Pink flamingos and Trumpian corruption in Albania by Timothy Davies

The controversy surrounding a proposed €1.4 billion luxury resort on Albania’s southern coast is about far more than hotels, marinas and investment brochures. It has become a test of whether small countries can protect their natural heritage when confronted by the combined weight of political influence, global capital and elite ambition.

Thousands of Albanians gathering in Tirana to protest the development is not merely another environmental demonstration. It reflects a growing unease that decisions affecting national treasures are increasingly being made for the benefit of the wealthy and well-connected rather than for ordinary citizens. The symbolism is difficult to ignore. On one side stand environmentalists, local residents and conservation advocates. On the other stand billionaire investors linked to one of the most politically connected families in America.

The project associated with Jared Kushner’s Affinity Partners promises economic growth, tourism revenue and international attention. Such arguments are familiar. They accompany almost every major development proposal around the world. Yet the question is not whether luxury resorts generate money. They do. The question is whether every coastline should be treated as a commercial opportunity and whether some places possess value precisely because they have not yet been transformed into playgrounds for the affluent.

The Vjosa-Narta region is not an empty canvas awaiting development. It is a rare ecological sanctuary, home to flamingos, nesting sea turtles and vulnerable marine species. These ecosystems took centuries to evolve. A resort can be built in a few years. Once damaged, however, natural habitats are rarely restored to their original state. The economic gains are immediate and measurable. The environmental losses often emerge slowly, long after investors have moved on to their next venture.

What makes this dispute particularly striking is the political context surrounding it. Donald Trump built much of his public identity on promises to challenge entrenched elites and defend national interests against global influence. Yet the international business activities of figures connected to his family frequently appear to embody the very forces many voters believed they were rejecting: the movement of powerful capital across borders in search of lucrative deals, privileged access and favourable treatment.

Whether in Washington, the Gulf or the Balkans, the perception persists that political connections and private business opportunities increasingly travel together. Even when no laws are broken, such arrangements raise uncomfortable questions. Citizens are left wondering whether public institutions are serving national interests or facilitating projects desired by wealthy outsiders.

Albania faces a dilemma familiar to many developing and middle-income nations. Foreign investment is needed. Economic growth matters. Tourism can create jobs and improve infrastructure. Yet growth that sacrifices irreplaceable environmental assets may ultimately prove self-defeating. Countries that sell their most valuable landscapes for short-term gains often discover that the real treasure was the landscape itself.

The protesters in Tirana are therefore arguing about something larger than a single resort. They are challenging a model of development that assumes every untouched coastline represents unrealised profit. Their message is that not everything should be for sale.

In an age when billionaires can move money across continents with ease, preserving that principle may become one of democracy’s most important environmental defences.

The vanishing middle by Brea Willis

Modern neighbourhoods are quietly losing the informal social infrastructure that once made daily life feel porous rather than segmented. The café that asked for nothing more than your lingering presence, the community center with its folding chairs and uncertain schedules, even the modest pub or library corner that tolerated idleness, these were never just amenities. They were the connective tissue of urban life, the places where belonging was not scheduled or monetized, but simply allowed to happen.

In their place we have built something far more efficient and far less forgiving: a geography of optimization. Coffee is ordered ahead of arrival, seating is reserved by subscription and even “community” has been reframed as a service with deliverables. The neighborhood, once a loose constellation of accidental encounters, increasingly behaves like a corridor, one moves through it rather than within it. The idea that one might simply exist somewhere, without extracting value from the moment, begins to look almost eccentric.

It is tempting to blame technology, but that diagnosis is too easy. The deeper shift is architectural and economic. We have systematically removed the “in-between” spaces, the moments not governed by productivity or consumption. In doing so, we have erased the conditions under which casual familiarity used to form. What remains is either the private interior or the transactional exterior, with little room for the slow emergence of recognition between strangers.

This loss is not merely sentimental. It changes how communities understand themselves. A neighborhood without shared third places becomes forgetful, not in a nostalgic sense, but structurally. People no longer accumulate each other over time; they pass through each other in parallel streams. Even loneliness becomes more abstract, less a feeling in a room than a pattern across a network.

The question, then, is whether such spaces can be rebuilt virtually without reproducing the same logic of efficiency that hollowed them out in physical form. Most digital platforms have not helped. They have replaced presence with performance, conversation with metrics, and gathering with engagement. What they call “community” often resembles audience management more than mutual inhabitation.

And yet the possibility remains that virtual third places could exist, if they are designed against the grain of optimization. This would require a deliberate refusal of urgency, a suspension of measurable outcomes. A digital café, if such a thing can be imagined, would not be a platform for output but a room for lingering, where arrival matters more than achievement and staying is not justified by activity.

