Tuesday, March 10, 2026

DON’T REPEAT VIETNAM: WAR WITH IRAN WILL ONLY STRENGTHEN TYRANNY - 3.10.2026

Resistance is already building inside Iran. History teaches a clear lesson: external enemies strengthen, not weaken, authoritarian regimes. 

Have we so quickly forgotten Vietnam?

Military escalation by the United States and Israel risks uniting Iranians behind a government many already oppose. Even more alarming are reports of white phosphorus being used — a weapon infamous for causing agonizing burns and devastating injuries. Its extensive use during the Vietnam War remains a stain on history and a reminder of the human cost of war.

If we truly want change in Iran, repeating the mistakes of Vietnam will achieve the opposite. War will silence internal dissent and empower hardliners. The path forward must be diplomacy, restraint, and respect for international humanitarian law — not another catastrophic conflict.



ONE STANDARD FOR RESISTANCE AND HUMAN RIGHTS - 3.10.2026

When Ukraine resists Russia, the U.S. and EU rightly call it courage and defend its right to self-defense. The same principle must apply elsewhere. If Western nations support Ukraine’s resistance, they must also recognize Palestinians’ right to resist Israeli oppression that many trace back to the 1948 Nakba, when hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were displaced during the creation of Israel.

Decades of occupation, blockade, settlement expansion, and repeated wars have left Palestinians without basic security or sovereignty. A just and lasting peace requires equal standards for human rights and international law.

Western governments should vigorously support a viable Palestinian state in Gaza and the West Bank alongside Israel, and press all leaders—including Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu—to end policies that perpetuate violence and deny Palestinians self-determination.

Justice and peace demand consistency, not selective outrage.



HEADING: ISRAEL ON THE BRINK — GLOBAL LEADERS MUST STOP THIS WAR BEFORE IT TURNS NUCLEAR - 3.10.2026

Retired Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson — former chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell — has sounded an alarm that should shake policymakers and the public alike: if the U.S.–Israeli war with Iran escalates further, Israeli leadership might consider using nuclear weapons in desperation. 

This chilling possibility demands urgent diplomatic intervention, not deeper military entanglement. The world cannot afford to normalize rhetoric of nuclear escalation. Leaders must push for de escalation, negotiation and genuine conflict resolution before catastrophic choices become real ones.



Fossil Fuel Wars: How Oil Dependence Is Weaponizing Global Security - 3.10.2026

The escalating U.S.–Israeli war on Iran exposes a perilous truth: our world remains dangerously chained to fossil fuels. As strikes disrupt energy infrastructure and threaten passage through the Strait of Hormuz—a chokepoint carrying about a fifth of global oil and gas—prices have surged and markets tremble. 

This crisis isn’t just about geopolitics; it’s about systemic vulnerability. Our reliance on oil has turned energy into a weapon of war, deepening global insecurity, fueling inflation, and imperiling ordinary people’s livelihoods. Leaders must treat this moment as a wake up call to accelerate the shift to homegrown, renewable energy and break the fossil fuel stranglehold on peace and prosperity. A stable, secure future depends not on fossil fuels, but on sustainable energy independence.



Sunday, March 8, 2026

Shadows of 1953: Secret Wars, Silent Bombs - 3.8.2026

American policy toward Iran cannot be understood without recalling the 1953 overthrow of Iran’s democratically elected prime minister, Mohammad Mossadegh, in a covert operation organized by the CIA and MI6. That intervention helped shape decades of instability and distrust that still influence relations today.

Many Americans now worry that history could repeat itself. Reports that the U.S. State Department used emergency authority to send more than 20,000 bombs to Israel without the usual congressional review raise serious concerns about transparency and democratic oversight.

For voters who supported President Trump partly because he pledged to avoid endless wars and regime-change interventions, such actions appear to contradict those promises. Americans across the political spectrum are weary of foreign conflicts that cost lives, drain resources, and lack clear objectives.

At this critical moment, U.S. leaders should prioritize diplomacy, accountability, and restraint, ensuring that any decisions that could lead to war involve full transparency and congressional participation. 



Saturday, March 7, 2026

IRAN’S CRISIS DIDN’T BEGIN WITH IRANIANS - 3.7.2026

Before judging Iran’s turmoil, we must remember the history that helped create it. In 1953, Iran had a functioning democracy under Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh, who nationalized Iran’s oil after decades of exploitation by British interests. In response, MI6 enlisted the Central Intelligence Agency to overthrow Iran’s elected government.

The coup restored the Shah, whose regime relied on the brutal secret police, SAVAK. Years of repression fueled public anger, culminating in the hard-line Iranian Revolution. Feeling threatened, Iran’s leaders pursued security—including nuclear research.

Today, bombing campaigns and threats of regime change risk repeating history’s mistakes while civilians across Iran and the region suffer. The first step toward peace is simple: stop the bombing and pursue an immediate ceasefire through credible international mediation.



Friday, March 6, 2026

WHY ARE WE AT WAR WITH IRAN? TRUMP HAS NO CLEAR STRATEGY - 3.6.2026

The rapidly escalating U.S.–Iran conflict raises a fundamental question: why are we at war without a clear plan? Former U.S. Middle East officials note that the Trump administration has offered shifting, often contradictory justifications for bombing Iran and targeting its leadership — from imminent threats to regime change — without presenting a coherent strategy for what comes next.

This absence of clarity is not just a policy misstep — it risks dragging America deeper into a broader Middle East war with grave human and strategic costs. With evacuation plans lacking and diplomatic channels abandoned, we are left with more questions than answers. Leadership demands a clearly articulated rationale and a feasible post-conflict plan. America’s highest duty is to explain and justify its actions to its citizens and the world.

I urge Congress and the American people to demand answers before the nation moves further down the path of needless killing, especially given historical grievances dating back to 1953 when we and the Brits hijacked their democracy and stole their oil.