Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Whose grief is seen, whose grief is unseen? - 4.28.2026

An Israeli mother recently shared the agony of losing her son, Hersh, in the October 7 attack. Her grief is real, personal, and heartbreaking. Many Israeli mothers have told similar stories on programs such as Amanpour & Company and across PBS and other U.S. networks.

But this raises difficult questions about whose suffering is visible to the world.

Why are Palestinian mothers—many of whom have lost entire families in Gaza—not given the same platform on Western television? Why does the Israeli government continue to restrict access for foreign reporters from countries such as Russia and elsewhere? If the war in Gaza is described by some observers and human rights groups as a genocide, why not allow independent journalists to report freely so the world can judge for itself?

Are Palestinian lives regarded as having equal value in the global narrative of this conflict?

Why is there an Iron Dome to protect Israeli civilians, but no comparable protection for Palestinians in Gaza or the West Bank—from airstrikes, settler violence, or abuses documented by rights organizations? Is there a hierarchy to how “terrorism” is defined and condemned?

And what about the years before October 7? Were Israelis and Palestinians living in peace? Or was this preceded by repeated cycles of violence often described by Israeli officials as “mowing the grass,” involving periodic bombardments of Gaza—frequently called by critics “the largest open-air prison in the world”?

Which countries continue to send weapons to Israel as civilian casualties mount? How much military aid has Israel received since its founding, and what accountability accompanies it?

Grief should never be ranked. If we are to understand this conflict honestly, the world must be allowed to hear from all mothers who mourn, and to see all suffering without filters.



History’s shadow over today’s war with Iran - 4.28.2026

Much of today’s tension with Iran cannot be understood without revisiting 1953, when British intelligence and the CIA helped overthrow Iran’s elected government and reinstall the Shah. His rule, enforced through the feared SAVAK security apparatus, bred deep resentment that culminated in the 1979 Islamic Revolution and continues to shape Iran’s distrust of the West.

That history matters now as conflict widens. Recent Israeli strikes on Iran and the resulting U.S. involvement risk escalating a long-simmering grievance into a broader regional war. At the same time, mounting humanitarian crises—from Gaza to southern Lebanon—are displacing civilians and alarming much of the world.

There are also global consequences. With the Strait of Hormuz threatened, the United Nations has warned of a potential food emergency as energy and shipping routes are disrupted. Leaders across Europe and elsewhere are voicing concern that the situation is spiraling beyond control.

Younger generations worldwide, including many in the United States, are increasingly questioning continued military support for policies they believe worsen humanitarian suffering and entangle America in conflicts not clearly tied to its security.

If lasting peace is the goal, acknowledging historical roots, prioritizing civilian protection, and recommitting to diplomacy over escalation are essential. 



Monday, April 27, 2026

Obscene US military waste - 4.27.2026

While citizens are told there is “no money” for healthcare, housing, or education, trillions have been poured into military ventures that delivered little beyond chaos, scandal, and long-term instability.

The public deserves to see these costs not in abstract strategy, but in hard dollars tied to failed outcomes.

A few examples,

• Afghanistan War (2001–2021): ≈ $2.3 trillion for a 20-year effort ending in Taliban control within days

• Iraq War: ≈ $2.0 trillion destabilizing a region and empowering adversaries

• “War on Terror” total: over $8 trillion across theaters with no clear victory

• Guantánamo Bay detention camp: $540+ million per year to hold fewer than 40 detainees

• Waterboarding, secret prisons, torture program fallout: hundreds of millions in black-site ops, legal costs, and global reputational damage

• F-35 program overruns: $1.7 trillion lifetime cost, plagued by delays and defects

• Pentagon accounting failures: trillions untracked, unable to pass a clean audit for years

• Syria intervention: $15+ billion with no defined end state

• Failed Afghan reconstruction projects: $145 billion in waste, fraud, and abandoned infrastructure

• Military equipment left in Afghanistan: $7+ billion handed to the Taliban

These are not the costs of defense. These are the costs of dysfunction, mismanagement, and unchecked military spending without accountability.

If even a fraction of this had been invested at home, the nation would look very different today.

