An Open Letter to President Trump by Habib Siddiqui

Dear President Trump,
When you ran your 2024 campaign, you promised to end the cycle of “forever wars” that had drained trillions of dollars and brought little benefit to the American people. Many voters believed you when you said it was time to put American interests first and avoid new foreign entanglements.

Yet your administration’s actions since taking office have sharply diverged from those promises. The most striking example is the escalating war with Iran—a conflict that even senior officials inside your own administration have publicly rejected. Joe Kent, the Director of the National Counterterrorism Center and a top aide to Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, resigned in protest, stating plainly that “Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation” and that the war was launched “due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby.”

Kent’s resignation is not an isolated viewpoint. It aligns with years of warnings from Tulsi Gabbard herself, who has consistently opposed regime‑change wars and repeatedly cautioned that a U.S. war with Iran would be catastrophic. As far back as 2019 and 2020, she condemned what she called “neocons” and “warmongers” pushing the United States toward conflict with Tehran. She even promoted the slogan “No War With Iran,” warning that such a war would make Iraq and Afghanistan “seem like a picnic.” Gabbard also warned against regime‑change operations in Venezuela, arguing that the United States should not interfere in the internal political processes of other nations. Her position was clear: if Americans do not want foreign powers choosing U.S. leaders, then the United States must stop trying to choose leaders for others.Her cautious and indirect responses during the March 18 Senate Intelligence hearing underscored how constrained senior officials now feel when addressing your administration’s Iran policy.

Despite these internal warnings, your administration has pursued a course of escalation—targeted killings of Iranian officials, joint operations with Israeli forces, and increasingly aggressive rhetoric. These actions have convinced much of the world that the United States is no longer acting as a stabilizing force but as a belligerent power willing to use force preemptively.

This perception is reinforced by your administration’s close alignment with the policies of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whose government faces widespread international criticism for its genocidal crimes in Gaza and its latest military actions in Lebanon. Many observers believe that U.S. policy has become indistinguishable from Israel’s strategic agenda, undermining America’s credibility as an independent actor.

The United States cannot credibly claim to support a stable, rules‑based international order while enabling the unchecked regional ambitions of any state, including Israel. Many around the world believe that Israel’s current trajectory—marked by prolonged conflict, expanding military operations, and disregard for international humanitarian norms—poses a grave threat to regional stability and to the broader principles of human rights. A responsible American foreign policy requires not only supporting allies but also restraining them when their actions endanger global security. Continued alignment with Israel’s genocidaland expansionist policies has drawn the United States into conflicts that serve neither American interests nor global peace.

Your administration’s approach to Iran has further deepened this crisis. Attacking a nation in the midst of diplomatic engagement, authorizing operations that have killed senior Iranian officials, and conducting military actions that have resulted in the deaths of civilians—including schoolchildren, according to multiple independent human rights organizations—have eroded America’s moral standing. Reports of U.S. naval forces sinking an unarmed Iranian vessel in neutral waters have raised additional concerns about violations of international norms. These actions have led many observers to conclude that the United States is abandoning diplomacy in favor of force, with devastating humanitarian consequences.

Your rhetoric about acquiring neighboring territories—from Canada to Cuba to Greenland—has only amplified global alarm about the direction of U.S. policy. Such statements, even when framed as strategic or hypothetical, reinforce the perception of an administration willing to disregard sovereignty and international law.

Meanwhile, the domestic consequences are severe. The economy, already weakening in 2025, is now facing deeper instability. Rising unemployment, volatile energy prices, and widespread uncertainty are affecting millions of Americans. You promised to lower inflation and stabilize oil markets, yet the current conflict has only intensified economic pressures.

You also pledged to “drain the swamp,” but critics argue that Washington has become even more insular, with key decisions shaped by a small circle of loyalists and family members. Whether these criticisms are fair or not, they have become part of the public narrative and raise serious questions about transparency and accountability.

The United States has long claimed to uphold a rules‑based international order. Yet the current approach toward Iran—preemptive strikes, sweeping sanctions, and military escalation—has led many nations to question whether those rules apply equally to all. Iran remains a signatory to the Nuclear Non‑Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and asserts that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes. Israel, by contrast, has never signed the NPT and maintains an undeclared nuclear arsenal. These realities shape global perceptions of fairness and consistency.

