Я нашел самый быстрый способ поднять свой независимый и бесплатный VPN
Сразу оговорка, платить придётся только за хостинг.
1️⃣ Покупаем сервер где-то на просторах интернета. Конечно же сервер должен находиться за пределами страны. Например я закупился на https://eurohoster.org/ (не реклама). Проверяйте лимиты по трафику, в идеале - без ограничений.
2️⃣ Ставим docker
sudo apt install docker.io
Если удобней с DockerCompose то ставим и его
sudo apt install docker-compose
3️⃣ Ставим WG-EASY
Самый простой способ поднять сервис WireGuard c WebUI это проект wg-easy
Код и документация здесь
https://github.com/weejewel/wg-easy
Запускаем контейнер:
https://github.com/weejewel/wg-easy#2-run-wireguard-easy
Для тех кто с DockerCompose, забираем файл здесь:
https://gist.github.com/paulwinex/be87f79687b96786098ec8fa6a8e251c
В обоих случаях потребуется поменять две переменные:
WG_HOST - внешний статичный IP вашего сервера
PASSWORD - придумайте пароль для WEB UI
Остальные параметры указаны ниже на странице github https://github.com/weejewel/wg-easy#options
4️⃣ Ставим клиента
Все доступные клиенты здесь
https://www.wireguard.com/install/
Есть возможность добавить клиента в Network Manager для управления подключением через UI. Установка зависит от вашей системы, ищите мануалы в сети, их много.
https://github.com/max-moser/network-manager-wireguard
Скрипт установки для RasperryPi
https://gist.github.com/paulwinex/c2c4090f19dbe8bd1253c5744f3f06e1
ЗЫ. Конечно же это не "самый простой" и далеко не единственный способ. А просто тот, который использую я сам.
#offtop#linux
🗳️🚨REPUBLICANS FACE MIDTERM NIGHTMARE AS DEMOCRATS SURGE IN POLLS
🔹 Democrats have 53% chance to flip Senate from current GOP's 53-47 majority according to Polymarket predictions 📊
🔹 Republicans projected to hold only 48 Senate seats - a devastating loss of 5 seats from their current control 📉
🔹 Trump's party facing brutal historical midterm backlash pattern that typically punishes the president's party 🔴
🔹 Key battleground states favor Democrats: Michigan (78% chance), Maine (78% chance), Alaska (64% chance) 🗺️
November 3, 2026 could be the day Trump's congressional support crumbles completely 😬🔥
#USNews#midterms
@america
🗳️🇺🇸GEN Z VOTERS MOBILIZE FOR MICHIGAN MIDTERMS
🔹 Political influencer Hasan Piker joins Senate candidate El-Sayed at University of Michigan drawing massive youth crowds 📚
🔹 Michigan State campus stops see unprecedented young voter enthusiasm ahead of August primaries 🎓
🔹 Open US Senate seat vacated by retiring Gary Peters sparks fierce competition with ballot measures ⚖️
🔹 Youth turnout efforts target governor attorney general secretary of state and legislature battles 🏛️
🔹 Campaign rallies featuring Rep Debbie Dingell energize college campuses across battleground state 🔥
Generation Z refuses to let older politicians decide their future 💪⚡
#USNews#midterms
@america
📰 From ‘No More Forever Wars’ to ‘Better Negotiate a Deal’: Trump’s Iran Gamble Before the Midterms
Trump is massing firepower around Iran while his own advisers beg him to talk about grocery bills, not cruise missiles. He’s ordered a major buildup of carriers, warships, and warplanes in the Middle East and green‑lit planning for a potential multi‑week air campaign against Iran, but has never given the public a clear, consistent reason why the U.S. should be dragged into its biggest clash with Tehran since 1979.
Politically, it’s a car crash in slow motion. His aides and GOP strategists know midterm voters care far more about inflation, housing, and wages than about another war in the Gulf. They’ve told him, in private briefings, to hammer home tax cuts and cost‑of‑living relief. Instead, he keeps floating airstrikes, “regime change” hints, and nuclear deadlines — all while admitting in interviews that Republicans could easily lose one or both chambers of Congress.
