When Politics Breeds Hate, Sacred Spaces Bleed Fear by Javed Akbar

The tragedy near the Islamic Center of San Diego is not merely another entry in America’s grim ledger of mass shootings. Reports indicate the gunmen never breached the mosque complex itself and were later found dead nearby from apparent self-inflicted wounds. Yet for the Muslim families who gathered there — and for the children attending the Islamic day school on the premises — such technical distinctions offer no refuge. Fear does not negotiate in geography. It settles in the body, in memory, in the silence before stepping out the door.

To treat this as an isolated burst of violence is to misunderstand the pattern. The United States has grown disturbingly accustomed to mass shootings in schools, churches, synagogues, concerts, and shopping malls. But when the target is a mosque, the act does not emerge from a vacuum of randomness alone. It is incubated in a cultural atmosphere where anti-Muslim suspicion has been steadily normalized, repackaged as politics, and laundered through the language of security, patriotism, and “civilization.”

The May 18 incident near the Islamic Center of San Diego is now being investigated as a possible hate crime. Early reports suggest the assailants were teenagers influenced by anti-Muslim rhetoric and generalized hate ideology. A security guard who attempted to intervene was killed. Children were evacuated in panic. These are not just statistics; they are fragments of a society’s moral failure.

And this failure is not new.

In Canada, the memory of the 2017 Quebec City mosque shooting still lingers as a national wound. Six worshippers were murdered during evening prayers — men who had come seeking nothing more radical than peace and community. Then came the 2021 attack in London, Ontario, where four members of a Muslim family were deliberately run down in an act of targeted violence that orphaned a child and shocked a country that often prides itself on tolerance.

These are not disconnected tragedies. They form a continuum.

Mosques across North America have endured bomb threats, vandalism, harassment, and armed intimidation. Muslim women wearing hijab describe navigating public spaces with a constant awareness of vulnerability. Parents quietly calculate risk before sending children to religious classes. A sanctuary, by definition, should not require security assessments.

The deeper danger lies in how such hostility becomes thinkable. Hate does not begin with violence; it begins with permission. And permission is often granted not by fringe actors alone, but by the steady drip of political and media rhetoric that reduces an entire faith to a problem to be managed.

The normalization of anti-Muslim narrative accelerated dramatically after Donald Trump entered political stage in 2015, transforming suspicion of Muslims from fringe discourse into mainstream political currency.

Demonization of Muslims reached a peak when calls for banning Muslims from entering the country entered mainstream political discourse. Even when softened later, the underlying message lingered: suspicion is acceptable, exclusion is defensible, fear is rational.

Words matter more than their speakers often admit.

No serious argument suggests that political rhetoric directly loads a gun. But it is intellectually dishonest to deny that sustained demonization alters the moral weather. It lowers the threshold of empathy. It tells the unstable that their fears are shared, their anger justified, and their fantasies of “defense” socially intelligible.

There is also a troubling asymmetry in public response. When perpetrators are Muslim, entire communities are subjected to interrogation, as though collective guilt were self-evident. When Muslims are victims, the language shifts: “isolated incident,” “mental health crisis,” “tragedy without context.” The imbalance is not merely semantic. It shapes whose suffering is politicized and whose is quietly absorbed.

This is not only a Muslim concern. It is a democratic one. A society in which people fear their places of worship is a society in which civic trust is already eroding. Democracy does not collapse only through coups or constitutional crises; it erodes when fear becomes routine and belonging becomes conditional.

Canada and the United States now face a clear test. They can either confront anti-Muslim hatred with the same moral urgency applied to other forms of extremism, or continue treating it as ambient background noise — regrettable, periodic, but ultimately tolerable.

Condemnation after each tragedy is no longer sufficient. What is required is political discipline: a refusal to weaponize identity for electoral gain; a media culture that resists outrage as spectacle; and digital platforms that acknowledge their role in accelerating ideological radicalization.

Above all, there must be a cultural insistence on one principle: no group should be rendered suspect by default.

Because history is unambiguous on one point. When people are repeatedly described as alien, dangerous, or incompatible, it is only a matter of time before someone decides that elimination is a form of clarity.

The families affected in San Diego deserve more than condolences. They deserve an honest reckoning with the climate that made their fear predictable.

And Muslim communities across North America deserve something that should never have been in question: the simple, fundamental right to gather, to pray, and to live without looking over their shoulder.


