A Muslim Judge Under Siege: What the Khan Case Says About Minority Rights in Today’s India by Habib Siddiqui

When Additional District and Sessions Judge Tabassum Khan delivered her verdict on 12 June, sentencing fourteen men to life imprisonment for the brutal mob lynching of Nazir Ahmad in Madhya Pradesh, India she was performing the most fundamental duty of a judge: upholding the law without fear or favor. Yet within hours, she became the target of a torrent of online abuse, communal slurs, rape threats, and death threats — a coordinated campaign that has shaken India’s legal community and raised urgent questions about the safety of judicial officers and the future of minority rights in the country.

The case itself was stark. In 2022, Nazir Ahmad, a 50-year-old Muslim cattle transporter, was intercepted at night by a group of self-styled gau rakshaks — cow protectors — armed with sticks and iron rods. They dragged Ahmad and his companions from their vehicle and beat them mercilessly on suspicion of smuggling cows. Ahmad later died of his injuries; his companions survived to testify. Judge Khan called it what it was: a clear case of mob lynching.

But the verdict triggered an eruption of rage from cow‑protection groups and Hindutva organizations. Family members of the convicted men protested outside the courtroom, attempting to block the police convoy. Soon after, videos began circulating online showing right-wing influencers hurling communal slurs at the judge, accusing her of bias because she is Muslim, and issuing explicit threats of rape and murder. In one widely shared video, a man warned of “bloodshed across the country” unless the convicted men were freed within ten days. The speakers’ faces and social-media handles were visible; the threats remained online for days, attracting thousands of likes and shares.

The attacks were not critiques of judicial reasoning. They were attacks on identity. As former Supreme Court judge Markandey Katju wrote, the campaign sought to “delegitimize Judge Khan’s authority as a judicial officer by reducing her identity to her religion.” Khan herself reportedly told Katju that the abuse had traumatized her and made her feel “like she had committed a crime by delivering her verdict.”

India’s leading legal bodies quickly rallied behind her. The Supreme Court Advocates‑on‑Record Association (SCAORA) and the Supreme Court Bar Association (SCBA) condemned the threats and demanded action. SCBA president Vikas Singh warned that “if we allow this to happen, no judge will be able to dispense justice.” The Madhya Pradesh High Court ordered continued police protection for Khan and asked senior officials to explain what steps had been taken to identify those behind the threats.

Yet the incident has exposed far more than the vulnerability of one judge. It has illuminated a deeper crisis in India’s democratic institutions — one that human-rights groups, scholars, and civil‑society organizations have been warning about for years.

A Pattern of Intimidation and Impunity

The threats against Judge Khan are not an isolated eruption of anger. They fit into a broader pattern in which cow vigilantism, majoritarian politics, and impunity have combined to create an environment where minorities — especially Muslims — live under constant threat.

Over the past decade, cow-related violence has repeatedly claimed lives. Reuters documented 63 cow‑vigilante attacks between 2010 and 2017, killing 28 people — 24 of them Muslims. Human Rights Watch recorded at least 44 people killed between 2015 and 2018, most of them Muslims. ACLED (Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project)data shows more than 50 fatalities between 2016 and 2020. Yet convictions have been rare. Only a handful of cases — including the Ramgarh lynching of Alimuddin Ansari, the Alwar killing of Rakbar (Akbar) Khan, and now the Seoni Malwa case involving Nazir Ahmad — have resulted in punishment.

In some instances, convicted killers have been publicly celebrated. In 2018, Union Minister Jayant Sinha garlanded eight men convicted of lynching Alimuddin Ansari after they were released on bail. In 2022, all eleven convicts in the Bilkis Bano gang-rape case were greeted with garlands at a Vishwa Hindu Parishad office. Such acts send a message far louder than any speech: that vigilante violence is not only tolerated but valorized.

This political signaling has consequences. As I lately noted in my Asia One News TV interview, “cow vigilante groups feel empowered because the political and social climate has repeatedly signaled that their actions will be tolerated — and sometimes even celebrated.” When leaders frame cow protection as a sacred duty, vigilante groups interpret this as moral license. When police hesitate to act decisively, impunity becomes expectation. And when extremist networks glorify violence online, mobs feel entitled to challenge the authority of courts themselves.

The Normalization of Anti‑Muslim Hostility

Human‑rights groups have expressed growing concern about the safety of religious minorities, particularly Muslims. The threats against Judge Khan illustrate how deeply anti‑Muslim hostility has been normalized in public discourse.

