It’s Israel, Not Iran, Stupid! By Habib Siddiqui

How Western Narratives Invert Reality to Justify a Catastrophic War

For decades, Western governments and media outlets have insisted that Iran is the gravest threat to global peace—a rogue nation, a sponsor of terrorism, a destabilizing force whose very existence endangers the “rules‑based international order.” This narrative has been repeated so relentlessly that it has hardened into conventional wisdom in Washington, Brussels, and most major newsrooms. But repetition does not make truth. And today, as the United States and Israel escalate their joint military aggression against Iran, the gap between reality and Western storytelling has become impossible to ignore.

The uncomfortable truth—one that Western officials work tirelessly to obscure—is that Iran has not invaded its neighbors, has not launched preemptive wars, and has not violated the sovereignty of other states on a scale remotely comparable to Israel. Iran signed the Nuclear Non‑Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and remains under the most intrusive inspection regime in the world. Its leaders, citing Islamic jurisprudence, have repeatedly declared nuclear weapons forbidden. Meanwhile, Israel—an undeclared nuclear power with an arsenal estimated in the dozens if not hundreds—has refused to sign the NPT, rejects inspections, and has a long record of preemptive strikes across the Middle East.

Yet it is Iran, not Israel, that Western governments portray as the existential menace. This inversion of reality is not accidental. It is the product of a century‑long political project rooted in colonial dispossession, military domination, and the systematic erasure of Palestinian rights.

The roots of today’s crisis lie in 1917, when Great Britain issued the Balfour Declaration—an extraordinary document in which a colonial empire promised a national homeland in Palestine to the Zionist movement. As historian Arthur Koestler famously observed, it was “one nation solemnly promising to give to a second nation the country of a third nation.” The people of that third nation—the Palestinians—were never consulted.

Three decades later, on November 29, 1947, the United Nations voted to partition Palestine into Jewish and Arab states. The plan allocated 56 percent of the land to the Jewish state, even though Jews constituted roughly one‑third of the population and owned less than 7 percent of the land. Arab leaders, with the exception of King Abdullah of Transjordan, rejected the plan as unjust. Violence erupted, and armed Zionist militias—Haganah, Irgun, and Lehi—launched operations that resulted in the depopulation of hundreds of Palestinian villages.

The massacres at Deir Yasin, Qibya, and Kafr Qasim were not aberrations; they were part of a systematic campaign to empty Palestine of its indigenous inhabitants. By the time Israel declared independence on May 15, 1948, more than 770,000 Palestinians had been expelled or fled in terror. Many ended up in Gaza, where their descendants remain trapped to this day.

This foundational violence set the pattern for decades to come: territorial expansion, demographic engineering, and the use of overwhelming military force to maintain dominance.

A Record of Aggression, Not Defense

Since 1948, Israel has launched repeated preemptive wars and military operations across the region. In 1956, it joined Britain and France in invading Egypt. In 1967, it launched a preemptive strike against Egypt, Syria, and Jordan, seizing the West Bank, Gaza, East Jerusalem, the Golan Heights, and the Sinai Peninsula. In 1982, it invaded Lebanon, leading to the Sabra and Shatila massacres carried out by allied militias under Israeli supervision.

From Nablus to Jenin, from Tyre to Sidon, from the West Bank to southern Lebanon, the pattern has been consistent: overwhelming force, collective punishment, and the targeting of civilian infrastructure. The Oslo Accords, hailed in the West as a peace breakthrough, became a mechanism for deepening Israel’s control over Palestinian land through settlements, checkpoints, and a matrix of military restrictions.

Here I am reminded of Bertrand Russell’s final political statement, written in January 1970 and read aloud at the International Conference of Parliamentarians in Cairo shortly after his death: “For over 20 years Israel has expanded by force of arms. After every stage in this expansion Israel has appealed to ‘reason’ and has suggested ‘negotiations’. This is the traditional role of the imperial power, because it wishes to consolidate with the least difficulty what it has already taken by violence. Every new conquest becomes the new basis of the proposed negotiation from strength, which ignores the injustice of the previous aggression.

Gaza, in particular, became the world’s largest open‑air prison. The blockade imposed in 2007 strangled its economy, restricted movement, and created a humanitarian catastrophe long before the events of October 7, 2024. That uprising—whatever one thinks of its tactics—did not emerge from a vacuum. It was the predictable result of decades of suffocation, the Israeli military metaphor of “Mowing of the Lawn”, dispossession, and despair.

