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Source channel @olddriverGDstudy · Post #53 · Mar 24

#知识#接吻 第一式:舔吻 用舌舔对方的上下唇,让对方感受舌部味蕾舔掠的感觉,注意要保持唾液的充分,如果唾液太少,干燥的舔吻会有不舒服的感觉。 第二式:咬吻 用牙齿轻咬对方的唇,但别咬的太用力,以免受伤喔! 第三式:吸吻 轻轻的吸吮对方的唇部;可用自己的唾液轻抹在对方的唇部,然后吸吮干净。 第四式:推动吻 把舌伸进对方口中,让舌与舌互相推放,男生力气应放小,以免女生疼痛;这种互推吻可形成快感。 第五式:吸舌吻 以你的唇含住他的舌,轻轻的吸吮对方的舌头,动作宜缓慢而轻柔,勿过于仓促。 第六式:齿龈吻 用舌探索对方的牙及牙龈的内外两侧,以刺激口内粘膜为目的。动作要仔细,慢,轻柔的介于碰触与不碰触之间,以产生一种特殊的亲密感。 第七式:滑动吻 用舌尖稍用力的舔对方的舌部内侧,由里向外滑舔。 第八式:舔舌吻 双方以舌对舌互舔,以用舌尖为主,不用唇。 第九式:嚼食之吻 咬住对方的舌头,似欲吞食般的吻;请小心别用力过火,只是假装而已。想像对方的舌头是好吃的东西,又咬又舔又吸的想吞进肚子里去。 第十式:律动之吻 以舌在对方的口中,有节奏律动般的的绕着对方的舌尖,画圈似的舔吻。 第十一式:深喉咙吻 将舌深入对方的喉咙重舔。重压,是霸道占有般的吻;这是一种颇不舒服的吻法,但还是有乐在其中的人。 第十二式:热情之吻 将自己的舌把对方的舌包卷于口中,上下左右回旋翻动,用放肆的旋动来增加快感,虽嫌粗鲁但颇具挑战性,是接吻高手必备的技巧之一。 第十三式:甘泉之吻 利用两唇相接时……以舌将自己的唾液渡入对方口中,并吸食对方的唾液。适用于两情相悦且身体健康的爱侣,会觉入口之唾液为琼浆玉液般,世间独有。

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DE - Geopolitics Edition

@DefendEvropa · Post #15848 · 01/24/2024, 10:41 PM

📝🇷🇺✈️ On the topic of relocating Westerners to Russia | CIG #commentary 🔷️ We believe that most folks in the west have either decided upon achieving total victory or die at their post. 🔷️ Politics are temporary, it is readily becoming more likely to expect European-descended Peoples to solve their problems. Especially for those who left Europe centuries ago to become conquerors, pirates, pioneers, mercenaries, explorers, adventurers, and so forth. Settling in new lands that many call home now. With no intention of returning to European countries. Not when there are endless spoils and opportunities in the world across the seas. 🔷️ There is a great abundance of usable land in North America, Africa, South America and even terraforming Australia should be a goal. Each of these continents holds historic European-descended populations. To pack up, leave and contribute to the over-crowding of increasingly densely populated European countries would just kill birthrates and strain resources among an increasingly energy demanding world. 🔷️ To quote the literary figure Oswald Spengler, "We are born into this time and must bravely follow the path to the destined end. There is no other way. Our duty is to hold on to the lost position, without hope, without rescue, like that Roman soldier whose bones were found in front of a door in Pompeii, who, during the eruption of Vesuvius, died at his post because they forgot to relieve him. That is greatness. That is what it means to be a thoroughbred. The honorable end is the one thing that can not be taken from a man."

