Saturday, March 21, 2026

SOUTH LEBANON BLEEDS—THE WORLD MUST NOT LOOK AWAY - 3.21.2026

From Beirut comes a grim toll: over 1,000 dead, more than a million displaced, and a growing fear that southern Lebanon may face prolonged occupation. This is not just another headline—it is a human catastrophe unfolding in real time. Families are uprooted, communities shattered, and the future held hostage by uncertainty and violence. 

Silence and delay from the international community only deepen the suffering. Urgent diplomacy, accountability, and protection for civilians are not optional—they are moral imperatives. 

The cost of inaction will echo for generations. 

The world must act now, decisively and humanely, before this crisis hardens into a permanent scar.



Democracy on the Brink - 3.21.2026

American democracy is fast eroding—not with a bang, but through calculated policy. The proposed SAVE Act risks disenfranchising tens of millions, disproportionately targeting women, low-income citizens, rural communities, and transgender voters. Under the guise of election integrity, it erects barriers that many eligible voters cannot realistically overcome.

Voting is not a privilege for the few; it is a fundamental right. When laws systematically exclude vulnerable populations, they undermine the very legitimacy they claim to protect. A democracy that narrows participation ceases to be representative.

We must reject measures that silence voices and instead strengthen access, fairness, and inclusion. The integrity of our elections depends not on restriction—but on participation.



Cesar Chavez: A Fallen Icon - 3.21.2026

When heroes fall: truth, power, and the courage to speak

The recent revelation by 95-year-old labor icon Dolores Huerta that she was raped by Cesar Chavez demands more than shock—it demands reckoning. for decades, Chavez has been revered as a champion of justice. yet justice cannot be selective.

Huerta’s courage in speaking now underscores a painful truth: power, even in movements built on equality, can be abused and silenced. this is not about erasing history, but confronting it honestly. survivors deserve to be heard, regardless of who stands accused.

If we truly honor the values Chavez symbolized, we must also hold space for accountability. movements are strongest not when they deny wrongdoing, but when they face it with integrity and compassion.

Silence protects power. Truth protects people.



Scripture ignored: power without justice is moral failure - 3.21.2026

Hegseth invokes divine purpose to justify military might -- really?

Judaism and Christianity both rest on clear moral foundations: theft, oppression, and injustice are forbidden. the commandment “you shall not steal” (Exodus 20:15) is absolute, reinforced by “woe to those who make unjust laws” (Isaiah 10:1). these are not symbolic ideals—they demand accountability in real-world actions.

History offers painful examples. the 1952 removal of Iran’s elected leadership, tied to foreign control of oil, reflects a grave breach of these principles. likewise, the ongoing

The Iranian Revolution was a mass uprising in Iran that overthrew the monarchy of Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi and replaced it with an Islamic republic led by Ruhollah Khomeini. Driven by widespread dissatisfaction with authoritarian rule, economic inequality, and Western influence, the revolution transformed Iran into a theocratic state and significantly reshaped Middle Eastern politics.

Suffering of Palestinians—marked by displacement, violence, and deprivation—and the devastation in Lebanon raise urgent moral questions that cannot be ignored.

Invoking faith while violating its core teachings is a dangerous contradiction. claims of “defense at any cost” ring hollow when civilian lives are treated as expendable—whether 100 or 250, each life carries equal moral weight.

scripture across traditions speaks of judgment—not as threat, but as truth: actions have consequences. if nations and leaders continue down paths of injustice, they erode the very moral authority they claim to uphold.

Justice is not selective. without it, faith becomes rhetoric, and power becomes abuse.

Does the Bible or the Ten Commandments justify the blatant theft of Venezuelan oil, or is this another appalling example of might making right? I wonder how the prophets of such great wisdom will explain such actions on the day of judgment?

"Finally, I call upon the religious leaders of all faith to break their long silence and remind humanity of the timeless absolutes at the heart of their teachings. If they fail to act, we risk plunging the world into inevitable annihilation. According to leading scientists, we are now a mere 80 seconds from the brink."



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.