Israel’s response was devastating: genocidal, the near‑total destruction of Gaza, mass civilian casualties, and the annexation of additional territory. Peter Maurer, the former President of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), who saw the aftermath of the Operation Protective Edge and said, “in all of my life I have never seen destruction like I saw in Gaza.”The campaign soon expanded into Lebanon and Syria, and now, with U.S. backing, into Iran.

The Manufactured Threat: Why Iran Became the Villain

To justify this escalation, Western officials have revived the familiar script: Iran is the world’s leading sponsor of terrorism; Iran seeks regional domination; Iran threatens global stability. But beyond its support for Palestinian resistance groups—Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis—Western governments offer little evidence that Iran poses a threat to Europe or the United States.

Iran has not invaded another country in over four centuries. It has repeatedly engaged in diplomacy, even when the United States violated agreements such as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). It has sought a negotiated resolution to disputes over its nuclear and ballistic programs, consistent with the guidance of Imam Ali(R) to his governor Malik al‑Ashtar: pursue justice, avoid oppression, and seek peaceful solutions whenever possible.

Contrast this with Israel’s posture. Israeli leaders routinely describe Palestinians, Lebanese, and Iranians in dehumanizing terms—“Amalekites,” “human animals,” “existential threats.” Several Israeli officials face international investigations for war crimes and crimes against humanity. Yet Western governments continue to embrace Israel as a moral beacon and strategic ally.

That hypocrisy is now in full display. In a stunning display of moral bankruptcy, after more than two years of arming and enabling Israel as it pulverizes the Gaza Strip—even after an October ceasefire deal—the United States last week formally intervened at the International Court of Justice to help Israel fend off genocide charges.

The double standard is glaring. When Israel bombs civilian neighborhoods, it is “self‑defense.” When Iran supports groups resisting occupation, it is “terrorism.” When Israel violates international law, it is “complex.” When Iran asserts its sovereignty, it is “aggression.”

None of this would be possible without the complicity of Western media. Major outlets routinely adopt Israeli and U.S. government framing, marginalize Palestinian voices, and portray Iran as irrational and fanatical. Context disappears. History is erased. The aggressor becomes the victim, and the victim becomes the threat.

This narrative discipline serves a purpose: it prepares Western publics for war. It transforms a nuclear‑armed state with a long record of regional aggression into a misunderstood democracy under siege. It transforms a non‑nuclear state that has abided by international treaties into an existential menace.

The result is a political environment in which Israel and the United States can launch preemptive strikes on Iran—twice in less than a year—while claiming the mantle of peace and stability.

Israel’s strategic doctrine has always been clear: maintain overwhelming military superiority, weaken neighboring states, and expand territorial control whenever possible. From the Nile to the Euphrates, the vision of a Greater Israel has animated political and religious extremists for generations.

This is not speculation. Israeli leaders have said so openly. They have threatened to use nuclear weapons—the so‑called “Samson Option”—if their dominance is challenged. They have repeatedly demonstrated a willingness to strike first and justify later.

A state with such a doctrine, armed with nuclear weapons, and backed unconditionally by the world’s most powerful military is not a stabilizing force. It is a recipe for perpetual conflict.

Time to Call a Spade a Spade

The world can no longer afford the comforting illusions propagated by Western governments and media. Iran is not the primary threat to Middle Eastern stability. Israel is. Its history of dispossession, occupation, preemptive war, and nuclear opacity makes it the most destabilizing actor in the region.

The tragedy is that this was not inevitable. A just peace was possible—still is possible—if the international community confronts the reality it has long avoided: Israel’s policies, not Iran’s existence, are the root cause of the region’s instability.

Until the world acknowledges this truth, the cycle of violence will continue, and the Middle East will remain trapped in a nightmare of endless war.

The time has come for the global community—especially nations of the Global South—to speak plainly. The time has come to reject the distortions that have justified so much suffering. The time has come to say what Western leaders refuse to say:

It’s Israel, not Iran, that endangers the region. And unless the world confronts this fact, the path ahead leads only to deeper catastrophe.


Dr. Siddiqui is a peace activist.


