Leo ᚑ ᚄᚓᚐᚉᚆᚅᚐᚄᚐᚔᚌᚆ's Avatar

Leo ᚑ ᚄᚓᚐᚉᚆᚅᚐᚄᚐᚔᚌᚆ

@leoie

Gen X lefty fag. Ban Billionaires. Trans rights are human rights. Free Palestine. Free Lucy Letby. New to the parish 🟩🟨

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07.06.2023
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Latest posts by Leo ᚑ ᚄᚓᚐᚉᚆᚅᚐᚄᚐᚔᚌᚆ @leoie

I just stole Melania (2026) from the internet.

Then I immediately deleted it without watching it.

That'll teach 'em.

09.03.2026 20:22 👍 4 🔁 1 💬 1 📌 0

As far as I am aware a major added bonus to this will be that KennCo are not major investors in the Occupied Territories or the Israeli arms industry. Unlike Allianz.

09.03.2026 17:48 👍 4 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0

Shout out where it's warranted. After a torturous 14 day, 8+ wasted hrs on hold to Allianz to advise them of an accident they told me they couldn't help because the 3rd party wasn't insured with them. I called KennCo who answered my call in 5 minutes, and sorted everything in <15m. Moving to KennCo.

09.03.2026 17:47 👍 4 🔁 1 💬 1 📌 0

ugh... too....

09.03.2026 15:39 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

I have tried emailing them to. Nothing.

They have finally answered my call, back on hold again because apparently they need to transfer me to someone else. Currently at 2 hours 11 minutes on hold today.

09.03.2026 15:39 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 2 📌 0

Something needs to be done to rein in these missiles which appear to be autonomously killing children all on their own.

09.03.2026 14:53 👍 4 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

1) This will never fucking happen. The Brits don't apologise.
2) Even if it did, the damage, the catastrophic damage is already done and no apology will rectify it as...
3) The Brits continue to support Israel and its expansionist genocidal strategy, by providing political cover and arms support.

09.03.2026 14:51 👍 1 🔁 1 💬 2 📌 0

1 hour 15 minutes on hold now. 1 hour 15 minutes of my monday when I have been unable to concentrate on anything else. I have a customer call in 15 minutes, I am going to have to drop off this call at that point, an HOUR AND A FUCKING HALF after I jumped on. All wasted. Back to the bottom.

09.03.2026 14:45 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

There is no other way of getting in contact with Allianz. CPCC don't seem to care as you cannot contact them to complain either. This is modern torture. And we all allow it to happen.

09.03.2026 14:39 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
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I have given up on that option and am now waiting on hold. They are repeating "we apologise for the delay in answering your call, call volumes are higher than normal, press 5 now to remain in the queue, and we will call when you reach the top of the queue." every 15 seconds. It's been 1 hour and 8m.

09.03.2026 14:39 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
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Waiting Line Ticket Movie Queue GIF ALT: Waiting Line Ticket Movie Queue GIF

They have an option so that you don't have to stay on hold and "someone will call you back when you get to the top of the queue". I have selected this 6 times in the last 12 days. Nobody has ever called me back, leading me to believe I have never ever reached the top of the queue.

09.03.2026 14:39 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

I have spent over 6 hours on hold to Allianz over the last 12 days trying to get to talk to someone, anyone to lodge a claim. Apparently they are "experiencing higher call volumes than normal". I mean, these call volumes seem pretty normal based on my experiences over 12 calls over 12 days.

09.03.2026 14:39 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
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Is it due to the war in the Gulf? Or is it due to your government's abject failure to reduce Ireland's total dependence on fossil fuels for every industry including agriculture and transport?

It's always someone else's fault eh lads?

09.03.2026 14:13 👍 5 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Oh you voted for her did you?

09.03.2026 14:03 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

Reminder to my Kerry compatriots, do not eat in this gammon's restaurant, it's shit. Much like that which comes out of his mouth.

09.03.2026 13:58 👍 3 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Who killed Rasheem Carter? A shattered skeleton. Gruesome rumors. A brutal history of lynchings. And tight-lipped cops who quickly said "no foul play."

This is absolutely mind-blowing to read in 2026.

Mississippi is clearly still burning.

www.motherjones.com/criminal-jus...

09.03.2026 13:13 👍 6 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0
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Trump's decision to bomb Iran is now the greatest windfall to the Russian war effort on record. If it continues, it might save the Russian war economy.

