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šŸ”„ Xi, Putin & Kim Unite in Beijing Parade šŸ’£šŸ¤ – What It Means for the World šŸŒ

TL;DR:Ā China pulled off its grandest Victory Day ParadeĀ šŸ‡ØšŸ‡³ on Sept 3, 2025, showing off flashy weapons šŸš€ and global ambitions 🌐. With PutinĀ šŸ‡·šŸ‡ŗ and Kim Jong-unĀ šŸ‡°šŸ‡µ right by Xi Jinping’sĀ side, this was the clearest sign yet of an anti-Western power squad. But while leaders flexed muscles šŸ’Ŗ, ordinary people are left asking: ā€œWhere’s the peace?ā€ āœŒļø

Beijing just turned into a giant theatre šŸŽ­ of power politics, and the whole world had its eyes šŸ‘€ fixed on it. On September 3, 2025, China staged its biggest Victory Day paradeĀ ever, marking 80 years since Japan’s surrender in World War II šŸ‡ÆšŸ‡µ. But it wasn’t just about history šŸ“œā€”it was about sending a loud, clear message: ā€œChina is here to lead the new world order.ā€Ā šŸŒšŸ”„

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šŸ’” Standing next to Xi JinpingĀ was none other than Russia’s Vladimir PutinĀ and North Korea’s Kim Jong-un—two leaders constantly at odds with the West. The trio looked like a power-packed ā€œaxis of upheavalā€ šŸ’„, signalling unity against Western dominance. #China #Russia #NorthKorea

The parade showcased super-advanced weaponsĀ āš”ļøā€”from hypersonic missiles šŸš€ and underwater drones šŸ¤– to tanks and even a rumored laser system šŸ”¦. Soldiers marched in perfect sync šŸŖ–, fighter jets zoomed across the sky āœˆļø, and the crowd waved flags in excitement šŸŽŒ. But behind the glitter and fireworks, the real story was political symbolism.

šŸ‘‰ For Putin, it was a chance to show he’s not isolated despite sanctions šŸ’ø.šŸ‘‰ For Kim Jong-un, it was his first China visit since 2019 šŸš†, arriving in his iconic armored train. He even stopped on the way to inspect missile labs šŸ”¬ā€”a clear flex of North Korea’s nuclear ambitions.šŸ‘‰ For Xi, it was about cementing his image as the architect of a ā€œmultipolar worldā€ šŸŒ where the West doesn’t call all the shots.

This wasn’t just a parade—it was a geopolitical statement 🧨. A declaration that China, Russia, and North Korea are ready to stick together against Western powers like the US šŸ‡ŗšŸ‡ø and its allies.

But here’s the thing šŸ¤”: while leaders play their war games, who suffers the most? Always the working class peopleĀ šŸ§‘ā€šŸŒ¾šŸ‘©ā€šŸ­. From farmers in Andhra villages 🌾 to daily wage workers in Telangana šŸ› ļø, folks know that wars and military escalations only bring hardship. What the world needs is peace, jobs, and equality—not nuclear parades. ✊

šŸŒ Ordinary youth across the globe are asking: why not march for better education šŸ“š, health care šŸ„, or climate action 🌱 instead of weapons? Because at the end of the day, missiles don’t feed hungry stomachs šŸ›, and tanks don’t build homes šŸ .

šŸ’¬ What do you think, fam? Should countries keep flexing their armies šŸ’£, or should they come together for peace āœŒļø and equality? Drop your thoughts in the comments šŸ‘‡ and let’s keep the convo real.

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