LOTS OF POSTS IGNORED BY BLOGGER.....
OR REMOVED ON THEIR WHIM!
ALL POSTS ARE AVAILABLE ON
MIDDLEBORO REVIEW AND SO ON
BLOGGER DOESN'T LIKE TRUTH OR FACTS!
BLOGGER DOESN'T LIKE FUND RAISERS AND DELETES
POSTS THAT INCLUDE FUNDRAISING THAT 'VIOLATES THEIR
UNDEFINED COMMUNITY STANDARDS SO ALL 'FUND RAISING'
IS DELETED - CONTRIBUTE AS YOU ARE INCLINED TO SUPPORT
IMPORTANT ISSUES! THESE ARE NOT SOLICITATIONS
THE COUNTERCURRENTS NEWSLETTER IS INCLUDED IN ITS ENTIRETY
DUE TO THE GLOBAL SIGNIFICANCE OF REPORTING!
Dear Friend,
On day 23 of the US-Israel assault on Iran, tensions escalate toward wider regional war. Donald Trump has threatened to “obliterate” Iran’s energy infrastructure unless the Strait of Hormuz is reopened within 48 hours, prompting Tehran to vow sweeping retaliation. Israeli strikes on Tehran coincide with Iranian missile attacks hitting southern Israeli cities, breaching defences and injuring dozens. Iran claims hundreds killed, while Israel reports no fatalities. The Natanz nuclear site has been targeted, though no radiation leak is confirmed. With over 1,500 deaths and thousands injured, the conflict risks spiralling into a catastrophic confrontation across West Asia.
We are on a fundraising drive. Kindly extend your helping hands to keep CC alive.
If you think the contents of this newsletter are critical for the dignified living and survival of humanity and other species on earth, please forward it to your friends and spread the word. It's time for humanity to come together as one family! You can subscribe to our newsletter here http://www.countercurrents.org/news-letter/.
In Solidarity
Binu Mathew
Editor
Countercurrents.org
The Self-Undoing of Israel: Has Zionism Crossed the Point of No Return?
by Ramzy Baroud and Romana Rubeo
Zionism stands at a historic crossroads, argue Ramzy Baroud and Romana Rubeo, as Israel’s relentless wars, internal fractures, and moral crises converge into a moment of profound reckoning. What was once framed as a project of security and refuge now appears trapped in cycles of violence, eroding its own foundations. The authors question whether Israel’s current trajectory—marked by militarism, global isolation, and deepening contradictions—signals not strength but decline. Has Zionism reached a point where it can no longer sustain itself? Or is this a turning point that could redefine the future of Palestine and Israel alike?
Lebanon: Israeli evacuation orders trigger unprecedented displacement amid dire humanitarian conditions
by Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor
Israel’s expanded military assault on Lebanon has triggered one of the largest waves of displacement in the country’s modern history, forcing over a million people from their homes under chaotic and dangerous conditions. Evacuation orders, issued amid relentless bombardment, have left civilians stranded without safe passage, shelter, or basic necessities. Testimonies reveal harrowing journeys marked by hunger, exhaustion, and loss, with children, pregnant women, and the elderly bearing the heaviest burden. As infrastructure collapses and aid remains scarce, serious concerns arise over forced displacement, potential war crimes, and the international community’s failure to act decisively.
No Eid Prayer at Al-Aqsa: From the Crusaders to Ben Gvir, The Final Chapter in a Programme of Erasure
by Laala Bechetoula
A quiet but seismic rupture unfolded on Eid morning in Jerusalem, as worshippers were barred from Al-Aqsa — an event without precedent since the Crusades. This article traces a long arc of history, ideology, and state policy, arguing that what appears as a security measure may signal something far more consequential: the steady advance of a project to transform the site itself. From historical conquest to modern institutional preparation, it raises urgent questions about power, silence, and complicity. At stake is not only a sacred space, but the moral conscience of a watching world.
Tulsi Gabbard and Joe Kent: Career versus Integrity
by Kim Petersen
Careerism versus conscience takes center stage in this sharp reflection on power and principle. Through a dialogue between two students, Kim Petersen probes the moral compromises of political life, contrasting Tulsi Gabbard’s perceived retreat from her stated positions with Joe Kent’s decision to resign. When truth is subordinated to loyalty, what remains of public service? The piece interrogates whether holding office justifies silence, evasion, or reversal—and asks a deeper question: what is the cost of integrity in an age of expediency? A timely critique of political ambition, this article challenges readers to weigh career survival against ethical accountability.
Tremors in MAGA: Joe Kent, the Iran War and the Antisemitism Smear
by Dr Binoy Kampmark
MAGA’s fragile unity shows signs of rupture as Joe Kent’s resignation over the US-Israel war on Iran ignites controversy. Casting the conflict as unnecessary and lobby-driven, Kent’s critique has drawn fierce backlash, with accusations of antisemitism overshadowing substantive debate on war and influence. Dr Binoy Kampmark situates this episode within a broader pattern: dissent within nationalist ranks is swiftly delegitimised, while questions about foreign policy capture remain taboo. As war deepens, the MAGA movement faces internal strain, revealing tensions between “America First” rhetoric and the realities of militarised alliance politics.