History shows that Iran cannot be subdued through force. It is a nation with a long tradition of resisting foreign domination. Military confrontation will not bring lasting security; it will only deepen instability, fuel anti‑American sentiment, and risk drawing the United States into another prolonged conflict with no clear exit.

There is a better path—one that aligns with the interests of Americans, Iranians, and the broader international community. A peaceful approach would acknowledge Iran’s legitimate right under international law to develop nuclear energy for civilian use. It would also recognize that unconditional support for any single state, including Israel, cannot produce long‑term regional stability. Many around the world believe that Israeli policies have contributed to cycles of violence and that unquestioning U.S. backing has prevented meaningful diplomatic progress.

A more balanced American policy—one that encourages de‑escalation, respects international agreements, and prioritizes diplomacy—would reduce the risk of war and restore global confidence in the United States as a responsible actor. Such a shift would honor the spirit of your 2024 campaign promise: to avoid unnecessary wars and focus on rebuilding the nation at home.

Mr. President, the decisions you make now will define your legacy. Continuing down the path of confrontation with Iran will be seen by many as a grave mistake—one that brought suffering to millions and undermined America’s credibility. Choosing diplomacy, restraint, and fairness would demonstrate true leadership and offer hope to a world that desperately needs it.

I urge you to reconsider the current course. End the escalation. Pursue dialogue. Allow Iran the peaceful rights it is entitled to under international law. And adopt a foreign policy that reflects justice, balance, and respect for human dignity.

Sincerely,
Habib Siddiqui


Dr. Habib Siddiqui is a peace activist.


China’s quiet leverage by Dag Hansen

For half a century China has been engaged in one of the most ambitious economic transformations in modern history. From a largely closed agrarian society in the late 1970s, it has risen to become the world’s manufacturing powerhouse and a central pillar of the global economy. This rise has produced immense wealth, but perhaps more importantly, it has produced reach, financial, infrastructural and political reach that now extends into nearly every corner of the world.

What makes this moment particularly significant is that China’s global expansion has not been built solely on military alliances or ideological blocs, the way Western power often has been. Instead, it has been constructed through capital, investment and ownership. Ports, energy grids, telecommunications networks, railways, real estate and corporate stakes across continents now form a sprawling web of Chinese economic presence. In Europe alone, Chinese companies and state-linked investors have quietly acquired assets that once seemed strategically untouchable, logistics hubs, shipping terminals, technology firms, and industrial infrastructure.

None of this happened overnight. It was the result of decades of patient policy and long-term planning. While Western economies focused on quarterly results and election cycles, Beijing pursued generational strategy. The result is a kind of economic gravity. Once Chinese capital enters a system, whether through infrastructure financing, industrial partnerships, or property acquisitions, it rarely leaves. Instead, it deepens, embedding itself into local economies and political calculations.

This matters because influence today is rarely exercised through blunt force. It moves through subtler channels, regulatory pressure, market access, investment leverage, and political relationships built over years of cooperation. A country that owns part of your port, finances your rail network, or controls a significant slice of your supply chain possesses influence that cannot be easily ignored.

Europe illustrates this dilemma well. Many European nations welcomed Chinese investment during periods of financial strain, particularly after the 2008 crisis. Cash-rich Chinese firms stepped in when Western capital was scarce. Ports in the Mediterranean, manufacturing plants in Central Europe, and technology partnerships in major economies all benefited from this influx. Yet those same investments now raise strategic questions. Economic integration can gradually evolve into political sensitivity.

The United States and its allies are beginning to recognize this shift, but recognition is not the same as response. Liberal democracies operate within constraints, regulatory oversight, public debate, electoral politics that make rapid strategic pivots difficult. China’s system, by contrast, allows long-term coordination between state policy, financial institutions and corporate actors. That alignment gives Beijing tools its competitors often struggle to replicate.

None of this guarantees geopolitical dominance. China faces serious domestic challenges, demographic decline, financial vulnerabilities and slowing growth. Its global ambitions also provoke resistance, particularly in regions wary of overdependence. But the architecture of influence already built cannot be easily dismantled.

What we are witnessing is the emergence of a new kind of power competition, one measured less in missiles or military bases and more in ownership, supply chains and economic entanglement. The contest is not about who fires the first shot, but about who quietly holds the keys to the world’s critical systems.

In that arena, China has been playing a long game. And the world is only now beginning to realize how many pieces are already on the board.


