Monday, April 27, 2026

Obscene US military waste - 4.27.2026

While citizens are told there is “no money” for healthcare, housing, or education, trillions have been poured into military ventures that delivered little beyond chaos, scandal, and long-term instability.

The public deserves to see these costs not in abstract strategy, but in hard dollars tied to failed outcomes.

A few examples,

• Afghanistan War (2001–2021): ≈ $2.3 trillion for a 20-year effort ending in Taliban control within days

• Iraq War: ≈ $2.0 trillion destabilizing a region and empowering adversaries

• “War on Terror” total: over $8 trillion across theaters with no clear victory

• Guantánamo Bay detention camp: $540+ million per year to hold fewer than 40 detainees

• Waterboarding, secret prisons, torture program fallout: hundreds of millions in black-site ops, legal costs, and global reputational damage

• F-35 program overruns: $1.7 trillion lifetime cost, plagued by delays and defects

• Pentagon accounting failures: trillions untracked, unable to pass a clean audit for years

• Syria intervention: $15+ billion with no defined end state

• Failed Afghan reconstruction projects: $145 billion in waste, fraud, and abandoned infrastructure

• Military equipment left in Afghanistan: $7+ billion handed to the Taliban

These are not the costs of defense. These are the costs of dysfunction, mismanagement, and unchecked military spending without accountability.

If even a fraction of this had been invested at home, the nation would look very different today.

Until waste on this scale is treated as a national scandal, taxpayers will continue funding failure while being told sacrifice is patriotic. 



Ceasefire in Name Only: Civilians Killed Abroad, Free Speech Threatened at Home - 4.27.2026

Israel murders innocent civilians with US-EU weapons violating cease fire again and again.

How many more lives must be lost before the word “ceasefire” regains its meaning? Reports that Israeli strikes have killed 14 people in Lebanon despite a U.S.-brokered ceasefire raise urgent questions about accountability and enforcement. A ceasefire that does not protect civilians is not a ceasefire—it is a pause without protection.

At the same time, Israeli forces have killed at least 12 Palestinians in Gaza, underscoring that the cycle of violence continues unabated. Civilian lives—Lebanese and Palestinian alike—are being extinguished while diplomatic language offers little refuge on the ground.

Equally alarming are reports that the Department of Homeland Security is seeking to deny green cards to immigrants who have criticized Israel. In the United States, political speech is not a privilege granted by ideology; it is a constitutional right. Conditioning immigration status on viewpoint sets a dangerous precedent that undermines the very freedoms this country claims to defend.

If ceasefires cannot hold, civilians cannot be protected, and free speech cannot be safeguarded, then both our foreign policy and our democratic principles demand urgent scrutiny.



Sunday, April 26, 2026

When Politics Fails, Moral Leadership Matters - 4.26.2026

The world is missing: moral leadership when political leadership has largely failed.

For decades, powerful nations have reshaped other countries through covert action, arms, and indifference to human cost. Iran’s 1953 coup, backed by Britain and the United States, toppled a democratic government after disputes over oil, installing a repressive monarchy that helped set the stage for the 1979 theocratic revolution. Today, many civilians there still live with the consequences of that history.

Likewise, the long and devastating Israeli-Palestinian conflict has roots in the violent struggles surrounding 1948, the Holocaust’s aftermath, regional wars, and decades of policies and counter-policies that have fueled cycles of fear, displacement, and retaliation. As weapons continue to flow into the region, ordinary people pay the price.

These histories are complex, painful, and often selectively remembered. What is urgently needed now is not more geopolitical maneuvering, but a consistent moral voice that places human dignity above power politics.

That is why Pope Leo’s willingness to speak plainly matters. When world leaders equivocate, moral leadership becomes indispensable.



Amateurs at the Nuclear Table - 4.26.2026

Sending Kushner and Witkoff to Pakistan a very bad move.

At a moment when the world is trapped in a dangerous deadlock with Iran—escalated by the policies of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s far-right government and carrying grave consequences for the United States and global stability—the choice of envoys matters enormously.

Serious nuclear diplomacy demands deep expertise, regional knowledge, and credibility with seasoned negotiators. Sending figures whose backgrounds lie primarily in real estate and political proximity rather than in arms control, nonproliferation, or Middle East diplomacy risks trivializing a crisis that could spiral into wider conflict.

Negotiations over nuclear issues are among the most complex and consequential undertakings in international relations. They require technical mastery, strategic patience, and an understanding of decades of precedent. Treating such talks as if they were business transactions undermines both the process and the stakes involved.

The American public—and the world—deserve diplomacy led by experienced professionals capable of navigating the intricacies of nuclear negotiations, not envoys selected for proximity to the executive branch.



Bibi and Trump - 4.26.2026

President Trump must rue the day he listened to Prime Minister Netanyahu.

Maureen Dowd’s column captures a striking reversal: a president who promised to avoid “blood and sand” entanglements now appears trapped in one of his own making.

By invoking O. Henry’s “The Ransom of Red Chief,” Dowd underscores the irony. What was framed as a show of strength and swift dominance has morphed into a drawn-out conflict with mounting costs, dwindling leverage, and no clear exit. The metaphor is apt: the would-be captor now looks captive to events he set in motion.

Dowd points to the political, military, and diplomatic strain — from depleted stockpiles to domestic fallout — and suggests the crisis has overtaken the narrative of control. Rather than dictating terms, the administration seems to be reacting to a conflict that refuses to conform to its script.



Saturday, April 25, 2026

Empire of Blunders: Time for Humility in US Foreign Policy - Trump vs Pope Leo - 4.25.2026

For decades, US foreign policy has often been driven by assumptions of military and economic supremacy, resulting in interventions that critics argue have produced long-term instability and human suffering.

From the division of Korea to the Vietnam War—with devastating casualties and spillover into Laos and Cambodia—through to the invasions and aftermaths in Iraq and Afghanistan, the record is deeply contested and widely criticised. Libya’s collapse following intervention and the long shadow of the 1953 Iran coup continue to shape regional instability.

Other examples frequently cited include external involvement in the Iran–Iraq war, the strategic significance and controversy surrounding Diego Garcia, and ongoing concerns over detention practices at Guantánamo Bay.

In the Middle East, the enduring Israel–Palestine conflict remains a central source of tension, shaped by multiple external powers and historic decisions.

In this context, moral and spiritual guidance should not be ignored. The leadership of Pope Leo, alongside the shared ethical teachings found in Christianity and Sikhism, could offer a valuable framework for restraint, compassion, and peacebuilding. Greater alignment with such principles may help prevent future foreign policy failures and encourage a more humane global order.

Taken together, these cases raise serious questions about the long-term consequences of interventionism. What is needed now is greater humility, adherence to international law, and a renewed commitment to diplomacy and peace grounded in justice.



Israel ignores ceasefire, goes on killing spree - 4.25.2026

While ceasefire extensions are announced and echoed in press briefings, the reality on the ground tells a different story. Reports continue to document Palestinian civilians, including children, killed during what is supposed to be a period of restraint. A ceasefire that does not stop the killing is not a ceasefire in any meaningful sense.

The silence from much of the U.S. and European media, and the muted response from political leaders, is deeply troubling. When civilian lives are lost and violations occur without accountability, it erodes the very idea of international law and human rights that these same governments claim to uphold.

A lasting peace cannot be built on selective outrage or indifference to suffering. If ceasefires are to mean anything, violations must be acknowledged, investigated, and addressed—regardless of who commits them.