The difficulty is that inefficiency, once the natural condition of social life, now feels like a luxury. But it is precisely inefficiency that allowed belonging to form in the first place. To be slightly bored together, to repeat encounters without agenda, to recognize someone not because you need them but because you have simply kept showing up, these are the understated mechanics of community.

Rebuilding this sensibility, whether online or off, is less about design than restraint. It asks for spaces that do not hurry people along, that resist turning every interaction into data. It also asks for patience in an impatient age, for environments where silence is not an error state but part of the texture of being together.

Perhaps the real task is not to restore what has been lost, but to reinterpret it. The middle ground between home and work, between solitude and performance, does not need replication so much as reinvention. If neighbourhoods are to regain their social depth, they will have to tolerate less efficiency and more ambiguity, more drift, more unplanned encounter.

In that sense, the vanishing middle is not just a loss to be mourned, but a challenge to be answered. What we build next, physically or virtually, will depend on whether we can once again make room for the unproductive moment, and trust that something meaningful can still begin there.


The luxury of enough by Sidney Shelton

For years consumer culture has spoken in a single, relentless language; the newer is better. The phone in your pocket is already obsolete. The sofa in your living room could be trendier. The coffee maker that works perfectly well lacks a feature you never knew you needed until an advertisement informed you of your deficiency. Entire industries thrive on the subtle suggestion that satisfaction is not a destination but a flaw.

Against this backdrop, the rise of the so-called “Underconsumption Core” movement feels less like a trend and more like a quiet act of rebellion.

Its premise is almost embarrassingly simple. Use what you already own. Keep the phone for another year. Wear the coat until it actually wears out. Resist replacing functional furniture because a social-media influencer has declared last season’s aesthetic spiritually bankrupt. In an economy built around perpetual upgrading, such behavior has begun to appear strangely radical.

What makes the movement fascinating is not its thriftiness but its emotional appeal. Traditional frugality often carried a moral undertone, a sense of sacrifice for a greater good. Underconsumption Core is different. It romanticizes continuity. It invites people to see beauty in familiar objects rather than treating them as temporary placeholders on the path to something newer.

A scratched dining table becomes evidence of family life rather than a decorating failure. A ten-year-old lamp becomes part of a home’s character instead of an embarrassment. A smartphone with a fading battery becomes a reminder that technology is a tool, not a personality.

This shift matters because modern consumption has increasingly become disconnected from necessity. Many purchases today are not made because something is broken but because something is boring. The marketplace has become remarkably effective at transforming ordinary familiarity into dissatisfaction. The object has not changed; only the story surrounding it has.

Underconsumption Core attempts to rewrite that story. Its popularity also reflects a growing exhaustion with the performance of consumption. Social media has turned buying into a form of public entertainment. Entire online identities are built around hauls, unboxings, room refreshes, and product recommendations. The result is a culture in which ownership is never enough. One must constantly acquire and display.

Yet there is something oddly liberating about refusing to participate. A person who decides that their current belongings are sufficient exits a race that has no finish line. They stop measuring their lives against an endless stream of curated upgrades.

Of course, every movement carries the risk of becoming the thing it criticizes. Already there are signs that Underconsumption Core itself may become another aesthetic, complete with its own influencers, hashtags, and opportunities for monetization. Capitalism has a remarkable ability to package resistance and sell it back to consumers.

Still, the core idea remains powerful. In a society obsessed with optimization, choosing enough can feel revolutionary. It rejects the assumption that fulfillment is always one purchase away. It recognizes that possessions often become more meaningful with time rather than less.

Perhaps the most appealing aspect of Underconsumption Core is that it reminds us of a truth that advertising rarely acknowledges: the happiest relationship we can have with our belongings may not be acquiring them. It may be keeping them. The greatest luxury, after all, is not having everything. It is discovering that what you already have is enough.


#eBook Of OSCE and Media by GAFG

 

By Steve Clemons, Zijad Bećirović, Olga Algayerová
Co-edited by: Silvie Drahošová

The relationship between media, truth, and security has never been more fragile—nor more consequential. As you will read in the pages that follow, the erosion of press freedom is not a distant concern confined to authoritarian regimes. It is happening here, now, across the OSCE region, accelerated by technologies that outpace our ethical frameworks and amplified by actors who understand that controlling information is the first step toward controlling societies.

This eBook emerges from the proceedings of the OSCE Supplementary Human Dimension Meeting held in Vienna on 17–18 March 2025—a gathering that brought together journalists, diplomats, technologists, and civil society advocates under the shared conviction that media freedom is not optional for democracy. It is its circulatory system.