The arsonist demands ...water by Edoardo Moretti

It takes a remarkable level of audacity to start a fire and then demand that everyone else bring the buckets. After months of escalating tensions, reckless rhetoric and deliberate provocations, the same leader who helped ignite a crisis in the Gulf is now calling on the world to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, as if the global community should rush to repair a disaster he played a central role in creating. It would be comical if it weren’t so dangerous.

The Strait of Hormuz is not just another shipping lane. It is one of the most critical arteries of global trade, a narrow corridor through which a significant portion of the world’s oil supply flows. Stability there is not a luxury; it is a necessity for the global economy. Yet stability was precisely what was undermined.

For months, the language coming from this leadership was anything but diplomatic. Allies were publicly insulted. Long-standing partners were dismissed as weak or cowardly. International institutions were mocked. Warnings from diplomats and military analysts were brushed aside with bravado and theatrical threats.

And now, with the consequences fully visible, the tone has suddenly changed. The same voices that mocked caution are now pleading for cooperation. The same administration that alienated partners is now asking those partners to intervene, to negotiate, to stabilize the very waters their policies helped destabilize.

In essence, the arsonist is now asking the neighborhood to rebuild the house. This is not leadership. It is improvisation at a global scale. Real leadership understands that influence depends on trust, and trust is built slowly but destroyed quickly. When allies are treated as expendable or humiliated in public, they do not rush to assist when things go wrong. They pause. They reconsider. They remember.

Diplomacy is not a switch that can be flipped on when convenient. It is a web of relationships maintained through respect, predictability and restraint. Tear that web apart and the consequences do not disappear simply because the political winds have shifted.

There is also a deeper problem here: credibility. When a government repeatedly escalates conflicts, dismisses expert advice and substitutes bravado for strategy, its requests for cooperation inevitably ring hollow. Why should other nations absorb the risks of de-escalation when they were treated as obstacles just weeks earlier?

The Strait of Hormuz did not become unstable overnight. It was the product of accumulating tensions, careless statements, and strategic miscalculations. Anyone paying attention could see the danger approaching.

Yet warnings were ignored, and the crisis arrived exactly as predicted. Now the world is asked to help restore calm. Of course reopening the Strait matters. Global trade depends on it. Energy markets depend on it. Millions of livelihoods depend on it. Responsible nations will ultimately work to stabilize the situation because the alternative is too costly.

But that does not erase the lesson. Leadership carries responsibility not just for victories but for consequences. When rhetoric replaces diplomacy and ego replaces strategy, the result is rarely strength. It is chaos.

And when chaos finally arrives, the loudest calls for help often come from the very people who insisted they did not need anyone in the first place.


A nation carving out silence by Mathew Walls

War has always been about territory, power and fear. But sometimes it is also about emptiness. The latest expansion of Israeli strikes on Hezbollah targets in Lebanon, now reaching into central Beirut, appears to be shaping something beyond the usual military campaign. It looks increasingly like the creation of a vast, shattered vacuum along Israel’s northern frontier, a landscape not merely controlled but emptied.

The human cost is already staggering. Nearly 700,000 people have reportedly been displaced by the renewed bombardment. Entire neighborhoods are emptying out as families flee south, inland or anywhere that might offer the faintest illusion of safety. Apartments once filled with ordinary life, children arguing over homework, the smell of coffee in the morning, are now abandoned shells. Roads that once carried the chaos of Beirut traffic are instead lined with vehicles carrying mattresses, bags, and the quiet panic of those who do not know if they will ever return.

Israel insists its targets are Hezbollah positions. From a purely military perspective, that claim follows a familiar logic; Hezbollah has embedded its infrastructure within civilian areas for years, turning dense neighborhoods into strategic shields. In such an environment, any military campaign inevitably spills into civilian life.

But the scale and direction of the strikes raise a deeper question. If the goal were only to dismantle specific weapons depots or command centers, the pattern might look different. Instead, what seems to be unfolding resembles something broader, the slow flattening of space itself. A widening belt of destruction where normal life becomes impossible.

In strategic terms, this would create a buffer zone without formally declaring one. A dead zone does not require fences or soldiers if no one can live there. If homes are rubble, if electricity grids collapse, if schools and shops vanish, then the area ceases to function as a society. It becomes a geographic pause, an empty strip separating two hostile forces.