For more than a decade, since Prime Minister Narendra Modi came to power, India has witnessed a steady rise in hate speech, mob attacks, discriminatory policing, and online radicalization targeting Muslims. What has made this trend more dangerous is the consistent silence from the highest levels of leadership. The Prime Minister has not issued a single unequivocal condemnation of cow‑related lynchings. Ministers have garlanded convicts. Extremist groups have held protests defending killers as “protectors of cows.”

This silence is not neutral. It is a signal. As I said during the interview, “When the Prime Minister refuses to condemn crimes committed by fellow Hindus against Muslims, that silence becomes a political message. It tells vigilante groups that their actions are tolerated. It tells police that enforcement is optional. And it tells minorities that their safety is negotiable.”

Judge Khan’s case shows how this normalization now threatens the rule of law itself. Instead of debating her legal reasoning, critics attacked her identity as a Muslim woman. That is a direct assault on judicial independence. When a judge’s religion becomes grounds for intimidation, minority judges become vulnerable, verdicts become politicized, and courts become targets of majoritarian pressure.

Social Media as a Weapon

Social media played a central role in amplifying threats against Judge Khan. Videos containing rape threats, death threats, and calls for nationwide violence circulated widely, attracting thousands of likes and shares. Influencers with large followings framed the convicted killers as heroes and the judge as an enemy of Hindu identity.

Authorities have arrested two individuals and say the cyber cell is monitoring inflammatory content. But enforcement remains inconsistent. As I noted in the interview, “Social media has become one of the most dangerous accelerators of hate in India today. Online abuse is not spontaneous anger — it is a digital ecosystem primed for incitement.”

Without stronger regulation, extremist networks will continue to use digital platforms to intimidate judges, mobilize mobs, and undermine public trust in institutions.

A Threat to Judicial Independence

The threats against Judge Khan have sparked a broader debate about judicial independence in polarized environments. Supreme Court advocate Sanjay Hegde argued that the state must do more to protect judges, citing the recent case of former Bombay High Court judge Gautam Patel, who received protection only after ten months of threats and a public‑interest litigation.

The principle, Hegde wrote, “cannot bend to rank. It cannot bend to religion. It cannot bend to the political weather around a particular verdict.”

In my interview, I emphasized that “judicial independence cannot survive in an environment where mobs feel entitled to threaten judges, and where political leadership refuses to defend them.” If judges fear for their lives, they cannot uphold constitutional rights. If courts are pressured by extremist groups, justice becomes negotiable.

The threats against Judge Khan are therefore not just an attack on one judge. They are a warning about the direction of India’s democracy.

What Must Change

Looking ahead, India needs a structural reset to protect judicial independence and minority rights.First, political leadership must speak clearly and unequivocally. Silence from the top has emboldened extremist groups. Condemnation of violence must come from the highest offices.Second, judges handling communal or mob‑violence cases must receive automatic security. Protection cannot depend on media attention.Third, police reform is essential. Law enforcement must be insulated from political pressure and held accountable for failing to act against vigilante groups.Fourth, social‑media platforms must be compelled to remove threats swiftly and cooperate with investigations.Finally, India must reaffirm its commitment to constitutional equality. Minority rights must be protected not as a concession but as a foundational principle.

A Moment of Reckoning

The threats against Judge Tabassum Khan reveal a nation at a crossroads. Will India allow mob power — emboldened by political silence — to overshadow constitutional power? Or will it defend the institutions that safeguard democracy?

As I said in closing during my interview: “Threats against a judge are not just threats against an individual — they are threats against the rule of law itself. And when the judge is targeted because of her identity, it becomes a warning to an entire community.”

India cannot afford to ignore that warning.The world is watching. And India must decide fast. The stakes could not be higher.


Dr. Siddiqui is the author of several books. His latest work – ‘Modi-fied’ India: The Transformation of a Nation – was published by Peter Lang in 2026.


The cost of political mortality by Howard Morton

Politics often pretends to be immortal. Parties speak as though their leaders will always be there, their electoral coalitions will endure forever, and today's certainties will somehow become tomorrow's traditions. Reality has a cruel habit of intervening. The reported death of Republican Senator Lindsey Graham at the age of 71, combined with the continuing hospitalisation of Senator Mitch McConnell and the limited public information surrounding his condition, would leave the Republican Party confronting something it has long postponed,  the unavoidable consequences of generational transition.

For years, Graham and McConnell represented more than two senators. They were institutions. McConnell mastered the mechanics of legislative warfare with extraordinary discipline, while Graham evolved from an outspoken conservative into one of Donald Trump's most loyal political allies. Whether admired or criticised, both became fixtures of modern Republican politics.

