Latest articles
by Binoy Kampmark / July 8th, 2026
Nigel Farage is not a picture of happiness. As Britain’s version of Trumpism (only a version, never a facsimile), the leader of Reform UK had been flying high in the polls. But his themes are starting to tire: the anti-establishment figure who so happens to be profiting from it; the martyr who always falls just short of the sword; the erratic, even cranky bully who aims volcanic fury at media reports he doesn’t like.
A report from The Sunday Times was certainly one such example he did not take a shine to. According to the paper, George Cottrell, …
by Biljana Vankovska / July 7th, 2026
Protests against the government in Tirana on June 13, 2026 – Albinfo, CC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
When one has witnessed not only a colour revolution in her own country (Macedonia, 2015–2016) but also sensed its arrival during Ukraine’s Euromaidan in 2014, every new outburst of supposedly spontaneous revolt provokes scepticism. Regrettably, this scepticism is usually justified. Nearly two years ago, I wrote similarly about student protests in Serbia and later about Nepal. The point is this: …
The faces of the innocent victims of war should--and will--haunt the perpetrators of war forever.
by Scott Ritter / July 7th, 2026
Darya Serdyuk’s face, captured in her last desperate plea for help broadcast under the rubble of her destroyed dormitory buildlng, May 22, 2026
The Death of Dasha
“Nastya, it is flying! It’s flying, Nastya, I am scared!”
The face and voice was that of Darya Sergeevna Serdyuk, born April 18, 2007. An orphan, Darya spent her childhood in Saint Petersburg, where she was raised by her aunt.
And it was in Saint Petersburg where her cousin and best friend, Anastasia Shcherbak (“Nastya”) lived.
Around ten at night on May 21, the first wave of …
by Bita Iuliano and Olivia DiNucci / July 7th, 2026
As the country and this administration launched its America 250 and Freedom 250 “Celebrations”, what we experienced in the nation’s capitol and a city of 700,000 residents replicated what the United States does to other parts of the world. The streets were invaded by the military, public spaces barricaded with multiple levels of security checkpoints, and the sky full of military flyovers, including a seven-hour schedule of flyovers on July 4th.
Military flyovers come at a devastating cost–economically, psychologically and environmentally. The most recent ones came in the middle of a heatwave where even Trump’s American State …
by Cyrus Janssen / July 7th, 2026
There are so many new technologies and exciting developments coming out of China these days that will fundamentally change our world, whether in medicine, materials science, telecommunications, or energy. But today, I want to tell you how, in just a matter of decades or less, transportation around the world will be completely transformed, and no, not just by electric vehicles. I’m talking about taking the same electrical revolution we’re seeing in EVs and expanding it into the much more ambitious realm of maritime and aeronautical transportation. I’m talking about …
by Binoy Kampmark / July 7th, 2026
Yet again, FIFA, and its chief, Gianni Infantino, have distinguished the game of football by showing what it is all about. Not glorious athletes representing code and country across the globe. Not the sense of wellbeing that comes with exercise. No: it’s all about corrupt manoeuvrings, opaque decisions, and scandalous meddling. And who better to be at the centre of it than one of America’s most corrupt, self-enriching figures, one President Donald J. Trump?
On July 5, the one-game suspension for American striker Folarin Balogun was vacated in exchange for a one-year probation. Balogun had received a contentious red card in …
by Dan Lieberman / July 6th, 2026
The recent arraignment of Michael Ron David Kadar, 27, a dual citizen of the United States and Israel, “on an indictment from the Middle District of Florida charging him with hate crimes and obstruction of the free exercise of religion committed against Jewish institutions throughout Florida, including schools and community centers,” intrigues me. Were these valid “hate crimes” or a deliberate “false flag,” a contrived plan to fool the world that anti-Semitism is a serious and growing problem? Exposing the purposeful inflating of numbers and spurious perspective of hatred of Jews as Jews rather than the real perspective of hatred …
New MKULTRA hearings have reopened questions about victims, destroyed files, and experiments America never answered for
by RT / July 6th, 2026
A decorated US Air Force serviceman with no history of violence suddenly abducted, raped and murdered a three-year-old girl.
When a search party found Jimmy Shaver wandering near San Antonio, Texas, he appeared to be in a trance, unable to explain where he was or how he had gotten there. After his arrest, he reportedly failed to recognize his own wife when she visited him in jail. Until the moment he was executed four years later, Shaver insisted he had no memory of committing the crime for which he had been sentenced to death.
More than seventy years later, some researchers …
by Allen Forrest / July 6th, 2026
Is there comfort to be found in something that one can always count on? And what might comforting something be?
by Lee Camp / July 6th, 2026
Mitch McConnell
The fact that one of the leading senators in Congress might be dead — and has been brain dead for months, if not years — doesn’t matter at all. And the fact that it doesn’t matter actually clarifies just how lost the US “experiment” is.