A very small man in a very loud moment by Emma Schneider

There are moments in public life that do not shock because they are unexpected but because they confirm something we hoped might not be true. The reported reaction ...celebratory, callous, and devoid of even the most basic human restraint, falls squarely into that category. It is not just political rhetoric at its worst; it is something more revealing, more troubling and far more enduring.

What does it say about a person when death becomes an occasion for applause? Not political disagreement, not sharp criticism, not even bitter resentment but satisfaction at the end of a life. There is a line most people recognize instinctively, a boundary where conflict yields to humanity. Crossing it is not strength. It is not authenticity. It is, quite simply, smallness.

This is not about defending one figure or condemning another based on policy or ideology. Democracies are built on disagreement. They thrive on it. But they also rely on a shared understanding that opponents are still human beings, not enemies to be erased or mocked in death. When that understanding erodes, something essential begins to fracture.

The language used in moments like this matters. Words are not harmless outbursts floating in a vacuum. They shape tone, they signal permission and they set examples. When someone with immense influence chooses cruelty over restraint, it trickles downward. It normalizes a coarseness that seeps into public discourse, making it harder for society to distinguish between firm conviction and outright contempt.

There is also something deeply performative in such statements. They are not spontaneous slips; they are deliberate signals aimed at an audience conditioned to cheer defiance over decency. The message is clear: empathy is weakness, civility is unnecessary, and cruelty is not just acceptable, it is admirable. That is not leadership. That is theater and a particularly cynical kind.

But beyond the spectacle lies a more uncomfortable truth. Reactions like this persist because they resonate with a segment of the public. They reflect a broader appetite for outrage, for blunt force over nuance, for the satisfaction of seeing adversaries diminished in any way possible. It is easier to applaud harshness than to wrestle with complexity. Easier to mock than to understand.

Still, there remains a quiet majority that recognizes the difference. People who may disagree fiercely on issues but recoil at the idea of celebrating death. People who understand that dignity is not a partisan value; it is a human one. Their voices are often less amplified, less dramatic, but they matter more than the noise suggests.

In the end, moments like this are not just about the person who speaks them. They are about the standards we choose to uphold or abandon. Public figures will continue to test those boundaries, sometimes gleefully. The question is whether the public continues to reward that behaviour or begins to reject it.

Because the measure of a society is not how loudly it argues, but how it treats even those it opposes. And when death becomes a punchline, it is not just one person who looks diminished. It is all of us, unless we decide it should not be.


Carpond #010 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

A cacophony of singalongs, stifled yawns,
and surprisingly insightful debates
on the existential dread of a four wheeler vacuum

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In search for a win by Markus Gibbons

When political momentum stalls history shows that leaders often go looking for it elsewhere. Not through compromise, not through policy breakthroughs but through spectacle. The logic is simple, if you can’t secure a clear victory at home or in a complex foreign arena you manufacture one where the odds are better, the risks are contained and the narrative can be tightly controlled.

That’s the uneasy lens through which recent rhetoric should be viewed. With no decisive outcome in Iran on the horizon and midterm pressure steadily mounting, the temptation to pivot toward a more “winnable” confrontation grows stronger. The suggestion of targeting Cuba is not emerging in a vacuum. It fits a pattern, one where symbolic strength is prioritized over strategic depth.

Cuba, in this context, is not just a geopolitical actor; it’s a stage. It offers proximity, historical baggage and the potential for a quick, headline-grabbing move. Unlike larger or more complex adversaries, it presents the possibility, at least superficially, of a controlled escalation. Something that can be framed as decisive without spiraling into unpredictability. Whether that perception aligns with reality is another matter entirely.

But even if such a move were to occur, it raises a deeper question: what comes after? Because the underlying issue isn’t Cuba or Iran or any single country. It’s the cycle itself. If political survival becomes tied to external “wins,” then one victory is never enough. Each action sets the stage for the next demand, the next demonstration, the next assertion of dominance.

That’s where the speculation, half serious, half incredulous, begins to creep in. Greenland, Canada, Mexico. These aren’t realistic targets in any conventional sense but their mention reflects something important: a growing perception that boundaries, once assumed stable, are now rhetorically negotiable. What was once unthinkable becomes discussable and what becomes discussable starts to feel, over time, less impossible.

This is how normalization works, not through sudden shifts, but through repetition. Through the gradual expansion of what people are willing to entertain, even as a joke. Especially as a joke.