The disappearance of such figures from active political life would inevitably create a vacuum that cannot simply be filled by another ambitious senator. Experience, relationships, institutional memory and political instinct cannot be inherited overnight. Every political generation believes it has produced irreplaceable figures, yet every transition exposes just how difficult replacement actually is.

The timing could hardly be more awkward. Midterm elections reward organisation as much as ideology. Campaigns require donors, strategists, coalition builders and veteran politicians capable of calming internal disputes before they explode into public spectacles. Without established figures capable of balancing competing factions, internal disagreements become louder, more personal and considerably more damaging.

That challenge is particularly acute for today's Republican Party. Donald Trump remains its dominant political force, but dominance is not the same as unity. The party contains populists, traditional conservatives, libertarians, religious conservatives, business Republicans and a younger generation eager to redefine what conservatism should mean after Trump eventually leaves the political stage. Strong personalities can hold these competing interests together; their absence often exposes fractures that had merely been hidden beneath the surface.

Leadership is also about reassurance. Voters may enjoy political disruption during campaigns, but they generally prefer stability when casting their ballots. Experienced senators frequently serve as symbols of continuity, especially during periods of national uncertainty. Losing respected veterans, regardless of political affiliation, creates an impression of instability that opponents are quick to exploit.

Democrats would undoubtedly recognise the opportunity. Elections are rarely won solely through one's own strengths; they are often won by capitalising on an opponent's uncertainty. A Republican Party forced simultaneously to mourn a prominent senator, manage questions surrounding another veteran's health and reorganise its leadership structure could find itself spending valuable political energy looking inward instead of presenting a confident vision to voters.

Yet there is another lesson here that extends beyond partisan politics. America's political establishment has become increasingly dependent on ageing figures whose influence stretches across decades. The country repeatedly finds itself discussing succession only after illness, retirement or death forces the conversation. That is not strategic planning; it is institutional procrastination.

Healthy democracies cultivate successors before they desperately need them. They encourage renewal without waiting for biological inevitability to dictate political change. Parties that fail to prepare for leadership transitions often discover that electoral success depends not merely on ideas but on people capable of carrying them forward with credibility.

Political movements survive personalities only when they invest in the next generation before the previous one disappears. Otherwise, every farewell risks becoming more than a personal loss. It becomes the beginning of a political reckoning.


The beige trap by Paula Bartlett

Walk into enough modern rental apartments and you begin to wonder whether someone accidentally copied and pasted the same room across an entire generation. Grey laminate floors. White walls. A crushed velvet sofa in a shade somewhere between ash and oatmeal. A black metal coffee table. A fake plant standing heroically in the corner, trying to convince everyone that life still exists here.

This is the aesthetic of landlord-chic, and it has become one of the defining visual languages of young adulthood. Of course, nobody dreams of living in a place that looks like an unlabeled furniture showroom. Most people do not wake up thinking, "I want my living room to resemble the waiting area of a budget dental clinic." Yet millions end up there anyway because rental housing has quietly trained us to expect as little personality as possible.

The modern apartment is no longer designed to be loved. It is designed to survive tenants. Every scratch is a deposit deduction waiting to happen. Every painted wall is forbidden. Every shelf drilled into plaster becomes a negotiation. The safest choice becomes doing absolutely nothing, leaving the apartment exactly as it was handed over.

The result is a generation living in spaces that feel permanently unfinished. Landlords often advertise these flats as "modern," "minimal," or "fresh." Translation, everything is grey because grey hides wear, white reflects light, and cheap laminate costs less than real wood. The colours are chosen for accounting purposes, not emotional ones.

This is efficiency disguised as style. Developers have embraced the formula because it photographs well online. Property listings need bright rooms, neutral colours and surfaces that offend nobody. Individuality is considered a risk. Character doesn't scale nearly as well as uniformity.

Young renters inherit this blank canvas, except it isn't really a canvas. It is a museum exhibit where touching the walls could cost hundreds of euros. Eventually something strange happens. Instead of resisting the aesthetic, people begin to copy it. Social media fills with nearly identical apartments where everything is beige, cream, white or grey. Even furniture bought independently somehow blends into the same monochrome landscape.

Minimalism slowly transforms into emotional neutrality. There is a difference between calm and lifeless, yet the two are increasingly confused. Homes used to tell stories. You could tell who lived somewhere by the books stacked unevenly, the mismatched chairs collected over years, colourful rugs from holidays, inherited cabinets that didn't match anything else, or walls covered with photographs instead of acoustic panels.

Today's rental culture discourages accumulation because permanence itself has become uncertain. Why buy the perfect bookshelf if you might move next year? Why paint a room sage green if the landlord insists on returning it to brilliant white? Why invest emotionally in somewhere that never truly belongs to you?

