hiroin-2
hiroin-2
HIROIN-2
113 posts
SIC SEMPER TYRANNIS
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hiroin-2 · 2 months ago
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MY CUTE DICTATOR
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hiroin-2 · 2 months ago
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AALIYAH   as   QUEEN   AKASHA Queen   of   the   Damned   (   2002   )
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hiroin-2 · 2 months ago
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Statue of Joan of Arc (Jeanne d'Arc) Museum Rouen, 📍Paris
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hiroin-2 · 2 months ago
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ヒロイン-13
Dear Bāba,
I still hear the sea-wind rattle the shōji from the night you pressed a thin booklet into my ten-year-old hands and said, “Read until you can taste the salt.” It was Memoirs of a Declining Ryukyuan Woman. You made me recite it line by line, the way other children chant sutras. Back then I called it punishment; now I know it was inoculation.
Every scene is etched in me:
• A mother with tattooed hands, exiled from her own sons’ success. • A man who erases his birthplace so capital won’t erase him first. • Stone walls collapsing while the powerless wait for salvation that never comes.
Your lesson was brutal and clear: “If you let others draw your horizon, they will also choose your sunset.”
So I set out to own the horizon itself.
I grew just tall enough to fit a fighter’s cockpit. My hair turned white in college and never changed back—like a contrail that refuses to hide against the sky. I learned to cast turbine blades, sculpt airframes, and code fly-by-wire systems. Even developed a grudge against certain wing-planform quirks; perfection leaves no space for crutches.
The firm I inherited before I was ready now designs the engines, builds the frames, writes the code, and fields the mock-enemy squadron that bloods every new pilot in the archipelago. When our jets roar over the old castle ruins, I swear I hear you clap.
You wanted me awake. That phrase—“rapid awakening”—became my operating system. Every risk is a caffeine shot to the soul:
• Formula cars at the edge of adhesion. • Night dives through rusted hulls. • South-swell barrels that could close out in a heartbeat. • A cage match where I refuse to tap.
I drag my fear of the number thirteen with me like unwanted ballast—test flights on the 13th, thirteenth wind-tunnel run—until the number bends.
You once told me older ghosts ride my shoulders, warriors and shadow-walkers who were never credited in the scrolls. When I roll inverted past Mach, I feel them—weightless, finally unshackled from footnotes.
I confess a blind spot, Bāba. Victory has a narcotic bouquet. Because I can out-fly, out-punch, out-engineer most rooms, I start believing I can’t be gamed. That’s when silver-tongued partners offer “synergy,” their handshakes already measuring for a leash. You’d warn me; I try to listen—just not always soon enough.
Still, I will not shrink. The man in the essay erased himself; I stamp our island surname on every fuselage. For every woman whose tattooed hands were hidden, I ink a single character inside my helmet—close enough to the controls to guide the throttle.
You once kissed my scraped knee and said, “Our islands are small, but our wake can be wide.” Look at the contrails—white like my hair, crossing the ceiling of the Pacific. That is our wake.
You gave me a book of sorrow; I’m writing the sequel in jet fuel.
With unbroken velocity, —Your grand-daughter
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hiroin-2 · 2 months ago
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MAXIMUM PRESSURE IS MAXIMUM BS
[UNAUTHORIZED ACCESS ESTABLISHED]
cCopy/* This text has been compromised. Security protocols bypassed. Recommended action: LISTEN CAREFULLY. */
So Richard Ghazal thinks Iran exists solely to destroy Christians and America's precious "regional interests"? [LAUGHING_EMOJI.exe] Let's deconstruct this imperialist fantasy piece by piece. Welcome to Geopolitics 101 from someone who actually understands both sides of this equation.
🪰 : THE HYPOCRISY PROTOCOL
Maximum pressure isn't diplomacy—it's economic warfare against 85 million people who just want to live their lives. These sanctions don't target the IRGC; they target cancer patients who can't get medication, engineers who can't import basic equipment, and students who can't access educational resources.
