Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Who pays for AI’s power and water? - 5.13.2026

Astra Taylor warns that the rush to build AI data centers is not just a tech story but a democracy story. Communities are being asked to surrender land, water, and electricity so billionaire tech firms can scale products few people voted for and even fewer understand.

These facilities consume staggering energy and water, often in drought-prone regions, while residents face rising utility bills and strained grids. Local voices are sidelined as deals are cut behind closed doors, dressed up as “innovation” and “jobs.”

This is not anti-technology. It is pro-accountability. If AI is the future, the public deserves a say in where it is built, how it is powered, and who truly benefits. Otherwise, we are subsidizing a private empire with public resources.

Before another data center breaks ground, communities should demand transparency, environmental review, and democratic consent. The question is simple: who pays, and who profits?



Fractured Shadows: How 1953 Still Haunts Today’s Iran–U.S. Confrontation - 5.13.2026

The recent column by Thomas Friedman is deeply flawed in both analysis and historical framing. It treats the prospect of conflict with Iran as either inevitable or manageable, when in fact such a war would be both unnecessary and catastrophically destabilizing for the region. Escalation is being discussed as policy abstraction, while the human and geopolitical costs are pushed to the margins.

Any serious understanding of today’s Iran–U.S. tensions must begin with history, not amnesia. The roots go back to 1953, when the CIA and British MI6 orchestrated the overthrow of Iran’s democratically elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh after the nationalization of oil resources. The subsequent installation of the Shah and the repression enforced through SAVAK helped set the stage for the 1979 Islamic Revolution and the enduring cycle of mistrust and confrontation that followed. Ignoring this lineage produces policy analysis that is detached from causation and doomed to repeat failure.



Silent Cells, Shattered Streets: How Gaza’s Civilians Pay the Price for Silencing Witnesses - 5.13.2026

The jailing of Gaza flotilla activist Saif Abukeshek is troubling, but it pales beside the far greater suffering endured daily by Palestinian civilians. The detention of witnesses is one story; the screams from bombed neighborhoods, shattered hospitals, and starving families are another.

Israel was founded in the shadow of profound historical trauma, with a moral promise of “never again.” Yet policies that restrict food, water, medicine, and safe passage for civilians betray that promise. Collective punishment, civilian displacement, and the obstruction of aid violate not only international law but the ethical foundations Israel claims as its guide.

When humanitarian flotillas are intercepted and activists jailed, it reflects fear of scrutiny. But no silencing of witnesses can drown out the evidence of widespread civilian suffering.

This descent into brutality is sustained in part by the nearly $3.7 billion in annual U.S. government support, which carries moral responsibility as well as political consequence.

History will ask how a nation born from suffering could permit such suffering — and how its allies justified it. 



Iran’s Broken Future: How Decades of Foreign Meddling Fueled Today’s Labor Collapse - 5.13.2026

Iran today is enduring a devastating labor crisis as businesses buckle under wartime pressures, escalating unemployment and economic collapse. Across the country, firms from tech startups to steel plants are cutting jobs, with officials estimating the loss of millions of livelihoods and entire sectors teetering on the brink as inflation and conflict ravage opportunity.

This pain is not simply an accident of geopolitics — it is rooted in decades of foreign intervention and coercive pressure. The 1953 coup, engineered by the United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and British MI6 to overthrow Iran’s democratically elected government and seize control of its oil industry, inflicted a historic wound that has echoed through generations.

Today’s Iranians, who face lost jobs, rising poverty and shrinking futures, deserve acknowledgment of this legacy and massive reparations for the extraordinary cruelty inflicted on their nation. Only by confronting this history can the world help Iran rebuild its economy and restore dignity to its people.



Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Absent Households: The Human Cost of Our Aid - 5.12.2026

Eight members of a single Lebanese family were murdered in an Israeli strike. This is not collateral damage; it is the obliteration of a household, a lineage, a future.

The United States sends $3.8 billion a year in military aid to Israel. That money does not float in abstraction. It lands in real places, with real consequences, for real families like this one.

Meanwhile, 60 Minutes grants airtime to Benjamin Netanyahu, a convicted war criminal, offering a platform while graves are still fresh. Journalism should question power, not normalize it amid mass civilian death.

We cannot mourn selectively. If we value human life, our outrage cannot stop at borders, alliances, or politics. A family in Lebanon is as human as any family here.

Our tax dollars should not underwrite the erasure of entire households. 



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.