Temporary housing creates temporary relationships with our surroundings. The saddest part isn't the grey flooring or the velvet sofa itself. Those are just objects. The real loss is the quiet disappearance of self-expression inside the place where we spend most of our lives.

Home should be where personality expands, not where it is packed away into storage boxes because the tenancy agreement says so.

Perhaps this explains why so many cafés now feel warmer than apartments. Coffee shops are filled with colour, plants, artwork and worn furniture chosen with affection rather than durability spreadsheets. Ironically, businesses often create more welcoming environments than the homes people return to every evening.

The tragedy of landlord-chic is not that it is ugly. It is that it encourages emotional detachment. It tells tenants not to settle in too deeply because someone else owned the walls before them and someone else will occupy them after.

A generation deserves more than housing that feels permanently on standby. People need homes that invite memories instead of merely avoiding damage. Until renting allows residents to shape their surroundings without fear, countless apartments will remain immaculate, practical and painfully forgettable. The walls may stay spotless, but something essential is always missing.


AntySaurus Prick #133 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

Dino is a vegetarian virgin dinosaur and his best friend is Anty,
a carnivorous nymphomaniac ant.
They call themselves the AntySaurus Prick and they are still here
waiting for the comet to come!

For more AntySaurus Prick, HERE!
For more Ovi Cartoons, HERE!


Who Will Code the Chokepoint of Asia Express? By Lily Ong

Even after three centuries, the vision of cutting a canal through the heart of Thailand has refused to fade. These days, however, it has evolved into a 30-billion-dollar multimodal transit corridor 90 km long. Linking deep-sea ports at Ranon on the Andaman Sea with Chumphon on the Gulf of Thailand, the Kra Land Bridge (KLB) envisions moving cargo overland via automated railways and highways to offer a structural alternative to the crowded Strait of Malacca.

One ought not to think of the KLB as a simple shortcut because the new kid will bring to bear not only an impact on regional logistics and wealth distribution but also an alteration of the geopolitical leverage points traditionally held by the two superpowers—the US and China.

As of now, the Strait of Malacca is still the primary maritime highway connecting Europe, the Middle East, and Africa to East Asia. However, as traffic approaches its physical capacity, risks related to shipping delays, collisions, and regional piracy have risen. Compressing journeys by 1200 nautical miles and four days, the KLB could serve as a pressure release valve. JIT (just-in-time) supply chains, in particular, would benefit from optimized inventory management.

However, the project is not without challenges. The viability of the KLB would depend on its ability to bring about friction-free automated port operations that would prevent double-handling fees and time from outstripping the advertised value of money and time saved.

Beyond dollars and days, the KLB will alter the economic equilibrium among Southeast Asian nations. Singapore and southern Malaysia have long built their economies around their strategic positions at the mouth of the Strait of Malacca. With the KLB, trade may shiftfrom traditional maritime states to continental Indochinaanddisrupt this monopoly by offering a northern alternative. Even ten percent of high-value container traffic would disrupt regional maritime revenues more broadly. It is no surprise then that Singapore has already started counterstrategies before the first brick is laid, including building a new hyper automated mega port to render the futureKLB commercially uncompetitive. 

However, Thailand could still do multiple dips in the infrastructure by going beyond a passive transit corridor and transform its southern provinces into an active industrial zone. Bypairing Ranong and Chumphon ports with special economic zones, the area stands to attract heavy industries, electronics manufacturing, and petrochemical processing. Thailand could also take a page from Singapore’s survival playbook in the big players’ game by embedding itself deeper in manufacturing and value chains, assembling or refining raw materials imported from western markets within the isthmus to increase its relevance.

And how would the big players deal? For China, its economic planning has long been constrained by what its leadership terms the Malacca Dilemma, since the country relies on the Strait of Malacca for a weighty 80 percent of its energy imports. This heavy reliance creates a single point of failure where any disruption or external blockage would seriously handicap its industrial legs.

Enter the KLB as a structural alternative by routing energy and commercial goods directly into the Gulf of Thailand. In addition, Beijing will gain access to a trade path that steers clear of a crowded maritime bottleneck, not to mention insulate its supply lines from external economic or military pressure, thereby altering the traditional levers of strategic deterrence in the Indo-Pacific.

For the United States, the ability to secure or restrict access to the Strait of Malacca has long been a foundational component of Western maritime strategy in Asia. If a portion of global trade is shifted to an overland route by the KLB, America’s strategic leverage with controlling the Strait of Malacca will no doubt be reduced.