Javed Akbar is a freelance writer whose opinion columns have appeared in Toronto Star and numerous digital platforms. He can be reached at: mjavedakbar@gmail.com


The corruption wound Zelensky cannot close by Marja Heikkinen

For more than two years, President Volodymyr Zelensky has carried the moral burden of presenting Ukraine not merely as a nation under siege, but as a nation worthy of rescue. Western taxpayers, European governments and American lawmakers did not only send weapons and aid because Russia invaded. They sent them because Ukraine promised something larger, a democratic future free from the oligarchic rot that poisoned the country for decades.

That is why the latest corruption allegations surrounding Andriy Yermak strike deeper than another ordinary political scandal. They reopen an old wound Ukrainians thought they had finally begun to cauterize.

War changes the political rules of a country. Citizens forgive shortages, delays and emergency powers when missiles are falling. But corruption is different. Corruption during wartime feels like theft not only of money, but of sacrifice itself. Every soldier in a muddy trench, every grieving mother and every exhausted taxpayer abroad inevitably asks the same corrosive question: who is still getting rich while the country bleeds?

The allegations connected to a luxury $10.5 million construction project outside Kyiv are politically devastating precisely because of their symbolism. Luxury. Millions. Elite connections. It is the visual vocabulary of the very Ukraine Zelensky vowed to dismantle when he rose from comedian to anti-establishment president in 2019.

And perhaps the cruelest irony is that Zelensky genuinely did change Ukraine’s political culture in meaningful ways. He helped modernize state institutions, strengthened international alliances and gave the country an image of resilience unimaginable a decade ago. His wartime leadership transformed him into the embodiment of Ukrainian defiance. But corruption scandals possess a unique power: they flatten nuance. One accusation can overshadow a hundred reforms.

For Ukraine’s enemies, this is a propaganda gift. The Kremlin has long insisted that Ukraine is merely another corrupt post-Soviet state wearing democratic clothing for Western audiences. Every fresh scandal allows Moscow to whisper, see, nothing has changed.

But the greater danger lies not in Russian talking points. It lies in exhaustion among Ukraine’s allies. Democracies are emotional creatures. Public support depends not only on strategy but on trust. Americans and Europeans may continue supporting Ukraine militarily while quietly losing faith politically. That erosion rarely happens dramatically. It happens gradually, through headlines that accumulate like water leaking through a ceiling.

Zelensky now faces the hardest challenge of wartime leadership: proving that patriotism is not immunity. If Ukraine’s anti-corruption institutions are real, they must be allowed to investigate powerful figures without interference, intimidation or political theater. Otherwise, the message becomes unmistakable, corruption is punished only until it approaches the presidential inner circle.

Ukraine’s tragedy is that it cannot afford even the appearance of moral failure. Countries fighting for survival survive partly on belief, belief from allies, investors, soldiers and citizens. Once doubt enters the bloodstream, it spreads quietly.

The battlefield may still define Ukraine’s territorial future. But scandals like this one threaten something equally important, the country’s democratic credibility. And unlike damaged buildings, trust is far harder to rebuild once shattered.


The Maltese falcon of federal law enforcement #thoughts by Theodore K. Nasos

There are ordinary government officials, and then there are government officials who apparentKashly travel the globe carrying personalized bourbon bottles engraved with “Ka$h Patel” and an FBI badge like they’re promotional energy drinks at a monster truck rally. Somewhere between international diplomacy and a fraternity reunion gone catastrophically off the rails, Patel seems to have created an entirely new branch of federal image management: Alcoholic Branding Operations.

According to stunned witnesses and likely several deeply exhausted interns, Patel has been distributing this “boozy merch” everywhere from the Milan Winter Olympics to FBI training seminars led by Ultimate Fighting Championship athletes. Because naturally, when Americans think “measured federal professionalism,” they think of cage fighters and custom liquor bottles with dollar signs in the name.

One can only imagine the scene at the Olympics. Elite athletes from around the world competing at the highest level while Patel roams the corridors like a suburban Gatsby, pressing bourbon bottles into the hands of confused diplomats.

“Compliments of Ka$h.” Nothing says “international stability” quite like a federal official handing out whiskey branded like a SoundCloud rapper who just discovered cryptocurrency.