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NSI - Nationalist Security and Intelligence

@border_leaks · Post #2828 · 02/28/2026, 08:10 PM

🇮🇱🇺🇸🇮🇷On the Iran-Israel War: /CIG/ #commentary Main takeaway is that the Iranian response was timely, instead of the 24-48 hour wait last time. Pretty decent day one for Iran. Expected performance by the US et al. Global shipping might be the main casualty here. Unknown what will happen to oil & gas. The main damage caused by Iran et al in recent years was by shutting down the Suez. The US also appears to be shifting towards lower-cost kamikaze drones, taking a page out of Iran's book. Iran focused on radars and anything which aids interceptions. This is better than hitting symbolic buildings like last time. They're taking taking big hits and their leadership may or may not be dead, but they prepared for decentralized military coordination. So it's like a unit by unit basis of commanders making self authorized decisions. Main US military impact is that this will functionally use up the remainder of munitions that would have been used on China. Also the US is not invading Iran shock & awe style. It took all the king's horses and airlift to move a couple AA batteries. US sealift is pretty much extinct these days as well. This might be the final big war for all the fancy and expensive toys wielded by the US. Iran successfully implemented their eyes & fist strategy of blinding/evading missiles without spamming anything. @CIG_telegram

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Addis Standard

@addisstandardeng · Post #21994 · 04/09/2026, 10:51 AM

#Commentary: Lights for Few, Darkness for Many: #Ethiopia’s mirage of ‘prosperity’ In this commentary, Sidoc Haytu criticizes the Ethiopian government’s “Prosperity” agenda, arguing that while billions are spent on palaces and prestige projects, millions still face hunger, displacement, and lack of basic services. He writes, “This is the systematic extraction of national wealth for the glorification of a comprador bourgeoisie…” IMF-style reforms have separated GDP growth from real human development, while poverty has risen to 43%, validating “the development they promised has proven to be a brief interlude between crises.” He emphasizes that “the empty lights of Ethiopia… illuminate nothing but the hollowness of the regime’s promises" and that development must be carried out “with the people, by the people, for the people.” https://addisstandard.com/?p=56453

Addis Standard

@addisstandardeng · Post #21931 · 04/03/2026, 10:42 AM

#Commentary: A Seat Without a Voice: #Ethiopia’s 2026 election and the illusion of choice In this commentary, Wakjira Tesfaye argues that the 2021 election “was not an aberration… but a proof of concept for a mode of governance in which the formal machinery of electoral democracy is preserved while the substantive conditions that give elections their democratic content are removed,” adding that the upcoming 2026 vote represents “the maturation of this model.” He contends that increasingly restrictive conditions have eliminated genuine political competition through legal, institutional, and security constraints. Wakjira emphasizes, “The problem is not procedural. It is constitutional and structural.” Without the essential freedoms required for “genuine” elections, he concludes, the process will produce “an authoritarian consolidation that is procedurally impeccable but substantively empty of democratic content.” https://addisstandard.com/?p=56292

Addis Standard

@addisstandardeng · Post #21829 · 03/25/2026, 11:29 AM

#Commentary: The Seductions of Success: How a reform mandate curated an autocratic turn in #Ethiopia The "Bathsheba Syndrome" explains how successful leaders often engineer their own undoing. Named after King David, it suggests that failure often stems not from external pressures but from the psychological consequences of early triumphs. In this commentary, Ezekiel Gebissa argues that Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s trajectory “exemplifies this pattern with unusual clarity.” Though initially met with global acclaim and a Nobel Peace Prize, the author contends that this success created a “moral halo that discouraged self-examination and accountability.” He notes, "Early success, unchecked narrative power, and institutional erosion converge to produce moral collapse.” https://addisstandard.com/?p=56064

Addis Standard

@addisstandardeng · Post #21421 · 02/17/2026, 06:46 AM

#Commentary: National Security and National Interest in #Ethiopia: A performance-based assessment This commentary examines a recent social media post by Getachew Reda, who contends that Jawar Mohammed conflates opposition to the Prime Minister with serious analysis of national interest. The author frames this exchange as symptomatic of a deeper structural crisis: in Ethiopia, "national security is treated as a political posture and strategic vocabulary," rather than "measurable protection of the state and the people." The article emphasizes that "national security must be defined carefully and then tested through outcomes." When measured against these standards, the piece contends, Ethiopia faces significant gaps. The author notes, "National security is not a slogan," underscoring that it must be judged by reduced conflict, the protection of civilians, and the preservation of strategic autonomy. https://addisstandard.com/?p=55207