This is because the land bridge would operate entirely within the domestic jurisdiction of Thailand. While a long-standing US treaty ally, Thailand is, after all, a sovereign nation whose transit zone is governed by terrestrial law rather than international maritime transit rights. If the US has not thought through how they must adjust their interdiction strategy for times of conflict, now would be a good time to start, even if a land bridge is incapable of moving aircraft carriers or destroyers overland.

Thailand on its own would not be able to bring the KLB to fruition. On the part of China, it can leverage SOEs and development banks to offer Thailand comprehensive financing and construction packages. By offering to integrate the KLB into the broader BRI, China will be able to connect the corridor with existing rail projects in all of Laos and Malaysia, thus creating a unified trade network.

When the commercial auction and bidding selections shift into the pipeline, China could launch aggressive bids for the management rights of the ports of Ranong and Chumphon to secure permanent logistics footholds at the interface of the Indian and Pacific Oceans. Further, Chinese industrial consortiums could partner with local Thai groups to not only establish manufacturing works within the new economic zones but also turn the isthmus into a processing zone for re-exporting goods into regional markets.

Meanwhile, the United States could gather its entrepreneurial minds from equity firms, institutional investors, and commercial logistics entities and woo Thailand with high-end port automation software, cyber-secure tracking systems, and green energy logistics solutions. In addition, the United States might consider deepening its economic and security partnerships with Singapore and India to ensure that a northern bypass would not destabilize the security equilibrium or disrupt trade lanes in the wider Bay of Bengal and the Andaman Sea.

Then there are third-party endeavors, like the Global Maritime Governance Forum whose GAFG Connectivity Doctrine seeks to redefine global infrastructure as an interdependent governance ecosystem where rules would replace piecemeal transit routes to bring about an alignment of physical, regulatory and institutional systems.

A viable alternative to the Strait of Malacca would no doubt diversify global supply chains, protect East Asian economies from chokepoint vulnerabilities, and spur regional growth. Yet, the future of this vital trade corridor hinges on how well the United States can leverage its technological and commercial advantages against Chinese economic statecraft to secure the broader Indo-Pacific —while challenging both actors to treat regulatory, physical, and transport layers as a single, unified governance ecosystem rather than isolated infrastructure projects.


Lily Ong Born in Singapore but bred and buttered in the US, she’s a linguistic assassin with zero chill. Performing public autopsies on the skulduggerous, she is the nightmare beneath their pillow. A rebel with a cause, she brings her pen and prayers to sword fights, tearing masks off slogans and drowning whistles of political piccolos. www.geopolitics360.net 


The border’s human cost by Virginia Robertson

Borders are not merely lines drawn on maps. They are places where human beings collide with governments, laws, fears and ambitions. The latest confrontation between Mexico and the United States over the deaths of Mexican citizens in US immigration custody exposes the uncomfortable reality behind Trump’s immigration agenda, the harder the system becomes, the heavier the moral and political cost becomes.

The Mexican government’s decision to pursue criminal complaints in the United States over the deaths of more than a dozen Mexican citizens in the custody of Immigration and Customs Enforcement creates a new and potentially damaging challenge for the Trump administration. For years, immigration has been treated primarily as a security issue, a campaign slogan and a political weapon. But every enforcement action involves real people and every death inside state custody raises questions that cannot simply be dismissed as bureaucratic accidents.

The Trump administration has always argued that strict enforcement is necessary to defend American sovereignty. That argument appeals to millions of voters who believe previous governments lost control of the border. Yet sovereignty does not remove responsibility. A government can enforce its laws while still being held accountable for how those laws are carried out.

The deaths of Mexican citizens in US custody place a spotlight on a system that often operates far away from public attention. Immigration detention centres are not prisons in the traditional sense, but for many detainees they represent a world of uncertainty, isolation and fear. When people die while under government supervision, the central question is not only what happened to them, but whether the system itself created conditions where tragedy became more likely.

Mexico’s response is also politically significant. For decades, Mexican governments have often been careful when dealing with Washington, balancing economic dependence with national pride. But the current climate has changed. A more confrontational approach allows Mexico’s leaders to demonstrate that their citizens abroad are not abandoned and that the relationship between the two countries is not simply one where Washington dictates terms.

For Trump, this is an uncomfortable battlefield. Immigration politics work well when the debate remains about statistics, illegal crossings and national security. They become far more complicated when the conversation shifts to individual lives, grieving families and questions of government responsibility. Numbers can be turned into slogans; human stories are much harder to control.

The irony is that an administration determined to project strength may find itself facing accusations of weakness in a different form: a failure to protect people under its own authority. The image of a powerful state struggling to explain deaths in its custody creates a contradiction at the heart of the “law and order” message.