Everything in Congress stays the same whether the members are dead or alive.
That should be shocking. It should be front page news. Instead, corporate media will ignore it like they do every deeper truth about the US empire.
Literally no one has heard from Mitch McConnell …
by Medea Benjamin / July 6th, 2026
On July 7–8, NATO leaders will gather in Ankara, Türkiye. The summit will focus on increasing military spending, expanding arms production, and continuing military support for Ukraine. They will call it an investment in security. In reality, it is an investment in an arms race that will leave people across NATO countries less safe.
For more than a decade, NATO’s benchmark was for member states to spend 2 percent of their GDP on the …
by Binoy Kampmark / July 5th, 2026
In the annals of policy, strategy and budgeting, the AUKUS pact comprising Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States will be seen as one of the most mindless, absurd projects of tiny, poorly furnished minds. Not for those in the UK and US, with both receiving Croesus-rich dollops of Australian cash for stuttering submarine programs. Not for flabby think tankers who repeatedly run out bills on the advisory circuit lauding the importance of costly boats and the China threat. It will be down to Australian government officials, elected and appointed, who seek the imaginary assurance of nuclear-powered submarines that …
by Black Alliance for Peace / July 4th, 2026
…your celebration is a sham; your boasted liberty, an unholy license; your national greatness, swelling vanity; your sound of rejoicing are empty and heartless; your denunciation of tyrants brass fronted impudence; your shout of liberty and equality, hollow mockery; your prayers and hymns, your sermons and thanks-givings, with all your religious parade and solemnity, are to him, mere bombast, fraud, deception, impiety, and hypocrisy — a thin veil to cover up crimes which would disgrace a nation of savages.
— Frederick Douglass, Fourth of July speech, 1852
The 250-year arc of the United States, a settler-colonial state rhetorically conceived in …
by Bruce Lerro / July 4th, 2026
Orientation
The rise and fall of Promethean Europe
From the 15th through the 19th century the various countries in Europe were both loved and feared around the world. Scholars like Patricia Crone, Jared Diamond, John A. Hall, C.R Hallpike and William McNeill wrote books about what made Europe different from other parts of the world. Eric Jones wrote a great book called The European Miracle. I’ve written two books on the subject, Forging Promethean Psychology in 2017 and Lucifer’s Labyrinth in 2019. But the 20th century told a very sad story about …
by Dan Lieberman / July 4th, 2026
Allied to the struggle to prevent the genocide of the Palestinian people are other issues ─ struggles by a brave and intrepid segment of the Jewish community to prevent emasculation of Reform Judaism and its humanistic content, to deter a remnant of orthodox Judaism from reducing Judaism to the reading of ancient scriptures, and to reverse having Jews connected and solidified by a tribal concept, where Israel is the commanding epicenter of a chauvinistic tribe. Ethical Judaism, which shaped Western Jews, has lessened, and the Judaism that rabbinical Jews brought to fruition in Mesopotamia and guided world Jewry is subdued …
No study has ever shown that military spending outperforms civilian investment. European leaders promoting a war economy are deeply irresponsible.
by Jan Oberg / July 4th, 2026
AI-generated illustration from Magnific
In Part 1 it was demonstrated that military spending delivers lower economic returns than civilian investment, that modern central‑bank and IMF analyses confirm this, that military capital is negative capital, and that opportunity costs drain talent and innovation from civilian sectors.
Part 2 now turns to the structural political economy behind Europe’s militarisation — and the absence of any serious economic analysis of its consequences.
5. The monopsony problem: weapons are produced for one buyer…
by Allen Forrest / July 4th, 2026
Why might sleep be preferable to conscious reality?
by Charles Sullivan / July 4th, 2026
Walden Pond
In the Middle East and beyond, we are witnessing a strategic defeat of the US empire at the hands of Iran. This must be distinguished from a military defeat. A major power shift is underway in that region. The US had no intention of honoring the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), and it is moving more military hardware and additional manpower into the region, most likely toward the Strait of Hormuz. The MoU was nothing more than a ruse to buy time for rearmament.
The strait, currently under the joint control of …
by Binoy Kampmark / July 4th, 2026
Words can function as prisons and windows. They can cage meaning and suffocate understanding. They can also reveal concepts which breathtaking clarity. “Monoculture”, a recent word running through the podcast-press corps stable down under, is very much of the prison variety, one planted by that most mini-syllabic of politicians, Pauline Hanson. Unlike her conservative opponents in the Liberal and National parties (her One Nation Party proudly proclaims to be more right wing), she continues to show why she is not on the endangered species list.