For Israel, the motivation is easy to understand. The memory of rocket fire from southern Lebanon is deeply embedded in the Israeli psyche. Communities in northern Israel have spent years under the shadow of missiles launched by Hezbollah. The idea of pushing that threat further away, of creating physical and psychological distance, has long tempted military planners.

But there is a moral and political cost to such strategies. Dead zones are rarely temporary. Once cities are flattened and populations displaced, rebuilding becomes a generational challenge. Infrastructure must be restored, trust rebuilt, political agreements negotiated. In the meantime, resentment grows in the ruins. History has shown again and again that devastation can suppress violence for a time but it can also plant the seeds of future conflict.

The tragedy of Lebanon makes the situation even more painful. This is a country already crushed by economic collapse, political paralysis, and years of instability. Its people have endured more than most societies can bear. Now another wave of destruction threatens to hollow out yet more of its fragile landscape.

None of this makes Hezbollah innocent. Armed groups that operate among civilians knowingly place those civilians at risk. But acknowledging that reality does not erase the suffering unfolding on the ground.

War often begins with the language of defense and necessity. Yet it can end with entire regions reduced to silence. And silence, w


Puppi & Caesar #41 #cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

Another cartoon with a mean and know-all of a bully cat, Puppi and her intellectual, pompous companion categorically-I-know-all, Caesar the squirrel!  

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Echoes of old mistakes by Timothy Davies

There is something eerily familiar about watching powerful governments drift toward confrontation with Iran while speaking in the language of confidence, inevitability and quick results. The narrative sounds persuasive on the surface: a regime widely criticized abroad, internal dissatisfaction among the population, and the belief that outside pressure or even conflict could trigger a political collapse. It is a storyline that has been repeated many times in modern history. And too often, it ends in disappointment, instability and unintended consequences.

The assumption underlying many strategic conversations today seems simple, weaken the government enough and the people will finish the job. Economic pressure, political isolation and perhaps limited military strikes will supposedly fracture the system and unleash a popular uprising. Supporters of this thinking sometimes point to other governments that fell quickly when pressure mounted. The Venezuelan case is often mentioned as a hypothetical blueprint, an example where sustained pressure was expected to trigger an internal political shift and in the end the betrayal of their own ...president and literally surrender him to USA.

But nations are not interchangeable chess pieces. Political systems are not identical machines that break in predictable ways. Societies are complicated ecosystems shaped by history, culture and deep national identity. What works or appears to work in one country rarely translates cleanly to another.

Iran, in particular, is not a fragile structure waiting for the first push. It is a country with a long memory of external interference, a strong sense of sovereignty and political institutions that have survived decades of sanctions, pressure and isolation. Even among citizens who criticize their government, the reaction to outside threats often shifts toward unity rather than rebellion. History repeatedly shows that when a nation feels attacked, internal divisions can quickly shrink.

This is where the shadow of Vietnam quietly appears in the background. During the Vietnam War strategic thinking in Washington was driven by confidence in pressure, escalation and the belief that the political system on the other side would eventually crack. Planners assumed that sustained force would push the population to turn against its leadership. Instead, the opposite happened. External pressure hardened resolve and strengthened the legitimacy of those already in power.

The lesson was painful, societies under siege often rally around national identity rather than fracture under it. Today, a similar gamble seems to be emerging. The expectation that ordinary Iranians will violently overthrow their government as a direct result of foreign confrontation is not a strategy, it is a hope. And hope is a dangerous substitute for planning when war becomes a possibility.

The deeper issue is not simply whether conflict would succeed or fail militarily. It is the absence of a clearly defined endgame. Removing or weakening a government is only the first chapter of a much longer story. What follows is often far more complicated, political vacuums, regional instability, economic collapse and prolonged uncertainty.

We have seen this pattern before across different regions and decades. Wars that begin with confidence often end with questions no one prepared to answer.

Iran is not Vietnam, of course. History never repeats itself perfectly. But it does rhyme in unsettling ways. When powerful nations believe pressure alone can engineer political transformation inside another country, they are stepping onto familiar ground.

And that ground has a long record of swallowing certainty whole. The real danger is not just miscalculation. It is the quiet belief that this time will somehow be different, despite the echoes that suggest otherwise.


The war that Lebanon never chose by Emma Schneider

Once again, Lebanon pays the price for a war that was never truly its own. History has a cruel habit of repeating itself in the Middle East and today the pattern is painfully clear, when powerful states clash, it is often the smaller and weaker societies that absorb the shockwaves. Lebanon, fragile after years of economic collapse, political paralysis and the trauma of past wars, now finds itself once more at the epicentre of destruction.

