Serious Idiots of this World

What are farking fat Idiot



why shouldn't they let him go? The Trump protester head butted him first. The asshole was lucky he wasn't carrying a gun. Could have shot the head butter right there. If Trump haters think think they have the right to shout at people driving by, then people driving by should also have the right to shout at them. They don't like it, that is too bad.
 
why shouldn't they let him go? The Trump protester head butted him first. The asshole was lucky he wasn't carrying a gun. Could have shot the head butter right there. If Trump haters think think they have the right to shout at people driving by, then people driving by should also have the right to shout at them. They don't like it, that is too bad.
Then why the farker fat Idiot did not use his tou gun?

lol
brbrbrbrbrbrbuuuuuuhahahahahaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
 
Then why the farker fat Idiot did not use his tou gun?

lol
brbrbrbrbrbrbuuuuuuhahahahahaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
If u watch the video u dumb shit, u will notice he came back into the crowd after he got his gun from the car. And he looked for the guy that head butted him, but the guy was not around anymore. Probably run off like the coward he is.
 
If u watch the video u dumb shit, u will notice he came back into the crowd after he got his gun from the car. And he looked for the guy that head butted him, but the guy was not around anymore. Probably run off like the coward he is.
Dumb shit you tok as though you were the fat arsehole

lol
bbrbrbrrbrbrbuuuuuahahahahahahaaaaaaaa
 
Idiotic Yindoos whack 2 co-workers worked as collection agents and were thrashed after being mistaken for being boyfriend and girlfriend
Crazy useless monkeys



Stripped of hijab, assaulted: Muslim girl, Hindu boy thrashed by mob in Uttar Pradesh After ascertaining that the boy was Hindu, the mob thrashed him, removed the ‘hijab’ of the girl and slapped her. They also made a video of the incident. Sanjay Pan...

Lucknow: A mob, reportedly enraged on seeing a Muslim girl with a Hindu boy, allegedly stripped the girl of her ‘hijab’ and assaulted the boy in Uttar Pradesh’s communally sensitive Muzaffarnagar district. According to the reports, the girl’s mother...




Read more at: https://www.deccanherald.com/india/...-boy-thrashed-by-mob-in-uttar-pradesh-3493261



A few months back, two Muslim girls were assaulted by a mob on suspicion of roaming with Hindu boys in Saharanpur town of UP. The mob threatened to inform their parents when the boys turned out to be Muslims.


Read more at: https://www.deccanherald.com/india/...-boy-thrashed-by-mob-in-uttar-pradesh-3493261
 
Idiotic Yindoos whack 2 co-workers worked as collection agents and were thrashed after being mistaken for being boyfriend and girlfriend
Crazy useless monkeys



Stripped of hijab, assaulted: Muslim girl, Hindu boy thrashed by mob in Uttar Pradesh After ascertaining that the boy was Hindu, the mob thrashed him, removed the ‘hijab’ of the girl and slapped her. They also made a video of the incident. Sanjay Pan...

Lucknow: A mob, reportedly enraged on seeing a Muslim girl with a Hindu boy, allegedly stripped the girl of her ‘hijab’ and assaulted the boy in Uttar Pradesh’s communally sensitive Muzaffarnagar district. According to the reports, the girl’s mother...




Read more at: https://www.deccanherald.com/india/...-boy-thrashed-by-mob-in-uttar-pradesh-3493261



A few months back, two Muslim girls were assaulted by a mob on suspicion of roaming with Hindu boys in Saharanpur town of UP. The mob threatened to inform their parents when the boys turned out to be Muslims.


Read more at: https://www.deccanherald.com/india/...-boy-thrashed-by-mob-in-uttar-pradesh-3493261
I should trash your muslim cheebye, u cunt
 
I should trash your muslim cheebye, u cunt
You Yindoooooo Modi dog

You see me you will run and scream
"Helpa helpa helpa ooooooo yeeeee ikhs please please helpa helpa helpa me the Muslims are after me
please please helpa helpa helpa"

lol
bbrbrbrbrbrbrbruuuuuhahahahahahaaaaaaaaaaaa
 
How to fight a war

No conclusive evidence linking ready-to-eat meals to food poisoning during Total Defence exercise: SFA, MOH​

A total of 187 people came down with gastroenteritis symptoms during the exercise.