This does not mean governments should abandon immigration enforcement. Every country has the right to manage its borders and enforce its laws. But effective enforcement cannot depend on ignoring accountability. A system that demands respect for the law must also demonstrate respect for human dignity.

The border has always been one of America’s biggest political stages. For Trump, it was supposed to be a symbol of control and victory. Instead, the deaths of Mexican citizens in US custody risk transforming it into a symbol of something far more complicated: the human consequences of political promises.

Walls can be built. Policies can be changed. But once lives are lost, no slogan can rebuild them.


Stretch less and feel more by Dai Eun Greer

For decades, flexibility has been treated like a competition. Touch your toes. Hold a hamstring stretch for thirty seconds. Push a little farther. Ignore the discomfort because "no pain, no gain." It has been a familiar script repeated in gyms, sports clubs, and fitness classes around the world. Yet a different philosophy is quietly gaining momentum, and it deserves attention. Somatic stretching is challenging the old assumption that better movement comes from forcing muscles to become longer. Instead, it suggests that the body moves best when the brain feels safe enough to let it.

That is a remarkable shift in thinking. Traditional stretching often encourages people to chase a destination. The goal is measurable. Can you do the splits? Can you reach the floor? Can your shoulders rotate farther than they did last month? There is nothing inherently wrong with improving flexibility, but the obsession with range of motion has often overshadowed a much more important question. How does your body actually feel while moving?

Somatic stretching flips that conversation upside down. Rather than treating the body like a stubborn machine that needs to be pushed into submission, somatic movement encourages curiosity instead of force. It asks people to slow down, notice tension, breathe naturally, and make small, gentle movements guided by sensation rather than external expectations. There is no stopwatch demanding a thirty-second hold. There is no instructor insisting everyone reach the same position. Instead, there is permission to listen.

That permission may be exactly what modern life has been missing. Most of us spend our days disconnected from our own bodies. We sit for hours, rush between obligations, stare at glowing screens, and respond to constant demands. By the time we decide to exercise, we often bring the same mentality with us. We want results immediately. Stretch harder. Lift heavier. Run faster. Everything becomes another task to complete.

Somatic stretching quietly refuses to play that game. Its greatest strength is not that it promises impossible transformations but that it restores awareness. Tight shoulders may not simply need more aggressive stretching. They may reflect stress. A stiff lower back may not be demanding punishment but asking for gentler movement after hours of inactivity. Muscles do not exist separately from the nervous system, and treating movement as purely mechanical ignores half the story.

Critics sometimes dismiss somatic practices as too slow or too soft. In a culture obsessed with intensity, gentleness can appear unproductive. But slowing down should not be mistaken for doing less. In many cases, moving with attention requires far more discipline than simply pushing through discomfort. It asks people to abandon the ego that constantly compares, competes, and measures success by extremes.

Perhaps that is why somatic stretching resonates with so many people who have grown tired of treating fitness like another exhausting performance review. They are discovering that moving well is not always about reaching farther. Sometimes it is about moving with greater ease, confidence, and comfort.

Fitness trends come and go, often promising miracle results before fading into obscurity. Somatic stretching feels different because it is built on something timeless: paying attention. The future of flexibility may not belong to those who stretch the hardest. It may belong to those who finally learn how to listen to their own bodies.


Woody Guthrie: Dust Bowl Blues and Revolt by Rene Wadlow

Woodrow Wilson Guthrie (1912 - 1967) whose birth anniversary we note on 14 July was an American folksinger who had a creative influence on at least three generations of folksingers, such as those of his own generation, Pete Seeger and Ramblin' Jack Elliot, the next generation Bob Dylan, Joan Baez and his son Arlo Guthrie and a more recent generation's  Bruce Springsteen.

Woody was born in Oklahoma and named after Woodrow Wilson, then the progressive governor of New Jersey and soon to be elected President. Woody's father, a former cowboy become land speculator was active in local Democratic Party  politics and also knew a wide range of songs which he passed on to his son.  His mother had Huntington's disease, a neurological disease which attacks both the body and the brain.  She was institutionalized in a mental home where she died when Woody was still young.  The disease seems to be hereditary as Woody as well as two of his children died of the same disease.

Oklahoma was caught up in the "Boom and Bust" economy which followed the First World War.  There was a short-lived prosperity from the development of oil wells, but the oil reserves gave out quickly.  The soil had been opened up to grow grain during the war period.  However, the land was not really appropriate for grain farming, having been pasture land previously.  With drought, the land dried and the top soil blown away by winds. Thus the term "Dust Bowl".  Many from Oklahoma, called "Okies" tried to move to California where farm land was better and where there were also non-farm jobs.  The young Woody Guthrie was among the number.