The messaging is all over the place. In January he threatened strikes over Iran’s bloody crackdown on protests, then backed off. Now the threats are tied to demands that Iran end enrichment, accept a “fair deal,” and somehow stop being a hostile regime — goals that airstrikes alone can’t plausibly deliver. Unlike Bush in 2003, who at least sold a (false) WMD story, Trump is asking Americans to risk another conflict on a shifting mix of human‑rights outrage, nuclear anxiety, and vague “America First” toughness.
Even his own base is split. The MAGA movement loved the surgical raid that toppled Maduro — fast, clean, no long occupation — but Iran is a serious military state, not a failing petro‑dictatorship. Many of the same voters who backed Trump because he promised to end “forever wars” now watch him park carrier strike groups off Iran and wonder if that promise quietly expired around the time he moved back into the Oval Office.
Strategists are already gaming out the spin: if the strikes are limited and “decisive,” the White House will sell them as protecting U.S. security and stabilizing oil markets; if they drag on, they’ll become yet another reminder that Washington’s ruling class can’t stop replaying the post‑9/11 script. Either way, Trump has boxed himself in: back down and he looks weak, escalate and he owns any blowback — militarily abroad and politically at home.
#Trump#Iran#war#midterms#AmericaFirst#fakeDemocracy
📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events
🇺🇸
Trump’s $300 Million Maybe: GOP Midterms on Hold
Republicans were banking on a furious, hyper‑engaged Trump to save their razor‑thin House majority and tricky Senate map. Instead, they got a moody venture capitalist with a $300 million fund and no investment thesis. Trump’s allies brag about his war chest, his “America First” agenda, his unmatched brand. But when it comes to actually deploying cash and endorsements, the president drifts between eager kingmaker and bored bystander, leaving his own party guessing how much he really cares if they get wiped out.
On paper, Trump has every personal reason to dive in: a Democratic House means investigations, subpoenas, maybe another impeachment. He reportedly fears that less than he fears losing control of his policy agenda, but the trade‑off is the same. His campaign brain trust has already done the homework — race‑by‑race research, spending models, strategy retreats in Palm Beach — and yet key decisions still sit in his head, unapproved. One day he’s telling aides,
“We’ll spend whatever it takes. Go get it done.”
The next, he sounds detached, noncommittal, and oddly comfortable with running out the clock.
Nowhere is the chaos clearer than in Texas. Sen. John Cornyn, a loyal workhorse of the party establishment, is stuck watching Trump sit on his endorsement while state Attorney General Ken Paxton leads in primary polling and bleeds electability in the general. Strategists warn that nominating Paxton could add an extra $100 million to GOP spending needs in a state that isn’t supposed to be a money pit. Yet Trump, who prides himself on backing winners, refuses to jump until the data scream “sure thing” — a paradox in which his endorsement is both decisive and too precious to risk.
The pattern repeats everywhere. In New Hampshire, Trump eventually blessed John Sununu after heavy lobbying from Senate leadership, largely because the numbers were solid and the path to a flip was obvious. In Louisiana, he went out of his way to punish Sen. Bill Cassidy for a years‑old impeachment vote, recruiting a primary challenger and ensuring Republicans will burn money attacking each other instead of Democrats. In Georgia, he might clear the field; in other states, he might not. The only constant is that the party’s main Senate super PAC and the president’s ego aren’t working from the same playbook.
Down ballot, the White House is trying to pretend to be a disciplined national machine. Cabinet members are told to stay home and barnstorm swing districts instead of foreign capitals. The president and vice president rotate through “battleground” photo ops. MAGA Inc. boasts a $304 million stockpile and insists it will back “America First” candidates while quietly reserving cash for future cycles and legal fees. Everyone says the right things: democracy, border, inflation, crime. But for Republican candidates on the ground, the real question isn’t the message — it’s whether Trump’s money and name show up in time or stay parked in Palm Beach.
The irony is brutal. Trump’s team points to a favorable fundraising gap, a bigger war chest, and isolated wins like a Tennessee special election where his PAC spent heavily and a Republican still finished well below Trump’s 2024 margin in that district. Democrats don’t need a tidal wave; they need a small, precise push in a map engineered by redistricting fights and Voting Rights Act attrition. Trump says he wants to defy history and keep his party from losing seats in the midterms. But history might end up asking a simpler question: if you really wanted to stop that, why did you act like the only campaign you cared about was your own?