There’s also a domestic dimension that cannot be ignored. Foreign policy framed as a series of “wins” plays well in short bursts. It simplifies complex realities into digestible outcomes. Victory or defeat. Strength or weakness. But governance isn’t a scoreboard, and international relations are not a sequence of isolated matches. Every move carries consequences that ripple outward, economically, diplomatically and most dangerously, militarily.

The risk is not just escalation abroad, but distortion at home. When success is defined narrowly as visible triumph, quieter but more meaningful achievements, stability, cooperation, long-term strategy, lose their appeal. They don’t generate the same headlines. They don’t shift poll numbers overnight.

So the pressure builds. To act faster. To act bigger. To act louder.

And that’s the real danger, not any single decision but the mindset driving it. A mindset that sees the world less as a network of relationships and more as a map of opportunities for validation.

Because once you start chasing wins for their own sake, you’re no longer leading. You’re performing.


Thirst lines by Shanna Shepard

On World Water Day, we perform a familiar ritual: we speak of scarcity as if it were a distant storm, gathering somewhere beyond the horizon. We discuss innovation, conservation, and cooperation with a tone that suggests we are still early in the story. But the truth, increasingly difficult to ignore, is that the crisis is already here and it is political, not merely environmental.

Water, once considered the most basic and neutral of resources, has become entangled in the same hardened lines that define modern conflict. Rivers cross borders that armies defend. Aquifers lie beneath territories claimed and contested. Infrastructure, pipes, dams, treatment plants, has quietly joined the list of strategic targets. When bombs fall, water systems fail. And when water fails, everything else follows.

There is a tendency, especially in wealthier nations, to treat water scarcity as a technical challenge. Build better desalination plants. Repair aging systems. Price water more efficiently. These are not wrong solutions; they are simply insufficient. They assume that the problem is one of engineering, when in fact it is one of power.

Who controls water? Who gets to decide how it is distributed, priced, and protected? These questions rarely appear in glossy World Water Day campaigns, but they linger beneath every statistic about access and every photograph of a dry well. In places already strained by conflict, water becomes both a weapon and a bargaining chip. Deny it, and you weaken your opponent. Control it, and you consolidate authority.

The result is a slow, grinding form of violence, less visible than war, but no less devastating. Children grow up without reliable access to clean water, their health compromised before they have any say in the systems that failed them. Farmers abandon land that can no longer sustain crops, joining the swelling ranks of the displaced. Cities expand faster than their infrastructure can handle, turning taps into uncertainties.

Meanwhile, the global conversation remains curiously polite. We speak of “stress” and “risk,” as though water scarcity were a market fluctuation rather than a structural injustice. The language is careful, almost anaesthetic, as if blunt honesty might be impolite.

But blunt honesty is precisely what is required. The world is not running out of water; it is running out of fair ways to share it. There is enough water to meet human needs, but not enough political will to distribute it equitably. The imbalance is not accidental. It is built into systems that prioritize profit over access, sovereignty over cooperation, and short-term stability over long-term survival.

World Water Day, then, should not be a celebration of incremental progress. It should be an occasion for discomfort. It should force us to confront the uneasy reality that clean water, the most fundamental requirement for life, is still treated as a privilege rather than a right.

What would it mean to take that right seriously? It would mean recognizing water infrastructure as essential, not optional, even in times of conflict. It would mean holding governments and corporations accountable for policies that restrict access. It would mean acknowledging that water management is not a niche environmental issue but a central pillar of global stability.

Above all, it would mean abandoning the illusion that time is on our side. The lines are already drawn. They run through rivers, through cities, through lives. And unless we redraw them with intention and urgency, they will harden into something far more permanent than drought.


#eBook The final follower by Julia A. Girard

Gabriel sat alone in the darkness, a faint glow from his phone the only source of light in the room. The city stretched out beneath him, its lights like tiny, blinking stars on a pitch-black canvas.

He leaned back in his chair, tapping his fingers absentmindedly on the glass of his phone. The cold air from the open window cut through his apartment, but it wasn’t enough to shake the feeling that something was wrong.

His apartment, sleek, sterile and undeniably modern, was supposed to represent his success. The marble countertops, the black leather couch, the walls adorned with art that screamed sophistication. It was everything he’d wanted. Everything he’d worked for. Yet, when he looked around, he couldn’t shake the gnawing emptiness that clung to him like a second skin.

Julia A. Girard is a writer who'd rather be caught dead than serious. Her stories and books are a delightful blend of witty observations, quirky characters, and laugh-out-scary moments that will have you hooked from the first page.

