Friday, May 29, 2026

People before austerity measures - 5.29.2026

Bolivia’s Indigenous-led protests are not about politics alone — they are about survival. Families are struggling to afford food, fuel and basic necessities while austerity measures deepen hardship for ordinary people. When governments impose economic pain on the poor while protecting elites, unrest becomes inevitable.

Indigenous communities have long carried the burden of inequality, exploitation and neglect. Today, they are again standing at the front lines demanding dignity, fairness and the simple right to feed their families. Their voices deserve to be heard, not dismissed or criminalized.

Economic policy must serve human beings, not abstract financial targets. No nation can claim stability while millions face hunger, insecurity and despair. Bolivia’s protests are a warning to governments everywhere: people cannot endure endless sacrifice while wealth and power remain concentrated at the top.

A just society is measured not by stock markets or austerity budgets, but by whether ordinary families can live with dignity and hope.



America cannot lecture Cuba - 5.29.2026

America is not the world’s arbiter of morality or good government. For decades, U.S. sanctions on Cuba have imposed excessive hardship on ordinary people and violated every norm of a civilized society. These measures have not brought freedom or prosperity. They have brought shortages, blackouts, hunger, and desperation.

Today, Cuban families are forced to cook with charcoal and firewood because cooking gas is unavailable and electricity repeatedly fails. Elderly people stand for hours in lines for basic supplies that never arrive. Hospitals struggle, food spoils without refrigeration, and daily life becomes a battle for survival.

The United States conveniently forgets its own history in Cuba. Washington long supported the corrupt and brutal dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista, whose regime enriched elites while repressing ordinary Cubans. Many Cubans supported revolution because they were tired of foreign domination, inequality, and state violence backed by outside power.

America also continues to occupy Guantánamo Bay — Cuban territory held against Cuba’s wishes — where, during the darkest years of President George W. Bush’s “war on terror,” innocent detainees were imprisoned, abused, and denied justice. Guantánamo became a symbol not of democracy, but of indefinite detention, torture allegations, and moral hypocrisy, while costing American taxpayers billions of dollars.

No nation is perfect, including Cuba. But collective punishment of an entire population is neither moral nor humane. The Cuban people deserve engagement, dignity, trade, and humanitarian relief — not endless suffering imposed in the name of politics.

History will not judge kindly those who used sanctions and deprivation as weapons against civilians.



Thursday, May 28, 2026

Humanity buried under bombs, silence from the West - 5.28.2026

Israel’s expanding war on Lebanon and the forced evacuation of huge parts of the country expose a catastrophic moral collapse of the so-called civilized world. The United States and European powers continue sending weapons and political cover while civilians, including countless women and children, are killed under relentless bombardment.

Governments that preach human rights cannot wash their hands of responsibility while enabling destruction on such a massive scale. History will remember not only those who dropped the bombs, but also those who financed, armed and justified them.

Even the scriptures claimed by many supporters of this war speak clearly: “Thou shalt not kill.” Christianity teaches, “Blessed are the peacemakers.” Judaism commands, “Justice, justice shall you pursue.” Islam declares that killing one innocent person is like killing all humanity. Yet these sacred teachings are being violated before the eyes of the world.

Silence in the face of mass suffering is complicity. Humanity deserves better than endless war and collective punishment.



Threats are not diplomacy - 5.28.2026

Former diplomats and nuclear negotiators understand what many politicians ignore: peace is built through dialogue, restraint and mutual respect — not reckless threats. President Trump’s reported threat to “blow up” Oman while pressuring nations into the Abraham Accords is dangerous brinkmanship, not statesmanship.

Oman has long played the role of mediator in one of the world’s most volatile regions. Threatening an ally while nuclear tensions with Iran remain unresolved only deepens instability and risks another catastrophic war in the Middle East.

The world has already paid a terrible price for decades of militarism, invasions and coercive diplomacy. Ordinary people in Iran, Israel, Palestine, Lebanon and across the region deserve security, dignity and peace — not more threats from powerful nations treating human lives like bargaining chips.

Real leadership requires courage to negotiate, not swagger about destruction.



Oligarchs own our democracy

Professor Jeffrey Winters powerfully exposes the great blind spot of modern democracy: elections exist, but concentrated wealth rules. Oligarchs capture political parties, shape public opinion through corporate media, bankroll candidates, and write laws that protect privilege while millions struggle with insecurity, debt and declining trust in institutions.

When billionaires possess more influence than millions of voters combined, democracy becomes theater rather than genuine self-government. Citizens sense this betrayal every day as policies favor endless tax breaks, corporate monopolies and militarism while ordinary people face rising costs and shrinking opportunity.

A healthy democracy requires more than voting. It demands limits on concentrated wealth, transparent campaign financing, strong labor rights, independent journalism and an engaged public willing to challenge oligarchic power. Until then, the people will remain spectators in a system increasingly owned by the few.

The growing anger across America is not irrational. It is the predictable response of citizens watching democracy die. 



Mercenaries of blood - 5.28.2026

The shocking revelations that the UAE trained Colombian mercenaries to fight alongside the RSF in Sudan expose the ugly reality of modern proxy wars. Sudan’s devastated people are paying with their lives while foreign powers bankroll violence, chaos and mass suffering for political influence and profit. From Bogotá to El Fasher, mercenaries are helping fuel atrocities that have already destroyed countless innocent families. 

The world cannot stay silent while outside actors turn Sudan into a killing field. Those enabling war crimes and fueling this catastrophe must face international accountability and condemnation.



Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Humanity behind bars - 5.27.2026

The hunger-striking detainees inside the Newark ICE jail are sending America a desperate message: they are human beings, not disposable bodies hidden behind concrete walls. The protesters outside remind us that conscience still exists in this country. “They are not alone inside” is more than a slogan — it is a moral test for all Americans.

The detainees launched their hunger strike to protest what they describe as degrading and inhumane conditions inside the facility — including lack of adequate medical care, poor treatment, isolation, uncertainty and the crushing despair of indefinite detention. When human beings refuse food, they are risking their own health to make the world hear suffering that authorities too often ignore.

No society can call itself civilized while people are denied dignity, medical care and humane treatment in detention centers. History judges nations not by slogans about freedom, but by how they treat the powerless and imprisoned.

MAGA and all other Americans should demand transparency, compassion and accountability in every detention facility. Silence in the face of suffering only deepens national shame. The courage of those protesting and hunger-striking should awaken the conscience of the nation before more humanity is lost behind locked doors.