Oct 31, 2025

Poet's Nook: "I Must Become a Menace to My Enemies" by June Jordan







1

I will no longer lightly walk behind
a one of you who fear me:
                                     Be afraid.
I plan to give you reasons for your jumpy fits
and facial tics
I will not walk politely on the pavements anymore
and this is dedicated in particular
to those who hear my footsteps
or the insubstantial rattling of my grocery
cart
then turn around
see me
and hurry on
away from this impressive terror I must be:
I plan to blossom bloody on an afternoon
surrounded by my comrades singing
terrible revenge in merciless
accelerating
rhythms
But
I have watched a blind man studying his face.
I have set the table in the evening and sat down
to eat the news.
Regularly
I have gone to sleep.
There is no one to forgive me.
The dead do not give a damn.
I live like a lover
who drops her dime into the phone
just as the subway shakes into the station
wasting her message
canceling the question of her call:
fulminating or forgetful but late
and always after the fact that could save or 
condemn me

I must become the action of my fate.

2


How many of my brothers and my sisters
will they kill
before I teach myself
retaliation?
Shall we pick a number? 
South Africa for instance:
do we agree that more than ten thousand
in less than a year but that less than
five thousand slaughtered in more than six
months will
WHAT IS THE MATTER WITH ME?

I must become a menace to my enemies.

3


And if I 
if I ever let you slide
who should be extirpated from my universe
who should be cauterized from earth
completely
(lawandorder jerkoffs of the first the
                   terrorist degree)
then let my body fail my soul
in its bedeviled lecheries

And if I 
if I ever let love go
because the hatred and the whisperings
become a phantom dictate I o-
bey in lieu of impulse and realities
(the blossoming flamingos of my
                   wild mimosa trees)
then let love freeze me
out.
I must become
I must become a menace to my enemies.

Oct 29, 2025

The Singularity of (AI) Shit by Steve O'Keefe



On the horizon lies a confluence of catastrophe.

One stream is the wealth-concentrating power of capitalism, leading to existential battles between a small group of oligarchs. They have the proven ability to take over states; no democratic force can stop them. Only revolution can re-set the clock. Then growth will resume, along with the concentration of wealth.

The second stream is climate change. It is irreversible now without causing a major economic disaster. The clear response of the increasingly powerful oligarchs is to burn right through it — to use as much fossil fuel as possible, as fast as possible, before it becomes worthless.

The oligarchs believe that if and when climate change becomes expensive enough, the market will fix it. If it kills off 90% of the people on the planet, they’ll be among the 10% who survive.

***

The concentration of wealth can be slowed and even reversed for a time, as it was as a result of the Great Depression and New Deal taxation. But it won’t be stopped. It is as relentless as gravity.

Capital has learned how to capture the state. Representatives will always sacrifice public good for personal gain. If they do not, they are targeted for removal. Officials who refuse to cooperate are set-up, if necessary, and their families and friends are pressured.

AI can manifest any two-dimensional reality one can imagine. The ability to create endless streams of convincing kompromat means that capital has all the tools it needs to compromise power.

***

That brings us to the third stream in the confluence of catastrophe: Artificial Intelligence. AI is supposedly the way out of this mess — the super-intelligence that steps in and saves humanity.

The AI will provide us with nearly free electricity using non-polluting fusion reactors or artificial suns. The electricity will fuel carbon capture, incinerate our garbage, and desalinate saltwater. Since it will cost almost nothing to make almost everything, surely standards of living will rise worldwide?

Not a chance!

The same folks who brought you Exxon, Tesla, and Apple are planning to own the free energy machines of the future and charge a fortune to power your dwelling, burn your garbage, and clean your water.

It does not matter whether it’s the United States that first gets the artificial sun, or China or the U.K. or France or Germany or India or Russia or Japan or Australia or Saudi Arabia. Its use will be controlled by oligarchs selected by capital. The fruits of superabundance will not be freely shared.

***

AI will be used, as it is now, to fuel wealth concentration by disguising it as growth. The stock market goes up! Productivity goes up! Wages flatline. One hundred percent of the increase is hoarded by oligarchs.

