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Liberty Politics Discussion

3.9k members • Free

10 contributions to Liberty Politics Discussion
What can I do now?
As you all know, I am in a safe and developed western country now and I want to work to protect the free world. what can I do from here? It's much safer than where I was before. Can you give me some suggestions? I want to utilize what skills I have. I also want to build strong connection with those who strive to protect the free world again You know who and You know what.
1 like • 21d
@Francesco Dell'Anna I have some skills and I can use my identity. I am building networks here slowly. For now, I will focus on the analog world.
I am safe and sound.
Hi everyone. I am safe and in new nation that is open and free.
Arab states are quietly making peace with Israel
The preconditions for peace are already there. The landscape has changed dramatically in recent years. Just to be clear – I am not saying all Arabs love Israel. Not at all. Far from it. - There is deep Arab resentment, anger and frustration toward Israel, especially toward the Netanyahu government. - The Palestinians continue to fight for dignity, and they enjoy broad Arab support. - Unfortunately there remain death cults like the ISIS-remnants and ISIS-wannabes, also in the mix. But these facts overshadow a more complex reality emerging on the ground. Most Arab nations have begun quietly waving the white flag; they seek no more military conflict with Israel. Even states that once waged war against Israel have moved on. They are no longer working to wipe out the Jewish state. The major Arab League nations that no longer seek Israel’s destruction include: - Egypt (1979 peace treaty) - Jordan (1994 peace treaty) - UAE, Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan (recent Abraham Accords or normalization steps). Other Arab states and forces have stood down, been beaten down or backed off. - Syria – Its anti-Israel dictator Bashar Al-Assad fell in 2024. The new government is less hostile to Israel. - Lebanon – Israel’s pager attacks and other strikes decimated Hezbollah in 2024. That fractured state is less hostile. - Qatar – It often uses money and media to discredit the Jewish state, but it never seeks direct confrontation. - Others (Saudi Arabia, Oman) engage pragmatically — seeking quiet diplomacy, security coordination or conditional normalization — rather than destruction.
1 like • Jan 29
@Francesco Dell'Anna Egypt's current administration might not be strongly anti-Israel, but there's a possibility that a radical government could arise in the future. Similarly, while Turkey's current government is problematic, a future secular government could be more favorable.
How probable is it that the Iranian regime will collapse at this point?
After countless lives have been sacrificed and enduring days of protests, is it truly possible for Iran to break free from authoritarian theocracy?
1 like • Jan 29
@Joseph Dabby This is serious. It appears that the regime is currently at its weakest point.
What will happen to Gaza Now?
Will Israel back down? Will it be taken over by a new administration? Will Hamas disarm? What really will happen?
1 like • Jan 28
@Dani Spivak How is Hamas managing to survive after this conflict? Hasn't their leadership been largely destroyed? Or is it that they continue to attract recruits from a consistent pool of like-minded radicalized individuals?
0 likes • Jan 29
@Dani Spivak What are the ways to promote deradicalization in Gaza?
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Active 12d ago
Joined Dec 17, 2025
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