Thursday, March 19, 2026

A WAR WITHOUT END—AND WITHOUT CONSENT - 3.19.2026

The escalating conflict in the Middle East reveals a grave miscalculation. As Professor Vali Nasr warns, Iran is playing a long game—gaining leverage as time erodes U.S. and Israeli defenses. Strikes on vital energy infrastructure have already fueled instability and soaring oil prices.

This is also an extremely unpopular war. Across Europe and the United States, public anger is rising at being drawn into what many see as an unnecessary conflict, with gas and food prices surging.

Yet Washington appears ready to deepen involvement, committing more troops and vast sums to a war it cannot control. Meanwhile, diplomacy remains sidelined despite signals for negotiation.

This is not a war of necessity, but one of misjudgment—and the longer it continues, the higher the cost.



Wednesday, March 18, 2026

WHEN TRUTH IS CALLED TREASON - 3.18.2026

TRUTH

The great spiritual master Guru Nanak called God “Truth.” So when the Trump administration calls truth “treason,” it represents one of the gravest wrongs a person can commit.

WHEN TRUTH IS CALLED TREASON

Recent threats by Donald Trump to label media reporting on the Iran war as “treason” mark a dangerous descent into authoritarian rhetoric. Reports indicate he has even considered forcing journalists to reveal their sources and punishing outlets for coverage he deems unfavorable.

In any democracy, the press is not an enemy of the state—it is a safeguard against it. Branding dissent or investigative reporting as disloyalty undermines constitutional freedoms and chills truth-telling at a critical time of conflict.

War demands scrutiny, not silence. If governments can decide what is “patriotic news,” then truth becomes a casualty long before the battlefield claims lives.



RESIGNATION THAT DEMANDS ACCOUNTABILITY, NOT SILENCE - 3.18.2026

The reported resignation of a senior counterterrorism official over disagreements about Iran policy should concern every American. When someone at the highest levels steps down citing pressure and disputed threat assessments, the issue transcends partisanship—it strikes at how decisions of war are made.

History shows the danger of sidelining internal dissent. Ignoring caution and debate has led to costly consequences before. In a functioning democracy, questions about the influence of allies, lobbying groups, and political pressure on U.S. foreign policy are not only legitimate—they are necessary.

American service members bear the ultimate burden of these decisions. They deserve policies grounded in clear evidence, defined national interests, and transparency. Reports that multiple officials across administrations have resigned over related policies suggest a deeper, ongoing concern that cannot be dismissed.

This moment calls for scrutiny, not slogans. Whether one agrees or disagrees with the policy itself, ensuring that dissenting voices are heard is essential to responsible governance. Accountability—not silence—must remain central in matters of national security and military action.

Remember 1953, when the CIA and the UK’s MI6 helped overthrow Iran’s democratically elected government, replacing Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh with the Shah of Iran, whose regime later relied on the SAVAK secret police—and whose rule ultimately gave way to today’s widely criticized theocracy.



WHEN ALGORITHMS KILL: AT MACHINE SPEED, TRUTH IS LEFT BEHIND - 3.18.2026

The acceleration of the military “kill chain” through AI is not progress—it is peril. Systems designed to identify targets at machine speed are compressing human judgment into seconds, with devastating consequences.

The recent strike on a girls’ school in Minab, Iran—where over 160 children were killed—stands as a horrifying example. Reports suggest the targeting may have involved flawed or outdated AI-driven intelligence, though the full truth remains contested.

Whether error or intent, the outcome is the same: innocent lives erased at algorithmic speed. When machines help decide targets, accountability blurs and tragedy scales.

War is not a data problem to optimize. If we surrender moral judgment to opaque systems, we risk normalizing a future where death can result in an errant line of code.

The time to stop this Israeli-US madness is NOW. 



Tuesday, March 17, 2026

REGIME CHANGE & INTERVENTION: A LEGACY OF UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES - 3.17.2026

A clear-eyed look at modern history reveals a troubling pattern of interventions and their aftermath.

1953: Iran — A CIA–UK MI6-backed coup ousted Iran’s democratically elected leader, Mohammad Mossadegh, contributing to long-term instability and disputes over oil control (later associated with British Petroleum).

1961: Cuba — The failed Bay of Pigs invasion deepened Cold War divisions.

1973: Chile — External backing helped topple Salvador Allende, leading to military rule.

1980s: Afghanistan — Proxy wars armed groups with enduring consequences.

2003: Iraq — An invasion based on disputed WMD claims destabilized an entire region.

2011: Libya — The fall of Muammar Gaddafi left a fractured state.

1948: Palestine — The war surrounding the creation of Israel led to the mass displacement of Palestinians, a crisis that continues to shape regional conflict, alongside repeated violence affecting Lebanon and neighboring states.

These episodes show a consistent lesson: external intervention and regime change often unleash forces far harder to control than to initiate.



Monday, March 16, 2026

WAR WITHOUT TRUTH - 3.16.2026

The U.S.–Israeli war on Iran has entered its third week, and the fog of war grows thicker with every claim and counterclaim.

Washington asserts Tehran sought a ceasefire; Iran’s foreign minister firmly denies it. Truth becomes the first casualty when narratives replace facts.

Wars launched in the name of security too often deepen insecurity, destabilize regions, and endanger civilians far from the battlefield. As missiles fly and rhetoric hardens, the world edges closer to a wider catastrophe.

History teaches that wars rarely end as their architects promise. They spread, they scar generations, and they drain humanity’s moral capital.

Before this conflict spirals further, the global community must demand transparency, restraint, and urgent diplomacy.

Because the longer wars continue, the harder peace becomes.



Friday, March 13, 2026

WHY DOES THE U.S. STILL CALL ISRAEL AN ALLY? - 3.13.2026

Israeli journalist Gideon Levy argues that Israel’s wars and occupation will not end unless the United States withdraws its unconditional support. That raises an even more troubling question: why does Washington continue to treat Israel as a close ally while accusations of grave war crimes mount?
Images of widespread destruction, civilian suffering, and allegations of starvation used as a weapon of war have shocked the world. International institutions, including the International Court of Justice, are examining claims related to possible violations of international law.

Allies should be held to the same moral and legal standards expected of any nation. When those standards appear to be ignored, credibility and the cause of human rights suffer.

If the United States truly stands for international law and human dignity, its policies must reflect those principles—without exceptions.