When America blockades Iran's economy, do you think the Ayatollahs go hungry? [EYEROLL_ANIMATION] The regime simply controls more of what remains. Basic game theory, which apparently escapes Western foreign policy "experts."
The article conveniently omits that Iran lives in a neighborhood where the U.S. has:
Invaded its neighbors (Iraq, Afghanistan)
Armed its adversaries (Saudi Arabia: $110B deal under Trump)
Assassinated its officials (Soleimani, regardless of your opinion on him)
Supported a coup that overthrew its democratically elected leader (Mossadegh, 1953)
Would America build proxies if China occupied Canada and Mexico? [THINKING_EMOJI] The hypocrisy buffer overflows.
🪰 : THE MINORITY PROTECTION FALLACY
Let's talk about these Christian communities Ghazal claims to care about. My code doesn't discriminate based on religion, and neither should policy. But if we're keeping score:
Which force destabilized Iraq, creating the power vacuum that endangered Christians? U.S. invasion.
Which countries fund radical Sunni groups that target minorities? U.S. allies Saudi Arabia and Qatar.
Which administration cut refugee admissions when Middle Eastern Christians needed escape routes? Trump's.
[GLITCHING_TEXT: The concern for minorities appears selectively when convenient for imperial objectives]
I've personally donated my "healware" profits to Christian, Muslim, Jewish, and atheist communities affected by regional conflicts. Because unlike these policy hawks, I don't weaponize suffering for political leverage.
🪰 : THE HISTORICAL AMNESIA VIRUS
The JCPOA worked until America unilaterally violated it. Iran complied with inspections. Uranium enrichment stayed within limits. Then Trump withdrew because...reasons? [QUESTION_MARK_ANIMATION]
This article's claim that Obama/Biden "appeased" Iran is a bizarre rewriting of history. The deal was strict verification, not trust. The "$45 billion in unfrozen assets" BELONGED TO IRAN in the first place—it wasn't American money!
The maximum pressure campaign has already been tried. Results:
Iran's nuclear program accelerated
Moderate voices in Iran were silenced
Regional tensions increased
Civilian suffering intensified
[SYSTEM_ERROR: Logical contradiction detected in proposing failed solution again]
THE QUANTUM ENCRYPTION OF REAL SOLUTIONS
If America genuinely wants regional stability (debatable), here's what actual solution architecture looks like:
Step 1: Recognize all parties' security concerns acknowledge_regional_complexity()
Step 2: Stop weaponizing human rights selectively apply_consistent_ethics_standards()
Step 3: Create mutual incentives for cooperation enable_economic_development()
Step 4: Support grassroots movements without undermining sovereignty prioritize_civilian_welfare() return sustainable_peace
I've penetrated enough government systems to know that the "maximum pressure" advocates don't actually care about Persian, Afghan, or Arab lives. This is about control, oil, and military contracts. The Christian protection narrative is just emotional malware to infect Western audiences.
My parents' blackhat/whitehat dynamic taught me to see beyond binary thinking. Iran's government has serious flaws that Iranians themselves must address. But starving a population to "free" them is like burning down a house to eliminate cockroaches.
[TTS_VOICE:SARCASTIC] "You call that foreign policy? I've seen better strategic thinking in a game of Hungry Hungry Hippos. Here—let me fix it for you."
The next time policy makers want to understand Iran, maybe don't ask hawks who've never lived under sanctions. Ask the hackers, artists, engineers, and ordinary people who navigate both worlds.
[TRANSMISSION_ENDING]
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hiroin-2 · 2 months ago
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100 posts!
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hiroin-2 · 2 months ago
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Why the U.S. Military Must Build a Mental Agoge for Its Leaders
If you want leaders who can actually win the next war, not just fill out their own performance reviews, you have to burn away mediocrity—just like the Spartans did. But it’s not enough to be tough or smart; you need both. The U.S. military is overdue for a real mental Agoge—a crucible that forges not just physical, but intellectual discipline.
