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

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

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

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

A Party Infrastructure Built on Manufacturing a Threat

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Donald Trump: The Megaphone That Made Hate Mainstream

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

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

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

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

How Rhetoric Radicalizes

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

Where do young Americans learn to think this way?

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

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

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

The San Diego Attack: A Tragedy Foretold

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

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

The Five Criteria of Dangerous Speech

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

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

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

This is not a coincidence. It is a climate.

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

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

But it is also deadly.

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

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

A Call for Moral Leadership

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

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

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


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


A pay cut won’t buy patience by Mia Rodríguez

Bolivia’s political crisis has reached a familiar stage, a government struggling to convince angry citizens that sacrifice today will produce prosperity tomorrow. President Rodrigo Paz’s decision to cut his own salary in half, along with those of his cabinet ministers, is clearly intended to send a message. The symbolism is obvious. If ordinary Bolivians are being asked to endure economic hardship under an austerity program, then the country’s leaders should share some of the burden.

It is a gesture that will generate headlines. Whether it will generate trust is another matter entirely. Across history, politicians have often turned to symbolic acts when confronted by mounting public frustration. They ride public transportation, reduce official perks, sell government vehicles, or slash their own salaries. Such measures are politically attractive because they are easy to explain and relatively painless compared with the far more difficult task of restructuring an economy. Citizens can immediately see them. Governments can immediately advertise them.

But symbolism is not policy. The protesters filling Bolivia’s streets are not demanding smaller paychecks for ministers. They are demanding relief from the economic pressures that have made daily life increasingly difficult. They are challenging an austerity program that they believe places the greatest burden on people least able to carry it. For them, the issue is not whether politicians are earning too much. The issue is whether the government’s economic strategy is making life worse.

That distinction matters. A cabinet-wide pay cut may create the appearance of solidarity, but appearances have a short shelf life during periods of economic pain. Families struggling with rising costs do not suddenly feel more secure because a minister’s salary has been reduced. Workers worried about employment do not gain confidence because senior officials have accepted lower compensation. Such actions can soften criticism temporarily, but they rarely address the underlying grievances fueling public anger.

Indeed, there is a risk that the announcement could backfire. When governments emphasize symbolic sacrifices, they sometimes unintentionally reinforce public perceptions that they are avoiding larger questions. Citizens may begin asking whether leaders are offering meaningful solutions or merely searching for public-relations victories. If the economic situation continues to deteriorate, a salary cut that initially appeared noble can come to look like an admission that policymakers have run out of persuasive arguments.

The challenge facing Paz is therefore much larger than demonstrating personal commitment. Leadership is not measured by how much income a president voluntarily gives up. It is measured by whether the policies being pursued can command public confidence.

That does not mean protesters are automatically correct in rejecting austerity. Governments occasionally face severe fiscal realities that leave few attractive options. Budget deficits cannot be wished away. Economic stability often requires painful decisions. Yet even necessary reforms become politically unsustainable when citizens conclude that they are carrying disproportionate costs while receiving little explanation, consultation, or hope.

Ultimately, Bolivia’s unrest reflects a crisis of trust as much as a debate over economics. The salary reductions may help project humility. They may even be sincere. But humility alone does not lower prices; create jobs, or calm social unrest.

A president can cut his paycheck in half. He cannot cut public frustration in half with the same stroke of a pen. That requires something far harder: convincing a skeptical nation that sacrifice today will genuinely lead to a better tomorrow.


The tyranny of 9:00 A.M. by Dai Eun Greer

For more than a century, the nine-to-five workday has been treated as if it were a law of nature rather than a managerial invention. Offices open, meetings begin, inboxes flood, and millions of people dutifully drag themselves into a schedule that often feels less like a productivity system and more like a collective act of sleep deprivation. We have become so accustomed to the arrangement that questioning it can sound almost rebellious. Yet the real mystery is not why so many workers struggle with the traditional workday. The mystery is why we continue pretending that everyone’s biological clock operates on the same timetable.

Human beings are remarkably diverse in almost every measurable way. We vary in height, metabolism, temperament, and talent. Yet when it comes to work schedules, organizations often behave as though every employee shares the exact same internal rhythm. The morning person who springs awake before sunrise and the night owl whose brain only seems to fully engage at noon are expected to arrive at the same hour and perform at the same level.

The result is predictable. Large numbers of people spend their most alert hours trapped in meetings and their least alert hours attempting meaningful work. We call this discipline. We call it professionalism. Sometimes we even call it efficiency. But efficiency is an odd word to use for a system that routinely asks people to work when their brains are operating below capacity.

The growing idea of “sleep-syncing” offers a challenge to this outdated assumption. Rather than forcing workers into a uniform schedule, sleep-syncing suggests aligning work demands with individual biological rhythms. It sounds deceptively simple: do your most important work when your mind is naturally most awake. Yet in practice, this concept overturns one of the deepest assumptions of modern office culture.