The current conflict grew from escalating tensions between Israel and Iran, culminating in coordinated military strikes by Israel and the United States against Iranian targets earlier this year. The retaliation did not remain confined to those two powers. Instead, the war spread outward, predictably and tragically, into Lebanon, where Hezbollah fired rockets toward Israel and Israel responded with a massive military campaign.

And so the cycle resumed. Airstrikes pound towns in southern Lebanon and the suburbs of Beirut. Entire communities flee under evacuation orders. In a matter of days, hundreds of civilians have been killed and close to a million people displaced, according to humanitarian estimates. Aid agencies warn that the country, already battered by economic collapse and political instability, simply does not have the capacity to absorb another catastrophe.

Yet in the grand strategic narratives offered by governments and military spokespeople, Lebanese civilians rarely appear as more than statistics.

Israel argues that its actions are aimed at neutralizing Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed militia that has long operated along the border. From Israel’s perspective, the threat is real: rockets and drones launched from Lebanese territory have targeted northern Israeli communities, forcing civilians there into shelters. But acknowledging that threat should not blind the world to the broader moral question, why must entire towns in Lebanon be reduced to rubble to address it?

War planners speak the language of “targets,” “deterrence,” and “security zones.” Families speak the language of survival.

The deeper tragedy is that Lebanon itself has little control over the forces pulling it into the conflict. Hezbollah acts as a regional proxy for Iran; while Israel’s military campaign is intertwined with the broader confrontation with Tehran. In this geopolitical chess game, Lebanon is not a player; it is the board.

Meanwhile, global powers issue statements, call for restraint, and promise humanitarian aid that rarely arrives fast enough. The world watches as medics die in airstrikes, families are buried beneath collapsed buildings and entire neighbourhoods empty overnight.

What should trouble us most is how normal this has become. Lebanon has endured civil war, foreign invasions, economic meltdown and the devastating Beirut port explosion. Yet just as the country struggles to stand again, another regional war drags it back into chaos.

If there is any lesson to draw, it is this, wars justified as strategic necessities often become humanitarian disasters for those who never chose them.

Lebanon did not start this war between regional powers. But, as so often before, its people are paying the heaviest price.


The Cinderellas of Washington #thoughts by Theodore K. Nasos

In the modern White House, the corridors of power echo not only with policy debates and hurried briefings but also with the faint squeak of brand-new leather soles. Diplomacy, as it turns out may hinge less on treaties and more on the fit of one’s footwear.

Photos circulating from recent appearances have revealed a peculiar fashion statement among some of the administration’s most visible men. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Vice President JD Vance have been spotted wearing polished black dress shoes that appear to be… well, slightly enthusiastic about breathing room. The gap between shoe and ankle is so generous that the foot seems to dangle inside like the clapper of a bell waiting for someone to ring it. One almost expects a soft ding every time they walk across a marble floor.

In normal political ecosystems, such footwear might simply be classified as “a sizing mistake.” But this is Washington, and nothing here is accidental, especially when the shoes in question reportedly arrive courtesy of President Donald Trump himself.

Yes, the Commander-in-Chief has apparently embraced a new side hustle, executive cobbler. According to the increasingly surreal lore of the capital, male officials occasionally receive surprise deliveries of mid-priced Florsheim oxfords. No ceremony, no sizing consultation, no gentle suggestion, just a pair of shoes appearing like a royal decree in leather form.

The scene practically writes itself. A nervous aide enters an office holding a box. “Sir, the President thought you might enjoy these.” Inside ...size ambiguous, ambition enormous.

Naturally, the recipients wear them. Immediately. Faithfully. Dutifully. Whether the shoe fits or not is apparently irrelevant. In fact, judging from the visible ankle-to-shoe airspace, the fit often resembles a toddler trying on a parent’s work shoes for career day.

One can only imagine the internal calculation. “Yes, the shoes are two sizes too large… but they were personally selected. Perhaps this is symbolic. Perhaps the gap represents strategic flexibility. Or maybe it’s just the space where my dignity used to be.”

The effect in photographs is remarkable. There stand the men responsible for global negotiations, military alliances and the occasional existential crisis, feet gently wobbling inside footwear that looks like it was purchased during a panic-induced mall sprint.

