Thursday, May 7, 2026

Disease Threat Rises as Gaza’s Sanitation System Collapses - 5.7.2026

Reports from Gaza indicate a rapidly deteriorating public health situation, with severe sanitation breakdowns, rising rodent infestations, and growing risk of infectious disease. Aid organizations have raised concerns that damaged infrastructure and limited access to reconstruction materials are worsening already fragile living conditions for civilians.

Public health experts warn that when waste management systems collapse and housing remains un-repaired, secondary crises—such as pest infestations and water contamination—can escalate quickly, putting children, the elderly, and medically vulnerable populations at particular risk.

There are urgent calls for increased humanitarian access and coordinated reconstruction efforts to prevent further spread of disease and to restore basic sanitation services. The protection of civilian health and infrastructure is an immediate humanitarian necessity.



Assault on full press freedom - 5.7.2026

The latest Reporters Without Borders rankings should alarm every citizen who values democracy. Global press freedom has fallen to a historic low, while the United States now ranks 64th in the world — an astonishing decline for a nation that claims to champion free speech.

A free press is not a luxury. It is democracy’s early warning system. When journalists are intimidated, silenced, attacked, or dismissed as enemies, corruption grows and truth disappears.

History shows that when full press freedom is denied, democracy dies. Citizens cannot make informed decisions if facts are buried, distorted, or controlled by power.

Protecting independent journalism means protecting the public’s right to know — and protecting democracy itself.



West Bank Israeli terrorism intensifies - 5.7.2026

As global attention remains fixed on major wars, a quieter but deeply alarming reality is unfolding in the West Bank. Under the cover of international distraction, extremist Israeli settlers have intensified attacks on Palestinian communities with growing boldness and diminishing scrutiny.

Reports of arson, destruction of homes and olive groves, assaults, and systematic intimidation are mounting. These are not random incidents. They form a pattern designed to force Palestinians from their land through fear and violence.

With media, diplomats, and governments preoccupied elsewhere, oversight has weakened and accountability has faded. This vacuum has allowed radical actors to escalate their actions, confident that the world is not watching closely.

These settlers should be called what their actions reflect: Israeli terrorists using violence to achieve political and territorial aims. Ignoring this reality because larger wars dominate headlines only enables it to continue.

Silence and distraction are not neutral. They create space for abuses to grow. The international community must not allow the West Bank to become a forgotten front where violence thrives without consequence.



Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Israel continues its mass killing of civilians mocking Trump’s ceasefire - 5.6.2026

Reports from southern Lebanon describe entire villages reduced to “moonscapes,” civilian life erased in ways that shock the conscience. Many people across the world—including Americans and a growing number of Jewish voices for peace—are expressing anguish and outrage at the scale of destruction in Gaza, the West Bank, and now Lebanon.

The deliberate or reckless harm of civilians violates the most basic moral and religious principles shared across traditions. Scripture teaches us to protect the innocent, pursue justice, and restrain violence. When these lines are crossed, silence becomes complicity.

I urge Americans to raise their voices and call for an immediate halt to U.S. weapons transfers that enable further civilian suffering. We must demand a policy grounded in human rights, accountability, and the preservation of life, not its devastation.

History shows that cycles of violence plant only deeper seeds of hatred. It is time to choose peace over barbarity and mass murder.



Tuesday, May 5, 2026

FCC commissioner speaks out - 5.5.2026

When media megamergers concentrate ownership into fewer and fewer hands, the public loses diversity of voices. But the danger grows sharper when political power is openly used to pressure, threaten, or punish those voices. Recent attacks aimed at Jimmy Kimmel and his network ABC, alongside rhetoric from Donald Trump, are not isolated spats. They are signals.

They signal to media companies that criticism may carry regulatory consequences. They signal to journalists and entertainers that speaking freely could cost their employers dearly. And they signal to the public that the watchdog meant to protect open communication — the Federal Communications Commission — may be drawn into political intimidation rather than standing apart from it.

The First Amendment does not erode all at once. It erodes when power and media consolidation combine with political retaliation, creating a climate where self-censorship feels safer than free speech.

Americans should be alarmed. This is not about one host, one network, or one politician. It is about whether our media environment remains free to criticize those in power without fear of reprisal.



The limits of American imperial power exposed - 5.5.2026

The escalating crisis over the Strait of Hormuz amid President Trump’s war against Iran has done more than disrupt global energy markets—it starkly highlights the limits of American imperial power. Despite overwhelming military might and ambitious naval operations like “Project Freedom,” the United States has failed to secure stable influence or decisive victory in the region. Iran’s firm control over this strategic chokepoint underscores how even the most powerful nation cannot simply impose its will when local dynamics and resistance are underestimated.

This is more than a foreign policy failure; it is a sobering moment demonstrating the constraints of military force without diplomatic strategy. If the United States is to contribute to global stability, it must recognize these limits and pursue negotiated peace, not perpetual confrontation.



Our Shared Humanity: Demanding Justice and Aid for Gaza - 5.5.2026

Israel continues its unrelenting terror attacks on acutely starved Palestinians, with full US–EU support. 

Readers should be deeply alarmed by the accelerating violence in Gaza and the broader region. Reports that the Israeli military is preparing for a renewed full-scale assault, alongside daily accounts of Palestinian civilians being killed, including in the West Bank as families go about ordinary life, point to a pattern of suffering that cannot be ignored.

At the same time, humanitarian conditions in Gaza remain catastrophic. Severe shortages of food, water, and medical supplies have left civilians—especially children—facing hunger, disease, and trauma on a massive scale. International agencies continue to warn that without sustained aid access and a halt to hostilities; the human toll will worsen.

These events are not only a regional tragedy but a global moral test. When civilians are trapped between armed actors, when aid is obstructed, and when accountability is absent, the rules meant to protect human life erode for everyone.

Governments that provide military, economic, and diplomatic support to parties in this conflict, including the U.S. and EU states, have a responsibility to press urgently for a ceasefire, full humanitarian access, the protection of civilians, and adherence to international law by all sides.

Silence, equivocation, or selective concern only deepens the crisis. What is needed now is principled pressure to stop the killing, feed the hungry, and protect innocent lives—before even more damage is done to our shared humanity.