In her June speech before journalism’s version of a monoculture, Australia’s National Press Club, …
Part 1: Europe’s Rearmament Myth: The Economics They Never Mention
by Jan Oberg / July 3rd, 2026
AI-generated illustration from Magnific
No study has ever shown that military spending outperforms civilian investment.
What Europe’s leaders say about rearmament and the economy
“Europe must build a strong defence industrial base — it will create jobs and drive innovation.”
— Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission (2024)
“Investing in defence is investing in Europe’s economic future.”
— Thierry Breton, EU Commissioner for Internal Market (2023)
“Rearmament is an opportunity for European industry and for growth.”
— Emmanuel Macron, President of France (2022)
“The €100 billion special fund will strengthen Germany’s economy and technological base.”
— …
"There is not a nation on the earth guilty of practices more shocking and bloody than are the people of the United States, at this very hour." -- Frederick Douglass
by Paul Haeder / July 3rd, 2026
by Renee Parsons / July 3rd, 2026
After watching a recent House debate on HR 108 attempting to adopt a War Powers Resolution on behalf of Lebanon, it might not be difficult to comprehend how relatively inexperienced ‘socialist’ candidates continue to defeat incumbent House Members including the most recent ‘upset’ in Colorado.
Even before the recent election, the House of Representatives, once referred to by the country’s founders as the “People’s House” because its frequent two year election cycle ostensibly brings elected officials closer to their constituents, has been largely transformed into an apathetic, Constitutionally anemic identity as if a ‘for sale’ piece of real …
by David Swanson / July 3rd, 2026
Wow, U.S. social media is suffering a pandemic of nationalism just in time for a celebration of a declaration of the crimes and abuses of King George, a laundry list of horrors that pale beside the accomplishments of any recent U.S. president — the quaint abuses of his royal highness of the blue piss who in reality was more progressive and less tyrannical than your average 21st century prime minister, but who was preventing the expansion of the ethnic …
by Allen Forrest / July 3rd, 2026
Is it still Nineteen Eighty Four?
The Technological Race That Could Be More Important Than AI
by Cyrus Janssen / July 2nd, 2026
There is a technology that will become ubiquitous in everyday life and completely transform our world, our technological capabilities, and the way information is transferred. And no, it’s not artificial intelligence. It’s actually 6G technology.
You wouldn’t be crazy for thinking AI will be the defining technology that affects your life over the next few years. It dominates the news and, frankly, has become the foundation of much of the American economy. But despite all the hype, we’re never given a clear answer as to what AGI will actually look …
by Allen Forrest / July 2nd, 2026
A message for humans about redundancies.
The Rituals Of Harm, Part 3
by Sammy Attoh / July 2nd, 2026
Institutions do not invent harm; they inherit it. What begins in households eventually becomes the logic of nations. The emotional habits learned in private rooms — silence, avoidance, domination, fear — are scaled into public systems that shape millions of lives.
Institutions rarely recognize themselves as violent. They believe they are maintaining order, enforcing standards, or protecting the public. But systems, like families, can normalize harm so thoroughly that it becomes invisible to those who administer it.
Bureaucratic Violence
Modern institutions often inflict harm through routine. A form not processed. A medication not approved. A border not opened. A complaint not investigated. The …
by Lee Camp / July 2nd, 2026
There’s shocking new video footage from inside Israel’s police command room as they decided to slaughter their own people on October 7th, 2023. The video was initially aired by Israel’s Channel 12, translated by B.M. on X, and also reported by Justin K.P. Click play here to watch it —
In the video, one senior officer says:
“Right now, I would bomb the entire Gaza border with artillery, hit them with …
by Ann Wright / July 2nd, 2026
As the Trump administration and the U.S. Congress continues to ramp up rhetoric of “China is our enemy,” 2026 is the 30th year that the United States has organized the largest naval war practice in the world, called Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC). For 37 days from June 24 through July 31, the RIMPAC war “games” will be held in the waters off the state of Hawaii.
This year 31 countries have sent naval, air and land military forces to Hawaii for RIMPAC.
50% of the participating countries are …
by Kim Petersen / July 1st, 2026
A city councillor in Brantford, Ontario is at the center of a kerfuffle over his stance on land acknowledgments. In most jurisdictions in Canada it is common to begin many functions by acknowledging that the location is or historically was a territory of a First People or Peoples. This acknowledgment addresses the historic wrong of dispossession, an admission that the land, to the extent that land can be rightfully owned, belonged to the inhabitants that the ocean-crossing Europeans encountered.
Following several years of colonialism, a state called Canada was established usurping multiple Indigenous nations.
The colonialists and their progeny entrenched European-derived government …