But the true masterpiece came during the FBI seminar involving UFC athletes, a sentence that already sounds like it was generated by an AI trained exclusively on protein powder advertisements and congressional hearings. Somewhere between armbar demonstrations and lectures about tactical awareness, disaster struck: one of the bourbon bottles vanished.

And Patel reportedly lost his entire mind. Not mildly irritated. Not “please check the conference room.” No. This became a full-scale national security event. Staff members allegedly watched in horror as the missing liquor bottle transformed into the Zapruder film of office scandals.

Who took it?
Why?
Was it foreign espionage?
Was the bottle compromised?
Had America’s enemies finally penetrated the sacred bourbon perimeter?

According to accounts, Patel threatened polygraph tests to uncover the culprit. Polygraphs. Over a bottle of vanity whiskey. Somewhere, actual FBI agents investigating organized crime probably paused mid-surveillance to whisper, “Wait, this is what resources are being used for?”

Imagine being the poor staffer trapped in that interrogation.

“Where were you between 8:14 and 8:17 PM?”
“Sir, I was getting ice.”
“For the bourbon?”
“Yes.”
“So you admit involvement.”

At this point the missing bottle had clearly evolved beyond alcohol. It had become symbolic, the One Bourbon to Rule Them All. A sacred artifact. The Declaration of Independrinks.

Meanwhile, terrified aides likely began searching trash cans, ceiling vents, and possibly each other’s luggage while trying to avoid eye contact with a man unraveling over engraved liquor.

And honestly, the engraving itself raises questions. Why “Ka$h”? Why the dollar sign? It gives less “senior federal authority” and more “regional nightclub owner who definitely knows a guy named Vinny.” The branding sounds like a celebrity-endorsed cinnamon whiskey available exclusively at gas stations next to expired beef jerky.

The darkestly funny part is that somewhere deep inside the FBI, a room full of serious career professionals probably had to discuss this with straight faces.

“Director, we have a situation.”
“Cyberattack?”
“No.”
“Terror threat?”
“Worse.”
“The Ka$h bottle is missing.”

At which point every ancestor of J. Edgar Hoover collectively rose from their graves just long enough to die again.


Ma-Siri & Co #123 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

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

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Why the RSS Is Wooing the West as India’s Democratic Fabric Frays By Habib Siddiqui

In recent months, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) – the ideological parent of India’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) – has intensified its outreach efforts in the United States and Europe. Senior RSS functionaries have been meeting lawmakers, think-tank analysts, and diaspora groups in Washington, London, Berlin, and Brussels. The timing is not coincidental. It reflects a strategic attempt to shape global perceptions at a moment when India’s democratic credentials are under unprecedented scrutiny.

At the heart of this campaign lies a simple question: What is the RSS trying to achieve abroad while the situation for minorities at home continues to deteriorate?

The answer begins with the growing international concern about India’s human-rights trajectory. For the sixth consecutive year, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) has recommended that India be designated a Country of Particular Concern – a label reserved for the world’s most severe violators of religious freedom. In its latest report, USCIRF urged the U.S. government to adopt a firmer stance: to impose targeted sanctions on individuals and entities, including India’s Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) and the RSS, for their role in or tolerance of serious violations; to link future security cooperation and trade engagement with measurable improvements in religious freedom; and to enforce Section 6 of the Arms Export Control Act to halt arms sales to India in light of continued intimidation and harassment of U.S. citizens and religious minorities..

Reports from independent watchdogs, academic institutions, and civil-society groups consistently document rising hate speech, mob violence, and targeted intimidation and lynching of Muslims, Christians, and Dalits.One example is the work of India Hate Lab, which monitors, documents, and analyzes hate speech, disinformation, and conspiracy theories targeting religious minorities both online and offline. Its 2025 report recorded 1,318 hate‑speech events across 21 states, one union territory, and the National Capital Territory of Delhi – an average of four incidents per day. This represents a 13 percent increase from 2024 and a staggering 97 percent increase from 2023, when 668 such incidents were documented. As expected, states governed by the BJP accounted for 88 percent of these events. Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, and Madhya Pradesh topped the list with 266, 193, and 172 incidents, respectively.

The 2025 Report, released on January 13, 2026, says: “Patterns of inflammatory rhetoric in 2025, benchmarked against earlier years,  revealed a steady progression toward more overt incitement. The report notes the persistent prevalence of dangerous speech (defined as speech that elevates the risk of violence) with political leaders and far-right figures openly using dehumanizing language, urging economic boycotts, calling for the destruction of minority-owned properties and places of worship, and issuing explicit appeals for Hindus to arm themselves given the threat of Muslims… As in the preceding year, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) affiliates such as the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) and the Bajrang Dal were central drivers of in-person hate speech events.”