What you hold is not a conventional conference report. It is a provocation, a warning, and a set of pathways forward. The contributors to this volume—from Steve Clemons' unflinching critique of mainstream media's hubris to Harvey Dzodin's radically practical reward-based model for combating disinformation, and Nathan Coyle's urgent call to decolonize AI training data to Philipe Reinisch's synthesis of human connection and technological ethics—share a common refusal to accept decline as destiny.

The numbers are sobering. At least 124 journalists were killed in 2024 alone. Over 90% of AI training data originates in the Global North, while 43% of global conflicts occur in Africa. A single deepfake audio clip may have swung a national election in Slovakia. And yet, as Olga Algayerova reminds us in her keynote, we possess the tools, the legal frameworks, and the collective institutions to reverse this tide—if we choose to act.

The Helsinki spirit of 1975 was never meant to be a museum piece. It was a living commitment to the idea that security cannot be comprehensive without freedom, and freedom cannot endure without truth. The essays in this volume ask us to renew that commitment for an age of generative AI, fragmented media ecosystems, and resurgent authoritarianism.

The question before us is not whether media freedom is under threat. It is whether we still possess the courage to defend it—not as journalists alone, but as societies, as institutions, and as individuals who refuse to confuse information with insights, noise with news, or propaganda with truth.

This eBook is offered as open source for a reason. Its insights belong to everyone who still believes that a free press is not a luxury but a lifeline. Read it. Share it. Act on it.

Dimitris Giannakopoulos

Of OSCE and Media

Read the eBook it online HERE!
Read it online & downloading it as PDF HERE!
Or enjoy reading it online & downloading it in PDF format HERE!

Walk the talk 26#009 #cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

The term “talk the talk, walk the walk” is a phrase in English
that means a person should support what they say, not just with words,
but also through action. Actions speak louder than words.

For more Walk the talk, HERE!
For more Ovi Cartoons, HERE!


Trumpism and the politics of interference by Bill Campos

Latin America has never been short of political theater. Yet even by the region’s colorful standards, Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa’s recent promise to abolish tariffs for a Colombian presidential hopeful before Colombians have even cast their votes stands out as an unusually brazen performance. Colombia’s foreign ministry was therefore justified in accusing him of deliberate interference in its electoral process. The incident offers a revealing glimpse into a growing trend that extends far beyond the Andes: the emergence of a transnational right-wing political fraternity that increasingly behaves as though national borders are little more than administrative inconveniences.

Mr Noboa’s conversation with Abelardo de la Espriella was notable not simply because it occurred, but because of how it was framed. By speaking as if he were negotiating with a government-in-waiting rather than a candidate in a democratic contest, Ecuador’s president effectively signaled a preferred outcome in Colombia’s election. His pledge to remove tariffs was not presented as a hypothetical future policy dependent upon electoral results. Instead, it sounded remarkably like an advance reward for political alignment.

Such behavior would have attracted criticism regardless of ideology. Imagine the outrage if a left-wing Latin American president had promised favorable trade treatment to a socialist candidate campaigning in a neighboring country. The denunciations would have been immediate and deafening. Sovereignty, after all, remains one of the sacred principles of international relations, particularly in a region with a long history of foreign meddling.

Yet this episode also reflects something larger than a diplomatic faux pas. Across the world, politicians inspired by Donald Trump have become increasingly comfortable treating ideological allies abroad as members of the same political movement rather than representatives of separate national interests. The language of national sovereignty remains central to their rhetoric, but their behavior often reveals a different instinct. Nationalism, it turns out, can be surprisingly international when it serves partisan purposes.

The irony is difficult to miss. Movements that frequently denounce globalism have developed their own form of political globalism. They share campaign strategies, narratives, grievances and increasingly direct endorsements across borders. What links them is not geography or national interest but a common political identity built around opposition to liberal institutions, distrust of traditional elites and a preference for strongman leadership.

None of this means that Mr Noboa’s actions will determine Colombia’s electoral outcome. Voters rarely appreciate being told how to vote by foreign leaders, particularly neighboring ones. If anything, such interventions often backfire by creating resentment among those who view them as patronizing or intrusive.

Still, the significance of the incident lies elsewhere. Democracies depend not only on fair voting procedures but also on a shared understanding that elections belong to citizens, not foreign governments seeking preferred outcomes. Once political leaders begin treating neighboring elections as opportunities for ideological investment, the distinction between domestic democracy and international political campaigning starts to blur.