Fourth Party Mediation Can Help to End the USA-Israel-Iran War
by Bharat Dogra
As the US–Israel–Iran war drags on, Bharat Dogra argues that conventional power equations are failing to deliver peace. Despite military superiority, the US–Israel combine faces a determined Iran unwilling to concede without securing its core interests. This stalemate risks prolonging a highly destructive conflict with global consequences. Dogra calls for urgent “fourth party” mediation led by the United Nations and respected independent diplomats to break the deadlock. Only a peace process rooted in justice, not dominance, can prevent further escalation and open a path toward a negotiated and durable end to the war.
Dabbling with a Sword of Opportunism in West Asia: Quo Vadis, India – As the Compass Falters
by Dr Ranjan Solomon
India’s West Asia policy, once guided by balance and moral clarity, is now veering toward strategic opportunism. As ties with Israel deepen and engagement with Iran recedes under external pressures, New Delhi risks eroding its credibility in the Global South and within BRICS. The shift from principled non-alignment to transactional diplomacy raises urgent questions about India’s global role. Can pragmatism coexist with moral responsibility? As regional tensions intensify, India’s choices may determine whether it remains a respected voice or drifts into geopolitical marginalization.
Worse than 2008?
by Richard Heinberg
Could the next financial crash eclipse the devastation of 2008? Richard Heinberg argues that today’s warning signs—an inflated AI-driven financial bubble, escalating war with Iran, and fragile global trust—point toward a far deeper crash. Unlike the subprime crisis, the current convergence of energy shocks, geopolitical instability, and systemic debt could trigger cascading failures across economies. With oil supply disruptions looming and inflation already entrenched, the world may be heading into uncharted territory. As institutions weaken and cooperation falters, Heinberg warns: this crisis may not just repeat history—it could surpass it in scale and consequence.
Crude Harvest: Food Security Beyond Oil and Nano-Tech Quick Fixes
by Colin Todhunter
As war disrupts oil flows and fertiliser supplies, India’s fragile food system stands exposed. Colin Todhunter argues that industrial agriculture—deeply tethered to fossil fuels—is now facing its moment of reckoning. Marketed solutions like Nano Urea and AI-driven advisory platforms promise efficiency but deepen corporate control and ecological depletion. Beneath the rhetoric of innovation lies a shift from soil-based fertility to proprietary dependence. Farmers’ resistance signals an alternative path rooted in agroecology, autonomy and localisation. In a world beyond cheap oil, real food security will not come from technological quick fixes, but from reclaiming democratic control over land, seeds and knowledge.
Hello Hannah! Now, Britain needs a Plumber
by Suresh Nautiyal 'Greenananda'
A political tremor in Britain signals more than an electoral upset—it reveals a deep shift in public imagination. The unexpected victory of a community-rooted Green candidate in a Labour stronghold reflects growing disillusionment with mainstream politics and a hunger for alternatives grounded in social justice and ecological sanity. By linking climate action with everyday economic concerns, the campaign broke long-held assumptions about voter loyalties. This moment suggests that Green politics is no longer marginal, but emerging as a credible force capable of reshaping Britain’s political landscape and inspiring similar movements globally.
International Water Day 2026: Confronting the Crisis of Contamination and Misuse
by Srinivas Katherasala
On International Water Day 2026, the deepening global water crisis demands urgent attention. Beneath the illusion of abundance lies a stark reality of scarcity, contamination, and systemic misuse. From depleted aquifers to polluted rivers, human actions are pushing water systems toward collapse. Invisible threats like microplastics and toxic discharge compound the suffering, especially for the most vulnerable. This crisis is not inevitable—it is shaped by policy failures, unsustainable practices, and indifference. Yet solutions exist, rooted in conservation, equity, and accountability. The question is not whether we can act, but whether we will act in time to protect our most vital resource.
Bijan Jazani and the Tragedy of Iran’s Revolutionary Left
by Harsh Thakor
Half a century after his execution, Bijan Jazani remains a towering yet contested figure in Iran’s revolutionary history. A Marxist theorist and founder of the Fedai Guerrillas, he sought to fuse armed struggle with mass political mobilisation against the Shah’s authoritarian regime. Writing from prison, Jazani developed an independent socialist perspective rooted in Iran’s realities, resisting both Soviet orthodoxy and blind militancy. His assassination by SAVAK in 1975 silenced a critical voice of the Left. This reflection revisits his ideas, contradictions, and enduring relevance, raising questions about strategy, sacrifice, and the unfinished trajectories of revolutionary movements.
