Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Poor fisherman don’t have the $$$ to put 3 or 4 powerful outboards on a boat, and they do not race at extremely high speed in the middle of the night in the direction of the U.S. or a Caribbean island used for transfer.
That is a drug boat.
Does that boat have the fuel capacity to get to the US?
At best these are just one early step in the logistics of drug smuggling to the US. They could be drugs headed elsewhere or not even drugs at all.
What they actually are is an attempt to provoke a shooting war. We’ve gotten successively worse at making these provocations credible over time though.
In reality these are fishing boats. The US Military under US and international law is committing murder. Military force is only legal if you are at war, actively involved in combat, posing an active military threat, etc. These actions do not meet or come close to the threshold needed for legal use of military force.
💯 agree with you. Cold blooded murder and he doesn’t care.
Have you seen the videos? What kind of fish do you catch going 70 mph?
Or what kind of fishing are you doing in a submarine?
Just make more stuff up. 56 people murdered because they were fishing try to feed their family or refugees fleeing to a better life. Killing civilians
is a war crime. Doing it with no war is just murder.
Actual, serious question for you, that I would really, really appreciate your making a serious answer:
If these are simple fishermen “just trying to feed their families” , as you insist, how did these “simple fishermen” who are just trying to feed their families afford a 40-something foot speedboat with 2 or 4 outboard motors, costing around half a million dollars? Because boats are expensive. I know - I’ve owned them most of my life. And the ones I’ve seen getting blown up cost more than the average American home. How are these humble fishermen just trying to feed their families able to afford boats like this? I have no trouble feeding my family at all, and I can’t afford a $500,000 boat.
Can you please explain this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Poor fisherman don’t have the $$$ to put 3 or 4 powerful outboards on a boat, and they do not race at extremely high speed in the middle of the night in the direction of the U.S. or a Caribbean island used for transfer.
That is a drug boat.
Does that boat have the fuel capacity to get to the US?
At best these are just one early step in the logistics of drug smuggling to the US. They could be drugs headed elsewhere or not even drugs at all.
What they actually are is an attempt to provoke a shooting war. We’ve gotten successively worse at making these provocations credible over time though.
In reality these are fishing boats. The US Military under US and international law is committing murder. Military force is only legal if you are at war, actively involved in combat, posing an active military threat, etc. These actions do not meet or come close to the threshold needed for legal use of military force.
💯 agree with you. Cold blooded murder and he doesn’t care.
Have you seen the videos? What kind of fish do you catch going 70 mph?
Or what kind of fishing are you doing in a submarine?
Just make more stuff up. 56 people murdered because they were fishing try to feed their family or refugees fleeing to a better life. Killing civilians
is a war crime. Doing it with no war is just murder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Poor fisherman don’t have the $$$ to put 3 or 4 powerful outboards on a boat, and they do not race at extremely high speed in the middle of the night in the direction of the U.S. or a Caribbean island used for transfer.
That is a drug boat.
Does that boat have the fuel capacity to get to the US?
At best these are just one early step in the logistics of drug smuggling to the US. They could be drugs headed elsewhere or not even drugs at all.
What they actually are is an attempt to provoke a shooting war. We’ve gotten successively worse at making these provocations credible over time though.
In reality these are fishing boats. The US Military under US and international law is committing murder. Military force is only legal if you are at war, actively involved in combat, posing an active military threat, etc. These actions do not meet or come close to the threshold needed for legal use of military force.
💯 agree with you. Cold blooded murder and he doesn’t care.
Have you seen the videos? What kind of fish do you catch going 70 mph?
Or what kind of fishing are you doing in a submarine?
Anonymous wrote:Targeting civilians is a war crime.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Poor fisherman don’t have the $$$ to put 3 or 4 powerful outboards on a boat, and they do not race at extremely high speed in the middle of the night in the direction of the U.S. or a Caribbean island used for transfer.
That is a drug boat.
Does that boat have the fuel capacity to get to the US?
At best these are just one early step in the logistics of drug smuggling to the US. They could be drugs headed elsewhere or not even drugs at all.
What they actually are is an attempt to provoke a shooting war. We’ve gotten successively worse at making these provocations credible over time though.
In reality these are fishing boats. The US Military under US and international law is committing murder. Military force is only legal if you are at war, actively involved in combat, posing an active military threat, etc. These actions do not meet or come close to the threshold needed for legal use of military force.
💯 agree with you. Cold blooded murder and he doesn’t care.
Have you seen the videos? What kind of fish do you catch going 70 mph?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Poor fisherman don’t have the $$$ to put 3 or 4 powerful outboards on a boat, and they do not race at extremely high speed in the middle of the night in the direction of the U.S. or a Caribbean island used for transfer.
That is a drug boat.
Does that boat have the fuel capacity to get to the US?
At best these are just one early step in the logistics of drug smuggling to the US. They could be drugs headed elsewhere or not even drugs at all.
What they actually are is an attempt to provoke a shooting war. We’ve gotten successively worse at making these provocations credible over time though.
In reality these are fishing boats. The US Military under US and international law is committing murder. Military force is only legal if you are at war, actively involved in combat, posing an active military threat, etc. These actions do not meet or come close to the threshold needed for legal use of military force.
💯 agree with you. Cold blooded murder and he doesn’t care.
Have you seen the videos? What kind of fish do you catch going 70 mph?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Poor fisherman don’t have the $$$ to put 3 or 4 powerful outboards on a boat, and they do not race at extremely high speed in the middle of the night in the direction of the U.S. or a Caribbean island used for transfer.
That is a drug boat.
Does that boat have the fuel capacity to get to the US?
At best these are just one early step in the logistics of drug smuggling to the US. They could be drugs headed elsewhere or not even drugs at all.
What they actually are is an attempt to provoke a shooting war. We’ve gotten successively worse at making these provocations credible over time though.
In reality these are fishing boats. The US Military under US and international law is committing murder. Military force is only legal if you are at war, actively involved in combat, posing an active military threat, etc. These actions do not meet or come close to the threshold needed for legal use of military force.
💯 agree with you. Cold blooded murder and he doesn’t care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Poor fisherman don’t have the $$$ to put 3 or 4 powerful outboards on a boat, and they do not race at extremely high speed in the middle of the night in the direction of the U.S. or a Caribbean island used for transfer.
That is a drug boat.
Does that boat have the fuel capacity to get to the US?
At best these are just one early step in the logistics of drug smuggling to the US. They could be drugs headed elsewhere or not even drugs at all.
What they actually are is an attempt to provoke a shooting war. We’ve gotten successively worse at making these provocations credible over time though.
In reality these are fishing boats. The US Military under US and international law is committing murder. Military force is only legal if you are at war, actively involved in combat, posing an active military threat, etc. These actions do not meet or come close to the threshold needed for legal use of military force.
Anonymous wrote:Yesterday, the Trump administration bombed 4 more boats, killing 14 people, and bringing the overall death toll to 57. To date, no proof has been offered regarding the culpability of the people killed.
Military Destroys Four More Boats
“The Trump administration launched another round of deadly strikes on vessel it accused of smuggling drugs, killing 14 people in four boats on Monday in its growing military campaign off the Central and South American coasts,” the New York Times reports.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth “said that the strikes — three of them — took place in international waters and that there had been one survivor. They bring the overall death toll to 57 in the campaign, which began in September.”