Mr Noboa may regard his comments as a gesture of friendship toward an ally. Colombia sees something different: an attempt to influence a sovereign political choice. The latter interpretation is considerably more persuasive. In an age of increasingly borderless political tribes, respect for democratic boundaries remains worth defending.


Environment day with an environment under fire by Shanna Shepard

World Environment Day arrives this year carrying an uncomfortable truth, the planet's environmental crisis is no longer competing merely with economic priorities. It is competing with wars, geopolitical rivalries and a political backlash against climate action itself.

For decades, environmentalists argued that climate change would eventually become the defining challenge of the century. They were right. Yet they underestimated how crowded the century would become. Today, public attention is consumed by battlefields stretching from Ukraine to the Middle East. Defence budgets are rising. Governments are rearming. Security has returned as the dominant language of politics.

The consequences for environmental policy are profound. In America, the return of Donald Trump to the White House has strengthened a political movement that remains deeply sceptical of climate policies, even when outright denial of climate science has become less fashionable. The modern MAGA movement often frames environmental regulations not as protections but as obstacles to growth, energy independence and national strength. Climate action is portrayed as an elite project imposed on ordinary citizens already struggling with inflation, housing costs and economic uncertainty.

This narrative resonates because environmental policy has frequently been presented as a moral obligation rather than a practical opportunity. Voters may support cleaner air and technological innovation, but they become less enthusiastic when confronted with higher costs or restrictions on consumption. Politicians understand this. Many who once spoke confidently about ambitious climate targets now speak more cautiously about affordability and competitiveness.

Meanwhile, war is reshaping global priorities. Europe's focus has shifted dramatically since Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Energy security, once considered complementary to climate goals, has become an urgent objective in its own right. Governments that promised rapid transitions away from fossil fuels have discovered that voters become nervous when heating bills rise or electricity supplies appear uncertain. Strategic realities have a habit of exposing political idealism.

The Middle East presents a similar dilemma. Regional conflicts dominate diplomatic agendas and consume resources that might otherwise be directed toward environmental cooperation. Every new crisis pushes climate discussions further down the list of immediate concerns. Leaders naturally prioritise preventing wars over preventing future temperature increases, even if the latter ultimately threatens far more lives.

Yet this would be a dangerous moment for environmental advocates to retreat into despair. History suggests that major transformations rarely occur during periods of calm consensus. They happen amid turbulence. The challenge is to connect environmental objectives with the concerns currently driving politics rather than treating them as separate issues.

Energy independence, for example, can support both national security and emissions reduction. Technological leadership in clean industries can strengthen economic competitiveness. Climate resilience can be framed as a matter of national preparedness rather than ideological virtue. Successful environmental politics will increasingly depend on such practical arguments.

World Environment Day therefore serves less as a celebration than as a test. The environmental movement must prove it can survive an age of conflict, populism and strategic competition. The old assumption that climate change would naturally rise to the top of the political agenda has been disproved. Attention is scarce. Crises are plentiful.

The environment remains a defining issue, but it is no longer the only one demanding urgency. In a world preoccupied with wars and political upheaval, the future of climate action may depend not on winning the argument about science, but on winning the argument about security, prosperity and national interest.


A war America does not need now by Howard Morton

The temptation to turn every geopolitical disagreement into a test of strength has become one of Washington’s most enduring habits. Yet if there is one lesson the United States should have absorbed from the turbulence of recent years, it is that military confrontation is often far easier to begin than to finish. That is why any effort by President Donald Trump to escalate tensions with Cuba would be a serious mistake. At a moment when Americans are exhausted by conflict abroad and increasingly skeptical of foreign adventures, the last thing the country needs is another dangerous standoff, especially one unfolding just 90 miles from Florida.

For decades, Cuba has occupied a unique place in the American political imagination. It is close enough to feel threatening, familiar enough to become a recurring political symbol, and controversial enough to generate applause on campaign stages. Yet governing requires something more substantial than symbolism. It requires recognizing strategic reality.

The reality is that the United States gains little from provoking Cuba and risks far more than many policymakers are willing to admit. America is emerging from a period of international instability that has tested both its military capabilities and public patience. Whether one views recent confrontations with Iran as victories, defeats, or something in between, the broader picture is clear: Americans are weary of endless tensions that consume resources without delivering lasting security. The public mood is not one of enthusiasm for another showdown. It is one of fatigue.

Opening a new front of hostility in the Caribbean would not strengthen America’s position. It would merely create another source of uncertainty at a time when the nation already faces pressing challenges at home. Inflation, border management, infrastructure, housing costs, and economic competitiveness demand attention. Voters are asking practical questions about their daily lives. Few are demanding a fresh confrontation with Havana.