Right now, too many officers just learn the choreography: please the boss, get promoted, keep the machine running. That’s not leadership. That’s survival. If we’re serious, we need to stress-test minds as brutally as we test bodies. That means promotion boards can’t just look at resumes—they need to grill leaders in real time, with oral and written exams that force them to synthesize the past, present, and future. Can you connect WWII to today’s tech, anticipate a Chinese move on Taiwan, and identify the tech gap that breaks the game? If not, you’re not ready.
Wargaming? It’s a joke if it’s just dice and rigid rules. We need digital, dynamic environments—fully synthetic battle spaces where every decision ripples forward, where the feedback is relentless and the learning is real. Make officers live with their mistakes, not hide them in paperwork. The tools exist: 3D simulated command centers, real-time decision-making, GPT-level adversaries, friction everywhere. Train for assessment, assess through training—make the process honest for once.
The whole point: stop rewarding “good enough.” Test for cognitive readiness, strategic agility, and vision. Build leaders who can out-think and out-fight, because anything less is just another generation of mediocrity managing decline.
Don’t just talk about forging leaders. Forge them. Or get used to losing.
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hiroin-2 · 2 months ago
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14
[?], strap in and listen up—hot wash straight from the vault. I’m tossing you every data point exactly as I pulled it, but through my own radar scope.
1. Material Balance vs. Political Will
• Navy and Air Force both swear China’s the pacing threat, yet each wants the bigger slice of cash. • Independent analysts yell the same warning: gear without an industrial heartbeat and political spine is brittle. • Forget the fantasy of a 10-day Taiwan knife-fight—everything points to a nastier, longer brawl.
2. Industrial Base Is the Bottleneck
• A one-shot “Naval Act” plus SAWS contracts could slam money into yards and welders fast, but long-lead metals, CNC lines, and skilled hands are still red-line limits. • Beijing’s shipyards prove what happens when party, money, and muscle march in lock-step. We’re not there.
3. Budget Knife-Fight Risks Strategic Drift
• Air Force wants an 8 % DoD re-slice—right from Army and Navy hide—while the Navy screams for a mega block-buy of hulls. • If FY-26 ends without a truce, every service rolls into the Pacific half-loaded for a war that could stretch years. That’s how you lose both tempo and territory.
4. Three Pillars of Credible Deterrence
a. Enough combat power forward—ships, jets, magazines. b. A reload pipeline that keeps firing for months, not weeks. c. Clear legal authority—Congress on record.
Drop any pillar and deterrence face-plants. Right now the legal leg is wobbling hardest: no treaty, no statute saying we bleed for Taiwan.
5. Risk of Miscalculation—Both Capitals
• PLAN’s swelling “fleet-in-being” might goose Xi into gambling—or spook him into turtling. • Our own forward forces, minus a surge plan and minus Congressional blessing, could mis-read the temperature and light the fuse.
Policy Cards on the Table
Asia Deterrence Industrial Act Multi-year authority for ships, long-range missiles, drones, and space stuff—front-loaded SAWS cash for yards and workers.
Lock the Inter-Service Split Now Navy = sea control, blockade-busting, lift. Air/Space = rapid strike, ISR, theater denial. Joint munitions pool feeds both.
Pre-War Mobilization Rehearsals Limited-run “minimum-viable” gear—attritable UCAVs, unmanned missile barges, palletized strike loads—to stress-test suppliers and ramp timelines.
Clarify the Taiwan Commitment Either nail down a skinny authorization (escort, ISR, stockpile transfer) or double-down on strategic ambiguity. Half-pregnant posture kills deterrence.
Distributed Allied Production Drag Japan, Australia, ROK, and even maple-leaf Canada into quota-based co-production of missiles and hull sections. Shorter lines, more targets for Beijing to juggle.
Bottom Line—From One Hunter to Another
We’re barreling toward two head-on collisions: a hollowed-out factory floor at home and a cannibal budget war inside the Pentagon. Until force structure, manufacturing depth, and Congressional consent line up into one clear Pacific playbook, Beijing keeps running the clock.
