Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Earth Day - 4.22.2026

On this Earth Day, communities across the country are sounding the alarm about the severe impact that large AI and data centers are having on people’s health, local environments, and the rising cost of electricity.

In Maine, lawmakers have passed the nation’s first statewide moratorium on new AI data centers while the state studies their environmental and energy impact. In Memphis, residents are suing over pollution from facilities located near Black neighborhoods. Native communities are resisting data centers built on or near Indigenous lands, calling it a new form of “data colonialism.”

These are not isolated incidents. They are warning signs.

Data centers consume enormous amounts of electricity and water, strain local grids, and often leave surrounding communities with higher utility bills, degraded air quality, and little say in the decision-making process. The benefits flow to tech companies, while the burdens fall on residents.

Earth Day should remind us that environmental justice is inseparable from technological progress. Innovation cannot come at the expense of public health, clean air, and affordable energy.

Before more AI and data centers are approved, we must demand transparency, environmental review, and meaningful community consent.

Our future should be powered by technology that respects both people and the planet.



Break the Siege in Gaza - 4.22.2026

Across the world, people are expressing outrage at the ongoing starvation, killing, and displacement of Palestinians in Israel’s war in Gaza and escalating settler and military violence in the West Bank. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faces international accusations of grave violations of humanitarian law, while civilians—especially children—bear the brunt of siege, hunger, and fear.

For Palestinians, this suffering echoes the trauma of the Nakba, when hundreds of thousands were uprooted from their land. The pattern of dispossession is painfully familiar to Indigenous peoples elsewhere, including Native Americans whose lands were seized during early U.S. expansion.

In this bleak moment, Greenpeace’s decision to send a ship as part of the Global Sumud Flotilla to deliver urgently needed aid is a courageous humanitarian act. It reflects the highest moral traditions shared across Jewish, Christian, Muslim, Sikh, and other faiths: to feed the hungry, protect the innocent, and stand against injustice.

Breaking the blockade to allow food and medicine to reach starving civilians is not a political act—it is a human one. When governments fail to uphold basic humanity, civil society must step forward.

History will judge not only those who enforced suffering, but also those who chose to challenge it.



Israeli Settler Terrorism - 4.22.2026

End the silence, end the occupation

Around the world, people are calling for an immediate end to the occupation and for recognition of Palestinian statehood in the West Bank and Gaza. Yet the silence from the United States and the European Union—while continuing financial and political support for Israel—raises urgent moral questions.

Ongoing violence by settlers in the West Bank, alongside the broader humanitarian crisis, cannot be ignored. Civilians are paying the price while international actors with influence choose quiet diplomacy over public accountability.

If the international community truly supports human rights, self-determination, and the rule of law, then its actions must reflect those principles. This means pressing for an end to settlement expansion, protecting civilians, and advancing a credible path toward a sovereign Palestinian state alongside Israel.

History cannot be changed, but present policy can. Silence and inaction only deepen the wounds and push peace further out of reach.



Russian oligarchs fueling terror in London - 4.22.2026

I am writing in response to a recent segment of Fareed Zakaria GPS on CNN that examined terror in London and the broader security questions facing the city.

The report was a stark reminder that, while London remains one of the world’s great capitals, its residents have repeatedly confronted the very real threat of extremist violence on their streets. These incidents underscore how global conflicts and ideologies can manifest locally, affecting ordinary lives in immediate and tragic ways.

The segment also prompted reflection on another, more complex issue that has drawn public scrutiny over the years: London’s role as a major financial hub and the influx of foreign wealth, including funds connected to powerful figures from Russia and other states with opaque financial networks. Questions have been raised by journalists, lawmakers, and watchdog groups about whether gaps in oversight allowed illicit or suspicious money to circulate too freely through property, banking, and legal systems.

Related to this are long-running public concerns about a number of unexplained deaths and alleged assassination attempts in the UK involving critics of the Russian government—cases that have often involved unusual circumstances and later attracted international attention. Over time, some of these incidents led to renewed investigations, public inquiries, and reassessments by Scotland Yard and other authorities about how such cases were handled and understood.