Addis Standard

@addisstandardeng · Post #21394 · 02/13/2026, 11:22 AM

#Commentary: Revisiting #Ethiopia’s Nation-State-Building Processes: Challenges, lost opportunities In this article, adapted from a 2019 National Consensus Dialogue concept note, Merera Gudina argues that Ethiopia’s current political crises are deeply rooted in unresolved tensions from the 19th-century state formation. While Ethiopia's ancient history is often invoked, he focuses on Emperor Menelik II’s “conquest-driven expansion,” which tripled the size of the empire but “entrenched a brutal political economy.” According to the author, the persistence of historical wounds can be traced to three conflicting narratives: that Menelik reunified a fragmented nation, that he unified distinct peoples, or that his campaigns amounted to colonial conquest. Merera states, “These perspectives, combined with unchecked clashes of dreams for power, are attitudes that complicate our national consensus efforts.” https://addisstandard.com/?p=55169

Borkena

@borkena · Post #6108 · 04/02/2026, 08:33 PM

The Prime Minister Who Taught How To Burn Human Alive (EF). Take a listen. https://borkena.com/2026/04/02/ethiopia-the-prime-minister-who-taught-how-to-burn-human-alive-ef/#Ethiopia#AbiyAhmed#commentary

Addis Standard

@addisstandardeng · Post #22124 · 04/27/2026, 11:04 AM

#Commentary: #Axum at a Crossroads: Religious coexistence, quest for equal rights in #Ethiopia’s ancient city Axum holds a rare global status as a sanctuary for two great faiths. As Mohammedawel Hagos notes, the city “possesses the unique distinction of being at once the cradle of both Christianity and Islam in Ethiopia.” Yet, he contends that this legacy of hospitality has curdled into exclusion. Today, Axum’s Muslims are “denied a mosque, denied a cemetery, and denied the right for their daughters to wear the hijab to school.” Mohammedawel argues that state policies and distorted historical narratives have superseded Ethiopia’s constitutional religious freedoms. To restore justice, the author proposes a “Two-Zone Solution" to ensure constitutional rights for all while preserving the sanctity of religious sites. https://addisstandard.com/?p=56637

Addis Standard

@addisstandardeng · Post #21070 · 01/14/2026, 11:19 AM

#Commentary: Politics of Performance: #Ethiopia’s education crisis, PM Abiy’s ‘intellectual’ puzzle In this commentary, Seife Tadelle analyzes Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s lecture delivered on 02 January 2026 to mark the 75th anniversary of Addis Ababa University (#AAU). While acknowledging its “ambitious scope and engaging tone,” he argues that “Who Is an Intellectual?” exposed “a notable methodological limitation.” Seife notes, “Over the hour-long presentation, no sources, theoretical frameworks, or empirical references were cited,” a gap that weakens its academic credibility, “particularly within a university setting where scholarly rigor is foundational.” More troubling, the author contends, was the marginalization of Ethiopia’s own intellectual heritage. “The omission of figures such as Zera Yacob, Gebrehiwot Baykedagn, Saint Yared, and Kebede Mikael risks erasing historical continuity,” thereby weakening the cumulative nature of scholarship. https://addisstandard.com/?p=54522

Addis Standard

@addisstandardeng · Post #21703 · 03/13/2026, 10:41 AM

#Commentary: Ballots and Battlefields: #Ethiopia's 2026 election under shadows of domestic turmoil, maritime ambitions In this commentary, Tilahun Adamu Zewudie argues that Ethiopia’s upcoming election is unfolding amid severe instability and ongoing armed conflicts in #Amhara, #Oromia, and #Tigray, where humanitarian crises and mass displacement make voting nearly impossible. While the government retains control over some urban centers—projecting “an image of legitimacy”—opposition participation remains limited. Although the incumbent is “widely expected” to win, Tilahun contends that “the mandate is likely to be contested.” He adds that “the election carries strategic significance for Ethiopia’s geopolitical ambitions, including access to the sea,” but warns that these goals depend on restoring internal stability, strengthening national unity, and pursuing a coherent strategy. https://addisstandard.com/?p=55830

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