However, both the authorities and the settled California population were not happy to see the rush of migrants.  Only those with a set amount of money were officially welcomed.  The others went around the police who guarded the highways and then often worked as underpaid farm hands and fruit pickers, a pattern followed a generation later by workers coming from Mexico.

From his father and his father's friends, Woody had a good knowledge of folk songs, and he was able to get a job at a local California radio station playing folk and country music - a radio program which gained him some local fame.  He started collecting songs from Okie farm workers, and then started singing the songs himself.

The working conditions of those working on California farms were very difficult as described by John Steinbeck in Grapes of Wrath. Efforts were made to organize the farm workers into unions.  However the major industrial unions were not oriented to organizing farm workers who kept changing employers and moving  from one area to another as the fruit ripened.  Thus, farm union efforts were left to those outside the mainstream of labor unions - often Communists or other radicals.  Woody was close to these farm union organizers, and he began a life-long cooperation with the Communist Party, although he never joined as a "card carrying" member.

Having reached his limits of California radio fame, he was encouraged to move to New York City which was then the national center for folk music.  Alan Lomax who was recording folk music for an extensive Library of Congress folk music collection recorded Woody singing folk songs he knew as well as those he had written.  Moses Arch, also in New York, was starting Folkways Records which became the leading recording company of folk music.  He recorded and then promoted Woody's music, especially the 1940 "Dust Bowl Ballads".  Woody wrote some 3000 songs, what he called "people's songs" giving voice to the disenfranchised, but also humorous songs for children.  Among the best known is "This Land is Your Land" written in 1940 but recorded only in 1944.

By the early 1950s, the marks of Huntington's disease became more serious, and for the last 15 years of his life he was in institutions for the mentally ill in New Jersey and  others close to New York City. His family and young folksingers like Bob Dylan would come to visit and he would sing for them.  Because of Woody's fame, there has been increased interest in the treatment and prevention of Huntington's disease. His songs and especially his style of singing have continued to be a creative part of the US music scene.

 *********************************************

Notes:
See his autobiography: Bound for Glory (New York: E.P. Dutton, 1943). The title is based on his song "This Train is Bound for Glory"

For biographies see: Edward Gray. Ramblin Man. The Life and Times of Woody Guthrie (New York: W.W.Norton,  2004)

William Kaufman. Woody Guthrie: American Radical (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2011)

 *********************************************

Rene Wadlow, President, Association of World Citizens


Ma-Siri & Co #126 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

Ma-Siri is a mother, a grandmother and a very active social life,
searching for the meaning of life among other things and her glasses.

For more Ma-Siri & Alexa, HERE!
For more Ovi Cartoons, HERE!


Greenland, the convenient distraction by Robert Perez

Every political leader has a favourite distraction; Donald Trump's increasingly predictable choice appears to be Greenland. Whenever a foreign policy triumph fails to materialise, whenever an international crisis exposes uncomfortable questions about American strategy or whenever allies begin asking difficult questions, the world's largest island mysteriously returns to centre stage. It is becoming less a geopolitical ambition than a political reflex.

At the NATO summit in Ankara, Trump once again grumbled against America's European allies, complaining about insufficient support during the Iran conflict while reviving his insistence that the United States should somehow control Greenland. The message was familiar, if Europe disappoints him, Greenland becomes the symbol through which that frustration is expressed.

This is precisely what should worry European governments. The issue is no longer whether acquiring Greenland is realistic but that it has become a recurring instrument in Trump's political vocabulary. Every diplomatic setback risks being redirected towards an entirely unrelated territorial obsession.

That pattern matters because foreign policy conducted through personal grievances is rarely stable. NATO has always depended on predictability as much as military capability. Allies need confidence that strategic decisions emerge from collective security interests rather than emotional reactions or political impulses. When personal disappointment becomes intertwined with alliance politics, uncertainty replaces trust.

Greenland itself has become almost secondary. It functions less as an actual objective than as a symbolic pressure point aimed at Europe. Denmark, a loyal NATO member for decades, repeatedly finds itself dragged into an argument it neither initiated nor wishes to entertain. The territory becomes shorthand for Trump's dissatisfaction with European governments generally, regardless of whether those governments have anything to do with the disagreement at hand.

Europe therefore faces an awkward dilemma. Ignoring the rhetoric risks normalising increasingly provocative statements. Responding forcefully risks giving the controversy exactly the publicity it seeks. Neither option is particularly attractive but pretending that repeated threats are harmless political theatre is becoming increasingly difficult.