The traditional workday emerged during an industrial age that valued synchronization above all else. Factories needed workers present at the same time because machines and assembly lines demanded it. But many modern jobs are not assembly lines. A software developer, writer, analyst, designer, or researcher often creates value through concentration rather than physical presence. The work depends less on being visible at a specific hour and more on being mentally sharp.

Despite this reality, many organizations still reward attendance more than performance. Employees learn to master the art of looking busy during prescribed hours rather than producing exceptional results during their peak cognitive periods. It is a strange arrangement. We celebrate innovation while organizing work according to assumptions inherited from the nineteenth century.

Sleep-syncing does not mean abandoning structure or turning workplaces into chaotic free-for-alls. Teams still need coordination. Deadlines still matter. Collaboration still requires overlap. But there is a vast middle ground between total rigidity and total freedom. Allowing people greater control over when they perform deep, demanding work may not simply improve well-being; it may improve outcomes.

Perhaps the greatest obstacle is cultural rather than logistical. Society continues to treat early rising as a moral virtue. The person answering emails at 5:30 a.m. is often admired, while the equally productive colleague working later hours may be viewed with suspicion. Yet biology is not a character flaw. A clock on the wall tells time. A clock inside the body tells us when we function best.

The future of work may depend less on where people work and more on when. The smartest organizations will recognize that productivity is not created by forcing every worker into the same schedule. It emerges when work finally learns to respect the rhythms of the humans performing it.


Trekking Chat #009 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

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Memories of Tiananmen Square by Rene Wadlow

June 4 makes the security forces in China somewhat uneasy, especially in Hong Kong where, in the past, there were large memorial meetings to remind people of June 4, 1989, when the military and police moved against those who had been protesting publicly for over a month. Students from colleges and universities in China’s capital initiated protests after the death of the former General Secretary of the Communist Party, Hu Yaobang, on April 15, 1989 who was considered a liberal reformer. The movement then spread over a number of weeks to most of the major cities. Students made numerous demands, among them were calls for an end to government corruption, increased funding for education, and freedom of the press. As the movement went on, students were increasingly joined by industrial workers.

There were differences of opinion within the ruling government circle as to how to deal with the protests. As the protests continued, there was more and more international media attention, especially as there were an increasing number of journalists in Beijing in advance of the visit of the Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev, with a large delegation of Soviet officials.

Students and intellectuals started writing petitions setting out demands that were signed by more and more people. The decentralized structure of power and decision-making among groups in Tienanmen Square allowed for tactical innovation as each group was free to act as it desired and stress the symbols it wanted. Thus, art school students created the Goddess of Democracy, largely based on the Statue of Liberty in New York harbor. The growth in support for the student-led protests led the more anti-reformist faction in the government to order a crackdown by the military and the police. The tanks started to move into Tiananmen Square.

Since June 1989 there have been reforms within China – what we might call “democratization from below” but without large scale, highly visible public protests. ‘Stability’ and ‘harmony’ have been the stated government policy aims, colored by the breakup of the Soviet Union and fundamental changes in Eastern Europe. So, democratization needs to proceed quietly and gradually. Such democratization requires long-term vision and skillful leadership. Democratization is basically linked to individualization, to an ever-larger number of people thinking for themselves, creating their own lifestyles and ‘thinking outside the box’. It can be a slow process and repressive forces within the government watch events closely. However, it is likely that the direction of individualism is set and cannot be reversed.

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Rene Wadlow, President, Association of World Citizens


The ghost of New Labour by Jemma Norman

More than a decade after leaving office, Tony Blair continues to hover over Labour like a well-dressed ghost, appearing whenever the party looks uncertain, divided or vulnerable. Today, with Keir Starmer facing growing discontent from parts of his own coalition and Labour struggling to define a coherent governing identity, Blair’s re-emergence feels less like a surprise than a recurring feature of British political life.

The irony is that Blair’s greatest political achievement may also have planted the seeds of Labour’s current crisis. During his years in power, he transformed Labour from a party rooted in traditional social democracy into a machine designed primarily to win elections. The ideological edges were softened. Market economics were embraced. Public services were reformed according to managerial logic. The old tribal distinctions between Labour and the Conservatives became increasingly difficult to identify.

For many voters, this was precisely the point. Blair understood that elections are won in the centre ground, not at ideological extremes. Yet the long-term consequence was a gradual erosion of Labour’s political identity. If Labour accepted much of the economic framework established by Conservative governments, what exactly made it Labour anymore? The question never entirely disappeared. It merely remained dormant while Blair was winning.

Now it has returned with force. Starmer’s leadership has often appeared as an attempt to complete Blair’s unfinished project. Much of Labour’s rhetoric revolves around competence, stability, fiscal caution, and reassurance rather than transformative ambition. The language is managerial rather than inspirational. The promise is effective administration rather than social reconstruction. While this approach helped Labour return to government, it has left many supporters wondering what larger vision lies beneath the surface.