1744726414429.png


Ready-to-eat (RTE) meals developed by SATS, designed to be stored without refrigeration and served at ambient temperature without reheating.


https://www.channelnewsasia.com/sin...se-not-linked-ready-eat-meals-sfa-moh-5066266
 
How to fight a war

No conclusive evidence linking ready-to-eat meals to food poisoning during Total Defence exercise: SFA, MOH​

A total of 187 people came down with gastroenteritis symptoms during the exercise.

View attachment 218276

Ready-to-eat (RTE) meals developed by SATS, designed to be stored without refrigeration and served at ambient temperature without reheating.


https://www.channelnewsasia.com/sin...se-not-linked-ready-eat-meals-sfa-moh-5066266
They saw your cheebye face and that is why they laosai.
 
The bastard cursed US Presidents Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon and their fellow croonies and soldier murderers who are now in piles of shit for eternity.


https://www.msn.com/en-ca/news/worl...er&cvid=89522b2f75074a20d23f29b9939b188c&ei=7

DA NANG, Vietnam (AP) — The Vietnam War ended on April 30, 1975, when the South Vietnamese capital of Saigon fell to Communist forces. But millions of people still face daily battles with its chemical legacy.

Nguyen Thanh Hai, 34, is one of millions with disabilities linked to Agent Orange. Born with severe developmental challenges, it's a struggle for him to complete tasks others take for granted: buttoning the blue shirt he wears to a special school in Da Nang, practicing the alphabet, drawing shapes or forming simple sentences.

Hai grew up in Da Nang, the site of a U.S. air base where departing troops left behind huge amounts of Agent Orange that have lingered for decades, leeching into food and water supplies in areas like Hai's village and affecting generations of residents.



FILE- Armored personnel carriers with tank support move through dense underbrush with a payload of South Vietnamese infantrymen and U.S. cavalrymen during patrol through jungle 40 miles northeast of Saigon on June 5, 1969. (AP Photo/Rick Merron, File)


FILE- Armored personnel carriers with tank support move through dense underbrush with a payload of South Vietnamese infantrymen and U.S. cavalrymen during patrol through jungle 40 miles northeast of Saigon on June 5, 1969. (AP Photo/Rick Merron, File)© The Associated Press

Across Vietnam, U.S. forces sprayed sprayed 72 million liters (19 million gallons) of defoliants during the war to strip the enemy's cover. More than half was Agent Orange, a blend of herbicides.

Agent Orange was laced with dioxin, a type of chemical linked to cancer, birth defects and lasting environmental damage. Today, 3 million people, including many children, still suffer serious health issues associated with exposure to it.


Vietnam has spent decades cleaning up the toxic legacy of the war, in part funded by belated U.S. assistance, but the work is far from complete. Now, millions in Vietnam are worried that the U.S. may abandon Agent Orange cleanup as President Donald Trump slashes foreign aid.


FILE- Infantryman points out a suspicious shadow in a tree to his machine gunner as they move on patrol near the Cambodian Border west of Pleiku in Vietnam on Nov. 26, 1966. Troops of the 25th Infantry Division (1st Battn. 14th Inf.) inches through the thick jungle from their base camp after being held up three days by snipers. AP Photo/Horst Faas, File)


FILE- Infantryman points out a suspicious shadow in a tree to his machine gunner as they move on patrol near the Cambodian Border west of Pleiku in Vietnam on Nov. 26, 1966. Troops of the 25th Infantry Division (1st Battn. 14th Inf.) inches through the thick jungle from their base camp after being held up three days by snipers. AP Photo/Horst Faas, File)© The Associated Press
Decades of contamination

When the war ended, the U.S. turned its back on Vietnam, eager to turn the page on a painful chapter in its history.

But Vietnam was left with dozens of dioxin hotspots spread across 58 of its 63 provinces.

Vietnam says the health impacts last generations, threatening the children, grandchildren, and even great-grandchildren of people exposed to the chemicals with health complications ranging from cancer to birth defects that affects the spine and nervous system.



