of Constantinople, a city still echoing with the ghosts of its Greek-Byzantine past. The Greek community was already marginalized by years of discriminatory policies, felt the weight of suspicion. After the fall of Constantinople, thousands were slaughtered, but they tried to keep the flame alive. But, on September 6 (1955), a false report spread like a spark in dry grass: a bomb had allegedly damaged the Turkish consulate in Thessaloniki, near the house where Mustafa Kemal was born. The bombing was a staged provocation, orchestrated by Turkish authorities to incite rage. By dusk, Constantinople was a tinderbox. Mobs, organized and armed with clubs, knives, and gasoline, poured into the streets, targeting Greek homes, businesses, and churches. The government’s role was clear; lists of Greek properties had been prepared in advance, and the police stood by, complicit or indifferent. It was all staged. A plan with only one purpose. To murder innocent Greek Christians that were living peacefully in the land of their ancestors, in the City that was built by their fathers. A crowd, chanting Kemalist slogans just like the days of the Genocide of 1922, smashes windows, looting everything; shelves, ovens, even family photos. The mob moves with precision, targeting Greek-owned properties. Churches, like the Zoodochos Pigi in Balat, are desecrated; holy icons are shattered, and altars burned. The Greek cemetery in Şişli is vandalized, graves defiled in an orgy of destruction. 4,348 Greek businesses, 110 hotels, 27 pharmacies, 23 schools, and 73 churches were damaged or destroyed. Many Greeks were killed, hundreds injured and numerous women assaulted. The mobs, often transported from outside Constantinople, carried out their rampage over two days, September 6–7, leaving the Greek community in ruins. The pogrom was a death knell. Many lost everything; homes, livelihoods, security. Greeks of Constantinople were reducing over time already after the fall in 1453. But that was the final hit. The exodus of Greeks from Turkey, reduced the community of over 250.000 to fewer than 2.000 today. As dawn broke on September 7, Constantinople became "Istanbul". The last Greeks, descendants of those who found the City, who built the city, who defended the City, who had history in this City, were expelled from their ancestral homeland. Streets were littered with broken glass and shattered dreams. The Greek community, a cornerstone of the city’s history, was left to pick up the pieces. That was, the anti-Greek "Istanbul pogrom" that took place on 6–7 September 1955. These events are fresh in our memories. How can we forget all the thing they did to us? They came and they expelled Greeks from their homes. Constantinople, Asia Minor, Cappadocia, Pontus, Cyprus, Ionia. We will never forget, everything they did to us. We will never coexist with them.

Homer Pavlos

55,570 görüntüleme • 19 gün önce

Naturally, after all that, you would think that the Muslim Turks would stop there. But it wasn't enough for them. Their goal was to erase every Greek element from Asia Minor. Their next target was the once-Greek Constantinople. It was a warm September evening in 1955, in the heart of Constantinople, a city still echoing with the ghosts of its Greek Byzantine past. The Greek community, though diminished, thrived in neighborhoods like Pera and Fener, their lives woven into the city’s fabric through shops, churches, and schools. The Greek minority, already marginalized by years of discriminatory policies, felt the weight of suspicion. On September 6, a false report spread like a spark in dry grass: a bomb had allegedly damaged the Turkish consulate in Thessaloniki, near the house where Mustafa Kemal was born. The bombing was a staged provocation, orchestrated by Turkish authorities to incite rage. By dusk, the city was a tinderbox. Mobs, organized and armed with clubs, knives, and gasoline, poured into the streets, targeting Greek homes, businesses, and churches. The government’s role was clear; lists of Greek properties had been prepared in advance, and the police stood by, complicit or indifferent. Dimitris, a baker in Beyoglu, is locking up his small shop. Suddenly, a roar of voices fills the air. A crowd, chanting Kemalist slogans, smashes his windows, looting everything; shelves, ovens, even family photos. Down the street, Eleni, a widow running a grocery, watches helplessly as her store is set ablaze. The mob moves with precision, targeting Greek-owned properties with chilling efficiency. Churches, like the Zoodochos Pigi in Balat, are desecrated; holy icons are shattered, and altars burned. The Greek cemetery in Şişli is vandalized, graves defiled in an orgy of destruction. 4,348 Greek businesses, 110 hotels, 27 pharmacies, 23 schools, and 73 churches were damaged or destroyed. At least 15 people were killed with hundreds injured and numerous women assaulted. The violence wasn’t random; it was a calculated assault, fueled by propaganda and enabled by state inaction. The mobs, often transported from outside Constantinople, carried out their rampage over two days, September 6–7, leaving the Greek community in ruins. The pogrom was a death knell. Many lost everything; homes, livelihoods, security. Greeks of Constantinople were reducing over time already after the fall in 1453. But that was the final hit. The exodus of Greeks from Turkey, reduced the community of over 150.000 to fewer than 2.000 today. As dawn broke on September 7, Constantinople became "Istanbul". The last Greeks, descendants of those who found the City, who built the city, who defended the City, who had history in this City, were expelled from their ancestral homeland. Streets were littered with broken glass and shattered dreams. The Greek community, a cornerstone of the city’s history, was left to pick up the pieces. That was, the anti-Greek "Istanbul pogrom" that took place on 6–7 September 1955. These events are fresh in our memories. How can we forget all the thing they did to us? They came and they expelled Greeks from their homes. Constantinople, Asia Minor, Cappadocia, Pontus, Cyprus, Ionia. We will never forget, everything they did to us. We will never coexist with them.

Homer Pavlos

119,742 görüntüleme • 7 ay önce