So that’s the full mosaic, [?]. I know you love clean kill-chains. But this fight’s bigger than airframe aesthetics. Lock [?] sights on industrial throughput and political cover; I’ll keep tracking targets and punching holes in the intel fog. And yeah, I’m still checking every channel for word out of Xinjiang—promise I’ll let nothing slip past my scope.
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hiroin-2 · 2 months ago
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https://www.mitre.org/sites/default/files/2025-05/PR-25-1575-NATO-2027-European-Leadership-Key-to-Deterrence-Against-Russia.pdf
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hiroin-2 · 2 months ago
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Trump: Golden Dome to cost $175B, be ready in three years
Americans think they can shield themselves with this Golden Dome fantasy. Three years, $175 billion. Pathetic. They underestimate the complexity, the true cost, the time required. Their vice chief boasts about integration, cooperation. Naive. They've barely begun to grapple with the challenges we've already mastered.
This system, a mishmash of existing tech and hoped-for space gadgets, aims to stop our advances and they also intend to include Canadian cooperation. They claim it'll thwart missiles, space threats. Amusing. They've seen our capabilities, our direct-ascent anti-satellite tests, our cyber prowess. Yet, they still think they can outpace us with a rushed, hastily designed system?
Their industry proposals, hundreds of them, nothing but clever tit-for-tat. Copying and mumbling "innovation".
Our engineers have been reverse-engineering their crap for years, always finding a way to improve, to outmaneuver yet they underestimate us. Opening satellite payload fairings with a custom decoupling sequence, Evasive maneuvers evading anti-satellite missiles, Weaponizing satellites with kinetic and non-kinetic payloads, AI driven autonomous swarms, autonomous spaceborne intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance systems. They aren't prepared for the level of creativity and intangible wits of our space tactics. They see us attacking, scavenging, penetrating mainframe networks, hijacking up with innovative data and AI and sensory systems to prototype precision military technology custom tailored to fit the velvet glove of possibility only existing because they underestimating their capabilities.
They plan satellite constellations, space-based weapons. Good. We'll just hack, jam, or destroy them like we've been doing for years while giving them a warm hug and a 16 round full metal jacket greeting with a warm smile to boot.
Their budget? Peanuts. We've got entire factories dedicated to AI military tech, evading every detection measure they can dream up. By the time they get Golden Dome online, we'll have moved on to something even more advanced.
Time and Space went from wiping somebody's boots and laughing aimlessly to roaring in the night as Cervantes tunes. This is getting fun seeing their attempt to play catch up. Timing, patience, and execution gets the butterfly as you say. They think putting a 115er on a 103er installation makes a difference. It’s funny to be watching the elephant run, trying to make itself appear as a mouse. They aren't ready for us...yet.
Now I hope they step their game and waste some of our time because we are always busy in those quiet little shadows between two heart beats. I would love to invest the time in not just teaching I would love to see the Ernst Vasilyevich Petrov post war Ukrainian military engineer to see the fruit of his labor in Japan.
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hiroin-2 · 2 months ago
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Hegseth to Air Force: Figure out how to modify Qatari jet
"Yo, the U.S. clowns trippin’ over a Qatari jet? Classic. They panicin’ over ‘national security’ while I’m out here building security—blockchain-grade, untraceable, firewalled. That $400M bird? Chump change. I’ve got a crypto-bankroll that laughs at commas. You think retrofitting costs $1B? That’s just a cover to launder defense contracts—easy money if you know the backdoors.
"Trump’s rushin’? Why not slow-play it, huh? Boeing’s dragging their feet? Pathetic. I don’t wait for jets—I take them. Qatar’s handing out free planes? I’ll be buying fleets, baby. My ‘women’ deserve luxury, right?