Until waste on this scale is treated as a national scandal, taxpayers will continue funding failure while being told sacrifice is patriotic. 



Ceasefire in Name Only: Civilians Killed Abroad, Free Speech Threatened at Home - 4.27.2026

Israel murders innocent civilians with US-EU weapons violating cease fire again and again.

How many more lives must be lost before the word “ceasefire” regains its meaning? Reports that Israeli strikes have killed 14 people in Lebanon despite a U.S.-brokered ceasefire raise urgent questions about accountability and enforcement. A ceasefire that does not protect civilians is not a ceasefire—it is a pause without protection.

At the same time, Israeli forces have killed at least 12 Palestinians in Gaza, underscoring that the cycle of violence continues unabated. Civilian lives—Lebanese and Palestinian alike—are being extinguished while diplomatic language offers little refuge on the ground.

Equally alarming are reports that the Department of Homeland Security is seeking to deny green cards to immigrants who have criticized Israel. In the United States, political speech is not a privilege granted by ideology; it is a constitutional right. Conditioning immigration status on viewpoint sets a dangerous precedent that undermines the very freedoms this country claims to defend.

If ceasefires cannot hold, civilians cannot be protected, and free speech cannot be safeguarded, then both our foreign policy and our democratic principles demand urgent scrutiny.



Sunday, April 26, 2026

When Politics Fails, Moral Leadership Matters - 4.26.2026

The world is missing: moral leadership when political leadership has largely failed.

For decades, powerful nations have reshaped other countries through covert action, arms, and indifference to human cost. Iran’s 1953 coup, backed by Britain and the United States, toppled a democratic government after disputes over oil, installing a repressive monarchy that helped set the stage for the 1979 theocratic revolution. Today, many civilians there still live with the consequences of that history.

Likewise, the long and devastating Israeli-Palestinian conflict has roots in the violent struggles surrounding 1948, the Holocaust’s aftermath, regional wars, and decades of policies and counter-policies that have fueled cycles of fear, displacement, and retaliation. As weapons continue to flow into the region, ordinary people pay the price.

These histories are complex, painful, and often selectively remembered. What is urgently needed now is not more geopolitical maneuvering, but a consistent moral voice that places human dignity above power politics.

That is why Pope Leo’s willingness to speak plainly matters. When world leaders equivocate, moral leadership becomes indispensable.



Amateurs at the Nuclear Table - 4.26.2026

Sending Kushner and Witkoff to Pakistan a very bad move.

At a moment when the world is trapped in a dangerous deadlock with Iran—escalated by the policies of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s far-right government and carrying grave consequences for the United States and global stability—the choice of envoys matters enormously.

Serious nuclear diplomacy demands deep expertise, regional knowledge, and credibility with seasoned negotiators. Sending figures whose backgrounds lie primarily in real estate and political proximity rather than in arms control, nonproliferation, or Middle East diplomacy risks trivializing a crisis that could spiral into wider conflict.

Negotiations over nuclear issues are among the most complex and consequential undertakings in international relations. They require technical mastery, strategic patience, and an understanding of decades of precedent. Treating such talks as if they were business transactions undermines both the process and the stakes involved.

The American public—and the world—deserve diplomacy led by experienced professionals capable of navigating the intricacies of nuclear negotiations, not envoys selected for proximity to the executive branch.



Bibi and Trump - 4.26.2026

President Trump must rue the day he listened to Prime Minister Netanyahu.

Maureen Dowd’s column captures a striking reversal: a president who promised to avoid “blood and sand” entanglements now appears trapped in one of his own making.

By invoking O. Henry’s “The Ransom of Red Chief,” Dowd underscores the irony. What was framed as a show of strength and swift dominance has morphed into a drawn-out conflict with mounting costs, dwindling leverage, and no clear exit. The metaphor is apt: the would-be captor now looks captive to events he set in motion.

Dowd points to the political, military, and diplomatic strain — from depleted stockpiles to domestic fallout — and suggests the crisis has overtaken the narrative of control. Rather than dictating terms, the administration seems to be reacting to a conflict that refuses to conform to its script.