Thursday, April 2, 2026

Echoes of 1953: Why Renewed Intervention in Iran Risks History’s Quagmire - 4.2.2026

The present confrontation with Iran cannot be separated from a pivotal historical wound. In 1953, the primary aim of MI6 — with crucial support from the Central Intelligence Agency — was to reverse Iran’s nationalization of its oil industry under Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh. British interests, later consolidated under what became BP, stood to lose control over vast Iranian petroleum resources. The coup restored foreign leverage over Iran’s oil and installed the Shah, sowing deep resentment that fed directly into the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

That history still echoes. War and threats of escalation today risk hardening attitudes inside Iran rather than moderating them. Talk in Washington of possible ground troop deployments is especially alarming. Such a move would be extraordinarily dangerous, widen the conflict, destabilize the region, and send oil prices soaring worldwide.
Mixed messages about diplomacy while military pressure intensifies only deepen confusion and mistrust. Europe’s growing unease underscores that this path lacks broad international support. If history teaches anything, it is that interventions rooted in resource interests and strategic misjudgments can spiral into long, costly quagmires.

Before repeating old mistakes, the United States must prioritize an immediate cease-fire.



Tuesday, March 31, 2026

END THE EMBARGO: MORALITY CANNOT BE ENFORCED BY STARVATION - 3.31.2026

The continued U.S. pressure on Cuba—despite the arrival of a Russian oil tanker—raises a deeper question: why does Washington still believe it has the moral authority to throttle another nation’s lifeline?
Sanctions that restrict fuel and trade do not punish governments as much as they punish ordinary people. Decades of embargo have strained Cuba’s hospitals, transport, and food supply, while doing little to advance democracy. This pattern is not new. From Argentina and Iran to Iraq and Afghanistan, U.S. interventions—overt and covert—have often destabilized societies in the name of order.

Critics note a troubling inconsistency: harsh measures for small, struggling nations, yet a lighter touch toward powerful states when geopolitics demands it. The result is a credibility gap. Morality cannot be selectively applied.

Sovereignty means allowing nations to chart their own course without collective punishment. If the goal is human dignity, then policies that deepen hardship undermine that aim. Engagement, diplomacy, and humanitarian trade open doors that embargoes keep shut.
A superpower should lead by example, not by deprivation. It is time to reassess whether punishing Cuba serves justice—or merely perpetuates suffering.



Monday, March 30, 2026

MOTHER OF ALL QUAGMIRES — HISTORY NOW HAUNTS U.S. POLICY ON IRAN - 3.30.2026

The current crisis with Iran did not begin yesterday. Its roots trace back to Mohammad Mosaddegh, whose elected government was overthrown in 1953 through a covert CIA–MI6 operation after he nationalized Iran’s oil. The West then backed Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, deepening resentment that later fueled the Iranian Revolution.

Today’s tensions cannot be understood without acknowledging this history. Military pressure and alignment with Benjamin Netanyahu risk repeating old mistakes. If the U.S. and U.K. openly admit their role, apologize, and consider reparative steps, it could open a path away from escalation. Durable peace begins with historical honesty, not force.

If global media — especially in the United States — repeatedly foreground this history, public understanding could shift quickly, creating pressure for diplomacy over conflict.



CRUDE CAPITALISM AND COLONIAL CRIMES: THIS WAR ON IRAN IS THE LATEST CHAPTER OF WESTERN PLUNDER - 3.30.2026

For over seven decades, Western powers have treated Iran as prey. The 1953 coup — engineered by the U.K. and the Central Intelligence Agency after Iran moved to nationalize British-controlled oil — crushed Iranian democracy to protect corporate interests. The Anglo-Iranian Oil Company later evolved into BP. That betrayal seeded the rage that shaped 1979 and echoes in today’s crisis.

Now, Donald Trump’s confrontation with Tehran has choked traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, the artery for a fifth of global oil and gas flows. The shockwaves hit farms, fertilizer supply, shipping lanes, fuel prices, and food costs. Ordinary citizens across continents are paying for geopolitical arrogance rooted in colonial greed.