Ovi eBook Publishing 2026

The final follower

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Read it online & downloading it as PDF or EPUB HERE!
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Litigation and International Arbitration in the Age of AI by GAFG

Continuing its series of world-class events, GAFG (Global Academy for Future Governance), together with its consortium of partners, is pleased to present the following event, scheduled for 26 March (12:00 – 14:00 GMT):

LITIGATION AND INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION IN THE AGE OF AI
Litigation, Legality, Authenticity, Morality, Trust, Compliance

An interactive session particularly suited for government officials (Justice and Home Affairs, Economy/Commerce, Trade and Development, Industry, Technology, Foreign Affairs, norms-setting bodies and legal enforcement); academia; WIPO, ILO, WTO; businesses; and the insurance, construction, extraction, trade and transport sectors.

Participants:

- Pascal Lamy, WTO Director-General (former)
- Ernest Petrič, President of the Constitutional Court of Slovenia (aD)
- Fernando Messias, lawyer and book author
- Umar Oseni, OIC Arbitration Chamber Secretary-General
- Julian Kassum, ICC Deputy Secretary-General (tbc)

In addition to the public part of this interactive session with top specialists, a privatissima segment will also be offered: a more informal, customised discussion with the panellist(s) of your choice, following your concern or interest.

Panellists:

- Fernando Messias, lawyer and book author
- Ernest Petrič, President of the Constitutional Court of Slovenia (aD)

Introductory Note / Moderated by:
- Prof. Anis H. Bajrektarevic, GAFG Co-founder, Geneva

Participation is entirely free of charge; however, we strongly encourage early registration, as places are limited.

Priority will be given to Global South member states, particularly Small Island Developing States (SIDS), Least Developed Countries (LDCs), and Landlocked Developing Countries (LLDCs).

Free event, limited spots – REGISTER TODAY: office@future-governance.org


Sceptic feathers #125 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

Cynicism with feathers on thin wires.

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When Islamophobia Tests the Boundaries of Democracy by Habib Siddiqui

The International Day to Combat Islamophobia arrived this year as the United States and Israel deepened military confrontation with Iran — an atmosphere that has pushed anti‑Muslim rhetoric from the margins into mainstream Western politics. In the United States, several recent statements by elected officials have raised alarms among civil rights advocates, constitutional scholars, and interfaith leaders who warn that such language is incompatible with democratic norms and the First Amendment’s guarantee of religious freedom. These concerns are not abstract: history shows that when governments normalize suspicion or hostility toward a religious minority, the consequences can be profound and long‑lasting.

That danger is visible again today, as remarks by President Donald Trump and several Republican lawmakers illustrate how deeply Islamophobia has become entangled with national politics. In a radio interview, Trump attributed recent violent incidents to the “genetics” of alleged assailants, suggesting that some people “shouldn’t have been let in” and that “something is wrong there.” His comments followed attacks at Old Dominion University in Virginia and at a synagogue in Michigan, the latter involving a U.S. citizen of Lebanese origin whose family had recently been killed in an Israeli strike. Experts have long associated such references to “genetics” with racial pseudoscience and eugenics, which modern science has rejected as unethical and discriminatory.The inconsistency speaks for itself: when a white American shot the president during the election campaign, “genetics” never entered the conversation. It surfaces only when the suspect can be othered. That is not science—it is scapegoating dressed up as biology.

Trump’s rhetoric has coincided with a surge of openly anti‑Muslim statements from members of Congress. Rep. Andy Ogles of Tennessee declared that “Muslims don’t belong in American society,” calling pluralism “a lie.” In a speech last year, he said that "America is and must always be a Christian nation." Other lawmakers have echoed similar sentiments. "No more Muslims immigrating to America," posted Rep. Brandon Gill, R-Texas on Thursday. Rep. Randy Fine of Florida wrote, “We need more Islamophobia, not less,” while Sen. Tommy Tuberville of Alabama posted a photo of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks side-by-side with a photo of New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who is Muslim. The caption read: "The enemy is inside the gates." These statements have drawn condemnation from Democrats and civil rights groups. "Islamophobia is a cancer that must be eradicated from both the Congress and the Country. The shocking silence from Republican leadership is deafening," said House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y.Speaker Mike Johnson said only that he “wouldn’t use quite the same language,” yet he still implied that fears of “Sharia law” justified the sentiment—despite the fact that no such legal system exists anywhere in the United States. The intent is unmistakable: invoking this imaginary threat as a political boogeyman is meant to scare the public and legitimize hostility toward an entire religious community.

