Anonymous ID: e1b5c3 Feb. 18, 2026, 10:51 a.m. No.24274164   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4173 >>4219 >>4282

>>24274061

anon, Q hasn't posted in years. you should get over yourself.

the board is still useful.

Q is Q.

anon are anon.

even though Q doesn't use the board like Q used to use it, Q could.

and anon still do.

as far as the shills: no matter what anyone does their mission is one of hateful discouragement and trying to draw people off into ruin.

 

get over yourself.

the board isn't alive, it's the anon who are, and Q.

the shills? they seem to have died (in spirit) a long long time ago.

Anonymous ID: e1b5c3 Feb. 18, 2026, 11:37 a.m. No.24274292   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4352

>>24274231

 

a little research with Google AI explains why Donald Trump is correct:

"

The "Moral High Ground" Clash: When the Mauritian government (led by a family dynasty) argues for the "rights of the oppressed Chagossians," critics see it as hypocrisy. They argue a dynastic elite is simply using the language of human rights to expand its own family’s territorial and economic influence."

 

The Chagossians are the group that is supposedly from Diego Garcia. The government of Mauritania is supposedly gaining title for them but the reality seems different.

Anonymous ID: e1b5c3 Feb. 18, 2026, 11:54 a.m. No.24274352   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>24274292

more from Google AI:

"

The perception that British elites are sacrificing national interests for international optics is a major theme in the current debate:

 

Legislative Stalls: The Diego Garcia Military Base and British Indian Ocean Territory Bill was recently pulled from the House of Lords order paper due to acute discomfort and growing opposition.

Financial Cost: Critics have labeled it one of the worst real estate deals in history, noting the UK will pay Mauritius approximately £101 million ($136 million) annually—totaling nearly £34 billion over the 99-year lease—to rent back territory it has owned for over 200 years.

Chagossian Protests: native islanders have accused the government of "political erasure," arguing that negotiating with Mauritius without their consent is not decolonization but "administrative choreography". On February 16, 2026, four Chagossians landed on the archipelago in an attempt to block the transfer by establishing a permanent settlement, leading the UK to issue removal orders against them.

 

"