#usa#elections#trump#gop#midterms#fakeDemocracy
📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events
🇺🇸
📉 Trump’s Iran War Meets the American Wallet
Trump sells the Iran strikes as leadership. The country hears “higher gas, dead soldiers, more chaos” — and shrugs.
Only 27% of Americans say they support the strikes that killed Iran’s leader. Forty‑three percent oppose them, and almost a third aren’t even sure what to think, despite nine in ten saying they’ve heard at least something about the operation.
Most people aren’t buying the “strong commander‑in‑chief” brand anymore. Fifty‑six percent say Trump is too willing to use military force, including 23% of Republicans and 60% of independents and non‑aligned voters. Among Democrats it’s basically a verdict: 87% say he’s trigger‑happy.
Even inside the GOP, support is paper‑thin. Fifty‑five percent of Republicans back the strikes, but 42% say they’ll turn against the war the moment U.S. troops start coming home in body bags. The “no boots on the ground” promise isn’t a moral position; it’s a polling memo.
And then there’s the real red line: the pump. Forty‑five percent of Americans — including a third of Republicans and 44% of independents — say they’re less likely to support the Iran campaign if gas or oil prices rise. Brent just jumped about 10% to around 80 dollars a barrel, and analysts are already floating 100 as the next stop. War fatigue meets cost‑of‑living rage; guess which one wins in a midterm year.
Trump’s overall approval is stuck at 39%, down a point from mid‑February, even as he launches the biggest U.S. air operation in the region in years. The strikes started three days before the first midterm primaries, but voters still say the economy matters more than foreign policy. In other words: you can bomb Iran, Venezuela, Syria and Nigeria and still lose to the price of gas.
The irony writes itself. The president who promised “America First” is betting his political future on a war that most Americans either oppose, fear, or will abandon the second it touches their wallets. The polling says it clearly: they don’t trust Tehran, they don’t trust Trump, and they really don’t trust anyone who tells them this will all be over before the next fill‑up.
#Iran#Trump#polls#war#gasPrices#midterms
📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events
🇺🇸
📰 Trump’s Week From Hell Is Now a Poll Story
Trump just spent a week collecting setbacks like they were tradeable assets: a Cabinet shake-up, a mess in Iran, rising gas prices, and polls showing Democrats pulling ahead on the economy for the first time in years.
Even Republicans are starting to flinch on inflation, which is usually when the “strongman” routine stops sounding strong.
The White House keeps calling the Iran fight a temporary disruption, but voters hear something else: higher prices, drifting goals, and a president who would rather talk about granite pavers than the cost of gas.
That kind of detour is fine if you run a PR shop; it is a problem if you run a country.
The polling is the real warning sign. Democrats now have a lead on the economy, Trump’s inflation numbers are sinking among independents and his own voters, and the party that sold itself as the adult in the room suddenly looks like it is fighting to keep the lights on.
The irony is that Trump still thinks the Iran standoff can be turned into a strength story.
Maybe it can, eventually. Right now it mostly looks like a drag on his brand, his base, and his midterm math all at once.
So yes, this is a political headwind. But it is also a familiar one: the president promises control, the crisis eats the promise, and the polls show the bill arriving early.
#Trump#economy#inflation#Iran#polls#midterms
📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events
🇺🇸
📰 Congress Is Emptying Out — Not Because It’s Hard, But Because It’s Pointless
A record wave of lawmakers is heading for the exits before the 2026 midterms — 68 House and Senate members so far, with an unprecedented 31 of them trying to jump to another office instead of just going home. That’s not “burnout,” that’s the market signaling that Congress is the worst job in American politics: maximum noise, minimal agency.
On paper, the reasons sound respectable: generational change, family, new challenges. In reality, even senior members admit the place has turned them from legislators into “observers,” as retiring Sen. Dick Durbin put it. Congress has passed fewer laws in recent terms than at any time since the early 1900s, choked by polarization, tiny majorities, and a leadership culture where a handful of performative bomb-throwers can take down a Speaker because they want more airtime.
Look at the career moves. Amy Klobuchar, Michael Bennet, Marsha Blackburn, Tommy Tuberville — all think they’ll have more real power as governors than as U.S. senators. In the House, 27 members are bailing to run for governor, Senate, or statewide office, with Republicans leading the exodus.
