Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Dictatorship in action - 5.20.2026

When a government carves out a $1.8 billion slush fund while simultaneously insulating a former president and his family from IRS scrutiny “forever,” it is not normal governance—it is institutional capture.

As David Cay Johnston warns, this is how accountability is quietly dismantled: selectively applied tax enforcement, politically engineered exemptions, and the steady erosion of equal treatment under law.

No individual, regardless of status or office held, should be placed beyond legitimate tax oversight. When enforcement is selectively blocked at the top, public trust in the entire system collapses.

This is not about partisan rivalry. It is about whether democratic institutions serve the public—or protect the powerful from the rules everyone else must follow.



Christian values and cruelty at odds with Cuba policy - 5.20.2026

The reported conditions in Havana—where Cubans are said to be starving and dying amid an intensified U.S. blockade—demand urgent moral scrutiny. Excessive cruelty, if accurate, stands in direct contradiction to the ethical teachings of Jesus and core principles attributed to God.

It is deeply troubling that some officials who publicly carry the Bible simultaneously support or implement policies that appear to violate its most basic tenets of compassion, mercy, and care for the vulnerable. Faith cannot be reduced to symbolism while policy produces suffering.

At the same time, political rhetoric on all sides risks drowning out the human reality on the ground. If civilians are indeed bearing the cost of geopolitical pressure, then moral responsibility cannot be ignored.

Consistent ethical standards—not selective invocation of scripture—should guide public policy, especially when lives are at stake. 



Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Democracy for Sale: When Public Power Becomes Private Profit - 5.19.2026

When public office becomes a private profit center, democracy itself is in danger. the allegations surrounding Donald Trump’s reported $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS, the timing of stock trades, and the intertwining of family business interests with political power paint a deeply troubling picture. these are not partisan concerns — they are constitutional ones.

Representative Jamie Raskin has called this “staggering corruption,” and the phrase fits. if elected officials or their families can leverage insider access, legal pressure, or political influence for personal financial advantage, then the rule of law becomes a tool of the powerful rather than a shield for the public.

The health of a democracy depends not only on elections but on ethical guardrails. transparency, accountability, and clear separation between public duty and private gain are essential. when those lines blur, public trust erodes — and without trust, democratic institutions weaken.

This moment calls for scrutiny, oversight, and a recommitment to the principle that no one, no matter how powerful, is above the law.



Israel attacks food flotilla at sea - 5.19.2026

The interception of a Gaza-bound aid flotilla in international waters and the detention of hundreds of unarmed activists should trouble anyone who believes humanitarian relief must never be criminalized. when civilians from dozens of countries sail to deliver food and medicine, the response should be coordination and de-escalation—not armed boarding and mass custody.

the suffering in Gaza is real and urgent. so is the need to uphold international norms that protect aid workers and peaceful volunteers. leaders from multiple nations have condemned the raid and called for accountability. their voices reflect a broader public alarm: that blocking relief and detaining civilians’ risks eroding the moral and legal standards meant to shield the vulnerable in times of conflict.

whatever one’s politics, we should agree on this: lifesaving aid must reach civilians, and disputes must be handled through law, not force. compassion at sea should not be met with confrontation, but never with force.



Choosing Our Children Over Our Guns - 5.19.2026

Time to prove we love our children more than we love our guns

The killing of three people at a San Diego Islamic center, reportedly by teenage attackers in what authority’s suspect is a hate crime, is a tragedy layered with preventable failures.

We must confront how propaganda, fear, and dehumanization can poison young minds. We must also confront how easy access to unsecured firearms turns that poison into irreversible violence. When minors can obtain weapons from their own home, accountability cannot stop at the trigger.

This is no longer an abstract debate about rights. It is a daily reckoning with lives lost in places of worship, schools, and neighborhoods. Statistics consistently show that more guns in homes increase the risk of death, not safety.

If we truly value our children, our faith, and our communities, we must be willing to reconsider the policies and attitudes that put weapons above human life. Loving God and loving our children should mean choosing their safety over our attachment to guns. 



Accountability in the Shadows: Investigating Wartime Abuse - 5.19.2026

Alleged rape of Palestinian prisoners by IDF demands immediate investigation by human rights groups

Recent reporting has highlighted grave and deeply disturbing allegations of sexual violence in the context of the Israel-Palestine conflict. These claims, including abuse in detention settings, have been raised by survivors and reported by multiple outlets.

Such allegations—regardless of who is accused—demand urgent, independent, and transparent investigation under international law. If even part of these accounts are accurate, they represent serious violations of human rights and basic human dignity.

In times of war, the protection of civilians must remain absolute. Silence or denial without thorough inquiry only deepens mistrust and prolongs suffering. Accountability is not optional; it is essential to justice and any prospect of peace. 



Monday, May 18, 2026

Mass murder and horrendous genocide by IDF - 5.18.2026

Each day brings another headline that shocks the conscience: civilians killed in southern Lebanon, paramedics among the dead; targeted assassinations that promise only further cycles of retaliation; and plans to militarize former humanitarian sites as public outrage grows worldwide.

What we are witnessing is not the “fog of war” but the mass killing of men, women, and children on a scale that many now describe as genocidal. The world is turning away in anguish and disbelief.

When the killing of medics, the repurposing of aid facilities for military aims, and the normalization of collective punishment become routine, our shared humanity is diminished.

Silence is complicity. Accountability is overdue.