There is also a broader strategic concern. The Arctic is genuinely becoming one of the world's most significant geopolitical regions. Climate change is opening new shipping routes, competition over natural resources is intensifying, and Russia and China are both expanding their Arctic interests. Serious discussions about Arctic security deserve careful diplomacy, scientific cooperation and long-term planning. Reducing that complex reality to ownership fantasies trivialises an issue of enormous strategic importance.

The irony is that America already enjoys extensive military cooperation with Greenland through longstanding agreements with Denmark. Washington possesses significant strategic access without owning a single additional square kilometre. The practical military arguments for outright control have never been particularly convincing. The political symbolism, however, remains irresistible.

European leaders should recognise the pattern for what it is. Greenland is becoming a recurring political escape hatch whenever broader foreign policy narratives become uncomfortable. Today it follows tensions surrounding Iran. Tomorrow it may accompany another international disagreement entirely unrelated to the Arctic.

Alliances cannot function effectively if every diplomatic disagreement risks reopening entirely separate territorial disputes. NATO's strength has always rested on shared commitments, institutional stability and mutual confidence. Personalising strategic relationships gradually erodes all three.

Europe cannot control what subjects Trump chooses to revisit. It can, however, refuse to let each fresh controversy dictate the alliance's agenda. Greenland deserves to be discussed as part of Arctic strategy, not as a recurring consolation prize whenever American foreign policy encounters another difficult moment.


Democracy deferred, power preserved by Eze Ogbu

Elections become "too expensive", constitutions require "modernisation", stability suddenly outweighs accountability and the public is told that extraordinary times demand extraordinary measures. Zimbabwe has once again become another chapter in this old political handbook.

By signing constitutional amendments that abolish direct presidential elections and postpone the next national vote, Zimbabwe's leadership has taken another decisive step away from democracy and towards permanent political control. Constitutions are supposed to restrain those who govern. When they are repeatedly rewritten to benefit those already in office, they cease to be the people's shield and become the ruler's armour.

None of this should surprise anyone familiar with Zimbabwe's modern political history. Decades of corruption, intimidation, patronage and economic decline have already hollowed out many democratic institutions. What was once presented as temporary emergency governance has gradually become the normal state of affairs. Every promise of reform has been followed by another concentration of power, another weakening of independent institutions and another shrinking of political space.

The tragedy is that authoritarianism rarely arrives in dramatic fashion. It advances through technical language, parliamentary procedures and legal amendments that appear almost mundane when viewed individually. Each change can be explained away as administrative necessity. Together they transform a republic into something very different.

The removal of direct presidential elections sends an unmistakable message. If citizens cannot directly choose their national leader, then the central principle of representative democracy has been deliberately weakened. Elections cease to function as instruments of accountability and become carefully managed rituals designed to legitimise predetermined outcomes. Governments that genuinely enjoy popular support seldom fear giving voters the final word.

Supporters of these constitutional changes will undoubtedly invoke stability. It is the favourite argument of governments that fear uncertainty more than they value freedom. Stability, however, cannot be built upon the systematic removal of political choice. A nation held together by fear, patronage and constitutional manipulation is not stable; it is merely quiet until the accumulated frustrations become impossible to contain.

Zimbabwe's greatest challenge has never been a shortage of constitutions or legal frameworks. It has been the persistent unwillingness of those in power to submit themselves to the same democratic standards expected of ordinary citizens. Corruption flourishes where accountability disappears. Violence becomes politically useful where peaceful change becomes impossible. Economic decline accelerates when investors lose confidence in institutions that increasingly serve political survival rather than the rule of law.

Perhaps the saddest consequence is the message sent to younger Zimbabweans. Many have already grown up knowing little beyond economic hardship, political polarisation and declining opportunities. They now witness yet another constitutional adjustment designed not to expand their rights but to limit their political influence. It teaches an entire generation that constitutions are flexible when powerful people wish them to be, but rigid when ordinary citizens seek justice.

History repeatedly demonstrates that leaders who reshape constitutions for personal longevity often succeed in extending their rule but rarely strengthen their nations. Institutions weakened for today's political convenience remain weak long after today's rulers have departed. Democracies can survive unpopular governments because citizens retain the power to replace them. Dictatorships survive by ensuring citizens lose that power altogether.

Zimbabwe deserves institutions stronger than personalities, laws stronger than ambitions and leaders confident enough to face voters rather than redesign the rules. Democracy is not protected by postponing elections. It is protected by holding them, accepting their outcome and recognising that no individual should ever become more permanent than the constitution itself.


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