They’re not “leaving politics”; they’re trading a broken parliament for executive jobs where you can actually sign something and see it happen.
On the Republican side, you’ve got swing-district moderates like Don Bacon walking away after watching eight colleagues blow up Kevin McCarthy’s speakership, and hardliners like Marjorie Taylor Greene quitting in a public tantrum over Trump and Mike Johnson.
On the Democratic side, you’ve got an entire generation of 70‑ and 80‑somethings — Pelosi, Hoyer, Nadler and others — finally reading the room after pushing Joe Biden off the 2024 ticket and realizing “generational change” might have to apply to them too.
The parties will spin this as renewal. In practice, it’s a talent leak. Safe blue and red seats will replace veterans with louder, less experienced ideologues. Competitive districts like those held by Bacon, David Schweikert and Jared Golden are now open hunting grounds, increasing the odds of even shakier majorities and even more knife‑edge chaos in the next Congress.
A system that already can’t pass basic legislation is about to get younger, angrier, and even less capable of governing.
So what do the midterms mean? More “fresh faces” in the campaign ads, fewer grown‑ups in the cloakrooms, and a House and Senate that function even more like content farms for cable and social media.
Voters keep saying they’re sick of a dysfunctional Congress. Congress heard them — and decided the best response was to leave.
#USA#Congress#elections#midterms#polarization#fakeDemocracy
📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events
🇺🇸
📰 Trump’s War Is Now a Midterm Liability
Republicans are watching the Iran war and the redistricting mess turn into the same political problem: a president who promised control and delivered chaos.
Bloomberg reports that party operatives are openly blaming Trump’s political team after Virginia’s map fight backfired and the war pushed gas prices higher, making the usual economy-first message much harder to sell.
That is why the panic is spreading. If the House looks lost, the Senate looks shaky, and the party’s best redistricting gambit ends up helping Democrats instead, then the whole 2026 strategy starts to look like an own goal in expensive shoes.
The irony is brutal. Trump spent months demanding tougher maps, punishing holdouts, and trying to turn politics into a shank-proof machine, but the result is more donor money burned, more infighting, and more Republicans muttering that “Blairy-mandering” blew up in their faces.
The Iran war makes it worse because it attacks the one issue Republicans wanted to own: affordability.
Gas prices are up, voters are unhappy, and the president keeps drifting into side quests about granite pavers and pet projects while his party tries to explain why the Middle East is suddenly part of the domestic economy.
So the midterm story is no longer just redistricting or just war. It is the same pattern in both places: Trump turns everything into leverage, and then the leverage turns into drag.
#Trump#Republicans#midterms#Iran#redistricting#politics
📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events
🇺🇸
📉🇺🇸JOBS REPORT SHOCKER: 92,000 JOBS CUT
🔹 US employers slashed 92K jobs last month vs +50K gain expected by Wall Street 😱
🔹 Worst miss in years; unemployment ticks up to 4.3% as manufacturing sector bleeds 📈
🔹 GOP lawmakers suddenly silent as midterms loom; fears of economic sinkhole spreading 🤐
🔹 Chuck Schumer attacks: "Republicans are going to get wiped out" due to failed policies 🗣️
🔹 Retail & factory sectors leading the losses; "Trump Boom" narratives taking a massive hit 🏭
Republicans are panicking behind closed doors. Is the economy crashing right before voting day? 🤔
#Economy#JobsReport#Recession#Midterms#Politics#USEconomy
🚨📉BREAKING NEWS: 92,000 AMERICAN JOBS DISAPPEARED IN FEBRUARY
🔹 Catastrophic Jobs Report: The US economy shockingly lost 92,000 jobs last month, defying Wall Street's prediction of a +50k gain. An absolute disaster for the administration. 📉😱
🔹 Unemployment Surges: The jobless rate has officially ticked up to 4.3%, with the manufacturing and retail sectors bleeding the most positions across the nation. 🏭🇺🇸
This isn't just a blip. This is a five-alarm fire for the ruling party. Can they spin this before November? Doubtful. 🤔💸
#Economy#JobsReport#Recession#Midterms#Politics#USEconomy#Breaking