The United States has confronted this dynamic in earlier wars. In World War II, Japanese people were depicted as animals or subhumans, a narrative that helped justify internment and the destruction of civilian populations. Historians have long observed that powerful states often rely on racialized rhetoric to make their wars appear necessary or inevitable. The language now used to describe Muslims in Gaza, Lebanon, and Iran follows this familiar scriptof dehumanization: entire communities are portrayed as inherently dangerous, lowering the moral threshold for military action.

According to reporting from ABC News, this pattern reflects a broader rise in anti‑Muslim rhetoric among Republican lawmakers, particularly in the context of the ongoing war involving Iran. Analysts note that the shift marks a departure from earlier periods when party leaders more consistently condemned such language.

History offers sobering examples of what happens when governments legitimize hostility toward a religious minority. In the United States, anti‑Catholic sentiment in the 19th century fueled violence, discriminatory laws, and political movements such as the Know‑Nothing Party. Anti‑Jewish rhetoric in Europe during the early 20th century laid the groundwork for exclusionary policies that escalated into catastrophic violence. More recently, the post‑9/11 era saw a dramatic rise in hate crimes against Muslims and those perceived to be Muslim, including Sikhs and Arab‑Americans. Civil rights organizations documented widespread surveillance, profiling, and detentions that disproportionately targeted Muslim communities.

These episodes demonstrate a consistent pattern: when political leaders frame a minority group as inherently suspect, foreign, or dangerous, public hostility increases, legal protections erode, and violence becomes more likely. The state’s role—whether through explicit policy or permissive silence—can either restrain or accelerate these dynamics.

One of the most striking contrasts between the present moment and the aftermath of 9/11 is the role of presidential leadership. In 2001, President George W. Bush visited a mosque within days of the attacks, and declared, "Islam is peace." "Those who feel like they can intimidate our fellow citizens to take out their anger don't represent the best of America," Bush said. That message, delivered from the highest office in the country, helped prevent an already volatile situation from spiraling further.

Today, the tone is markedly different. As noted by Maya Berry of the Arab American Institute, the current climate is “worse than what we saw post‑9/11” because the presidential “bully pulpit” is being used not to calm tensions but to amplify suspicion. Hate‑crime data reflect this shift: the largest spike in anti‑Muslim and anti‑Arab hate crimes occurred after 9/11, but the second‑largest spike came during the 2015–2016 period, coinciding with the rise of Trump’s initial presidential campaign. The pattern suggests that political rhetoric has a measurable impact on public behavior.

The United States is notthe only country witnessing a rise in Islamophobia. Across Western Europe, anti‑Muslim sentiment has been fueled by decades of migration from regions once colonized or occupied by European powers. In France, debates over hijab bans and “separatism” laws have intensified. In the United Kingdom, reports of anti‑Muslim hate crimes have risen during periods of political tension. In Germany, far‑right parties have capitalized on fears of immigration to gain electoral ground.Even Scandinavian countries—often idealized as models of tolerance—have seen their own surge in anti‑Muslim sentiment.

These developments reflect a broader struggle within Western democracies: how to reconcile pluralism with anxieties about identity, security, and cultural change. When political leaders choose to exploit these anxieties rather than address them constructively, the result is often a narrowing of democratic space and a weakening of social cohesion.

Statements suggesting that Muslims “don’t belong” in American society or that Islam itself is a threat run counter to the First Amendment. They also risk normalizing discrimination in policy areas such as immigration, law enforcement, and public education.

Legal scholars warn that when elected officials frame an entire religious community as inherently dangerous, it becomes easier to justify extraordinary measures—surveillance, exclusion, or restrictions on religious practice—that would be unthinkable if applied to other groups. The danger is not only to Muslims but to the integrity of the constitutional order itself.

Analysts note that inflammatory rhetoric can generate viral moments, energize political bases, and drive fundraising. In some cases, lawmakers who make such statements are rewarded with committee appointments or increased visibility. In fact, in the case of Congressman Randy Fine, the day he actually said starve them all is the day that he was appointed to the House Foreign Affairs Committee. This dynamic creates a perverse incentive structure in which bigotry becomes politically advantageous.

