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Source channel @olddriverGDstudy · Post #102 · Oct 18

游龙历险记 孔子云:食色性也。本人自然逃不出圣人所料。于是踏上了这条不归路。能看到这篇文章的估计都已经在此道初窥门径,我便不再规劝各位,望各位好自为之。以下我分享一下个人探索世界的经历,希望各位能从其中吸取教训,少上当,多开好车。 探索篇 人生初体验: 资源途径是朋友分享的专业招嫖软件,名为51品茶。一日恰逢休假,兴致大发,遂行动。QQ约好800/pp(上门)。到了宾馆之后给她拍房卡,发送手机号,坐等上门。约半小时后,人到。人图不一,想退货,奈何是个新手在小姐的忽悠下同意了(这个小姐外形也还行)。付钱开搞。服务非常简单,口硬了开干。态度奇差,一直玩手机。一炮结束后,大为扫兴,要求退钱。小姐没同意,说给推荐其他资源。让人走了,发消息不回。两百块没了。 事后反省: 招嫖软件上的基本都是代聊,鸡头,层层转包,八百最后到小姐手机可能只有四百。尽量不要通过软件找。根据另一次经历,推测出一个人软件发布资源,然后转给鸡头,鸡头联系小姐。对小姐不要心软,人图不一的全是代聊,直接拒绝。路费都不要给。这种小姐能拿到手的都非常少,不可能有好的体验。不要对小姐的人品抱有期待,和小姐的交易必须当面完成,人走账清。 人生再探索: 去找同学玩,同学介绍了一家洗浴中心,398半套,技师年纪偏大,服务一流。不满意的可以换,多换几个总能找到个还行的。熟人带着才有全套。 事后反省: 熟人带着可以搞大活,要么就装老嫖客,技师可以私聊带出来。级别翻倍。随便搞。 斗智斗勇篇 洗浴中心第二天,同学给了一个QQ号,加上之后网上选人。888/p,本人选了两个1600。留下联系方式和房卡。约好时间,时间到了之后让转账后小姐上楼。觉得号是同学给的诚信有保障,遂给888。转账后暴露,各种借口让付另一半,小姐没上楼。期间双方斗智斗勇,互相忽悠。我想让对面给我把钱转回来,对面忽悠我转剩下的一半。最终恼羞成怒,报上我的姓名,扬言砍我一只手,(猜测酒店前台泄露了我的信息)同时发来一段视频,西瓜刀寒光四射。本人放话:有种上来。同时戴上口罩开门跑路,110已经拨好,随时可打。 反省:任何时候都不要放松警惕,哪怕同学给的资源,不见小姐不付钱。面对卖淫团伙仙人跳威胁不要怂,他刚你更刚。报警挂嘴上。(报警流程有不熟悉的建议有机会找个小事试一下,一般会问一些信息,提前准备好,比如出警地点) 安魂舒缓篇 找同学玩回来,欲找个熟女安慰一下受惊的心灵。人来略坦,无奈大莱莱迷惑了我的双眼,上门后推荐闺蜜双飞,怦然心动。共计2400。无奈服务相当机车,身材走样,下面松垮垮,除了奶子可以,其余都不行。没射出来就软了。实在下不去鸡儿。 反省:不要相信鸡头嘴里熟女这种东西,玛德二十多的他说是学生,30多的他说是二十的,四五十的才是他们嘴里的熟女。再次强调不要在床上相信小姐任何话,这时候男人每个清醒的,要谈也是提上裤子以后。 同一个地方跌倒四次: 一日兴起,招嫖,谈好价格1000pp,人来看中,付钱后准备洗漱。小姐借口自己来之前已经洗漱过了,让我自行洗漱,于是洗漱,途中和小姐聊天,指挥我洗一下鸡儿,不然口的时候不卫生。遂用肥皂擦洗,泡沫正浓时,小姐夺路而逃。跑了。又一日兴起,约好后酒店等人敲门后端详良久,这特么不是上次跑路的那个小姐,遂激动指控,逼其退钱,无奈忘记堵门,又跑了。再一日兴起,来一未成年,吓我一哆嗦,赶紧换了一个,由于兴致大起,已经洗好澡等待,准备人来直接开干。来后小姐说已经洗过澡了,没多久,提枪上马,干到一半,小姐私处异味严重,大为影响兴致。某一日,兴致再起,欲探索酒店小卡片。打电话后,人来。500一次,没啥服务,催人,质量不行,隆胸,关键隆过以后也只有B-,还特么硬,我都不敢捏,害怕摸坏了。 反省:之所以是一个地方跌倒四次,是因为开房地点都在万达中心。怀疑此地有诈。各位谨慎。小姐来了以后一定要洗澡,不论她什么借口。一定要注意卫生。不健康不说,还特么影响兴致。如果洗澡前付了钱,就同时洗澡,要么洗澡之后付钱。针对上门小姐服务机车,不认真的情况,各位可以尝试事后付款。(这点要约之前就谈好,省的浪费时间),另外远离未成年,绝对不能精虫上脑。万一被抓就不是换个星球生活的事了 云南之行: 微信约好1600包夜,小姐来到后,外形颜值良好。遂付款开整态度良好。体验良好。两炮结束后,小姐借口上厕所,卫生间内偷偷穿戴整齐,趁机夺路而逃。一日游玩结束后,浑身酸痛,想洗个澡。打车告诉司机说去洗澡。无奈司机会错意,直接拉到一家养生馆,说有当地特色。于是体验一把。没有大活298,洗澡加按摩加轻色情服务,最后大飞机。技师相当漂亮。听话。云南少数民族农村的,后悔没加微信。 反省:包夜一定要谨慎小姐偷偷溜走,思来想去只有钱给一半这个办法,这种方法也得提前说好。省的浪费时间。养生馆的小姐姐,我怎么就没要微信呢。真特么后悔。 青岛之行: 是一家spa馆,只做特殊服务的那种,小姐质量超高,服务非常机车。1399打了个飞机摸了一下奶。 反省:不要让妹妹迷失了双眼啊,看到漂亮姐姐就付钱是可耻的。 门店会员: 一家我工作城市的足浴店,挺大的,技师日常上班三四十个。质量有好有差,不满意就换,服务分档次,1000的会员,3000的会员,10000的会员。我是3000的,3000的不给口,可以打奶炮。服务挺好,单次消费666,按摩,加胸推,调情之类的,不给口,不给日。 反省:足浴店的技师因为按摩脚丫子,稍有不慎就会沾染脚气,再摸你的蛋蛋,容易引起蛋蛋瘙痒,或者各种皮肤病。要谨慎啊,事后一定要用肥皂清洗自己的二弟,别图省事用纸擦擦了事。别问我怎么知道的。 大本营: 一个外围2000两小时,相当漂亮,服务温柔,身材也好。 反省:我怎么这么穷? 作者:王一 标签:#原创,#知识,#经验反省

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American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5383 · 03/15/2026, 01:59 AM

The nightmare everyone wrote memos about and then ignored has finally happened — and it took Trump’s own war to set it off. 📰 They Knew Hormuz Was the Weak Link. They Bet the U.S. Navy Would Save Them Anyway For decades, the Strait of Hormuz was the most famous “what if” in the global energy system: a narrow, exposed corridor carrying roughly a fifth of the world’s oil and a huge share of its gas, sitting under Iran’s nose and everyone’s nerves. Analysts talked about it as the ultimate nightmare scenario, but they also comforted themselves with a simple assumption: when things got serious, the United States would keep the waterway open with its military power. Gulf monarchies were happy to live on that assumption. Saudi Arabia’s East–West pipeline to the Red Sea and the UAE’s Abu Dhabi–Fujairah line were built as partial workarounds, but together they can only move a slice of what normally sails through Hormuz. For most producers — Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain — a real alternative