09.03.2026 05:24 👍 2237 🔁 1155 💬 82 📌 120

Wes Streeting is the worst kind of gay man.

I’m alright, I’m enjoying the benefits generations of gay men and women fought for, but I’m pulling the ladder up behind me.

09.03.2026 09:47 👍 2 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
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Why have an Apple Watch when you can have smart rosary beads? Faith meets firmware.

This feels like something The Righteous Gemstones would have sold.

08.03.2026 21:12 👍 222 🔁 33 💬 14 📌 13
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Polls have closed in the first of this year's five German state elections, in prosperous Baden-Württemberg. It's looking like a remarkable win-from-behind by the Greens under @oezdemir.de. Full results over the course of the evening.

08.03.2026 17:08 👍 643 🔁 178 💬 13 📌 25
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Happy international women’s day

08.03.2026 14:13 👍 229 🔁 75 💬 1 📌 4

made a video to explain what's happened to omid djalili

07.03.2026 17:42 👍 219 🔁 54 💬 17 📌 3

This just got a like, so I'm re-upping it for the day that's in it.

#speirgorm #InternationalWomensDay

08.03.2026 13:46 👍 7 🔁 4 💬 0 📌 0

Trudat

08.03.2026 16:49 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

China enters the chat.

08.03.2026 11:08 👍 5 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
The little shipping company that’s making Europe’s sanctions look silly Scattered among the candy shelves and freezer cabinets in Russian supermarkets across Germany are advertisements promoting a business with a service the government has tried to outlaw: a logistics company specialized in moving packages from the heart of Germany to Russia, in defiance of European Union sanctions. Trade restrictions have been in place since 2014 and were tightened just after the 2022 invasion of Ukraine, when Western nations began to impose far-reaching financial and trade sanctions on Russia. But an investigation by the Axel Springer Global Reporters Network, which includes POLITICO, has identified a clandestine Berlin-based postal system that exploits the special status of postal parcels to transport all kinds of European goods — including banned electronics components — into President Vladimir Putin’s empire. We know every stop and turn in the route because we sent five packages and used digital tracking devices to follow them — through an illicit 1,100-mile journey that undermines the sanctions regime European policymakers consider their strongest tool to generate political pressure on Russian leaders by weakening their country’s economy. LS Logistics said its internal controls make violations of EU sanctions “virtually impossible” but that it was not immune from customers making fraudulent declarations about the goods they ship. “Sanctions enforcement is whack-a-mole,” said David Goldwyn, who worked on sanctions policy as U.S. State Department coordinator for international energy affairs and now chairs the Atlantic Council Global Energy Center’s energy advisory group. “It’s a hard process, and you have to constantly be adapting to how the evaders are adapting.” The Uzbek label In late December, we packed five square brown parcels with electronic components specifically banned under EU sanctions and addressed the parcels to locations in Moscow and St. Petersburg. When we brought our parcels to the counters of Russian supermarkets in Berlin, we told salespeople the packages included books, scarves and hats. But they never checked inside the packages, which in fact held banned electronic components we rendered unusable before packing. Salespeople charged us 13 euros per kilogram, about $7 per pound, refusing to provide receipts. What makes these cardboard packages even more special is their disguise: The employee does not affix Russian postal stickers to the boxes, but rather those of UzPost, the national postal service of Uzbekistan. The former Soviet republic is not subject to EU sanctions. UzPost maintains close ties to the Russian postal service, according to a person familiar with the entities’ history of cooperation granted anonymity to discuss confidential business practices. Tatyana Kim, the CEO of Russian ecommerce marketplace Wildberries and reputedly her country’s richest woman, recently acquired a large stake in UzPost, according to media reports. “We work with partners, including private postal service providers,” the Uzbek postal service stated in response to our inquiry. “They can use our solutions for deliveries.” In Germany, registered logistics companies are permitted to provide postal services — including pick-up, sorting and delivery — for international postal operators. However, the Federal Network Agency, which is responsible for postal oversight, says the Uzbek postal service is not authorized to perform any of these functions in Germany. (The Federal Network Agency said in a response to our inquiry that it is “currently reviewing” the case and that it would pursue penalties for LS if it is found to be using Uzbek documents without authorization.) After our packages spent one to two days at the supermarkets, we saw them begin to move. Inside each package we had placed a small black GPS device, naming them “Alpha,” “Beta,” “Gamma,” “Delta” and “Epsi.” We could track their movements in real time in an app, watching them closely as they wound through Berlin’s roads to Schönefeld, site of the capital’s international airport. There they stopped, unloaded into a modern warehouse that has been repurposed into a Russian shadow postal