How Capitalism Breeds Cowardice and Destroys Collective Life
by Bhabani Shankar Nayak
An insidious politics of cowardice is reshaping our world—fuelled by crony capitalism, technological control, and endless wars. Moral conviction is dismissed as weakness, while profit, performance, and blind nationalism are celebrated. Human connections erode as societies are fragmented into isolated, fearful individuals, conditioned to accept injustice and inequality. This system thrives on “othering,” fear, and the normalization of violence, producing leadership devoid of accountability. Beneath the rhetoric of progress lies deepening alienation and dehumanisation. This powerful critique exposes how capitalism manufactures cowardice—and calls for reclaiming collective courage, solidarity, and the foundations of true freedom before they are lost entirely.
The Necessary Illusion of Ideal Democracy
by Ashish Singh
Democracy promises equality, participation, and accountability—but can it ever truly deliver? In this sharp reflection, Ashish Singh interrogates the comforting myth of “ideal democracy,” exposing how power, inequality, and manipulation persist beneath its formal structures. From distorted public reasoning to the hidden influence of wealth and digital misinformation, the essay reveals democracy as an ongoing struggle rather than a finished achievement. Yet its power lies precisely in this gap between ideal and reality. As a “necessary illusion,” democracy endures not as perfection, but as a critical force—one that keeps dissent alive and power under scrutiny.
WTO Talks Threaten Food Security and Farmer Livelihoods in India
by KV Biju
As the WTO Ministerial Conference approaches, Indian farmers face mounting risks from global trade rules that prioritise corporate interests over livelihoods. From unresolved public stockholding safeguards to rising import pressures and entrenched subsidies in developed countries, the playing field remains deeply unequal. The push for new issues like e-commerce and investment facilitation further sidelines urgent agrarian concerns, accelerating corporate control over food systems. Without a permanent solution on MSP-linked procurement, effective safeguards against import surges, and accountability on rich nations’ subsidies, millions of small farmers risk deeper distress, threatening both rural stability and national food security.
Shadow Rule in Bengal: Electoral Control, Constitutional Breakdown, and the Politics of Administrative Capture
by Arun Srivastava
West Bengal’s Assembly elections unfold under the shadow of what critics call an undeclared Emergency. Massive bureaucratic reshuffles by the Election Commission, bypassing established norms, have triggered charges of institutional overreach and a backdoor imposition of President’s Rule. Mamata Banerjee’s defiance, legal challenges, and an unprecedented impeachment move against the Chief Election Commissioner signal a deepening constitutional crisis. Is electoral neutrality being replaced by administrative capture? As democratic safeguards appear to erode, Bengal becomes the frontline of a larger struggle over federalism, institutional integrity, and the future of India’s democracy.
Policing Identity: India’s Transgender Bill Turns Rights into Permissions
by Dr Trishna Sarkar
India’s Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Amendment Bill, 2026 marks a troubling reversal of hard-won rights. By undermining the Supreme Court’s NALSA judgment, it replaces self-identification with medical scrutiny and bureaucratic approval, excluding many from legal recognition. Identity is no longer treated as a lived reality but as a claim to be verified. While the Bill promises stronger penalties against violence, it simultaneously deepens structural exclusion. At stake is not just policy, but dignity itself. When the state demands proof of existence, rights turn into permissions—and recognition becomes a privilege rather than a guarantee of equal citizenship.
A Dinner Conversation That Revealed the Politics of Religious Polarisation
by Dr Suresh Khairnar
A revealing personal account from the 1990s uncovers the calculated rise of religious polarization in Indian politics. In a candid dinner conversation, a committed Hindutva ideologue admits that the Ram temple movement was driven less by faith than by political strategy—“trial and error” to mobilize masses and capture power. The chilling assertion that the Babri Masjid must remain to sustain polarization exposes the cynical core of identity politics. The narrative warns of the dangerous consequences of weaponizing religion, reminding us that coexistence, not communal division, is the only path to a just and stable society.
Three Paths to Liberation: Marx, Ambedkar, and Periyar on the Meaning of Social Justice
by Pon Chandran
Marx, Ambedkar, and Periyar offer three powerful lenses to understand and dismantle oppression—class exploitation, caste hierarchy, and cultural domination. While Marx calls for the overthrow of capitalism, Ambedkar demands the annihilation of caste through constitutional democracy, and Periyar insists on rationalism and self-respect as the foundation of freedom. Their ideas converge in struggles that reveal how inequality operates across economy, society, and consciousness. From historical movements to present-day battles over education and rights, this synthesis remains vital. Social justice is not a single path—it is a continuous, interconnected struggle for dignity, equality, and liberation.
Dowry is not a Tradition
by Ashlynn Dania
Dowry is often defended as tradition, but its reality tells a different story—one of coercion, violence, and silence. Ashlynn Dania traces how a once voluntary gift system transformed into a deeply entrenched form of exploitation, despite legal prohibitions. From harassment and abuse to the horror of dowry deaths, countless women continue to suffer behind closed doors. Laws exist, yet social acceptance allows the practice to persist. This piece calls for urgent collective action—through awareness, accountability, and refusal—to dismantle dowry as a normalized custom and affirm that dignity, not payment, must define marriage.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.