Latest articles
by subMedia / June 10th, 2026
The power that could emerge from our coming together. The pooling of our efforts and our resources, through the interweaving of ropes, long and strong enough to allow us to hold together in the face of the challenges of our time. This is what we call Mujawara. A revolutionary neighbouring that we have already begun to weave from all these territories, these places, and popular powers born of our struggles.
And to inaugurate it, and to begin weaving this neighbouring that crosses borders, we …
The scheme would work only if Israel could destroy all evidence of its own guilt. USS Liberty June 8 1967
by Paul Haeder / June 10th, 2026
NOTE: I was part of the racket. The academic racket, though I was a freeway flyer, precarious, adjunct, road scholar, who fought like hell against exploitation of adjunct faculty, who fought like hell for students to be free and critical thinking students (not customers) and who fought like hell give some micro-shade of radical thinking and radical action in the midst of those Upton Sinclair folk — It’s difficult to get a man or woman to know or see the truth when he or she depend on not knowing the truth for their pieces of eight, their mortgage, rent, utility …
by Lee Camp / June 10th, 2026
Despite all of their reporting dripping with imperial propaganda, the New York Times can be useful at times. For example, if they start reporting that something needs to be done about [fill in country here], then it generally alerts us all that the US oligarchy/CIA/lizard billionaires have been working towards coup’ing [country] for months already.
So who/what is the Times now telling us we need to do something about?
Mexico.
We – the murderous, blood-thirty …
Here you have the essential arguments that people who cannot or will not think freely never mention
by Jan Oberg / June 10th, 2026
Nuclear weapons are undemocratic, useless, criminal, terrorist, and unethical – they cannot serve deterrence without being used, and their development steals the resources that should be used to solve real problems and secure humanity’s better future.
Global nuclear weapons spending reached an unprecedented 119 billion USD in 2025, according to the latest analysis by the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN). This represents a 19 per cent increase over the previous year and continues a five‑year trend of accelerating investment in nuclear arsenals. In total, …
by Allen Forrest / June 10th, 2026
What about the abuse that people opposed to wearing a mask or getting jabbed without evidence of efficacy of prophylaxis.
The Best Test for the American Public’s View on any War is not the Polls, but Bond Sales and These Would also Pay Bond Expenses for the Two Major Parties.
by Barbara G. Ellis / June 9th, 2026
If the Iran war drags on much longer and becomes costlier for taxpayers, it’s possible the two major political parties might be so desperate and smart enough to try returning to the colorful citizens’ bond drives of World War I and II that helped pay a large part of the costs. And the public felt that both the President and Congress heard their views.
Now, most ordinary Americans from 1917 even up to today do not understand what a bond is—federal, corporate, or municipal. But they certainly do if told that any bond is an IOU …
by Binoy Kampmark / June 9th, 2026
Waxworks have nothing to say, but when incarnated in the form of former Fox News anchor and, at a pinch, “personality”, Pete Hegseth proves to be a marvel of sheer stupidity. It’s not that one cannot be provocative on matters of discomfort, teasing the political consciousness and prodding the sensitive. Immigration, and what makes it up, is a point of energetic disquiet in Europe, and a figure insisting on raising it is bound to add a spoke to the news cycle. But to do so in the fashion of the US Secretary of War, as he likes to be known as, …
by Black Alliance for Peace / June 8th, 2026
The occupation doesn’t want Palestinians to have any sort of normality: no sports or teams to begin with. In the past, the occupation entity would target any sports event or Palestinian sporting participants when they saw we were making a name for ourselves. The occupation entity also split the league in Palestine into two leagues, which is very unusual across the world – usually, there’s only one league in each nation.
by Allen Forrest / June 8th, 2026
The Final Message
by Sammy Attoh / June 8th, 2026
IN LOVING MEMORIES OF PROFESSOR MR. JAY- MY MENTOR
Message: I hope you find meaning in this closing reflection — a hard, honest meditation meant to steady your steps on the long journey back to clarity, conscience, and the deeper work of being human.