There is also a strategic argument for restraint. Geography matters. Conflicts occurring thousands of miles away are difficult enough to manage. Conflicts unfolding near American shores carry an entirely different level of risk. Even limited escalation could trigger migration pressures, economic disruptions, diplomatic crises, and heightened regional instability. Such outcomes would affect not only foreign policy but domestic politics as well.

None of this requires naïveté about the Cuban government. Disagreements over human rights, political freedoms, and governance remain real and significant. But diplomacy is not an endorsement. Engagement is not surrender. Negotiation is not weakness. In fact, the strongest nations are often the ones confident enough to talk to their adversaries rather than constantly searching for opportunities to threaten them.

History offers countless examples of leaders who confused toughness with effectiveness. The two are not always the same. Effective statecraft involves reducing dangers, not multiplying them. It means creating channels of communication before crises emerge rather than scrambling for solutions after tensions spiral out of control.

President Trump frequently presents himself as a dealmaker. If that image is to mean anything, Cuba represents an obvious test. The challenge is not finding new ways to provoke an old adversary. The challenge is finding practical ways to manage a difficult relationship while avoiding unnecessary conflict.

America does not need another war. It certainly does not need one in its own neighborhood. What it needs is a foreign policy guided less by confrontation and more by calculation. In the case of Cuba, the wiser path is not escalation. It is engagement, patience, and a determination to keep a manageable problem from becoming a needless crisis.


Maples & Oranges #066 #cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

Taunting oranges in the midst of other fruity links,
constantly spreading the wares of their juicy gloom.

For more Maples & Oranges, HERE!
For more Ovi Cartoons, HERE!


Advancing Equity and Ethical Governance in Health Data and Biobanks: Global Experts Meet in Vatican City by The World Medical Association

The World Medical Association (WMA), in collaboration with the Pontifical Academy for Life and the Israeli Medical Association, convened the Third Open Expert Meeting on the Revision of the Declaration of Taipei on 1–2 June 2026 in Vatican City.

Focused on Equity, Global Challenges and Ethical Considerations, the meeting brought together international experts in medicine, bioethics, law, public health and health governance to examine pressing ethical challenges related to health databases, biobanks and the rapidly evolving digital health landscape.

Originally adopted by the WMA in 2002 and revised in 2016, the Declaration of Taipei provides ethical guidance on the use of health databases and biobanks. As advances in artificial intelligence, genomics, data-driven medicine and cross-border data sharing continue to reshape healthcare and medical research, the WMA launched a revision process to ensure the Declaration remains responsive to contemporary global realities and ethical concerns.

The Vatican City meeting focused particularly on equity in the collection, storage, access and use of health data and biospecimens. Discussions addressed the underrepresentation of vulnerable and marginalised populations in research, the fair sharing of research benefits, meaningful stakeholder engagement in ethical decision-making, and governance mechanisms that promote justice and global solidarity.

Opening the meeting, WMA President Dr. Jacqueline Kitulu underscored the importance of ensuring that innovation in medicine remains grounded in ethics and equity.

“Health data and biobank research hold enormous potential to improve healthcare and scientific knowledge worldwide. However, scientific progress must go hand in hand with ethical responsibility, meaningful inclusion and equitable sharing of outcomes to ensure that all communities benefit equally,” she stated.

Msgr. Renzo Pegoraro, President of the Pontifical Academy for Life, highlighted the importance of international dialogue on these issues.

“The growing role of health data and digital technologies in medicine raises important ethical questions that require global reflection and cooperation. This meeting represented an important opportunity to promote a more equitable approach to biomedical research and healthcare,” he noted.

The Vatican City meeting marked the third open expert consultation in the ongoing revision process, following the First Open Expert Meeting held in Taipei, Taiwan (December 2025) and the Second Open Expert Meeting held in São Paulo, Brazil (March 2026).

The collaboration of physicians from around the world shows that, even in times marked by conflict, humanity can unite in the service of health and the wellbeing of patients. We hope this spirit of cooperation contributes to greater understanding and peace.


The World Medical Association (WMA) is an international organization representing physicians. It was founded on 17 September 1947, when physicians from 27 different countries met at the First General Assembly of the WMA in Paris. The organization was created to ensure the independence of physicians, and to work for the highest possible standards of ethical behaviour and care by physicians, at all times.


The Manufactured Muslim “Threat” – and the Deadly Consequences By Habib Siddiqui

When three Muslim worshippers were murdered at the Islamic Center of San Diego this spring, many Americans reacted with shock. But for those who have been tracking the escalation of anti-Muslim rhetoric in our politics, the tragedy was not shocking at all. It was the predictable outcome of a deliberate, coordinated campaign to portray Muslims as an existential danger to the United States.