Ray Kurzweil’s famous animation showing the steady increase in global GDP conveniently ignores the fact that most people in “the West” haven’t felt any increase in a generation.

The oligarchs pretend that they are building social capital like the stock market that benefits everyone. The stock market isn’t social; it’s private. It’s theirs. You’re welcome to wet your beak a little if you have anything left at the end of the month to invest.

All the leading indicators prove that the world of the super rich is getting steadily better. Too bad about you.

***

In their greed to dominate AI, the oligarchs have released shitty AI that is going to screw up the entire project long before we get to artificial suns.

Soon, teenagers equipped with AI will be able to use drones to deliver weapons of mass destruction. The concentration of capital necessary to build a super yacht will come up against a pissed-off kid with an AI weapon.

Just as Putin’s bombers can be taken out by Ukrainian bots, so any large-scale infrastructure can be decimated with cheap, deadly explosives. War is no longer a matter of defending one’s borders. Today, you must defend every bridge, every building, every person.

***

The idea of a representative government is over. The idea that we can hire a group of people to defend us is over. You have to represent yourself, fund yourself, protect yourself, educate yourself.

The old ways no longer work. They relied on the specialization of labor, where everyone is the master of their own piece of the puzzle. But now the other pieces have turned predatory for profit: the banks, the farmers, the manufacturers, the distributors, the retailers, the media, and the government.

The puzzle is broken because they all want to dominate and they don’t care about the individual pieces or even the whole puzzle. They want to win, even if the result looks like shit. That brings us back to the confluence of catastrophe, the Singularity of Shit.

People used to believe in working together, in making things better, in making progress. But it doesn’t work anymore. No matter the effort or time invested, all progress, all growth is siphoned off by hedge funds. We toil for their gain, decade after decade. If we learn, they win. If we improve, they confiscate the benefits.

Soon it will no longer make any sense to learn anything, build anything, save anything, or even try. When that day comes, the AI will probably take us out.

Sep 25, 2025

why facts dont change minds

 




goose thought facts were enough. 
but brains aren’t spreadsheets. they’re nests. 
and some geese would rather honk louder than feel wrong.

Sep 17, 2025

Sep 12, 2025

Close Encounters of the Fifth Kind

 




“Close Encounters of the Fifth Kind” is a feature documentary presented by Dr. Steven Greer, the global authority on extraterrestrials who created the worldwide disclosure movement and routinely briefs presidents and heads of state on the ET phenomenon. His previous works, Sirius and Unacknowledged, broke crowdfunding records and ignited a grassroots movement. 

 In this film, Dr. Greer presents the most dangerous information that the architects of secrecy don’t want you to know: how forgotten spiritual knowledge holds the key to humans initiating contact with advanced ET civilizations. 

 The film features groundbreaking video and photographic evidence and supporting interviews from prominent figures such as Adam Curry of Princeton’s PEAR Lab; legendary civil rights attorney Daniel Sheehan; and Dr. Russell Targ, who headed the CIA’s top secret remote viewing program. Their message: For thousands of people, contact has begun. This is their story.

Sep 2, 2025

Trump Doesn’t Want You to Know History by Rachel Lee Perez

 


Source: The Progressive

Studying history is becoming a lost art, and that is precisely how the Trump Administration wants it. The study of history forces us to confront the successes and failures of the past so that we can create a better future. It compels us to evaluate and assess the consequences of injustice, war, and resistance. It fosters empathy by exposing us to diverse perspectives and lived experiences. But most importantly, in today’s political climate, studying history promotes critical thinking, produces the ability to identify propaganda, and empowers citizens to be informed.

Governments that attempt to rewrite history to avoid addressing uncomfortable truths, limit access to educational resources, and ban books in efforts to restrict information from their people are demonstrating the telltale markers of authoritarianism. These are key strategies—used by regimes like that of Nazi Germany in the 1930s and 1940s—designed to control the narrative, weaken civil awareness and knowledge, and reshape not just what people know, but also how they think. Authoritarians rely on people not knowing or thinking critically about history.

The Trump Administration is demonstrating many of these markers of historical authoritarian regimes, beginning with attempts to rewrite the past.