Against this backdrop, the RSS’s global charm offensive is best understood as an image-management exercise. India aspires to a permanent seat on the UN Security Council and seeks deeper strategic partnerships with Western democracies. But reputational damage threatens these ambitions. The RSS’s international campaign aims to reassure Western policymakers that India remains a stable, pluralistic democracy – even as evidence on the ground suggests otherwise.

The RSS insists it is merely a cultural organization devoted to social service and national unity. Yet its influence on Indian governance is unmistakable. Many of the BJP’s most senior leaders, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi, were trained in the RSS from their youth. The organization’s worldview – rooted in the ideology of Hindutva, often described by scholars as a form of Hindu civilizational nationalism and, by some critics, as exhibiting features of Hindu fascism – shapes policy, public discourse, and institutional behavior..

To describe the RSS as “cultural” is to overlook its political reach. It provides ideological direction, cadre training, and grassroots mobilization. The BJP, in turn, provides the political power to implement that vision. The two function as parallel arms of the same movement, even if they maintain a formal separation on paper. This symbiosis is central to understanding India’s current political trajectory.

Critics argue that the consequences of this ideological alignment are visible in the lived experiences of India’s minorities. The rise in hate speech and vigilante violence is not an abstract claim; it is documented across multiple states and corroborated by journalists, scholars, and human-rights organizations. Genocide Watch and other atrocity-prevention experts warn that India exhibits several indicators of the early stages of genocide or mass-atrocity processes. Genocide is not a sudden eruption of violence; it is a process marked by dehumanization, impunity, and the steady normalization of hate that makes mass violence thinkable.

In a country where nearly 300 million people belong to minority communities, the stakes could not be higher.

The RSS’s international outreach must therefore be read in the context of this domestic reality. Western governments are increasingly aware of the contradictions between India’s democratic self-presentation and its internal policies. The situation in Kashmir, the use of bulldozer demolitions against Muslim neighborhoods, the shrinking space for dissent, and the prosecution of journalists and activists all raise serious questions about the health of India’s democracy.

More recently, allegations of transnational repression – including attempts to target Sikh activists abroad – have further strained India’s credibility. These developments complicate the RSS’s efforts to portray India as a responsible global actor committed to pluralism and rule of law.

So what message is the RSS trying to convey to Western policymakers? At its core, the organization seeks to reassure the world that India remains a reliable partner – economically, strategically, and ideologically. It wants to counter the narrative that India is sliding toward majoritarian authoritarianism. It wants to persuade Western governments that concerns about minority rights are exaggerated or politically motivated. And it wants to ensure that India’s global partnerships remain insulated from domestic criticism.

But trust cannot be manufactured through public-relations campaigns alone. It must be earned through consistent democratic behavior. Western policymakers are not blind to the contradictions between rhetoric and reality. They see the growing polarization, the erosion of institutional independence, and the normalization of hate speech. They see the consequences of a political ideology that seeks to redefine India not as a secular republic but as a Hindu nation.

The RSS’s outreach campaign is, therefore, a defensive maneuver – an attempt to manage perceptions at a time when the world is paying closer attention. But the deeper question is whether India’s leaders are willing to confront the underlying issues that have triggered this scrutiny.

A nation’s global reputation is ultimately shaped not by what its representatives say abroad, but by how it treats its most vulnerable citizens at home.

For India to reclaim its moral authority on the world stage, it must reaffirm its constitutional commitment to equality, secularism, and human dignity. It must ensure that the rights of minorities are protected not only in law but in practice. It must restore the independence of its institutions, safeguard press freedom, and reject the politics of division.

Civil society, both within India and across the diaspora, has a crucial role to play. Scholars, activists, journalists, and community leaders must continue to document abuses, challenge misinformation, and advocate for pluralism. International partners must engage India with honesty and clarity, recognizing both its strategic importance and its democratic responsibilities.

The RSS’s global outreach may succeed in shaping narratives temporarily. But the world is watching India more closely than ever. And no amount of diplomatic charm can obscure the fundamental truth: a democracy is judged by how it treats its minorities. India’s future, its stability, its global standing, and its moral authoritydepends on whether it chooses to uphold that principle.