According to the Center for the Study of Organized Hate (CSOH), Republican elected officials increased their anti-Muslim posts by 1,450% between February 2025 and March 2026. That is not a random spike. It is a political strategy: one that has created a climate in which violence becomes thinkable, even inevitable.

The San Diego attack, carried out by two teenagers who were radicalized online, is the human cost of that strategy. But to understand how we arrived at this moment, we must look beyond the shooters and examine the political ecosystem that taught them whom to hate.

A Party Infrastructure Built on Manufacturing a Threat

The CSOH report says that in more than 1,100 posts on their official social media accounts, Republican members of Congress and governors have promoted conspiracy theories about Muslim Americans, called for the deportation and denaturalization of Muslims, promoted negative portrayals of Islam, described U.S. cities with significant Muslim populations as “conquered” or “invaded”, weaponized domestic terror attacks to vilify Islam and Muslims even when no Muslim had anything to do with them, used dehumanizing language, and invoked claims of a supposed Muslim takeover of the United Kingdom and Europe to whip up anti-Muslim hysteria and fearmongering at home. 

The “Sharia” conspiracy appeared in 48 percent of posts, serving as the campaign’s master frame. This conspiracy theory can be traced to a clear ignition point. On February 24, 2025, Texas Governor Greg Abbott reposted an X message from anti-Muslim provocateur Amy Mek, who had previously attacked a proposed Muslim-led housing development near Dallas known as EPIC City. Mek labeled the project a “Sharia city” and blasted out alarmist warnings like “Alert Texas,” “Warning Texas,” and “Sharia City is Being Built in Texas – And YOU Are Helping Fund It!” Her posts reached millions. When Abbott amplified her message, declaring that “Sharia law” would never be allowed in Texas, his repost alone drew 3.6 million views and more than 57,000 likes, instantly mainstreaming a fringe conspiracy theory. On November 18, 2025, Abbott went even further, designating the Muslim Brotherhood and the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) as foreign terrorist organizations and transnational criminal organizations.This move – directed at an American civil‑rights group whose core mission is to defend the constitutional rights of Muslim communities – laid bare the depth of his Islamophobia

Nearly a third of all posts (322 posts) frame Muslims through the lens of terrorism, jihad, and national security. These posts weaponize real incidents of violence, for example, the Boulder, Colorado attack and the Austin, Texas shooting, exploiting them to characterize Muslims and Islam more broadly as violent threats. 

More problematically, 231 posts embedded anti-Muslim rhetoric within legislative action, which demonstrates that the hate campaign is not confined to inflammatory social media rhetoric, but is being systematically woven into the institutional machinery of governance. Posts in this category serve as a bridge between online rhetoric and real-world policy, giving conspiracy theories a veneer of legitimacy that social media posts alone cannot provide.

One hundred and sixteen posts link anti-Muslim rhetoric to immigration policy, framing Muslim immigration as an invasion or infiltration that poses a direct threat to the American way of life. The language includes terms such as “illegal aliens,” “mass migration,” “conquer,” and “invaders.” 

Lastly, 64 posts contain explicit demands for the denaturalization, deportation, or expulsion of Muslims.

The CSOH Report identifies 46 Republican officialswho published 1,111 postsbetween February 2025 and March 2026, repeatedly pushing bigotry and anti-Muslim narratives across social media, legislative proposals, and public appearances. Texas and Florida-based Republican officials produced 71 percent of all such posts. Five members of Congress produced 73 percent of all posts. Rep. Randy Fine alone accounted for 325 posts(29 percent).

  • Rep. Randy Fine (R-FL), who wrote on May 21, 2025, after two Israeli embassy staffers were killed in Washington, D.C., that  “Muslim terror has come to our Nation’s Capital tonight,“ and declared that “these demons must be put down by any means necessary,” although the suspect, Elias Rodriguez (who has since been charged for the killings), is not Muslim and has no Muslim background. During the New York mayoral contest, he called Zohran Mamdani – “proud Muslim terrorist” who “would do to New York City what Khomeini and Khamenei did to Tehran. We cannot let radical Muslims turn America into a Shiite caliphate.”On October 3, 2025,Rep. Fine posted that “fear of Islam is rational” and “Islamophobia is a lie”.
  • Rep. Keith Self (TX), who is the most prolific promoter of the Sharia scare, constituting 176 of his 191 posts (or 92 percent) to Sharia.
  • Rep. Chip Roy (TX), who has repeatedly referenced defending “Western civilization” from Islam.
  • Sen. Tommy Tuberville (AL), who posted on his social media account: “Radical Islam has DESTROYED Europe. If we don’t call out this extreme ideology, America will be next.”
  • Rep. Andy Ogles (TN), who wrote on X “New York City has been occupied by muslim invaders. DEPORTATIONS NOW”, and that Muslims “don’t belong in American society”.