There are moments in history when humanity must stop, look at itself, and admit the truth: we have lost our way. We have built systems that reward arrogance, not wisdom; noise, not clarity; power, not justice. We have mistaken progress for purpose and technology for transformation. We have forgotten …
by Binoy Kampmark / June 6th, 2026
Of the three countries involved in AUKUS, that most draining, useless and even pernicious of security pacts, Australia has been the only country indifferent, even scoffing, about the need for an inquiry into its merits. Unsurprisingly, both the US and UK inquiries have found much to merit the project – Australian taxpayer money has sluiced and soothed the submarine industrial base of both countries – but have also expressed concern about their respective production rates of nuclear-powered submarines.
While the first pillar of the agreement promises, with mighty emptiness, that the Royal Australia Navy will receive three Virginia-class nuclear-powered submarines …
by Harvey Herring / June 6th, 2026
The breach of the stock exchange executive’s Outlook account, the use of localized phishing lures to deploy the Atlas RAT to compromise mobile devices, large-scale Chinese APT attacks on mobile networks, which allowed intruders to infiltrate the infrastructure of more than 50 providers and government agencies in 42 countries, and other similar news about attacks by hostile states have become a daily norm in Western media.
There is no doubt that digital security is an urgent problem in today’s world, where smartphones and other gadgets have become necessary tools for carrying out lots of actions. However, one shouldn’t fall for the …
by Renee Parsons / June 6th, 2026
On the evening of June 3, the legislative chambers of the US House of Representatives, normally a relatively reserved buzz of activity, began by maintaining the Ukraine war machine and ended with an eruption into what became a fierce display of political disagreement, partisan strife and personal insult.
The House began with consideration of three different House Resolutions related to foreign policy regarding Ukraine, Iran and Lebanon.
Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-NY) offered Resolution 518 in support of the Ukraine Support Act to authorize HR 2913 which would provide additional $8 billion in support for Ukraine for a total US …
I am surrounded by people who look at their navels, who are old(-er) and taking account of their lives, who would rather write of the whip-poor-will dying on their cedar deck than Gaza
by Paul Haeder / June 6th, 2026
So, I proposed a piece for this Literary Journal I have been a part of for years, a decade or more. I’m in it with my poetry, reviews, creative non-fiction, fiction, more.
I’m troubled by the people around me, those in academia, the arts, or literary …
by J.S. O’Keefe / June 6th, 2026
The field ahead looked worked over, flattened in patches like multitudes had crossed it for centuries. Brown grass under frost.
Men standing in lines. Faces too close to each other, shoulders almost touching. I didn’t recognize any of the faces.
A colonel moved down the line. Everyone stiffened when he passed, so that’s what he must’ve been. Or major. Maybe brigadier general. He stopped beside me; my boots settled deeper in the mud. Training. Reflex.
An order came. The body moved before I caught up to it. Rifle raised. Words said, worn smooth from too many times. Mouth working through short sentences that …
Crime Doesn't Pay, but US Government Grants Do
by Roger D. Harris and Kelly Nelson / June 6th, 2026
InSight Crime, a thinktank which claims to fuse “investigative journalism with academic rigor,” accuses Nicaragua’s government of “hiring assassins” to hunt down and kill opponents abroad. This bold accusation is based on no more than “circumstantial” evidence, strongly suggesting political motivation. This fact-impoverished rush to judgment reflects a more general bias of the US-aligned corporate press, which seeks to demonize Nicaragua and its Sandinista political leadership.
The focus of the thinktank’s article is the death of Roberto Samcam, a former Nicaraguan army officer, exiled in Costa Rica. He was assassinated by gunmen in his home in a …
by Allen Forrest / June 6th, 2026
What effect does slumbering have for social media posts?
by Allen Forrest / June 5th, 2026
Why some out-spoken dissidents don’t get arrested.
by Michel Chossudovsky / June 5th, 2026
Google’s project to release genetically modified Wolbachia mosquitoes in Florida and Calfornia was announced on June 1, 2026. It’s an initiative of Google’s parent company, Alphabet, through its life sciences division Verily.
“Verily has filed for EPA approval to release millions of specially treated mosquitoes over the next two years as part of an effort to reduce disease-carrying mosquito populations.
The initiative is known as the Debug Project, a program that has been researching mosquito control for more than a decade.”