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.


Lines redrawn, democracy reduced by Timothy Davies

The latest Supreme Court decisions on gerrymandering may not arrive with tanks in the streets or ballots tossed into bonfires, but the effect feels disturbingly similar: the quiet engineering of political power before voters even enter the booth. In modern America, democracy is no longer being challenged only through conspiracy theories or election denialism. It is being weakened through maps, legal doctrines, and judicial permission slips.

For years, partisan gerrymandering has allowed politicians to choose their voters instead of voters choosing their politicians. Districts twist across states like spilled ink, carefully designed to dilute opposition and maximize partisan advantage. What once would have been treated as a national embarrassment is now defended as a normal feature of politics. The danger is not merely unfairness. The danger is permanence.

The Supreme Court’s posture toward these disputes has effectively signaled that federal courts will stand aside while state legislatures aggressively manipulate representation. That decision alone reshapes the battlefield. It tells one party, particularly Republican-controlled legislatures aligned with Donald Trump’s MAGA movement, that there are few meaningful limits left on how political maps can be weaponized.

Supporters call it strategy. Critics call it minority rule dressed in legal language. The deeper issue is not whether Republicans are uniquely ruthless. American politics has always involved power struggles and hardball tactics. The deeper issue is that the system increasingly rewards anti-democratic behavior. When elections can be structurally tilted before campaigns even begin, the public loses faith that voting still carries equal weight.

That erosion of trust is poisonous. In state after state, heavily gerrymandered districts create “safe seats” where the only real political threat comes from extremist primary challengers, not the general electorate. Moderation disappears. Compromise becomes weakness. Politicians no longer fear losing to the other party; they fear losing to louder radicals within their own faction. The result is a Congress and state governments filled with representatives incentivized to inflame rather than govern.

Trumpism thrives in precisely that environment. MAGA politics feeds on grievance, polarization, and institutional distrust. Gerrymandered maps help protect that ecosystem by insulating its candidates from accountability. Even when public opinion shifts nationally, distorted districts can preserve legislative dominance far beyond what actual voter sentiment would suggest. That is why critics increasingly describe these judicial decisions not as neutral constitutional rulings, but as active enablers of democratic backsliding.

The language may sound dramatic, but the consequences are real. A democracy cannot function indefinitely when one side believes elections are rigged by fraud and the other believes elections are rigged by design. Both narratives destroy legitimacy. Both push citizens toward cynicism. And cynicism is the authoritarian’s best ally, because people who stop believing in democratic institutions eventually stop defending them.

The United States still holds elections. Courts still operate. Journalists still criticize power openly. But democratic decline rarely arrives all at once. It advances incrementally, through legal normalization and public exhaustion. Each new precedent lowers the threshold for the next abuse.

What makes this moment unsettling is not simply partisan advantage. It is the growing sense that democratic rules themselves are becoming negotiable depending on who benefits. Once that principle takes hold, the map becomes more important than the voter, and power becomes more important than representation. That is not democratic strength. It is democratic decay.


#eBook: The Iron Front by Ovi History

On the morning of 17 July 1932, a column of Reichsbanner men marched through Altona’s streets under the black-red-gold flag of the Weimar Republic.

They had come to show that democracy could still fight. By nightfall, seventeen lay dead, and the swastika flew a little higher over Hamburg. Within nine months, every banner they carried would be burned.

The Iron Front was never supposed to end this way. Born in December 1931 out of desperation and defiance, it was the last great republican coalition of the Weimar era, a formal merger of the Reichsbanner Schwarz-Rot-Gold (the Social Democratic defence league), the free trade unions, and the workers’ sports clubs.

Its target: the Harzburg Front of Nazis, nationalist DNVP, and Stahlhelm paramilitaries. Its slogan: ‘We are the republic.’ Its symbol: three arrows, aimed at monarchism, Nazism and communism, each design chosen to be painted over a swastika before the SA could reach the next street corner.

Ovi History eBook
May 2026

Ovi eBook Publishing 2026

The Iron Front

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Ian Glim #009 #cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

A bewildered soul navigating global complexities armed
only with earnestness and a sharp, sarcastic wit.