These are not fringe voices. They are sitting members of Congress, committee members, and influential figures shaping the Republican Party’s messaging.

But the ecosystem extends far beyond the House. It includes senators, media personalities, and Trump-era officials whose rhetoric reaches millions.

Senator Ted Cruzof Texas isan ardent Christian Zionist who continues to play a significant role in legitimizing anti-Muslim suspicion at the national level. During his 2016 presidential campaign, he called for patrolling Muslim neighborhoods, reminiscent of surveillance tactics used against Japanese Americans during World War II. He has also amplified conspiracy theories about “Islamist infiltration” of the U.S. government and aligned himself with anti-Muslim activists whose organizations have been designated hate groups.

When a senator with his national platform suggests that Muslim communities require special policing, it sends a powerful signal: that Muslims are a suspect class. When a senator like Tommy Tuberville repeatedly warns of imagined “Islamic threats,” he reinforces the same message – turning baseless fear into a political weapon.

And the same message is echoed even more forcefully by those in higher positions of authority.

House Speaker Mike Johnson has repeatedly used religiously charged language to frame geopolitical conflicts as battles against “Islamic evil.” As reported by The New York Times (Oct. 26, 2023), Johnson described the conflict with Hamas as a struggle against “Islamic evil,” casting political violence in explicitly theological terms. During the Iran conflict, he went further, saying that Iran views the United States as the “Great Satan” because of its “misguided religion,” a formulation documented by The Washington Post (Feb. 1, 2024) that blurs the line between criticizing a regime and demonizing a faith.

As Speaker, Johnson gives institutional weight to anti-Muslim narratives. His rhetoric signals to millions of Americans that Islam itself – not extremist groups, but the religion – is a threat.

And the pattern becomes even more troubling inside the executive branch.

Pete Hegseth’s rise from Fox News firebrand to Secretary of War has only magnified the reach of his long‑standing anti‑Muslim rhetoric. On Fox & Friends, he repeatedly claimed that “Islam hates us” and warned that “Sharia values” were infiltrating America — language he used in multiple segments between 2015 and 2019 (Fox News, Jan. 2015; Fox & Friends, June 2017). He also argued that Muslim immigration posed a national security threat, insisting that “we have a Muslim problem in this world” (Fox News, Nov. 2015). Those talking points once served as red meat for a cable audience; now they carry the weight of federal authority.

Hegseth’s appointment has effectively moved a set of fringe ideological claims into the center of U.S. military messaging. His public statements continue to blur the line between combating extremist groups and casting suspicion on Muslim communities as a whole – a framing that echoes the same “civilizational conflict” narrative he championed on air. And because he was already a close Trump ally and informal advisor, his transition into a Cabinet-level role has institutionalized a worldview that treats Islam itself as a strategic danger.

The result is a dangerous feedback loop: rhetoric that once inflamed viewers now shapes policy discussions, military posture, and the national security narrative. In Hegseth’s hands, anti-Muslim bigotry is no longer just a media product – it is a governing philosophy.

Several Trump administration officials continue to help transform anti-Muslim suspicion into policy. Their rhetoric became law.

Donald Trump: The Megaphone That Made Hate Mainstream

No figure has done more to normalize anti-Muslim hostility in American politics than Donald Trump, and his return to the White House has only amplified that pattern. His 2015 call for a “total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States” marked a turning point in modern political discourse, the first time in generations that a major presidential candidate openly advocated discrimination against an entire religious group. As president, he enacted the Muslim Ban, separating families, stranding students, and signaling to millions of American Muslims that their faith made them suspect.

Trump’s rhetoric has not softened with time. In recent months, he has suggested that “something is wrong” with the “DNA” of people from Muslim‑majority countries – remarks reported by The Guardian and The Washington Post in late 2025 and condemned by civil‑rights groups as echoing the discredited pseudoscience of eugenics. Statements like these do not merely stigmatize a community; they legitimize the idea that Muslims are biologically suspect or inherently dangerous, pushing bigotry into the realm of racial determinism.

