Skip to main content

Posts

Follow Me !

Gaza Beyond the Alibi of Hamas: Genocide as Method, Silence as Accomplice.( From Chris Hedges report )

We are the most informed generation in human history—and perhaps the least disturbed by what we know. From the first missiles that struck Gaza’s residential blocks to the slow starvation that followed, everything was visible. Every destroyed home. Every burned hospital. Every child pulled from rubble. And yet, the global emotional temperature barely rose. In an age of total visibility, feeling itself has become scarce. Watching has replaced witnessing. Knowing has replaced responsibility. This moral numbness is not accidental. It is cultivated . And at the center of this cultivation stands a single word, endlessly repeated, ritually invoked, and strategically deployed: Hamas . Hamas has functioned not as an explanation, but as an alibi. The Choice Was Announcedk From Day One From the earliest days of Israel’s assault, the policy was articulated with chilling clarity: Gaza’s population would be given two options— stay and starve, or leave . This was not the language of countert...
Recent posts

Our Genocide: When Silence Becomes Complicity

The world watches. The bombs fall. And a human tragedy of unfathomable scale unfolds. On July 28, 2025, B’Tselem , Israel’s foremost human rights organization, issued a report titled Our Genocide — a document that shatters decades of euphemism and denial. For the first time, a major Israeli human rights group did not merely describe violence in Gaza as disproportionate or unlawful — it named it for what it is: genocide . “ A coordinated attack to destroy Palestinian society” B’Tselem did not arrive at this conclusion lightly. The report painstakingly documents the consequences of nearly 22 months of war — cities erased, families obliterated, a society made into rubble. “An examination of Israel’s policy in the Gaza Strip and its horrific outcomes, together with statements by senior Israeli politicians and military commanders about the goals of the attack, leads us to the unequivocal conclusion that Israel is taking coordinated action to intentionally destroy Palestinian societ...

Hajo Meyer: Auschwitz, Zionism, and the Courage to Say “Never Again Means Never Again”

Hajo Meyer did not speak from ideology. He spoke from Auschwitz . Born in Germany in 1924, Meyer survived the Nazi machinery of annihilation and emerged with a conviction that would shape the rest of his life: the Holocaust was not a Jewish lesson alone—it was a human one . To betray that universality, he believed, was to betray the dead. Late in life, Meyer became one of the most unsettling voices in Jewish ethical discourse —not because he denied Jewish suffering, but because he refused to let that suffering be weaponized . The Moral Core of The End of Judaism (2005) In his seminal book, The End of Judaism: An Ethical Tradition Betrayed , Meyer argues that Judaism is not defined by land, power, or ethno-nationalism , but by an ethical tradition rooted in justice for the vulnerable. One of his central claims is uncompromising: “ Judaism is not a bloodline or a state . It is an ethical tradition. When that tradition is abandoned , Judaism ends — regardless of who claims ...

Rabbi David Mivasair and the Cost of Speaking as a Jew Against Power

  There are moments in history when silence is safer than speech—and moments when silence becomes a form of betrayal. Rabbi David Mivasair has chosen the harder path: to speak as a Jew against what he sees as injustice carried out in the name of Jewish safety, Jewish history, and Jewish survival. That choice has placed him far outside the comfort zone of institutional respectability. Ordained through the Alliance for Jewish Renewal and serving as the spiritual leader of Ahavat Olam, a progressive synagogue in Vancouver, Rabbi Mivasair represents a strand of Jewish moral thought that has always existed but has rarely been tolerated when it challenges power directly. His anti-Zionism is not casual, rhetorical, or fashionable. It is theological, ethical, and deeply unsettling to the mainstream Jewish establishment in Canada and beyond. At the heart of his position lies a refusal to conflate Judaism with political Zionism. For Rabbi Mivasair, Judaism is not a state ideology, not a ...

Citizens on Paper, Expendable in Practice Arab Israelis, October 7, and the Failure of International Law Inside the “Only Democracy”

  Israel tells the world it is the only democracy in the Middle East . Democracies, we are reminded, protect all citizens equally—especially minorities—especially in times of crisis. Now look at Palestinian citizens of Israel , roughly 20% of the population , in the months following October 7 . Then ask: what exactly does citizenship mean when the state will not protect your life? The Forgotten Fifth of the Population Arab citizens of Israel vote. They hold passports. They pay taxes. They are citizens in the narrow, bureaucratic sense. But international law does not define citizenship by paperwork. It defines it by: Equal protection Non-discrimination The right to life Equal access to justice On those measures, Israel is not merely failing—it is structurally violating its obligations . A Murder Epidemic the State Chooses Not to Stop Long before October 7, Arab towns inside Israel were drowning in violence: Illegal weapons proliferated Organized crime flourished ...