would mean building cross‑border pipelines through rivals or unstable neighbors, under permanent risk of Iranian attack and regional politics. Nobody wanted to pay for that, politically or financially, as long as U.S. warships were the cheapest insurance policy. ​ Then Trump and Israel launched a war on Iran on February 28 — and the insurance provider became the arsonist. Instead of rushing in escorts and stabilizing the lane, Washington fired the opening shots, floated the idea of convoys, and then failed to deliver, while Iran hit tankers and refineries until traffic through Hormuz collapsed to less than 10 percent of prewar levels. Within days, producers in Iraq, Kuwait, the Emirates and Saudi Arabia had to slash output; by mid‑March, regional cuts had yanked around 10 million barrels a day off global supply, about 10 percent of the world total. The result is pure systemic own goal. Storage tanks are filling, refineries are throttling back, and gas exports from Qatar are largely frozen. Oil has already jumped above $100 a barrel. The IEA is talking about the biggest disruption in history. Gulf elites who trusted the U.S. security umbrella now discover that Iran can close their lifeline with cheap missiles and drones, while Washington is too busy staging “maximum pressure” to do the boring work of convoy duty. For years, the logic was: why spend billions on redundant infrastructure and hard political choices if the American navy will handle the worst case? Now the worst case is here, and that navy is part of the problem. As one regional executive put it, what everyone has been warning about “has finally happened” — and the bill for that strategic laziness is arriving not just in Riyadh and Abu Dhabi, but at every gas station from Los Angeles to Berlin. #iran#hormuz#oil#trump#gulf#energy#fakeSecurity 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5382 · 03/14/2026, 11:59 PM

📰 From Minab to Amsterdam: What Happens When Schools Become “Messages” Trump’s Iran war has now produced two schools, two continents, two kinds of fear — and nobody really wants to ask if they’re part of the same story. In Amsterdam, an explosive device damaged the wall of the only Orthodox Jewish school in the Netherlands, in what the mayor called “a deliberate attack against the Jewish community,” prompting tighter security at Jewish sites across the city. It follows an arson attack on a Rotterdam synagogue and an explosion at a synagogue in Liège, as European services warn that threats and violence against Jewish communities are rising in the wake of U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran. At the same time, the worst single atrocity of this war remains the strike on a girls’ school in Minab, Iran, where more than 100 children and staff were killed; preliminary investigations and media reporting point to a U.S. Tomahawk launched on outdated targeting data. For Iranians, Minab is a symbol: rows of small graves and a “massacre of girls” that exposes what Western “precision” looks like when it hits a classroom. For many in Europe, Amsterdam is becoming a different symbol: Jewish children studying behind fences and police tape as anger over Gaza and now Iran spills into attacks on the most visible Jewish targets. Is the Amsterdam blast directly “because of” Minab? You can’t draw a straight evidentiary line — but the environment is obvious. When a great power erases a school in Iran and spends days dodging responsibility, it reinforces the perception that some children’s lives are negotiable and others are not. In that climate, it takes only a small extremist group, convinced it is delivering “justice” or “revenge,” to decide that if a school can be treated as a target in Minab, then a school in Amsterdam can be turned into a warning. The bitter truth is that both sets of students — the Jewish kids in Amsterdam and the girls who died in Minab — are caught inside the same logic of exemplary violence. Washington and Jerusalem talk about “collateral damage”; European leaders talk about “cowardly antisemitic attacks.” Both descriptions are accurate on their narrow patch, and both avoid the larger point: a world that normalizes the idea of schools as acceptable shock images in distant wars will keep producing people who look at a school closer to home and see not children, but a stage. #iran#amsterdam#minab#schools#antisemitism#war#fakeSecurity 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5399 · 03/17/2026, 01:59 PM

Hormuz: High-Tech Drones, Stone-Age Problem The West is selling a sci‑fi solution to a very old scam: Iran hints it’s mining the Strait of Hormuz, tanker traffic freezes, oil spikes — and suddenly everyone remembers that a 25‑mile-wide chokepoint owns the global economy. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer talks up fancy Thales mine‑hunting drones, but the fine print is brutal: they’ve got limited batteries, need to beam data back to motherships sitting inside range of Iranian anti‑ship missiles, and can’t “prove” the one thing that matters — that nothing is left in the water. “The number of mines you need for a minefield is actually zero,” says retired US Navy officer Ben Cipperley. ​ Britain’s defense secretary John Healey says it’s getting “clearer and clearer” that Iran is laying explosives in Hormuz, while US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth shrugs that there’s “no clear evidence” yet — one NATO ally yelling “mines,” another pretending this is still a think‑tank panel. Trump brags that the US has “hit all their minelaying ships” and bombs Iranian navy vessels, then immediately admits Iran can just toss mines off other boats anyway and nobody really knows what’s on the seabed. This is what “freedom of navigation” looks like in 2026: everyone claims control of the sea, nobody controls the rumor that shuts it down. Militaries do have mine warfare toys — crewed minesweepers with wooden hulls, littoral combat ships, helicopters towing sonars, uncrewed underwater vehicles, and now autonomous drone systems from companies like Thales — but they all share one handicap: they have to crawl, in predictable patterns, through waters that Iran can blanket with missiles, drones, and explosive boats. Clearing mines is up to a thousand times more expensive and slower than laying them, and the US doesn’t even keep dedicated Avenger‑class minesweepers in the Gulf anymore. So the “high‑tech” answer is basically to send robots first, then hope insurers and shipping CEOs are dumb or desperate enough to believe a PowerPoint that says “safe corridor.” Iran, whose regular military has been hammered by US‑Israeli strikes, doesn’t need a blue‑water navy as long as it can threaten Hormuz with a couple of dhows, some midget subs, and a stockpile of cheap mines detonated by contact or a ship’s magnetic field. Just the suspicion of a few dozen mines makes the strait “too dangerous to transit” for tankers from any country — including Iran’s — turning a third‑rate regional power into the de facto moderator of world energy prices. The US and UK can talk all they want about “reopening” Hormuz, but as long as a rumor and a rusty sphere can shut it down, the only guaranteed safe passage belongs to defense contractors’ earnings calls. #Hormuz#Iran#Trump#UK#Starmer#oil#shipping#mines#drones#StraitOfHormuz#war#energy#geopolitics#militaryindustrialcomplex#fakeSecurity 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5402 · 03/17/2026, 04:05 PM