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Pandemic roulette by Mia Rodríguez

The return of Hantavirus headlines should not merely trigger memories of lockdowns and overflowing hospitals. It should force a harsher question, after everything the world endured during Covid-19, are we actually more prepared for the next pandemic or have politics, conspiracy culture and institutional sabotage left us weaker than before?

The uncomfortable answer is that the world learned lessons from Covid but many leaders learned the wrong ones. Public health was once treated as a shared responsibility, imperfect but grounded in science, coordination, and trust. Now it has become another battlefield in the culture war. Facts are negotiated like political slogans. Expertise is mocked as elitism. Basic disease prevention is framed as tyranny. The damage from that shift did not end when masks disappeared from airports.

Donald Trump spent much of Covid minimizing the crisis, attacking scientists, and turning public health guidance into partisan theater. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., meanwhile, built influence by spreading suspicion around vaccines and institutions, turning fear into a political brand. Together, directly and indirectly, they helped normalize a dangerous instinct, distrust the people trained to respond to epidemics and trust personalities instead.

That erosion of trust may become the true legacy of the Covid era. Pandemics are not defeated by bravado. Viruses do not care about ideology, podcast followers, or election rallies. They exploit confusion, delay, and denial. The greatest weapon against a fast-moving outbreak is not only medicine but public cooperation. Once that cooperation collapses, even wealthy countries become vulnerable.

What makes the current moment alarming is not simply the possibility of another dangerous virus emerging. It is that large portions of the public are now conditioned to reject the very mechanisms needed to contain one. Vaccines are treated as suspicious by default. Public health agencies are viewed through partisan lenses. Scientific uncertainty, which is normal in evolving crises, is interpreted as proof of deception.

That creates fertile ground for chaos. Imagine a future outbreak with a higher fatality rate than Covid but the same political environment. Governments hesitate because they fear backlash. Citizens refuse guidance because they assume manipulation. Online misinformation spreads faster than the disease itself. Every safety measure becomes a tribal loyalty test. By the time consensus forms, hospitals are already collapsing.

This is not paranoia. Covid already gave the world a rehearsal. The tragedy is that humanity achieved remarkable things during the pandemic. Scientists developed vaccines at historic speed. Medical workers endured impossible pressure. Communities adapted in real time to an unprecedented emergency. Yet instead of building stronger global systems afterward, many countries slid into exhaustion, resentment, and selective amnesia.

Preparedness requires investment, international cooperation, transparent communication, and public trust. All four are fragile today. None of this means panic is justified every time a virus appears in the news. Hantavirus is not automatically “the next Covid.” But complacency mixed with anti-science populism creates a far more dangerous environment than any single pathogen alone.

The next pandemic threat may ultimately be survivable biologically. The real question is whether societies poisoned by disinformation and political vanity can still respond rationally enough to survive it socially. That answer looks less certain than it should.


Selective fear by Edoardo Moretti

America once described its war on terror as a global struggle against violent extremism. Presidents wrapped the campaign in solemn language about liberty, civilization and security. Airports became fortresses. Surveillance expanded quietly but relentlessly. Civil liberties organizations warned that emergency powers, once normalized, would eventually be turned inward. Two decades later, that warning no longer sounds theoretical. The machinery built in the name of national safety increasingly appears aimed at the vulnerable, the inconvenient, and the politically disfavored.

The modern performance of American counterterrorism often feels less like national defense than social sorting. Immigrants, asylum seekers, foreign students and even children encounter a government that treats paperwork errors, border crossings or protest activity with the vocabulary and posture once reserved for existential threats. Raids are televised like military victories. Families become symbols in ideological campaigns. Fear itself has become institutional policy, not because fear produces safety, but because it produces obedience.

Donald Trump did not invent this system. He inherited it, sharpened it, personalized it, and transformed it into political theater. His genius, if it can be called that, was recognizing that Americans conditioned by twenty years of terrorism rhetoric would accept extraordinary treatment of designated outsiders. Once a population becomes accustomed to hearing words like invasion, infestation, sleeper cell, or radicalization, almost anyone can be recast as a threat. The target merely changes according to political convenience.

That shift has become especially visible whenever Trump identifies critics or opponents. Federal power suddenly adopts the emotional logic of a vendetta. Universities, journalists, activists, prosecutors, immigrants and bureaucrats are folded together into one giant atmosphere of suspicion. The distinction between national security and personal grievance starts to disappear. Loyalty becomes patriotic. Dissent becomes dangerous. An accusation alone creates contamination.