What makes this pattern even more striking is its selective nature. While Trump continues to cast Muslims as a threat in his political messaging, he has shown no hesitation in cultivating lucrative relationships with wealthy Gulf monarchies and business elites. His political hostility toward Muslims has never interfered with his willingness to accept investments, licensing deals, or lavish patronage from Arab sheikhs and authoritarian kingdoms. The contradiction is glaring: Muslims are framed as a danger when it serves his political narrative, yet welcomed as partners when they can enrich his personal brand.

Trump’s words carry weight: not only because he is president again, but because his rhetoric has long served as a cue for others. When the nation’s most powerful political figure repeatedly paints Muslims as outsiders, threats, or biologically flawed, it does not remain abstract. It shapes public perception. It emboldens extremists. And it contributes to the climate in which violence, like the San Diego mosque attack, becomes thinkable.

How Rhetoric Radicalizes

The San Diego shooters were teenagers, but the ideas that fueled their hatred were not teenage inventions. Investigators found a manifesto filled with white supremacist ideology, Nazi symbols, and explicit calls for the “extermination” of Muslims.

Where do young Americans learn to think this way?

They learn it from online spaces where political rhetoric is amplified and distorted. They learn it from public officials who portray Muslims as invaders, terrorists, or enemies of the state. They learn it from a political culture that treats Islam as a civilizational threat.

When Cruz, Tuberville, Fine, Ogles, Abbott, Johnson, Hegseth, and Trump portray Muslims as a threat, they are not merely expressing opinions. They are providing ideological fuel.

And some people – especially young, angry, isolated people –act on that fuel.

The San Diego Attack: A Tragedy Foretold

On the day of the attack, the two Christian teenagers arrived at the Islamic Center of San Diego armed with multiple firearms. They opened fire during midday prayer, killing three men:Amin Abdullah, a father of eight; Mansour Kaziha, a community volunteer; and Nader Awad, a local business owner.

Abdullah died while delaying the attackers long enough to save the lives of 140 children studying inside the mosque.But heroism should never be required to protect children at prayer.

The Five Criteria of Dangerous Speech

The pattern documented in the CSOH report aligns closely with what scholars call dangerous speech – speech that increases the likelihood of violence. According to the Dangerous Speech Project, five factors determine when rhetoric becomes truly perilous. First is the speaker: when the rhetoric comes from presidents, governors, cabinet secretaries, or nationally known media figures, its impact is exponentially greater. Second is the audience: Republican officials have been directing their messages toward followers already primed by years of fearmongering about Muslims, making them more susceptible to mobilization. Third is the message itself: portraying Muslims as invaders, demons, biologically suspect, or part of a “Sharia takeover” is precisely the kind of dehumanizing, threat-inflating language that historically precedes violence. Fourth is the social and historical context: the United States is in a period of intense polarization, demographic anxiety, and geopolitical tension—conditions that make audiences more receptive to calls for hostility. Finally, there is the means of dissemination: these messages are blasted across X, Fox News, congressional press conferences, and now even Cabinet-level platforms, reaching millions instantly. When all five criteria converge –as they do in today’s anti-Muslim campaign – the risk of real-world violence is not hypothetical. It is predictable.

And the numbers show exactly what this kind of rhetoric produces.

CAIR documented8,683 anti-Muslim civil rights complaints in 2025, the highest number in its 30-year history. In 2025 alone, there were 33 attacks on mosques.

This is not a coincidence. It is a climate.

And that climate is being shaped by political leaders who have discovered that fear of Muslims is a powerful mobilizing tool.

The CSOH report makes one thing clear: anti-Muslim hatred in America today is not organic. It is manufactured. It is coordinated. And it is politically useful.

But it is also deadly.

The San Diego massacre is not an isolated incident. It is a warning.

We have seen where this road leads. In India, the BJP’s dangerous‑speech ecosystem has already fueled lynchings of Muslims – a chilling example of what happens when political rhetoric turns entire communities into targets.

A Call for Moral Leadership

No house of worship in America should require armed security. No parent should fear sending their child to a religious school. No community should have to bury its members because teenagers absorbed a worldview that portrayed their neighbors as enemies.

The question now is whether our leaders will rise to the momentor whether they will continue to fan the flames.

For the sake of every community that gathers in prayer, for every child who deserves to grow up without fear, and for the future of a democracy that claims to value pluralism, the answer must be loud and clear.


Dr. Siddiqui is a peace and human rights activist. His forthcoming book – ‘Modi-fied’ India: the Transformation of a Nation – is scheduled for publication by Peter Lang in 2026. This essay draws on the author’s recent interview with Asia One News, Perspectiva.


Pink flamingos and Trumpian corruption in Albania by Timothy Davies

The controversy surrounding a proposed €1.4 billion luxury resort on Albania’s southern coast is about far more than hotels, marinas and inv...