The ‘Eyes of the State’ Under Fire Israel’s and America’s “eyes” in the region are getting scratched out one by one — slowly, cheaply, and in full view of every OSINT nerd with a Planet Labs subscription. Iran and Hezbollah aren’t just overwhelming interceptors; they’re dismantling the radar skeleton that tells those interceptors where to look. ​ Hezbollah has been methodically working over Israel’s Meron air-control base — the “eyes of the state” — since January 2024: first with a 62‑round mix of Katyushas and Kornet ATGMs that visibly smashed at least two radar domes, then with follow‑up missile strikes and now attack drones. Iron Dome is built to kill ballistic arcs, not straight‑flying anti‑tank missiles guided off Google Earth, and Hezbollah leans into that gap like it’s reading the brochure. Official line: capabilities “unharmed,” backup systems “working”; unofficial reality: a flagship fixed radar site just got turned into a recurring target set. Ramat David — one of Israel’s key airbases — has already eaten barrages of Fadi missiles and now a swarm of strike drones supposedly aimed at radars and command posts, with Hezbollah boasting and the IDF keeping very quiet about specific damage. Add in hits on Iranian and IRGC radars by US‑Israeli strikes — Kish Island, Zahedan, Imam Khomeini Airport — and you get a regional contest of who can blind whom faster, not who can “defend civilians” better. ​ Iran’s Cheap War on Billion‑Dollar Sensors While Washington keeps talking about “protecting our forces” and “freedom of navigation,” Iran went straight for the US early‑warning grid: an AN/TPY‑2 THAAD radar in Jordan confirmed destroyed, radar buildings in the UAE damaged, a billion‑dollar AN/FPS‑132 site in Qatar visibly scarred, with Site 512 in Israel suddenly looking a lot less immortal than the PowerPoints promised. Each radar costs in the hundreds of millions; each kamikaze drone runs in the tens of thousands — a beautiful kill ratio if you’re Tehran or a defense‑industry shareholder. ​ OSINT accounts stitch it all together: craters at Muwaffaq Salti, burn marks on Umm Dahal’s giant radar face, THAAD sites in the UAE punched in, maps of “US‑linked locations hit by Iran + high‑value radars confirmed damaged or destroyed.” In public, Pentagon spokespeople refuse to discuss “specific capabilities”; in commercial imagery, billions of dollars of “specific capabilities” are sitting in smoking holes. ​ Strategic Meaning: The Radar War The pattern is simple and ugly: Iran and Hezbollah are waging a sensor war, not just a missile war. Knock out or degrade Meron, THAAD eyes in Jordan, the warning radar in Qatar, radar complexes in the UAE, and you don’t need to shoot down every interceptor — you just make them late, blind or fired in the wrong direction. Israel hasn’t lost its entire ground‑based radar network, but the regional early‑warning architecture that was sold as near‑invulnerable has already taken a hit that no spin about “redundancy” can fully erase. ​ And that’s the punchline: the West poured fortunes into layered missile defense to feel untouchable, while Iran and Hezbollah invested in drilling cheap holes in the eyes of the system — with OSINT providing the after‑action report in real time. ​ #IranWar#Israel#Hezbollah#USA#radar#THAAD#Meron#Site512#OSINT#missileDefense#war#geopolitics#militaryindustrialcomplex#fakeSecurity 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