At the same time, the absence of strong condemnation from party leadership signals that such rhetoric is acceptable. This silence can be interpreted as tacit approval, further emboldening those who seek to use fear and division as political tools.

Why the International Day to Combat Islamophobia Matters

The International Day to Combat Islamophobia is not merely symbolic. It serves as a reminder that religious freedom is a universal human right and that democracies must actively protect minority communities from discrimination and violence. It also highlights the need for vigilance: Islamophobia does not emerge in a vacuum but is shaped by political choices, media narratives, and social conditions.

By acknowledging the harms caused by anti‑Muslim rhetoric—both historically and today—societies can begin to address the root causes and work toward more inclusive and resilient democracies.

Addressing Islamophobia requires a multifaceted approach:

  • Political leadership that unequivocally rejects bigotry and affirms the equal dignity of all citizens.
  • Legal safeguards that protect religious freedom and ensure accountability for hate crimes.
  • Public education that counters misinformation and fosters understanding across communities.
  • Media responsibility in avoiding sensationalism and providing accurate, nuanced coverage of Muslim communities.
  • Interfaith and civic engagement that builds bridges and strengthens social cohesion.

These steps are not only morally necessary but essential for the health of democratic institutions.

Closing Reflection

The rise of Islamophobia in the United States and across the West is a warning sign. Democracies are strongest when they protect the rights of minorities, uphold the rule of law, and resist the temptation to scapegoat vulnerable communities. The International Day to Combat Islamophobia invites us to reflect on these principles and to recommit to a vision of society in which all people—regardless of faith—can live with dignity, safety, and equal rights.


Dr. Siddiqui is a peace activist.


Dangerous echoes in the language of power by Shanna Shepard

Every year the world marks the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, a day meant to remind humanity of the devastating consequences of prejudice elevated into policy. It is not simply a ceremonial date on the calendar. It is a warning carved out of history, one that demands vigilance whenever the language of racial hierarchy resurfaces in public discourse.

In recent days remarks by Donald Trump invoking ideas reminiscent of Eugenics and notions of “genetic criminality” have reignited concerns about how easily discredited pseudoscience can creep back into political rhetoric. These ideas are not abstract theories; they are relics of a dark intellectual tradition that once justified forced sterilizations, racial segregation and even genocide. When such language appears in modern politics, it should set off alarms far beyond partisan divides.

Eugenics emerged in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as a movement claiming that society could be improved by controlling human reproduction. It wrapped prejudice in the language of science. Certain groups were labelled “inferior,” while others were deemed biologically superior. Governments in multiple countries embraced these theories, implementing policies that stripped people of autonomy over their bodies and lives. The ideology’s most infamous culmination came during the atrocities of the Holocaust, where racial pseudoscience became a foundation for systematic extermination.

That history is precisely why references to genetic explanations for criminal behaviour are so troubling today. Suggesting that crime or social problems are embedded in a group’s DNA is not just scientifically baseless; it also shifts responsibility away from social conditions, inequality, education and policy failures. Instead of addressing complex problems, it reduces them to biological destiny.

The danger lies not only in the idea itself but in the normalization of the language. When influential leaders speak casually about genetics determining morality or criminality, they lend legitimacy to narratives that have long been used to stigmatize minorities and immigrants. Words spoken from powerful platforms carry weight; they shape the boundaries of what becomes acceptable in public debate.

Some defenders dismiss such remarks as rhetorical exaggeration or political theater. But history shows that harmful ideas rarely arrive fully formed as policy. They begin as whispers, as metaphors, as supposedly offhand comments that test the limits of public tolerance. Once the language seeps into mainstream discussion, the step from words to actions becomes smaller than many would like to believe.

The International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination is meant to remind us that racism does not only manifest in overt acts of violence. It also appears in the assumptions embedded in political narratives, assumptions about who belongs, who is suspect and who is deemed biologically predisposed to wrongdoing.

In the end, this conversation is not merely about one politician. It is about the standards we expect from those who hold power and influence public thought. Leaders have the ability either to challenge prejudice or to quietly legitimize it.

History has already shown us what happens when pseudoscience and politics intertwine. Remembering that lesson is not political correctness; it is historical responsibility. And on a day dedicated to eliminating racial discrimination, that responsibility could not be clearer.


An Open Letter to President Trump by Habib Siddiqui

Dear President Trump, When you ran your 2024 campaign , you promised to end the cycle of “forever wars” that had drained trillions of doll...