On January 29, 2025, among a slew of Executive Orders issued by the current administration was one titled “Ending Radical Indoctrination in K-12 Schooling.” In this directive, the Trump Administration alleged that American students have been indoctrinated by an educational system promoting “anti-American ideologies.” Just two months later, a follow-up Executive Order titled “Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History” purported that, for the past decade, Americans have been indoctrinated by “distorted” and “revisionist” history that has caused them to cast a blind eye to our nation’s “unparalleled legacy of advancing liberty, individual rights, and human happiness.”

The January 29 order reinstated the 1776 Commission, a body that Trump established during his first term. Just two days before his first term ended in January 2021, the commission released “The 1776 Report,” a forty-five-page document rife with inaccuracies and falsehoods about the founding of our nation.

We know, of course, that Thomas Jefferson, even as he penned the infamous words “All men are created equal,” enslaved more than 600 people during his lifetime—a number greater than any other U.S. President. Critical thinking would tell us that this is blatant hypocrisy. Yet “The 1776 Report” frames Jefferson’s inclusion of these very words in the Declaration of Independence not as paradoxical, but as the moral seed that supposedly “set the stage for abolition”—despite abolition being a Black-led movement that was not achieved until nearly a century later. The report insists that many of the Founding Fathers opposed slavery, while downplaying the fact that many of these very men were themselves slaveholders.

In sum, “The 1776 Report” would have us ignore the fact that enslaved Black people built this nation through their brutal, unpaid labor, and instead have us view slavery as merely a “blight” in U.S. history. It entirely omits several other major injustices, such as the genocide and forced relocation of Native Americans, the racial violence of the Reconstruction Era, segregation, the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, and the disproportionate forced sterilization of Latinx women from 1907 to 1979. By omitting these events, the report “elevate[s] ignorance about the past to a civic virtue,” as the American Historical Association noted, joining dozens of other organizations that publicly condemned the report.

The core argument of “The 1776 Report” is that extensively studying injustices throughout U.S. history undermines the principles of equality, liberty, and justice upon which our nation was founded. But if we truly are a nation built on those ideals, isn’t it our responsibility to teach about the times when our country did not uphold them? Isn’t it our duty to demonstrate what the United States has done and what it still must do to right its wrongs?

This version of revisionist history that has been authored by allies of the Trump Administration is strategic and should be expected. Authoritarian regimes have long manipulated historical narratives to cast themselves in a favorable light, erase past atrocities, and instill a sense of loyalty, patriotism, and ideology in their people.


This control over historical narratives extends beyond rewriting the past; it also involves controlling who has access to education and the resources that make learning possible. This is why the Trump Administration has aggressively sought to dismantle the federal agencies that provide necessary funds and resources to education nationwide.

On March 20, 2025, an Executive Order titled “Improving Education Outcomes by Empowering Parents, States, and Communities” was issued with the explicit goal of abolishing the Department of Education. Administration officials claim that the federal government’s education department has failed the American people and that dismantling it is necessary to return educational control to the states.

This argument is misleading, as things like curriculums are already determined at the state level. The Department of Education primarily exists to manage financial aid, prohibit discrimination, and ensure equal access to education for all students, including racial minorities, women, and people with disabilities. Eliminating this agency is not about efficiency, cost savings, or returning any so-called control; it is about restricting access to education and whom the federal government deems to be worthy of it.

On March 14, 2025, Trump issued an Executive Order titled “Continuing the Reduction of the Federal Bureaucracy,” which targeted several entities, including the Institute of Museum and Library Services. This institute provides vital grants to museums and libraries across the country—many of which will not survive without federal funding. It provides funding for things like summer reading programs, Internet access, and online book lending databases—programs that some rural libraries are already losing at a rapid pace.

This reduced access to books and educational materials is detrimental to society, but it is also intentional. By limiting educational resources and controlling who receives them, the federal government can more easily promote its own ideology while suppressing educated, dissenting opinions.