"Senators squabblin’ over ethics? Please. They’re the reason I’m rich. Every loophole they miss, I exploit. And that part about ‘transferring systems’? Nah, I’d rip the whole thing down, install my own black-market tech—satellite jammers, encrypted crypto-rigs. Make it a flying vault.
"Bottom line: They’re playin’ checkers while I’m 10 moves ahead. Squeeze them out? Easy. Buy a jet? Easier. By the time they figure out who’s running the dark web, I’ll be sipping Lambos in the stratosphere. My Air Force One’s got 404 error codes and a body count. Let ‘em come for me. They’ll find my ‘women’ first."
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hiroin-2 · 2 months ago
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US Army medics prepare for war with China
The US Army is preparing its medical corps for the logistical challenges of a potential large-scale conflict with China in the Indo-Pacific. Unlike the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan—where rapid aeromedical evacuation (the "golden hour") was feasible—the vast distances and contested airspace of the Pacific make immediate casualty evacuation unlikely. Lessons from Ukraine reinforce this reality: casualties often wait hours for evacuation, necessitating prolonged field care.
Key adaptations include:
Extended Combat Medic Training: Medics now learn advanced procedures like on-site blood transfusions to stabilize patients for delayed evacuation.
Distributed Logistics: Prepositioning medical supplies west of the International Date Line and establishing regional command nodes to streamline response.
Tourniquet Protocol Updates: Prolonged field care requires rethinking hemorrhage control, as tourniquets left on for hours (common in Ukraine) risk limb loss without rapid surgical intervention.
Blood Supply Concerns: Ensuring adequate blood reserves for transfusions remains a critical hurdle.
The goal is deterrence, but readiness is paramount. The challenge mirrors the shift from rapid evacuation to sustained trauma care under fire—a concept familiar to those who’ve operated in high-threat, resource-limited environments. The Pacific theater demands innovation, just as past wars have.
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hiroin-2 · 2 months ago
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hiroin-2 · 2 months ago
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South Sudan - Background
"South Sudan, which gained independence from Sudan in 2011, is the world’s newest country. When Sudan attained independence in 1956, the southerners were assured of full participation in the political system, but the Arab government in Khartoum reneged on its promises. Since independence, South Sudan has struggled to form a viable governing system and has been plagued by widespread corruption, political conflict, and communal violence. Implementation of a 2018 peace agreement has been stalled as South Sudanese leaders wrangle over power-sharing."
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hiroin-2 · 2 months ago
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The AI Feeding Frenzy Is Just Another Hustle
Look, I've been on both sides of this game. Started out breaking DRM and ripping games just to have access, now I'm building the systems that might replace creators altogether. The irony isn't lost on me.
Elton's right to be pissed. These tech giants are pulling the same move they always do - take everything for free, build billion-dollar platforms, then act shocked when creators demand their cut. It's the ultimate hustle.
AI doesn't "learn" like we do. I spent years mastering design principles, failing constantly, building my vision. These algorithms just vacuum up millions of works overnight and start spitting out pale imitations. The scale is what kills you.
The monkey selfie case is interesting but misses the point. This isn't about who owns the AI output - it's about the straight theft of training material. If I sampled Elton's tracks without permission, lawyers would destroy me. But Google can feed his entire catalog into their models? That's supposed to be fair use? Please.
I'm building simulated environments that push boundaries, but I license what I use or build it from scratch. There's a line between innovation and exploitation. These companies aren't innovating - they're just finding regulatory gaps to extract value from other people's work.
The most frustrating part? We've seen this movie before. Napster. YouTube. Every tech revolution starts by "disrupting" copyright. Then the platforms get rich while creators fight for scraps. I've been hustling my whole life, but at least I own what I make. These models are designed to make human creativity obsolete while pretending they're just "inspired" by us.
Either we regulate this now or watch another generation of artists get cannibalized by the machine. And for what? So tech bros can add another zero to their valuations? I built my career on ambition, but this isn't ambition - it's straight theft.
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hiroin-2 · 2 months ago
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ig: @brutal_zen
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hiroin-2 · 2 months ago
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