There are books that inform. There are books that persuade. And then there are books that accuse. Malik Mukhtar’s Anatomy of Moral Collapse series does not ask for your agreement—it puts you on trial. Across five tightly interwoven volumes, Mukhtar attempts something unusually ambitious: not merely to document the catastrophe in Gaza , but to construct a broader theory of how modern systems—political, humanitarian, digital, and psychological — have converged to normalize human suffering . This is not conventional analysis. It is a moral autopsy of our time. And like any autopsy, it is unsettling. A Theory of Collapse, Not Just a Chronicle of War What distinguishes this series is its refusal to remain confined to events. Mukhtar is not just describing what is happening—he is asking why it has become acceptable . The central argument unfolds with relentless clarity: modern systems no longer fail to prevent suffering—they produce, manage, and normalize it . Institutions meant t...
There are wars fought with missiles. There are wars fought with money. And then there are wars like this one— where the real battlefield is human endurance , and the real weapon is pain tolerance . The blockade of the Strait of Hormuz is being presented as a masterstroke by —a clean, calculated move to choke Iran’s economic lifeline. But beneath the polished language of “strategic pressure” lies a far simpler, far more uncomfortable truth: This is not a test of power. It is a test of who can suffer longer. And in that contest, Washington may have chosen the wrong opponent. The Fantasy of Economic Collapse The theory is elegant: Strangle oil exports Collapse revenue Trigger unrest Force surrender It is also, historically speaking, remarkably ineffective . A major study by RAND Corporation on coercive economic strategies concluded that: “ Economic sanctions alone rarely achieve major political objectives, particularly against regimes with strong internal sec...