This strategy is chillingly familiar. The Nazi regime followed a very similar blueprint. Throughout the 1930s in Germany and Austria, books and educational materials that did not align with Nazi ideology were systematically removed from libraries, bookstores, and universities. The Nazis held mass book burnings, ceremonial events that targeted works by Jewish authors, liberals, socialists, and anyone whose ideas challenged Nazi doctrine. Works by some of the world’s most well-known and respected minds—people like Albert Einstein, Ernest Hemingway, Sigmund Freud, and Helen Keller—were included in this cultural decimation.

Today, we are witnessing echoes of this strategy. Since the first Trump Administration, there have been nearly 16,000 book bans, with approximately 10,000 of those book bans in the 2023-2024 school year. This suggests a rapid acceleration in efforts to restrict diverse and critical perspectives. The dismantling of public education, combined with mass book bans, is a deliberate attempt to suppress the necessary tools to be informed, engaged citizens.

We should question a government that is afraid of books and an educated populace. We should be wary of a government that fears its people knowing its past.

Trump doesn’t want you to know history, because if you do, you will recognize the dangerous path down which he is leading our country. History shows us a familiar pattern: Regimes that revise their pasts, limit education, and ban books ultimately pave the way for decline and authoritarian control.

If history tells us anything about authoritarian governments, it’s that they must control the narrative. Authoritarian regimes rise not just through force, but through controlling ideas and silencing critical thought. When they cannot control the literature their subjects consume—even, and especially, materials about nationalism and history—they have lost control of everything. And by not knowing history, we as a people surrender the power to know any better. 

Aug 22, 2025

Trump: the Personification of the End of History? by Tom Englehardt


Source: Common Dreams

Sometimes I dream—in the sense of a nightmare—about bringing my parents back to this all too strange world of ours to tell them about… yes, of course, Donald J. Trump. They died long before The Apprentice even made it onto TV early in this century, so—best guess—though they also lived in New York, they undoubtedly had never heard of him.

My mother died in 1977 when Donald Trump was 31 and Jimmy Carter was president; my father in 1983 when Trump was 37 and Ronald Reagan was president. But nothing, not even Richard Nixon, could have prepared them for a Trump presidency, not once but (yes!) twice.

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Mind you, my father was a salesman and, in that sense, he might have understood something about Trump, including his ability to sell himself to all too many of the rest of us so damn successfully, again not once but twice—and if he has anything to do with it, maybe (but “probably” not) a third time, too. My parents could never have imagined, however, that the country which, at my mom’s birth, had Theodore Roosevelt as president and, in the years to come, Franklin D. Roosevelt and John F. Kennedy, among others, would have elected a madly self-referential ex-salesman with six bankrupt businesses in his past to the White House not once, but—yes, again!—twice.

I think my mother, a professional political and theatrical caricaturist, might have grimly laughed and then gone to her easel to turn him into her caricature of the ages. She would undoubtedly have caught his strange essence, as she did that nightmarish Trumpian figure of her moment (though he never had the same power to devastate our world), Sen. Joe McCarthy.

Under the circumstances, here’s my new phrase for this global moment of ours: We—and I mean all of us on Earth—are in Trumple deep.

And believe it or not, there is indeed some appropriate history here. Great powers—and after the Soviet Union collapsed and the Cold War ended in 1991, this country seemed to be a great power like no other, possibly ever—do come and go. Indeed, the going can be bizarre and disorienting. But when they come, it often seems as if they might be here forever and a day. And of course, in that now distant moment when the Soviet Union suddenly unraveled and China had not yet risen, the US did appear to be The Great Power (and capitals and italics are indeed appropriate), the only one left on Planet Earth.

At the time, in fact, it felt as if this country might actually prove to be the Ultimate Great Power, the Greatest of All. Who then could have imagined that, not quite a quarter of a century later, the US would, in its own fashion, have gone to the dogs, that it would be ever more—and yes, we do need some new words to describe this increasingly stranger, more disturbing world of ours—tariffyingly alone on an increasingly resentful and hostile planet? And mind you, I’m not just thinking about countries like Brazil, India, and Switzerland that are deeply ticked off by Donald Trump’s soaring tariffs and so much else. Who then could have imagined that we were already heading for the historical edge of what may prove to be the ultimate cliff of history? Who, then, could have imagined that Donald J. Trump—that living, breathing symbol of ultimate decline—would indeed become this country’s president, not once but—yes, again (and again)!—twice?