FILE- A yellow flag marks a field contaminated with dioxin near Danang airport, during a ceremony marking the start of a project to clean up dioxin left over from the Vietnam War, at a former U.S. military base in Danang, Vietnam Thursday Aug. 9, 2012. (AP Photo/Maika Elan, File)


FILE- A yellow flag marks a field contaminated with dioxin near Danang airport, during a ceremony marking the start of a project to clean up dioxin left over from the Vietnam War, at a former U.S. military base in Danang, Vietnam Thursday Aug. 9, 2012. (AP Photo/Maika Elan, File)© The Associated Press

But the science about the human health impact — both to those exposed to Agent Orange and the generations that follow — remains unsettled. This is partly because when the two countries finally started working together in 2006, they focused on finding dioxin in the environment and clearing it instead of studying the still-contentious topic of its impact on human health, said Charles Bailey, co-author of the book “From Enemies to Partners: Vietnam, the U.S. and Agent Orange.”


FILE- Maps of the area contaminated with dioxin around Danang airport are displayed during a ceremony marking the start of a project to clean up dioxin left over from the Vietnam War, at a former U.S. military base in Danang, Vietnam Thursday Aug. 9, 2012. (AP Photo/Maika Elan, File)


FILE- Maps of the area contaminated with dioxin around Danang airport are displayed during a ceremony marking the start of a project to clean up dioxin left over from the Vietnam War, at a former U.S. military base in Danang, Vietnam Thursday Aug. 9, 2012. (AP Photo/Maika Elan, File)© The Associated Press

“The science of causality is still incomplete,” said Bailey.

Vietnam identifies Agent Orange victims by checking family history, where they lived, and a list of health problems linked to the poison. And Hai's disabilities were very likely linked to the spraying of the defoliant, added Bailey.

The 34-year-old dreams of becoming a soldier like his grandfather, was unable to leave home for years, waiting alone while his family went out to work. It was only five years ago that he began attending a special school. “I am happy here because I have many friends,” he said. Other students at the school hope to become tailors or makers of incense sticks.

The contamination also denuded Vietnam’s natural defenses. Nearly half of its mangrove trees, which shield shores from strong storms, were destroyed. Much of its tropical forest was irrevocably damaged, while the herbicide also leached the soil of nutrients in some of Vietnam’s most climate-vulnerable areas.


FILE -A woman walks next to a highly contaminated pond around the grounds of the Danang airbase in Danang, Vietnam, May 21, 2007. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder, File)


FILE -A woman walks next to a highly contaminated pond around the grounds of the Danang airbase in Danang, Vietnam, May 21, 2007. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder, File)© The Associated Press

A massive cleanup begins

In the decades after the war ended, the recovering country fenced off heavily contaminated sites like Da Nang airport and began providing support to impacted families.

But the U.S. largely ignored growing evidence of health impacts — including on its own veterans — until the mid-2000s, when it and began funding cleanup in Vietnam. In 1991, the U.S. recognized that certain diseases could be related to exposure to Agent Orange and made veterans who had them eligible for benefits.

Since 1991, it has spent over $155 million to aid people with disabilities in areas affected by Agent Orange or littered by unexploded bombs, according to the U.S. State Department. The two countries have also cooperated to recover war dead, with the U.S. aiding Vietnam’s search for its own missing.


Truong Minh Phu, 20, centre, sits in a classroom with other students at a school for victims of Agent Orange in Da Nang, Vietnam, March 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Aniruddha Ghosal)

T
ruong Minh Phu, 20, centre, sits in a classroom with other students at a school for victims of Agent Orange in Da Nang, Vietnam, March 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Aniruddha Ghosal)© The Associated Press

Cleaning up Agent Orange is expensive and often dangerous. Heavily polluted soil needs to be unearthed and heated in large ovens to very high temperatures, while less contaminated soil can be buried in secure landfills.

Despite years of work, large sites still need to cleared. In Da Nang, where an air base was contaminated during storage and transportation of Agent Orange, the U.S. completed a $110 million cleanup in 2018 but an area the size of 10 soccer fields still remains heavily contaminated.
 
Blady Farkers
From one pocket to the other pocket.
The money should be given to the family of the victim



SMRT Trains fined $240k after employee killed by rod that shot out of machine​



SMRT Trains was ordered to pay a fine of $240,000 on Monday (5 May) for workplace safety failures after an employee died while working at Bishan Depot. A rod that shot out of a hydraulic press machine struck Muhammad Afiq Senawi, a 30-year-old technical officer. He died of face and chest injuries on 23 March, 2020.
 
What an ugleeeee fake big ass bitch.
Wear such a stupid looking outfit and expect people to watch all over so as not to step on her freaking ugleeeeeeee dress.
lol


Kim Kardashian scolds security guard for stepping on 2025 Met Gala dress​


Kim Kardashian turned heads in a custom-made Chrome Hearts outfit at the Met Gala on Monday night (May 5).