Into this uncertainty steps Blair once again. His interventions increasingly reflect a political instinct shaped by a different age but adapted to contemporary anxieties. Whether discussing immigration, crime, national identity, technological disruption, or government efficiency, Blair often sounds less like an elder statesman of the centre-left and more like a strategist studying the rise of populist politics across the Western world. He appears convinced that traditional parties must absorb elements of the populist challenge if they hope to survive it.

This does not make Blair a Trumpist, nor does it mean Labour is becoming a British version of Trump’s movement. The comparison is subtler than that. Blair’s instinct is to borrow the themes that resonate with frustrated voters while maintaining establishment control over the political system. It is a strategy of adaptation rather than rebellion.

Yet such adaptation carries risks. Every time Labour moves closer to conservative rhetoric on culture, borders, or national identity, it risks reinforcing the perception that ideological differences between the major parties are largely cosmetic. Voters searching for genuine alternatives may conclude that they are being offered competing management teams rather than competing visions of society.

The deeper problem for Starmer is that Blair’s return highlights a vacuum at the heart of contemporary Labour. Strong parties rarely need advice from former leaders. They generate their own confidence and direction. Weak parties invite ghosts.

And in British politics, few ghosts are more persistent than Tony Blair.


Quarantine at a distance by Marja Heikkinen

Recent controversy surrounding a proposed quarantine and treatment facility in Kenya for Americans potentially exposed to a dangerous Ebola variant has reignited an uncomfortable question: when public health emergencies arise, who is expected to bear the burden, and who is expected to be protected from it?

Supporters of such arrangements often frame them as practical necessities. They argue that infectious diseases require careful containment and that governments have an obligation to protect their populations from potential outbreaks. On paper, that sounds reasonable. In practice, however, these decisions can create the impression that some lives are being treated as logistical problems rather than human beings deserving care, dignity, and reassurance.

The most troubling aspect is not simply the location of a quarantine facility. It is the message that many people hear beneath the policy. To critics, the proposal suggests a willingness to keep potentially exposed citizens at arm’s length, physically and politically, while the risks and anxieties associated with their treatment are transferred elsewhere. Whether that interpretation is entirely fair or not, it reflects a growing public distrust of institutions that increasingly seem to view citizens through the lens of risk management rather than responsibility.

The backlash in Kenya is understandable. Citizens and medical professionals there have every right to ask why their country should become a destination for handling another nation’s public health challenge. Their objections are not merely about disease. They are about sovereignty, fairness, and respect. No nation wants to be perceived as a convenient holding area for problems wealthier countries would rather keep at a distance.

At the same time, the controversy raises uncomfortable questions for the United States itself. America possesses some of the most advanced medical facilities in the world. It has enormous scientific resources, sophisticated public-health agencies, and vast financial capacity. Against that backdrop, any suggestion that potentially exposed Americans should be managed primarily outside the country can appear less like a necessity and more like an avoidance of responsibility.

Public trust is fragile. People want to believe that if they become caught in a crisis abroad, their government will move mountains to bring them home safely and provide the best possible care. They want reassurance that they will not be treated as liabilities to be parked somewhere convenient until the danger passes. When policies create the opposite impression, even unintentionally, confidence erodes.

Health emergencies demand difficult choices. There are no perfect solutions when dealing with highly contagious diseases. But governments must recognize that citizens are not cargo, and partner nations are not storage facilities for political discomfort. Effective public health depends not only on science and logistics but also on legitimacy. People must believe that decisions are being made with fairness and humanity at their core.

When a policy leaves both the host country and the affected citizens feeling used, it is worth asking whether the problem lies not in the criticism but in the decision itself. A nation demonstrates its values most clearly during moments of fear. The question is whether those values are revealed through responsibility or through distance.


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Helene Schjerfbeck spent nearly seven decades painting, yet her fiercest work began only when the world stopped looking. For much of the twentieth century, she was remembered, when remembered at all, as a Finnish painter of polite portraits and Nordic still lifes.

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Carpond #014 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

A cacophony of singalongs, stifled yawns,
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Silently climbing aboard by Fahad Kline

If reports that Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates secretly participated in attacks against Iran are accurate, they mark more than another episode in the Middle East’s endless cycle of confrontation. They signal a profound shift in the political identity of two states that have long prided themselves on balancing ambition with caution. The question is not whether Iran deserves criticism for its regional conduct. The question is whether Gulf governments are abandoning the strategic restraint that once defined their foreign policy.