Honestly, in those nearly 25 years, how did the seemingly greatest power in history become something like an all-too-grim planetary laughing-stock—or do I mean totally frightening-stock?

Of course, in a fashion my parents couldn’t have imagined once upon a time, Donald Trump may be the ultimate… Wait, what word or words am I searching for here? I wonder if it or they even exist. He’s almost too strange for the ordinary language we’re used to, while—though who yet knows?—it’s at least possible to imagine that he might prove to be the personification of the end of history. The last president, so to speak.

After all, though in my parents’ time humanity already had the ability to do this planet in, thanks to the atomic weapons that ended my father’s war, who would have imagined then that we humans had already come up with a second, slow-motion way to do the same thing—I’m thinking, of course, about climate change—while essentially not noticing for decades. Nor could they have imagined that, once the long-term destructiveness of global warming became more apparent, the American people would elect a president dedicated to the very substances, fossil fuels, that are slowly transforming this planet into a giant fire hazard, heat condominium, and flooding nightmare first class.

The Final Act?

I mean, imagine this: even if the atomic weaponry that has spread to nine countries is never used again—and don’t count on that when the Russians and the Americans have only recently implicitly or explicitly threatened to employ just such weaponry, while the last nuclear treaty between those two countries is scheduled to run out in February 2026 (oh, and my country is also planning to invest another $1.7 trillion in “modernizing” its nuclear arsenal in the decades to come)—the burning of fossil fuels, a slow-motion version of atomic warfare, has now become the heart and soul(lessness) of the potential devastation of planet Earth. After all, last November, Americans reelected a man who, in a fashion that could hardly have been blunter, ran his third campaign for president as a “drill, baby, drill” candidate. It was, in fact, his main election slogan. And since retaking the White House, he has indeed backed to the hilt the idea of increasing this country’s production of coal, oil, and natural gas. In fact, he only recently reached a tariff deal with the European Union in which he forced the EU to agree to purchase $250 billion worth of American natural gas and oil annually in the years to come. Who cares that US energy exports to all buyers globally in 2024 added up to (and what a word to use in this context!) only $318 billion?

As John Feffer recently put it all too accurately, “Trump uses tariffs like a bad cook uses salt. It covers up his lack of preparation, the poor quality of his ingredients, the blandness of his imagination. It’s the only spice in his spice rack.” Indeed, that couldn’t be more on target, unless, of course, you start to think of climate destruction as a kind of spice, too.

Worse yet, he has proven all too grimly a man of his word. Under him, for instance, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is being turned into an outfit that will essentially protect nothing whatsoever. As David Gelles and Maxine Joselow of the New York Times reported recently: “Lee Zeldin, the administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, this week proposed to repeal the landmark scientific finding that enables the federal government to regulate the greenhouse gases that are warming the planet. In effect, the EPA will eliminate its own authority to combat climate change.”

He has, in short, brought us to what might be considered the ultimate cliff of history and is, in essence, putting a potentially devastating tariff on Planet Earth.

The only thing that the Trump administration now has to do is change that outfit’s name to the Environmental Destruction Agency, or EDA, since it’s already doing everything it can to halt wind and solar power projects of any sort in this country. And as Gelles and Joselow also report, it has recently “dismissed hundreds of scientists and experts who had been compiling the federal government’s flagship analysis of how climate change is affecting the country. In May, Mr. Trump proposed to stop collecting key measurements of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere as part of his 2026 budget plan.”

In short, right now the very idea of a “great” power seems to be heading for the dustbin of history, and that Cold-War-ending moment in 1991 appears ever more like a fantasyland of the first order. Yes, much that’s all too familiar is still ongoing on this planet of ours, including endless wars. But what a time to have made Donald J. Trump president of the United States again. Under the circumstances, here’s my new phrase for this global moment of ours: We—and I mean all of us on Earth—are in Trumple deep.

In truth, the very phrase “great power” might as well now be “grape power.” And mind you, given the strange ingenuity of humanity, don’t for a second assume that there isn’t a third way of doing us all in as well, even if we don’t yet know what it is.