Kim Kardashian scolded a security guard for stepping on her dress as she made her way to the 2025 Met Gala on Monday night.

In a video circulating on TikTok, the reality TV star is seen leaving The Mark Hotel in New York City alongside her daughter North West when a security guard accidentally trips on the train of her custom-made Chrome Hearts outfit.

In the footage, Kim is seen angrily looking back at the guard while attempting to support him as he stumbled.





https://www.asiaone.com/entertainme...erral&utm_campaign=A1+trending&utm_content=c2

1746540541756.png
 
What are farking bastard
Read and watch and see if you agree with me

Why does Drumph allow this terrorist to drive
Guess which car model he drives.

Best was he was leeleased after 10 months out of 5 year jail time because of overcrowding with asylum seekers who need to be deported.

If he did this in Singapore he would be behind bars for life. This scum of a piece of shit.
Luckily he dare not visit my village by Lake Victoria Uganda.



Road rage suspect who attacked Asian mom, daughter is assaulted by inmates in Hawaii​


https://www.google.com/search?q=nat...ate=ive&vld=cid:0295b31c,vid:YGj_gSwDubk,st:0











1747879944545.png
 
What a Drumph farrrrkkkhh
Ask him which country has China attacked vs USA?
Taiwan is = China
And telling other cuntries not to seek closer economic ties with China?
Fuckerrrrrrrr if you TACO tariff man close the economic co-operation doors to others then all will fall back on the one next in line.
By the way just go to any store and 95% of the goods are Made in China.
Why you TACO man so lazeeeeeee donch want to work in factolees and also donch want others to work in factolees.
lol


Hegseth warns China poses 'imminent' threat to Taiwan and urges Asia to boost defence​


https://sg.news.yahoo.com/hegseth-urges-asia-boost-defence-082757632.html

US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth has warned of China posing an "imminent" threat to Taiwan, while urging Asian countries to boost defence spending and work with the US to deter war.

While the US does not "seek to dominate or strangle China", it would not be pushed out of Asia nor allow its allies to be intimidated, Hegseth said while addressing a high-level Asian defence summit.

In response, China has accused the US of being the "biggest troublemaker" for regional peace.

Many in Asia fear potential instability if China invades Taiwan, a self-governing island claimed by Beijing. China has not ruled out the use of force.

Speaking at the Shangri-la Dialogue in Singapore, Hegseth characterised China as seeking to become a "hegemonic power" that "hopes to dominate and control too many parts" of Asia. China has clashed with several neighbours over competing territorial claims in the South China Sea.

He said Beijing was "credibly preparing to potentially use military force to alter the balance of power" in Asia, and referred to a 2027 deadline that President Xi Jinping has allegedly given for China's military to be capable of invading Taiwan.

This is a date put forth by US officials and generals for years, but has never been confirmed by Beijing.

China "is building the military needed to do it, training for it, every day and rehearsing for the real deal", Hegseth said.

"Let me be clear: any attempt by Communist China to conquer Taiwan by force would result in devastating consequences for the Indo-Pacific and the world. There's no reason to sugarcoat it. The threat China poses is real. And it could be imminent. We hope not but certainly could be."

The US does not seek war or conflict with China, Hegseth added.

1748732685639.png



"We do not seek to dominate or strangle China, to encircle or provoke. We do not seek regime change… but we must ensure that China cannot dominate us or our allies and partners," he said, adding "we will not be pushed out of this critical region".

In response, the Chinese embassy in Singapore posted a note on its Facebook page saying the speech was "steeped in provocations and instigation" and said Hegseth had "repeatedly smeared and attacked China and relentlessly played up the so-called 'China threat'".

"As a matter of fact, the US itself is the biggest 'troublemaker' for regional peace and stability," it added. Examples it cited included the US "deploying offensive weapons" in the South China Sea and conducting reconnaissance of what the embassy called "Chinese islands and reefs".


"What the US now offers the most to the world is 'uncertainty'," the embassy said. "The country claims to safeguard peace and not to seek conflicts. We've heard it. Let's see what moves will it take."

China's robust rhetoric came as it deliberately diminished its presence at the dialogue.

The Shangri-la Dialogue has traditionally served as a platform for the US and China to make their pitches to Asian countries as the superpowers jostle for influence.