Taken together, these issues highlight how national security today is not only about preventing acts of terror, but also about recognizing how financial systems, law enforcement, and international politics intersect in ways that can affect public safety and trust.

Segments like this do more than report events—they encourage necessary public reflection on how open societies can protect themselves without compromising the values that define them.



Deaths in the Shadows: Inside America’s For‑Profit ICE Detention System - 4.22.2026

Seventeen people have died in ICE custody in 2026—an average of one death every week. These deaths are occurring inside a detention system funded by billions of dollars approved by Congress and carried out largely in remote warehouses and privately run facilities that function like prisons.

Many ICE detainees are held in for-profit detention centers operated by private prison corporations, where oversight is limited and transparency is scarce. Reports from advocates, attorneys, and former detainees have described inadequate medical care, harsh conditions, and mistreatment that would alarm any reasonable person. Meanwhile, the companies running these facilities are paid per bed, per day—meaning human confinement becomes a revenue stream.

At the same time, prosecutions of anti-ICE protesters are repeatedly collapsing in court. Arrests are made, but charges often fail to withstand scrutiny. This contrast—deaths in detention on one hand, and aggressive but unsustainable crackdowns on dissent on the other—raises serious questions about priorities and accountability.

This is not about politics. It is about human dignity, oversight, and whether taxpayer funds are being used in ways consistent with our values and laws. Detention without proper care, transparency, and accountability is a national disgrace.

Congress funds this system. The public deserves answers about how it operates, who profits from it, and why people continue to die behind its walls.



Epstein, the Trump Administration and Congress - 4.22.2026

The public’s faith in our institutions is eroding for a simple reason: accountability too often stops at the water’s edge of power.

From the disgraceful revelations tied to Jeffrey Epstein’s circle to the resignation of Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick ahead of an ethics sanctions hearing, and reports from advocacy groups alleging misconduct by lawmakers, the pattern is clear. When serious allegations involve people in authority, consequences are slow, opaque, or quietly avoided.

If ordinary citizens faced credible accusations of sexual misconduct, investigations would be swift and the penalties severe. Yet in Congress and other corridors of influence, resignations before hearings, sealed records, and procedural delays too often replace transparency and justice.

The remedy is not symbolic outrage but structural reform: mandatory, independent investigations; public reporting of findings; automatic suspension of privileges during inquiries; meaningful financial penalties; and, where warranted, expulsion from office. No one entrusted with public power should be shielded from scrutiny.

Accountability must be consistent, visible, and unavoidable. Without it, trust in government will continue to collapse—and rightly so.



Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Selective Outrage, Equal Human Worth, and the Need for Accountability - 4.21.2026

When Hamas attacked Israeli civilians on October 7, the world rightly condemned the atrocity in the strongest terms. That moral clarity should not fade when assessing the conduct of the war that followed.

Reports from the Gaza Strip describe widespread civilian deaths, displacement, hunger, and the destruction of homes, hospitals, and schools. Journalists, medical workers, and civilians have been killed with limited transparency or accountability. Developments in the West Bank and cross-border strikes affecting civilians in Lebanon raise further alarm.

The United Nations and human rights groups have documented grave humanitarian consequences, including high numbers of women and children killed. Independent access for foreign journalists is urgently needed so the world can witness events firsthand.

Criticism from organizations like Amnesty International reflects concern that international norms and human rights protections are eroding. Raising these concerns is legitimate criticism of state actions—not hostility toward a people or a faith. Allegations of antisemitism should not be used to dismiss good-faith scrutiny of government policy, just as condemnation of terrorism must never be diluted.

Condemning terrorism must not prevent us from condemning collective punishment. Justice, accountability, and the protection of civilians must be applied consistently, without selective outrage. An Israeli life and a Palestinian life are equal in worth, and our moral clarity should reflect that truth.