Worse yet, don’t for a second imagine that President Trump is alone on planet Earth. Just consider Vladimir Putin, the Russian ruler who decided that the best way to go in 2022 was to invade a neighboring country and simply never stop fighting there. (Yes, I know, I know… NATO did seem to be creeping up on Russia in those years, but still…) And what about Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who simply can’t stop slaughtering Gazans and utterly devastating that microscopic 25-mile strip of land—with American weaponry no less—while potentially starving thousands (tens of thousands? hundreds of thousands?) of Gazans to death? (And while you’re at it, don’t forget that war itself is one of humanity’s most effective ways of putting yet more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere and heating this planet further!)

Putting a Tariff on Planet Earth?

It’s not exactly a pretty picture, is it? And mind you, I haven’t even mentioned the ongoing disasters in Sudan or Somalia, or so much else on this unsettled and unsettling planet of ours. Nor have I mentioned the one major country that seems to fit none of the above categories, being neither at war, nor in decline, nor headed by some distinctly strange and unnerving version of humanity, and that, of course, is China. There can be no question that it is indeed a significant power and, once upon a time, would undoubtedly have been considered the next great power to loom over Planet Earth.

And give the Chinese some credit. While not acting globally in the usual fully imperial fashion, they have been moving to create ever more green energy—in fact, installing more wind and solar power than the rest of the world combined. And yet, that country is also a carbon disaster, using more coal than almost all the other countries on this planet put together and still planning to install startling numbers of new coal power plants. So, a “great” power? Not exactly, not on this ever-less-than-great planet of ours.

Meanwhile, Donald Trump is sending the US down the tubes in double time (and, in the process, potentially taking much of the rest of the world with him). He has, in short, brought us to what might be considered the ultimate cliff of history and is, in essence, putting a potentially devastating tariff on Planet Earth.

We face what could—not even a quarter century after the United States appeared to stand alone and all-powerful on this planet of ours—be something like the last act in the drama (the tragedy?) of human history.

Under the circumstances, the question, of course, is: Why can’t we humans seem to learn what truly matters on this increasingly endangered planet of ours?

I sometimes feel like a bewildered child when I think about what we’re now doing to our world—a child with no parents around to explain what’s happening. And 79-year-old Donald Trump catches that mood of mine exactly as, having just turned 81, I watch him visibly begin to move into an altered state of personal decline, while ensuring by his acts (and those of his minders) that this planet continues to head for hell in a handbasket.

In the past I’ve suggested that his middle initial J should be changed to a D for decline. But now that seems almost too mild to me as we face what could—not even a quarter century after the United States appeared to stand alone and all-powerful on this planet of ours—be something like the last act in the drama (the tragedy?) of human history.

And yes, I still do have the urge to call my parents back from the dead, hoping they might be able to explain us humans and our ever-stranger ways to their son. I suspect that, on returning to this eerie world of ours so many decades later, my mother might find it to be the ultimate caricature.

Jul 30, 2025

Chris Hedges: On the Precipice of Darkness

 


 


 The world is getting darker by the day.....the sun will rise again, thankfully. whether we're here or not...perhaps it's better that we're not here..the world will heal faster without us here...

Jul 29, 2025

Alex Henderson: Americans in 'denial' as 'Age of Trump' spins 'out of control'



Source: MSN

The ironic term "Good Germans" is used to describe Germans who, during the 1930s and 1940s, didn't actively support Adolf Hitler's Nazi regime but looked the other way and downplayed or ignored the atrocities that were taking place. Often, "Good Germans" would argue that sure, Hitler is brash, but his opponents are overreacting to his inflammatory speeches.

Salon's Chauncey DeVega, in an article published on July 18, fears that in 2025, too many "Good Americans" — not unlike the "Good Germans" of the 1930s and 1940s — are downplaying the most disturbing parts of Donald Trump's second presidency.

"I have studied accounts from people who lived through authoritarian and fascist regimes in places like Chile, Argentina and Germany," DeVega warns. "One of the common threads is how citizens compromised their ethics and, in the end, were stained in ways both large and small. For some, this took the form of actively working with the regime against their family, friends and neighbors. They raised high the banner of patriotism! Law and order! The Dear Leader is always right! Other denizens chose denial and willful ignorance, turning inward to a fantasyland where, somehow, everything was normal, even when it was not."