But while this year the US has sent one of its largest delegations ever, China instead sent a notably lower-level team and scrapped its planned speech on Sunday. No explanation has been given for this.

'Deterrence doesn't come cheap'​

To prevent war, the US wants "a strong shield of deterrence" forged with allies, said Hegseth, who promised the US would "continue to wrap our arms around our friends and find new ways to work together".

But he stressed "deterrence does not come cheap" and urged Asian countries to ramp up their defence spending, pointing to Europe as an example.

US President Donald Trump has demanded members of the Western alliance Nato spend more on defence, at least 5% of their GDPs – an approach Hegseth called "tough love, but love nonetheless". Some countries including Estonia have moved quickly to do so, while others such as Germany have signalled an openness to comply.

"How can it make sense for countries in Europe to do that while key allies and partners in Asia spend less in the face of a more formidable threat?" he said with reference to China, adding North Korea was a threat as well.

"Europe is stepping up. US allies in the Indo-Pacific can, and should, follow by quickly upgrading their own defences," he insisted, saying they should be "partners, not dependents" on the US.

He touted US military hardware and also pointed to a new Indo-Pacific partnership for defence industrial resilience. Its first projects are establishing a radar repair centre in Australia for US maritime patrol aircraft purchased by allies, and aiding the production of unmanned drones in the region.

He also warned Asian countries against seeking economic ties with China, saying Beijing would use it as "leverage" to deepen its "malign influence", complicating US defence decisions.

Hegseth's speech came a day after French President Emmanuel Macron's pitch at the same dialogue for Europe to be Asia's ally as well.

Answering a question about Macron's proposal, he said the US "would much prefer that the overwhelming balance of European investment be on that continent" so that the US could use its "comparative advantage" in the Indo-Pacific.

China's response criticised the US's approach to Europe. "Since the US commitment to its European allies is to urge the latter to spend more for self-defence, what will be its commitment to others?" the statement read.

"The US keeps expanding its already staggering defence expenditure. Will the expanded portion come from tariffs it imposes on other countries?" it added, referring to Trump's global tariffs which have shaken up the world economic order and sparked concern among US allies.

'Common sense' vision​

Hegseth also sold Trump's vision of "common sense" in dealing with the rest of the world, where "America does not have or seek permanent enemies".

He compared the US President to the late Singaporean statesman Lee Kuan Yew, who was famous for his pragmatic realpolitik in foreign relations.

"The United States is not interested in the moralistic and preachy approach to foreign policy of the past. We are not here to pressure other countries to embrace and adopt policies or ideologies. We are not here to preach to you about climate change or cultural issues. We are not here to impose our will on you," he said.

It was an approach that Democratic Party Senator Tammy Duckworth, who was part of the US delegation in Singapore, criticised.

Speaking separately to reporters at the dialogue, the member of the Senate's foreign relations committee said Hegseth and Trump's vision was "inconsistent with the values on which our nation was founded".

Others "know what we stand for, we stand for basic human rights, we stand for international law and order. And that's what we are going to continue to push for. And I know that in the Senate we're going to try to uphold that or else it would be un-American otherwise," she said.

Duckworth also took aim at Hegseth's overall message to allies in the region, calling it "patronising".

"His idea where we wrap ourselves around you - we don't need that kind of language. We need to stand with our allies, work together, and send the message that America is not asking people to choose between the PRC (People's Republic of China) and us."

Other members of the delegation, Republican representatives Brian Mast and John Moolenaar, told the BBC the speech sent a clear message of China's threat and it was welcomed by many Asian countries, according to meetings they had with officials.

"The message I've heard is that people want to see freedom of navigation and respect for neighbours, but feel intimidated by some of the aggressive actions that China has displayed," said Moolenaar, who is chairman of a House committee on competition between US and China.

"So the presence of the US is welcome and encouraged. And the message was to continue to be present."

Ian Chong, a non-resident scholar with Carnegie China, said Asian governments would be reassured by the US's commitment to the status quo.

Hegseth's call to increase defence spending was "pretty standard for the US these days", he said, adding that while it has been a "perennial issue" between the US and Asian allies like Japan, South Korea and Taiwan that goes back decades, "the Trump administration is more insistent and demands more".

"I guess Asian governments will listen - but how much they will comply is a different story," said Dr Chong.
 
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