There are grim winners and losers. Russia benefits from surging oil revenues as prices spike. Meanwhile, Ukraine — already ravaged by war and dependent on stable global energy and grain logistics — suffers further economic and strategic strain from the turmoil.

If peace is possible, it begins with truth: a formal apology to Iranians, reparations for decades of interference, and urgent diplomacy to ensure the Strait is fully reopened. Without reckoning, this cycle of plunder and instability will only intensify.



Friday, March 27, 2026

IRAN FROM 1953 TO TODAY: THE ROOT CAUSE OF THE IRAN CRISIS WE REFUSE TO NAME - 3.27.2026

Today’s dangerous escalation with Iran did not begin this year, or last year. Its roots trace directly to 1953, when MI6 and the CIA orchestrated a coup that overthrew Iran’s elected prime minister, Mohammad Mossadegh, and reinstalled the Shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.

The Shah’s rule, enforced by the feared SAVAK, brutalized political dissent and crushed democratic aspirations. This foreign-backed repression laid the groundwork for the Iranian Revolution and the theocratic state that followed. To discuss today’s crisis without acknowledging this history is to ignore the fuse that was lit more than seven decades ago.

Now, as tensions again center on the Strait of Hormuz, the world faces economic shockwaves and the risk of wider war. But military escalation will not solve a problem born of historical grievance and mistrust. More bombing, more troops, and more threats only deepen the quagmire.

A serious path to de-escalation must begin with truth. The governments of the United Kingdom and the United States should formally acknowledge their role in the 1953 coup and the consequences that followed. Israel should halt military actions that risk widening the conflict. Symbolic and material steps toward accountability — including apology and restitution — would do more to lower tensions than any show of force.

History does not disappear because it is inconvenient. Until it is confronted honestly, it will continue to shape the present in dangerous ways.



Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Remembering Rachel Corrie, end the worldwide lust for killing - 3.25.2026

“People have the power”—not politicians, not armies.

The ongoing devastation in Gaza , THE West Bank, Iran and beyond reflects a grave abandonment of moral responsibility and human dignity. Civilians continue to suffer unspeakable loss, and the world cannot remain silent.

We must remember Rachel Corrie, the young American activist who epitomized courage and compassion. In March 2003, while defending a Palestinian home in Gaza, she was crushed by an Israeli bulldozer despite wearing a bright orange vest marked “PRESS.” Her sacrifice stands as a stark reminder of the human cost of this conflict.

History demands that we uphold justice, not repeat its darkest failures. Voices across the world must unite to demand an end to violence and a restoration of humanity.

“People have the power.” Let it be used now—to stop this tragedy.

Religious leaders throughout the world, including the Pope, have encouraged protesters to carry the Ten Commandments and small copies of the Bible, the Quran, and the Torah as a moral symbol calling for an end to violence and a defense against petty but dangerous tyrants worldwide.

Remember: people have the power, not petty tyrants.



WHEN WAR BECOMES “FUN,” HUMANITY IS THE FIRST CASUALTY - Pentagon Whistleblower Criticizes “Bloodthirst” of Iran War, Says Hegseth Is Enabling War Crimes - 3.25.2026

A Pentagon whistleblower’s warning about “bloodthirst” in the Iran war should alarm every citizen. When leaders speak of war with eagerness—or even amusement—it signals a dangerous erosion of moral restraint. Reports of aggressive tactics and rhetoric from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth only deepen fears that lines protecting civilians and soldiers alike are being blurred. 

War is not spectacle. It is governed by laws, conscience, and accountability. If those in power normalize brutality, the risk of war crimes is no longer hypothetical—it becomes policy by neglect.

Silencing dissent or sidelining whistleblowers will not hide the truth. It will only hasten a descent into impunity. The nation must demand transparency, restraint, and adherence to international law—before irreversible damage is done.