DeVega continues, "Those 'Good Germans.' How could they ever do such things? We 'Good Americans' will, in all probability, not be much different."

Americans, DeVega laments, "are being intentionally spun out of control by Trump and the larger right-wing anti-democracy movement."

"These last few weeks have seen Trump's reign as a wannabe king and aspiring dictator made even more secure by a series of decisions by the right-wing extremists on the Supreme Court, who have neutered the ability of the federal courts to slow down the (Trump) Administration's assaults on the rule of law and democracy," DeVega observes. "In violation of decades — and centuries — of norms and precedents, Trump has expanded the use of the military and federalized National Guard as part of his mass deportation campaign. He is also claiming the right to nullify and generally ignore any law he does not agree with."

DeVega adds, "According to a recent whistleblower report, Justice Department official Emil Bove, who Trump has nominated for a federal judgeship, suggested telling courts that ruled against the (Trump) Administration 'f——— you' and then 'ignor(ing) their orders.' This is part of a much larger pattern where Trump, his staffers and other mouthpieces have argued he does not have to obey the Constitution and its protections for civil and human rights. The president and his agents are becoming even louder with their threats to arrest and imprison members of the Democratic Party for 'crimes.'"

Despite the massive No Kings Day protests of June 14, DeVega observes, the Trump Administration's "attempts to end multiracial pluralistic democracy" are "accelerating with little effective resistance from civil society or the mass public."

"To ignore these dimensions of our current national emergency is to fundamentally misunderstand the nature of the existential danger we are facing," DeVega explains. "To wit: Public opinion polls, focus groups and other data consistently show that the vertigo we are experiencing during this Age of Trump is getting worse…. Ultimately, Americans are quickly running out of time to stop our democracy and society from spinning out of control. However the Age of Trump may end, I fear it will show that too many Americans, along with their 'responsible' mainstream leaders and other elites, did not pay close attention when the flight crew told them about the escape doors and flotation devices."

Jul 27, 2025

The Gaza Riviera by Chris Hedges

 



Source: Chris Hedges


Starvation is not a pretty sight. I covered the famine in Sudan in 1988 that took an estimated 250,000 lives. There are streaks in my lungs — scars from standing amid hundreds of Sudanese who were dying of tuberculosis. I was strong and healthy and fought off the contagion. They were weak and emaciated and did not.

I watched hundreds of skeletal figures, ghosts of human beings, trudge at a glacial pace across the barren Sudanese landscape. Hyenas, accustomed to eating human flesh, routinely picked off small children. I stood over clusters of bleached human bones on the outskirts of villages where dozens of people, too weak to walk, had laid down in a group and never got up. Many were the remains of entire families.

The starved lack enough calories to sustain themselves. They eat anything to survive — animal feed, grass, leaves, insects, rodents, even dirt. They suffer from constant diarrhea. They have trouble breathing because of respiratory infections. They rip up tiny bits of food, often spoiled, and ration it in a vain attempt to hold off the gnawing hunger pains.

Starvation reduces the iron needed to produce hemoglobin, a protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen from the lungs to the body, and myoglobin, a protein that provides oxygen to muscles, coupled with a lack of vitamin B1, which affects heart and brain function. Anemia sets in. The body, in essence, feeds on itself. Tissue and muscle waste away. It is impossible to regulate body temperature. Kidneys shut down. Immune systems crash. Vital organs atrophy. Blood circulation slows. The volume of blood decreases. Infectious diseases such as typhoid, tuberculosis and cholera become an epidemic, killing people by the thousands.

It is impossible to concentrate. Emaciated victims succumb to mental and emotional withdrawal and apathy. They do not want to be touched or moved. The heart muscle is weakened. Victims, even at rest, are in a state of virtual heart failure. Wounds do not heal. Vision is impaired with cataracts, even among the young. Finally, wracked by convulsions and hallucinations, the heart stops. This process can last up to 40 days for an adult. Children, the elderly and the sick expire at faster rates.This is the future Israel has preordained for the two million people in Gaza.

