Monday, May 11, 2026

License to Kill: How “Counter-Narco-Terrorism” Erodes the Rule of Law - 5.11.2026

As a citizen who believes in the rule of law, I am deeply disturbed by reports of U.S. military strikes on small boats in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific that have killed people without any public evidence, charges, or judicial process.

We are told these killings are part of a “counter-narco-terrorism” campaign. But labeling suspects as enemies in a vague armed conflict does not erase the Constitution, due process, or international law. If these individuals were criminals, they should have been arrested and prosecuted. If they were civilians, they should never have been targeted at all.

Killing people from the air or sea because they are suspected of wrongdoing is not justice. It is punishment without trial. It is execution without a courtroom. It is the definition of extrajudicial killing.

When a government claims the power to kill first and explain later, every citizen should be alarmed. Silence now normalizes a precedent that erodes the legal and moral standards we claim to defend.



Shattered Heat: How the Iran Conflict Is Crippling Firozabad’s Glassmakers - 5.11.2026

The roots of the Iran conflict, linked to the 1953 intervention by Britain’s MI6 and the US CIA, continue to affect livelihoods worldwide. One example is Firozabad, India’s “City of Glass,” a major centre for glassmaking and bangle production.

Tensions involving Iran and Israel and the United States have disrupted global energy and supply routes, raising fuel and natural gas prices and making supplies less certain. Glass production requires continuously high heat, so rising energy costs have forced many furnaces in Firozabad to cut back or shut down, threatening the livelihoods of hundreds of thousands of workers. Higher transport and shipping costs and slower exports have worsened the situation.



US Budget Cuts That Cost Children’s Lives - 5.11.2026

Nicholas Kristof’s lays bare a brutal truth: slashing humanitarian aid is not an abstract budget choice; it is a decision measured in children’s graves. Vaccines not delivered, food not provided, malaria nets not distributed, clean water not restored—these are the quiet, preventable deaths that follow.

Foreign aid is a tiny fraction of the U.S. budget, yet it saves millions of lives and stabilizes fragile regions. Cutting it by more than two-thirds does not make America stronger or safer. It makes us smaller, meaner, and complicit in suffering we have the power to prevent.

History will not judge this as fiscal discipline. It will judge it as indifference to the world’s poorest children. 



When Universities Silence Palestine, They Fail Democracy - 5.11.2026

When a university disinvites a commencement speaker because of views on Palestine, it sends a chilling message about academic freedom and moral courage. That is what happened to biotech CEO Rami Elghandour, who says he was removed as a graduation speaker at Rutgers University over his public stance on Palestinian rights.

Commencement is meant to celebrate inquiry, diversity of thought, and the courage to speak truth. Silencing a speaker for expressing concern about Palestinian lives betrays those very principles. Universities should be places where difficult conversations are welcomed, not punished.

We once ignored the horrors of Jewish suffering during the Holocaust. Let us not repeat that moral failure by turning away from the suffering of Palestinians today.

Disinviting a speaker over political views is not neutrality — it is capitulation to pressure and fear. If students are taught that speaking about Palestine comes at a professional cost, what lesson are we really imparting?

A university that cannot tolerate dissent in a speech cannot claim to prepare students for a democratic society.



Democracy drifts when fear becomes policy - 5.11.2026

The surge of a far-right, anti-immigrant party in U.K. elections is a warning. When voters feel unheard on jobs, housing, identity, and public services, anger fills the gap — and reshapes politics.

This moment calls for reflection from Keir Starmer and the Labor Party. If mainstream leaders fail to present a confident, humane vision on immigration and economic security, space opens for division.

Scapegoating is reprehensible. Palestinians have every right to advocate for their human rights and to protest the devastation in Gaza. Labeling Palestinian rights groups as “terrorist” without clear evidence is appalling and chills lawful speech. Democracies must protect the right to peaceful protest, whether the issue is Gaza, the West Bank, or southern Lebanon.



From South Lebanon to the West Bank: The Human Cost of Netanyahu’s War - 5.11.2026

In southern Lebanon, communities that once feared being caught between armed actors now face destruction, displacement, and constant insecurity along the border. Whatever the stated military objectives, the effect on ordinary families has been fear, loss of homes, and a hardening of attitudes that will last for generations.

In the West Bank, daily life for Palestinians is increasingly defined by checkpoints, settlement expansion, land loss, and violence from settlers operating with apparent impunity under military protection. The fragmentation of towns and farmland, and the steady erosion of normal civilian life, has created a reality that few outside the region fully grasp.

History teaches that such conditions do not bring peace or security. They deepen resentment, entrench division, and make future reconciliation far more difficult.

The appalling crimes committed against Jews during the Holocaust should never be repeated against any people. The hypocrisy of Western nations, including the U.S., which express concern for civilians while maintaining a constant supply of weapons, raises serious moral questions.

The rampant sewage in Gaza, infestations from rodents, the bombing in Lebanon—primarily with U.S.-supplied weapons—and the crimes committed by settlers in the West Bank demonstrate a total disregard for the lives of Palestinians and Lebanese by Prime Minister Netanyahu and his far-right government.



America’s ballots are not a president’s property - 5.11.2026

A democracy cannot survive if the machinery of elections is bent to serve one person’s power. Reporting by Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Ned Parker details efforts by Donald Trump to assert control over how elections are run while targeting perceived enemies for punishment.

This is not a partisan concern. It is a constitutional one. The legitimacy of our republic depends on neutral election administration, the rule of law, and the principle that no individual stands above either.

When a political leader seeks influence over vote counting, certification, and the officials responsible for those processes, the risk is not theoretical. It strikes at the core of public trust. When that same leader signals retribution against critics, civil servants, or opponents, the chilling effect spreads far beyond politics into the daily functioning of government.

Americans of every affiliation should be alarmed. Elections must be administered by laws, not loyalties. Public office must never be a shield for vendettas. Safeguards exist for a reason: to protect the people from the concentration of power in a single set of hands.

The test before us is simple. Do we preserve institutions that outlast any one leader, or allow them to be reshaped for personal control?

The answer will define the future of American democracy.