The premises as well as the narrative of the Verily initiative are similar to those put forth by …
by Caitlin Johnstone / June 5th, 2026
A series of surveys documents that citizens want international cooperation, solidarity and peace – but their ‘democratic’ governments couldn’t care less
by John Helmer / June 4th, 2026
Tehran Times spoke with John Helmer, a veteran journalist and geopolitical analyst based in Moscow, to assess the implications of the conflict for U.S. policy toward Iran, the role of domestic political calculations in Washington, and shifting regional alignments. In this interview, Helmer examines coercive diplomacy, regional security dynamics, and the limits of U.S. strategy.
by Allen Forrest / June 4th, 2026
Whose life is it that meaning is sought and why.
by Edward Curtin / June 4th, 2026
Years ago when I was twenty-seven years-old and my father fifty-eight, we wandered around an off-beat section of a small New England town. There was a section where old wooden structures had been abandoned years before and lay forlorn. But they drew us to them. Old names on walls, here and there a small plaque telling a little history of places and people long vanished, never to return, for the rest of this town had been modernized and gentrified, as was exemplified by the expensive shops and cars that lined its …
Why America's China policy hasn't changed since 1945
by Godfree Roberts / June 4th, 2026
1989: President Bush’s Secret Letter to Deng Xiaoping
On June 20, 1989, after his attempt to call Deng Xiaoping directly failed, President Bush hand-crafted a letter himself, initiating a secret top-level contact with China as his attempt to preserving the US-China relationship. Deng Xiaoping responded immediately to the letter. Bush later published it in his book All the Best.
The letter is an example of American hypocrisy: Bush replaced the US Ambassador to Beijing with Bush’s CIA protege …
by Binoy Kampmark / June 4th, 2026
Call it a repeating script, a rusty template, or simply a creaky model to emulate time and again. The structural and homicidal destruction of Gaza undertaken by Israeli forces is now finding full expression in southern Lebanon, a cause of concern even for those in Washington. The war’s increasing savagery is a reminder of how hollow the exhortations by the Netanyahu government seem following the official cessation of hostilities against Hezbollah in November 2024.
Israel’s pre-emptive war on Iran, commencing on February 28 with the full and criminal connivance of the United States, took place alongside an incursion into …
by Renee Parsons / June 4th, 2026
Many Americans may still remember when Donald Trump was masquerading as the Peace President. In his pre-and-post inaugural vows, Trump began by promising to end the war in Ukraine in ‘one day’ for a total of fifty three verbal guarantees. Today the Ukraine War continues as it is threatening to enlarge into a more widespread, significant conflict after a war crime strike in Lugansk that killed twenty two teenagers. In 2019, comedian Volodymyr Zelensky ran for President and was elected on a peace platform.
The Trump Presidency has deteriorated …
by Tricontinental Asia / June 3rd, 2026
Manash Das (India), Red Ant, n.d.
Every five years, the electorate in Keralam goes to the polls to elect a new state government. One of 28 states in India, Keralam has a population of 35 million. It has been governed by the Left Democratic Front (LDF), which is led by the Communist Party of India (Marxist) or CPI(M), for the past decade. On 4 May, the Election Commission of India announced that the LDF had won only 35 of the 140 seats in the legislature and that the LDF’s …
Can Israel Be Saved?
by Biljana Vankovska / June 3rd, 2026
Many of us who consider ourselves public intellectuals and outspoken voices feel compelled to follow all—or at least the most important—global developments and to have something meaningful to say about them. Few are as consistent in this endeavor as Princeton professor Richard Falk, who for decades has devoted himself to awakening both conscience and awareness of the suffering of the Palestinian people. Take a look at his bibliography, his personal blog, and his countless online appearances and debates. If anyone today deserves to be called a moral compass and …
by Global Times / June 3rd, 2026
Illustration: Chen Xia/GT
On Monday, China Coast Guard’s Daishan vessel formation conducted routine law-enforcement patrols in accordance with the law in the waters east of China’s Taiwan island, directly targeting the illegal collusion between Japan and the Philippines. China made it clear that this was a necessary operation in response to the announcement by Japan and the Philippines on their own, to begin talks on maritime delimitation in the waters east of China’s Taiwan island, which seriously infringed upon China’s territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and …