Ana Kasparian: The Voice That Won’t Be Silent — A Call for Truth in an Age of Power

  Ana Kasparian is one of the most recognized and outspoken voices in contemporary political media. As a co-host of The Young Turks — a trailblazing online news and commentary program — she has spent nearly two decades dissecting U.S. politics, media, power, and foreign policy with unapologetic clarity and fierce conviction. She is not just a commentator — she is a truth-seeker who challenges power at every turn , refusing to soften her words for comfort. Schooled in journalism and political science, Ana’s commentary continues to mobilize millions, especially younger generations who feel unheard in mainstream discourse. A Voice Against the Status Quo Ana’s rhetoric can be bold, controversial, and deeply passionate — because she refuses to accept narratives that obscure the underlying truth about power and influence. On American democracy and foreign policy, she strikes at the heart of what many hesitate to articulate: “ We don’t actually live in a true democracy here in t...

Gaza and the Collapse of World Order: When the Guardian of Human Rights Sounds the Alarm

There are moments when the language of diplomacy fails, when caution becomes complicity, and when silence becomes an accomplice to destruction. On January 9, 2026, Agnès Callamard—Secretary General of Amnesty International—crossed that threshold. Her words were unambiguous, unprecedented, and devastating: The United States is destroying world order. Israel has been doing so for the last two years. Germany, through complicity and repression, is helping govern its demise. This was not activist rhetoric. It was a diagnosis from the very institution tasked with guarding the moral and legal architecture of the modern world. The Collapse of the Post-War Moral Architecture The international order that emerged after World War II was built on a promise: never again . Never again genocide. Never again collective punishment. Never again impunity for powerful states. That promise was codified in international law, human rights conventions, and multilateral institutions. But Gaza has...

If You Can’t Draw the Line at Genocide, You Can’t Defend Democracy

  There are moments in history when ambiguity becomes a crime. Ta-Nehisi Coates put it plainly, with the kind of moral clarity that cuts through noise, spin, and partisan theatrics: “If you can’t draw the line at genocide, you probably can’t draw the line at democracy.” This is not a slogan. It is an indictment. We are living through a period where the word democracy is invoked endlessly—by politicians, pundits, institutions, and parties that claim to be its last defenders. And yet, at the same time, we are witnessing a livestreamed annihilation of a people, carried out with Western weapons, Western money, and Western diplomatic protection. The contradiction is not accidental. It is foundational. The Moral Test Democracy Has Failed Democracy is not merely a voting system. It is not just procedures, ballots, or constitutional rituals. At its core, democracy claims to rest on human dignity , equal worth , and the sanctity of civilian life . If those principles are condit...

When 2,000-lb “Dumb” Bombs Are Called “Precision”: The Anatomy of an Aerial Assault and the Moral Bankruptcy Behind It

In the mid-December 2023 U.S. intelligence assessment that rattled diplomatic calm around the Gaza war, one cold number stuck out like a funeral wreath: about 29,000 air-to-ground munitions had been dropped by the Israeli Air Force on Gaza between October 7 and mid-December 2023 , and roughly 40–45% of them were unguided — “dumb bombs ” rather than precision-guided munitions (PGMs). Think about that. Not 1%, not 10%, not “some.” Nearly half of the weapons raining down on one of the most densely populated enclaves on the planet lacked guidance systems, GPS correction, or laser targeting — the very technologies militaries worldwide equate with “surgical” strikes. So How Many Bombs Really Fell? Here’s where the numbers — even from reliable assessments — become theologically depressing: 29,000+ air-to-ground munitions dropped from Oct. 7 to mid-Dec 2023 according to U.S. intelligence. That doesn’t include tons beyond bombs , artillery, naval gunfire, mortar shells, guided mis...

Dr. Randa Abdel Fattah. De-Invited by Association: When Grief Becomes a Pretext and Palestinian Identity a Liability

How Dr. Randa Abdel-Fattah Was Silenced in the Name of “Sensitivity” In a remarkable feat of moral gymnastics, Australia’s literary establishment has once again demonstrated how grief can be weaponised, principles suspended, and Palestinian identity rendered dangerously “inappropriate ” —all in the name of cultural sensitivity. Dr. Randa Abdel-Fattah , a respected author, academic, and public intellectual, was quietly de-invited from Adelaide Writers’ Week following the Bondi Junction massacre. Not because she had any connection—real, implied, or imagined—to the atrocity. Not because she endorsed violence. Not because she violated any law or ethical standard. But because, apparently, the mere presence of a Palestinian Muslim woman who speaks about justice is now considered culturally unsafe during national mourning . One wonders: unsafe for whom? The Logic of the Absurd Festival organisers were careful—almost impressively so—to state that Dr. Abdel-Fattah had nothing to do wi...