service. Cologne, technically In 2014, a retired professional gymnast was tasked with launching a subsidiary of Russia’s national postal service, the RusPost GmbH, which would operate with official authorization to collect, process and deliver postal items in Germany, according to a former employee granted anonymity to speak openly about the business. For 18 years,  the St. Petersburg-raised  Alexey Grigoryev had  competed and coached at Germany’s highest levels , winning three national championship titles with the KTV Straubenhardt team and working with an Olympic gold medalist on the high bar. But he had no evident experience in the postal business. RusPost’s German business model collapsed upon the imposition of an expanded sanctions package in the weeks after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Much like American sanctions on Russia, the European Union blocks  sensitive technical materials  that could boost the Russian defense sector, while allowing the export of personal effects and quotidian consumer items. “The sanctions are accompanied by far-reaching export bans, particularly on goods relevant to the war, in order to put pressure on the Russian war economy,” according to a statement the Federal Ministry of Economics provided us. In March 2022, while conducting random checks of postal traffic to Moscow, customs officials discovered sanctioned goods (including cash, jewelry and electrical appliances) in numerous RusPost packages. The Berlin public prosecutor’s office launched an investigation of the company, concluding that a former RusPost managing director had deliberately failed to set up effective control mechanisms, in breach of his duties. He was charged with 62 counts of attempting to violate the Foreign Trade and Payments Act over an eight-month period; criminal proceedings are ongoing. The Russian postal network did not quite disappear, however. A new company called LS Logistics Solution GmbH was formed in December 2022, according to corporate filings. LS filled its top jobs, including customs manager and head of customer service, with former RusPost employees, according to their LinkedIn profiles. The new company listed as its business address an inconspicuous semi-detached house in a residential area of Cologne, across from a church. When we visited, we found an old white mailbox whose plated sign lists LS Logistics alongside dozens of other companies supposed to be housed there. But none of them seemed to be active. The building was empty during business hours, its mailbox overflowing with discolored brochures and old newspapers. The operational heart of LS is the warehouse complex in Berlin-Schönefeld, just a few minutes from the capital’s airport. The building itself is functional and anonymous: a long, gray industrial structure with several metal rolling doors, some fitted with narrow window slits. Through them, towering stacks of parcels are visible, packed tightly, sorted roughly, stretching deep into the hall. Trucks arrive and depart regularly, from loading bays lit by harsh white floodlights that cut through the otherwise quiet industrial area. Behind the warehouse lies a wide concrete parking lot where a black BMW SUV with a license plate bearing the initials AG is often parked. We saw a man resembling Grigoryev enter the car. The former head of RusPost officially withdrew from the postal business after authorities froze the company’s operations. Unofficially, however, the 50-year-old’s continued presence in Schönefeld suggests otherwise. According to one former RusPost employee, the warehouse near the airport serves as a collection point for parcels from all over Europe. Other logistics companies with Russian management have listed the warehouse as their business address, some of their logos decorating the façade. LS Logistics Solution GmbH has the largest sign of them all. The A2 getaway According to tracking devices, our packages spent several days in the warehouse before being loaded onto 40-ton trucks covered with grey tarps, among several that leave every day loaded with mail. They were then driven toward the Polish border, through the German city of Frankfurt (Oder). Without any long stops, the 40-ton trucks traversed Poland on the A2 motorway, past Warsaw. Two days after leaving Berlin, they were approaching the eastern edge of the European Union. They arrived at a border checkpoint in Brest, the Belarusian city where more than a hundred years ago Russia signed a peace pact with Germany to withdraw from World War I. Now it marked the last place for European officials to identify contraband leaving for countries they consider adversaries. In 2022, the European Union applied  a separate set of sanctions on Belarus  because its leader, Alexander Lukashenko, a close ally of Putin, has supported Russia’s presence in Ukraine. Yet despite provisions that should have stopped our packages from leaving Poland, they moved onward into Belarus, their tracking devices apparently undetected. What makes this possible is the special legal status that accompanies international mail. While a formal export declaration is required for the export of regular goods, such as those moving via container ship or rail freight, simplified paperwork helps speed up the departure process for postal items. At Europe’s borders, this distinction becomes crucial, as postal packages are examined largely on risk-based checks rather than comprehensive inspections. “International postal items are subject to the regular provisions of customs supervision both on import and on export and transit and