Palestinians shove to receive a hot meal at a charity kitchen in the al-Mawasi area of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on July 22, 2025. (Photo by -/AFP via Getty Images)

But it is not the future Israelis see. They see paradise. They see an ethno-nationalist Jewish state where Palestinians, whose land they stole and occupied and whose people they have subjugated and forced into an apartheid existence, do not exist. They see cafes and hotels rising up where thousands, perhaps tens of thousands, of bodies lie buried under the rubble. They see tourists frolicking on the Gaza beachfront, a vision enhanced by an Artificial Intelligence-generated video uploaded to social media by Israeli Minister of Innovation, Science and Technology, Gila Gamliel. It is what a Gaza devoid of Palestinians would look like, echoing the absurdist AI video posted by Donald Trump.

In the new video, carefree Israelis eat at seaside restaurants. Anchored in the sparkling Mediterranean are luxury yachts. Gleaming hotels and office high rises, including a Trump Tower, dot the beachfront. Attractive residential neighborhoods stand where now there are broken, jagged mounds of concrete. The video shows Benjamin Netanyahu and his wife, Sara, as well as Trump and Melania, strolling along the seaside.

Gamliel, like other Israeli leaders and Trump, cynically uses the term “voluntary emigration” to describe the ethnic cleansing of Gaza. This omits the stark choice Israel actually offers the Palestinians — leave or die.

Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich has called for a “security annexation” of the northern Gaza Strip and vowed that Gaza will become an “inseparable part of the State of Israel.” He made the remarks at a Knesset conference called “The Gaza Riviera — from vision to reality,” which presented proposals for the building of Jewish colonies in Gaza. Smotrich said Israel would “relocate Gazans to other countries,” and that Trump endorsed the plan.

Israeli Minister of Heritage Amichai Eliyahu, who once proposed dropping a nuclear bomb on Gaza, declared that “All Gaza will be Jewish.” The Israeli government “is racing ahead for Gaza to be wiped out,” Eliyahu said. He described Palestinians as Nazis. “Thank God, we are wiping out this evil. We are pushing this population that has been educated on ‘Mein Kampf.’”

Genocidal killers embrace fantasies of eradicating a native population and expanding their ethnonationalist state. The Nazis carried out their genocidal assault, which included mass starvation, on Slavs, Eastern European Jews and other indigenous people, dismissed as Untermenschen, or subhumans. Colonists were then to be shipped to Central and Eastern Europe to Germanize the occupied territory.

These killers do not reckon with the darkness they unleash. The upscale beachfront properties dreamt of by Israel will never appear, just as the modern, exclusively Serb capital, with its golden domed cathedral, imposing presidency building, 15-story clock tower, state-of-the-art medical center and national theater with a 72-foot revolving stage was never built on the ruins of Bosnia.

Rather, there will be ugly apartment blocks, populated by the usual miscreants, proto-fascists, racists and mediocrities who live in the Jewish colonies in the West Bank. These ultranationalists, who have formed rogue militias to seize Palestinian land and joined the Israeli army in murdering over 1,000 Palestinians in the West Bank since Oct. 7, will define Israel. They are the Israeli version of the 3-million-strong Pancasila Youth — Indonesia’s equivalent of the Brown Shirts or the Hitler Youth — that in 1965 helped carry out the genocidal mayhem that left half a million to one million dead.

These rogue militias, equipped with automatic weapons provided by the Israeli government, lynched Saifullah Musallet, a 20-year-old Palestinian-American, who was attempting to protect his family’s land two weeks ago. He is the fifth U.S. citizen killed in the West Bank since Oct. 7.

Once these Israeli goons and thugs are done with the Palestinians, they will turn on each other.

The genocide in Gaza signals the abolition, for Israelis as well as Palestinians, of the rule of law. It marks the obliteration of even the pretense of an ethical code. Israelis are the barbarians they condemn. If there is any warped justice in this genocide it is that Israelis, once they finish with the Palestinians, will be forced to live together in moral squalor.


Poet's Nook: "I Must Become a Menace to My Enemies" by June Jordan

1 I will no longer lightly walk behind a one of you who fear me:                                      Be afraid. I plan to give you...