International observers, who once spent decades decoding nuclear strategy and geopolitical signals, now find themselves studying ankle gaps. “What does it mean?” foreign analysts whisper.

“Is it a sign of loyalty? A footwear-based chain of command? Are the shoes deliberately large to leave room for ambition?” Meanwhile, somewhere in Europe, diplomats stare at the images and quietly conclude that American political theater has finally merged with improv comedy.

And yet the tradition persists. The shoes shine. The ankles hover. The steps echo through the halls of power with the faint hollow sound of leather meeting uncertainty.

History will judge many things about this era, its policies, its rhetoric, its relentless chaos. But future scholars may also pause over one enduring mystery, why so many powerful men walked through Washington looking like they’d borrowed their boss’s shoes and were too polite to say they didn’t fit.


2nd opinion! 26#05 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

Seriously, a human hater self-centred agoraphobic in quarantine!
I think you’ll need a second opinion after this.

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Panama papers and Mitsotakis & CO. silence by Thanos Kalamidas

A trial opens in Germany and suddenly the air fills with words like accountability, tax evasion and justice. In Cologne, prosecutors present a case against a 56-year-old Swiss man accused of helping clients dodge taxes worth €13 million over nearly two decades. The courtroom becomes a symbol of a functioning system: accusations examined, evidence weighed, responsibilities assigned. Whether the man is guilty or innocent will be decided by judges, but the important point is this, there is a process.

And then there is Greece. Because when the Panama Papers exploded into public view in 2016, one of the largest financial leaks in modern history, names surfaced across the globe. Politicians, oligarchs, celebrities, business tycoons. Governments trembled, ministers resigned, investigations were launched. Iceland’s prime minister stepped down within days. Authorities in multiple countries began probing financial networks and offshore structures. The revelations shook the comfortable illusion that elites play by the same rules as ordinary citizens.

But in Greece, something remarkable happened. Nothing.

Among the thousands of names buried in the documents were individuals directly connected to the highest levels of political power, including the wife and mother-in-law of the country’s prime minister. The revelations should have sparked immediate scrutiny. Not because anyone had already been proven guilty, but because public office carries a burden heavier than private wealth, transparency. When people connected to the leadership of a nation appear in documents exposing global tax avoidance systems, the public deserves answers.

Instead, the Greek public received silence. A silence so loud it almost echoed. Television panels that normally shout about minor scandals suddenly developed a strange case of selective muteness. Political commentators who can dissect a parking ticket violation for three hours discovered a sudden lack of curiosity. Newspapers that thrive on outrage turned the page. No serious investigation, no sustained questioning, no political earthquake.

Just a shrug. Imagine the absurdity. In Germany, authorities are prosecuting a man accused of helping clients evade €13 million. Thirteen million euros, an amount that certainly matters, but hardly compares to the staggering financial networks exposed in the Panama Papers. Yet German prosecutors pursue the case with determination, because the principle matters. Taxes are the foundation of the social contract. When someone cheats that system, they are not just hiding money; they are undermining society itself.

Meanwhile in Greece, the names connected to the Panama Papers sit quietly in the archives of forgotten scandals. This is not simply about legality. That is the easy escape route politicians always take. “Nothing illegal happened,” they say, as if morality begins and ends with the criminal code. But the Panama Papers were never only about illegality. They were about the architecture of privilege, an international system designed to protect wealth from scrutiny while ordinary citizens carry the tax burden.

The outrage across the world came from a simple realization, the game is rigged.

And Greece, unfortunately, has long been a masterclass in how that rigging works. A country where austerity was imposed with surgical brutality on the middle class and the poor. A country where pensioners counted coins while political elites lectured them about fiscal discipline. A country where taxes increased, wages fell, and public services shrank, all supposedly necessary to stabilize the economy. So when names connected to the ruling political class appear in documents exposing offshore wealth structures, the issue is not gossip.

It is legitimacy. Because how can citizens trust a system that demands sacrifice from them while refusing to even ask questions of those closest to power? How can a government preach responsibility when transparency seems optional for the elite?

The German courtroom in Cologne represents something very simple, the idea that no one should be above scrutiny. Not bankers, not businessmen, not the wealthy clients they serve.

Greece, however, often behaves like a country where scrutiny stops at the door of political convenience. And that is the real scandal.