are checked on a risk-oriented basis in accordance with applicable EU and national legislation, including with regard to compliance with sanctions regulations,” the German General Customs Directorate stated in response to our inquiry. Two of our tracking devices briefly lost their signal in Belarus — likely part of a widespread pattern of satellite navigation systems being disrupted across Eastern Europe — but after a journey of around 1,100 miles, they all showed the same destination. Our packages had reached Russia’s largest cities. Ukrainian authorities told us they were not surprised by our investigation. The country’s presidential envoy for sanctions policy, Vladyslav Vlasiuk, said at the Ukrainian embassy in Berlin that his government regularly collects intelligence on such schemes and shares it with international partners. “Nobody is doing enough, if you look at the number of cases,” Vlasiuk said. One step behind After the arrival of the packages, we confronted all parties involved, including LS Logistics Solution GmbH, the mysterious shipper that helped transport the goods from Europe to Russia. We called Grigoryev several times, but he never answered; efforts to reach him through the company failed as well. An LS executive would not answer our questions about his role. “Our internal control mechanisms are designed in such a way that violations of EU sanctions are virtually impossible,” LS managing director Anjelika Crone wrote to us. “Shipments that do not meet the legal requirements are not processed further. We are not immune to fraudulent misdeclarations, such as those that obviously underlie the ‘test shipments’ you refer to.” Crone said she could not answer further questions due to data protection and contractual confidentiality concerns. This month, Germany took steps to strengthen enforcement of its sanctions regime, expanding the range of violations subject to criminal penalties. The law, passed by the Bundestag in January,  amends the country’s Foreign Trade and Payments Act  to integrate a  European Union directive  harmonizing criminal sanctions law across its 27 member states and ensure efficient, uniform enforcement. Germany was one of the 18 countries  put on notice by EU officials last May  for having failed to follow the 2024 directive. The Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs, which is responsible for implementing the new policy, argued in a statement to the Axel Springer Global Reporters Network that the very ingenuity of the logistics network we unmasked operating within Germany was a testament to the strength of the country’s sanctions regime. “The state-organized Russian procurement systems operate at enormous financial expense to create ever new and more complex diversion routes,” said ministry spokesperson Tim-Niklas Wentzel. “This confirms that the considerable compliance efforts of many companies and the work of the sanctions enforcement authorities in combating circumvention are also having a practical effect. Procurement is becoming increasingly difficult, time-consuming, and expensive for Russia.” According to those who have tried to administer sanctions laws, that argument rings true — but only partly. “It’s probably more fair to say that sanctions had a material impact and increased the cost of bad actors to achieve their goals. But to say that they’re working well is probably overstating the truth of the matter,” said Max Meizlish, formerly an official with the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control and now a research fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. “When there’s evasion, it requires enforcement,” Meizlish went on. “And when you need more enforcement I think it’s hard to make a compelling case that the tool is working as intended.” The Axel Springer Global Reporters Network is a multi-publication initiative publishing scoops, investigations, interviews, op-eds and analysis that reverberate across the world. It connects journalists from Axel Springer brands—including POLITICO, Business Insider, WELT, BILD, and Onet— on major stories for an international audience. Their ambitious reporting stretches across Axel Springer platforms: online, print, TV, and audio. Together, these outlets reach hundreds of millions of people worldwide.

The little shipping company that’s making Europe’s sanctions look silly

08.03.2026 10:53 👍 2 🔁 5 💬 0 📌 0
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Jennifer O'Connell: There’s no chance of an end to the Burke family circus – and maybe that’s not a bad thing It’s helpful to think of the Burkes as a kind of antivirus software

This is a terrible analogy, used to make a terrible argument. The Burke's are not like antivirus software. AV software is silent. The Burke's are anything but. They are poisonously omnipresent spreading their toxic hate and pretending it's a message of godly love. www.irishtimes.com/opinion/2026...

07.03.2026 23:03 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
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Loving the fact that this contributor to Channel 4 news appears to be background of his zoom call plugging (his?) book on Jerusalem AND a best of album of legendary Lebanese singer Fairuz!

07.03.2026 19:13 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

Israel have today murdered 41 Lebanese Civilians in a (failed) operation to retrieve the remains of an Israeli airman who crashed his jet in Lebanon... 41 years ago.

Make this make sense please....

07.03.2026 19:07 👍 6 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0