For decades, Saudi Arabia and the UAE understood a simple reality. Geography is permanent. Iran is not a distant rival that can be ignored or isolated. It is a neighbor, a competitor, and at times an adversary. Yet even during periods of intense tension, Gulf leaders generally sought to avoid direct military entanglement. They preferred economic leverage, diplomatic maneuvering, and carefully managed pressure over actions that could ignite a broader regional war.

That calculation appears to be changing. The war has exposed an uncomfortable truth for many American partners in the region. The United States remains powerful, but its security guarantees are no longer viewed as absolute. Washington’s willingness to intervene decisively has become less predictable, regardless of which party controls the White House. Faced with that uncertainty, regional governments have increasingly sought new ways to shape events rather than simply react to them.

But there is a difference between pursuing strategic autonomy and tying oneself to the political instincts of a particular American administration. Donald Trump’s foreign policy approach has always favored confrontation over caution. Allies are often encouraged to take bolder positions against common adversaries. The danger is that countries with their own complex regional interests begin viewing every challenge through Washington’s lens rather than their own. In doing so, they risk becoming participants in conflicts that may serve short-term tactical goals while undermining long-term national interests.

Saudi Arabia and the UAE spent years cultivating images as pragmatic powers focused on economic modernization, investment, and stability. They marketed themselves as hubs of commerce and innovation rather than permanent actors on the battlefield. Those ambitions require predictability. Investors do not flock to regions drifting toward open conflict. Global businesses do not make long-term commitments based on military escalation.

A secret role in attacks against Iran would therefore represent more than a military decision. It would be a political statement. It would suggest that deterrence is now being pursued through direct action rather than strategic distance. That is a risky wager in a region where retaliation rarely remains limited and where unintended consequences have a habit of becoming permanent realities.

Perhaps the most striking aspect of this moment is how quickly traditional assumptions appear to be eroding. Countries once associated with cautious neutrality are increasingly willing to choose sides. The space between diplomacy and confrontation is shrinking. That may satisfy those who believe strength is measured by aggression, but history offers a different lesson. The Middle East has never suffered from a shortage of military ventures. It has suffered from a shortage of political patience.

If Gulf leaders are indeed moving closer to Washington’s most confrontational instincts, they should remember that great powers can change direction with elections. Geography cannot. Long after American administrations come and go, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Iran will remain neighbors. That reality, more than any temporary alliance, should guide their decisions.


Citizens on paper by Shanna Shepard

Native American Citizenship Day arrives each year with the quiet dignity of a date that should provoke national reflection but rarely does. The observance commemorates the 1924 law that finally granted U.S. citizenship to Native Americans born in this country. The word “finally” deserves emphasis. Indigenous peoples were here before the United States existed, yet they had to wait for citizenship from a government built on their dispossession.

That contradiction has never entirely disappeared. It simply changes costumes. In the age of Donald Trump and an immigration apparatus that has become one of the most visible symbols of federal power, Native American Citizenship Day feels less like a celebration than a mirror. It reflects an enduring American habit: deciding who belongs, who must prove they belong, and who gets treated as a guest in a place that is supposed to be home.

The irony is almost too sharp to write without sounding satirical. The descendants of the continent’s first peoples mark a day recognizing their citizenship while the national conversation is increasingly dominated by suspicion, documentation, enforcement, and belonging. The language may be directed at migrants, asylum seekers, and undocumented workers, but it reveals something broader about the American political imagination. Citizenship is discussed not as a shared democratic bond but as a badge to be inspected, challenged, and revoked in spirit if not in law.

Trump did not invent that impulse. He merely amplified it. His political rise depended heavily on drawing bright lines between insiders and outsiders. The border became both a policy issue and a cultural symbol. Immigration enforcement became a performance of national identity. In that environment, agencies such as ICE took on a significance far beyond their administrative role. They became characters in a larger story about who counts as a real American.

Native Americans know something about that story. For centuries, Indigenous communities have been asked to adapt, assimilate, relocate, register, and justify their existence according to standards imposed from outside. Their relationship with the federal government has often been defined by bureaucracy backed by force. The details differ dramatically from contemporary immigration enforcement, but the underlying question remains familiar: who has the authority to determine belonging?

The uncomfortable answer, throughout much of American history, has been whoever holds power at the moment. That is why Native American Citizenship Day should not be reduced to a historical footnote or a ceremonial proclamation. It should challenge Americans to think about citizenship as something larger than paperwork. Citizenship is not merely a legal category. It is a promise of equal dignity. When public life becomes obsessed with sorting people into deserving and undeserving groups, that promise begins to erode.

The lesson of Native American Citizenship Day is not that America eventually got it right. The lesson is that America spent generations getting it wrong. Remembering that history matters, especially during periods when political leaders gain influence by narrowing the definition of who belongs.

A mature democracy does not fear the question of belonging. It answers it with confidence. Native American Citizenship Day reminds us that citizenship should expand the circle, not guard the gate. That remains a lesson the United States is still struggling to learn.


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