The Panama Papers were a mirror held up to the world, revealing the vast machinery of hidden wealth. Some countries looked into that mirror and decided they did not like what they saw. They began investigations, reformed laws, pursued accountability. Others simply turned off the lights. In Greece, the lights went out very quickly.

Masked brutality by John Reid

Every year, March 15, the International Day Against Police Brutality, arrives with the quiet insistence of a moral checkpoint. It asks societies to examine the distance between authority and accountability, between the badge and the public it claims to serve. In recent years in the United States, that distance has widened in troubling ways, particularly in the shadowy theater of immigration enforcement.

The image that keeps returning is strangely theatrical, masked agents, unmarked vehicles, neighborhoods that suddenly feel occupied rather than protected. It has the visual grammar of a dystopian film. But for many communities, it is not fiction.

Consider the January 2026 killing of Renée Nicole Good, a 37-year-old American citizen shot by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent during a federal operation in Minneapolis. The shooting happened quickly, three shots in less than a second, during a chaotic enforcement surge that had already unsettled the neighborhood for weeks.

Her death was not an isolated tremor. It came amid a series of violent encounters tied to aggressive immigration operations across several states since 2025.

What troubles many observers is not only the shootings themselves, but the atmosphere surrounding them, opacity, militarized tactics, and a creeping normalization of anonymity in law enforcement. Masked officers executing domestic operations raise a question that democratic societies are supposed to answer clearly, who, exactly, is wielding the power of the state?

In theory, law enforcement exists within a framework of visibility and accountability. Officers wear badges. Agencies release reports. Citizens can identify those who detain or question them. These rituals are not cosmetic, they are foundational. A democracy cannot function if the people cannot see the machinery of authority.

Yet immigration enforcement in recent years has increasingly drifted toward a model that resembles counterinsurgency rather than civil policing. Large-scale operations, tactical gear, and agents whose identities are hidden behind balaclavas create an aesthetic of occupation. When such operations spill into residential streets the symbolism is unmistakable, the state arriving not as a public servant but as an opaque force.

Supporters argue that immigration enforcement is dangerous work and that officers require anonymity for safety. Critics counter that anonymity removes the most basic mechanism of accountability. When the public cannot identify the agents of the state, misconduct becomes harder to investigate and easier to deny.

This tension between security and transparency is not new. But the stakes rise sharply when lethal force enters the picture.

A democratic society should be able to enforce its laws without erasing the identities of those who enforce them. Power that hides its face invites suspicion, fear, and ultimately resistance. History, from authoritarian regimes to colonial occupations, offers countless reminders of this dynamic.

The International Day Against Police Brutality is not merely about condemning violence. It is about reaffirming a principle that the authority to use force must always remain visible, accountable and constrained.

When that principle fades, when masked figures arrive in unmarked vehicles and deadly force becomes another bureaucratic footnote, the line between policing and intimidation begins to blur.

And in that blur, democracy itself becomes harder to recognize.


Ovi History #eMagazine #17: Julius Caesar assassinated

 

They came as saviours and left as executioners. On a day meant to bleed a tyrant dry and restore a republic, the Roman senators who encircled Julius Caesar instead plunged a dagger into the heart of their own world, only to watch a far more enduring empire rise from its corpse.

The Ides of March is history’s ultimate cautionary tale. It is a story of noble intentions paving a road to chaos, of a surgical strike that became a self-inflicted wound. In this issue, Ovi History steps into the bloody footprint of that day. We move beyond the Shakespearean drama to confront the raw mechanics of power, the blindness of idealism, and the terrifying truth that sometimes, killing the father only clears the path for a more ruthless son.

From the desperate prayers of Calpurnia to the fugitive footsteps of the Liberators, we trace the pivot point where an assassination ended one era and unknowingly anointed the next. The daggers may be cold, but the questions they raise about power, violence, and consequence are as sharp and urgent as ever.

For this issue of Ovi History, a historical fiction short story from James O. Miller.

So, turn the page, and walk into the forum.

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With the hope that you will read and learn from the articles,
so ...do read this historic chronicle

Thanos Kalamidas

It’s Israel, Not Iran, Stupid! By Habib Siddiqui

How Western Narratives Invert Reality to Justify a Catastrophic War For decades, Western governments and media outlets have insisted that ...