The tragedy is not simply the cruelty directed at migrants or political enemies. It is the broader moral exhaustion underneath it. America has spent years teaching itself to confuse harshness with seriousness. Politicians who sound punitive are treated as realistic adults, while anyone discussing rights or due process is dismissed as naïve. The country that once lectured the world about democratic values now regularly debates whether certain groups deserve constitutional protections at all.

Children waiting in detention centers become abstractions. Refugees become statistics. Protesters become extremists. The language of counterterrorism flattens human beings into categories requiring management rather than empathy. Bureaucracy finishes the emotional work politics begins.

None of this means genuine threats do not exist. Violent extremism remains real, unpredictable, and deadly. Governments have an obligation to prevent attacks and protect civilians. But a nation that permanently governs through fear eventually loses the ability to distinguish between danger and discomfort. That confusion is where democracies become brittle.

The most alarming feature of American anti-terrorism policy today is not its strength but its elasticity. Powers created for rare emergencies now stretch easily toward ordinary politics. Once fear becomes a governing instinct, the definition of terrorist expands conveniently alongside it.

Perhaps that is the final lesson of the post-September era: institutions built without restraint rarely remain limited to their original purpose. They search constantly for new enemies, because systems justified by permanent emergency cannot tolerate normality. Eventually the border between counterterrorism and political intimidation dissolves altogether, leaving behind a republic that calls itself free while governing through suspicion, spectacle and fear.uences are measured in lives rather than headlines, that is a gamble the world can ill afford.


The spy next door wears a city-hall badge by Mira Radulova

The resignation of the mayor of Arcadia after agreeing to plead guilty to acting as an illegal agent for the Chinese government sounds less like municipal politics and more like rejected Hollywood fiction. Yet here we are again, in an era where espionage no longer hides in trench coats, coded telegrams or smoke-filled embassies. It hides in suburban city councils, trade partnerships, cultural associations and polished public smiles.

For years, Americans convinced themselves that the Cold War ended when the Berlin Wall fell. The flags changed, the slogans softened and global markets replaced military standoffs as the preferred battleground. But power never retires. It simply changes uniforms. The 21st century version of geopolitical conflict does not always arrive with tanks. Sometimes it arrives through influence, access and relationships cultivated quietly over time.

That is what makes the Arcadia case unsettling. Not because one local politician allegedly crossed legal and ethical lines, but because it reveals how vulnerable democratic systems can become when foreign governments understand something Americans often forget: local politics matters. A mayor of a midsize California city may seem insignificant compared with senators or presidents, yet local officials shape business ties, community sentiment, law enforcement relationships and regional influence. Foreign governments know this. They study openings patiently while Americans often dismiss municipal politics as boring neighborhood administration.

The greater danger is not merely espionage itself. It is the growing normalization of influence operations. Universities, technology firms, social organizations and local governments increasingly sit at the intersection of global strategic competition. China is hardly alone in pursuing influence abroad; powerful nations have always attempted to shape foreign societies. But Beijing’s methods have become especially sophisticated, blending economic leverage with political cultivation in ways democracies are still struggling to confront.

And yet America remains oddly naive about all this. The public still imagines spies as cinematic villains slipping through alleyways in dark raincoats. Reality is far more ordinary and therefore far more dangerous. Influence today often looks respectable. It attends banquets, funds exchanges, praises cooperation and builds networks long before anyone notices the broader strategic objective behind the friendliness.

There is also a deeper cultural problem at work. Democratic societies are built on openness. That openness is a strength, but it also creates vulnerabilities authoritarian governments are eager to exploit. Free societies assume engagement leads to mutual understanding. Authoritarian systems often view engagement as opportunity, an opening to gather leverage, shape narratives and expand influence without firing a single shot.

The Arcadia scandal should therefore serve as more than a brief headline before the next celebrity trial or election drama captures attention. It is a warning about the blurred line between diplomacy and manipulation in modern politics. Americans do not need paranoia, xenophobia or another Red Scare. But they do need realism.

Because the uncomfortable truth is this, the Cold War mentality never disappeared. The battlefield simply moved closer to home, into places where citizens least expected it,


When Politics Breeds Hate, Sacred Spaces Bleed Fear by Javed Akbar

The tragedy near the Islamic Center of San Diego is not merely another entry in America’s grim ledger of mass shootings. Reports indicate t...