Saturday, April 18, 2026

A BRIGHT SYRIAN AND SURELY GLOBAL ANALYSIS.......

 
The first thing that must be stated clearly is that Syria’s problem is not just the name of the ruler, but the very structure of power itself. After the fall of Bashar al-Assad, Ahmed al-Sharaa became interim president in January 2025, and then the Constitutional Declaration was issued in March 2025, establishing a five-year transitional period with broad presidential powers, while legislative authority was entrusted to a transitional People’s Assembly until a permanent constitution was adopted and legislative elections were held. This means that the real danger is not just “who occupies the chair,” but that the chair itself remains designed in the old Arab style: a president above the institutions, not a president within the institutions.


The idea that many have overlooked is this: the Arab revolutions repeatedly failed because they toppled the tyrant but not the logic of tyranny. In other words, they demolished the facade but left the psychological and political architecture intact: loyalty before competence, kinship before merit, symbolism before accountability, and slogans before construction. Here, the new ruler becomes merely an updated version of the old disease, even if he comes with a different slogan, different attire, or different religious rhetoric. This is not simply a matter of a "bad person," but rather a matter of a system that punishes independence and rewards obedience. And despotism in the Arab world often returns through the very door the revolution entered: the door of "temporary exception," "a sensitive phase," and "let's not open the door to disagreement now." Then the transition becomes permanent, and the temporary becomes the governing doctrine.

Hence the fundamental critique of the Sharia, not merely as an individual, but as a center of power around which the state is being reshaped. If the transitional phase has effectively begun with a formula granting the president a broad role in shaping the new system, the question is not: Do we trust him? Rather: Why build a system that depends on trust in a man, instead of one that requires institutional discipline? A sound state is not built on the righteousness of the ruler, but on the limitations of his powers. A good man may pass away, he may fall ill, he may become corrupt, he may weaken, and he may be betrayed by those around him. A good institution, however, is what prevents even a good man from becoming a danger. This is the difference between a state and a leader.

Therefore, any serious discussion about Syria must begin with a clear demand: reducing the powers of the transitional presidency, expediting the formation of a genuinely independent legislative authority, and establishing a clear and publicly announced timetable for elections—not vague pronouncements open to extension and interpretation. The current constitutional declaration stipulates a relatively long transitional period and a People's Assembly to temporarily exercise legislative power, but the core of the legitimate political objection is that a prolonged transition with a strong presidency could reproduce the same logic of centralized control, even if the language is different.

The idea that Syria should be governed by a "sheikh" mentality, with bearded men exercising guardianship over people's private lives, is not merely a matter of individual freedoms; it is a matter of a civilizational failure to understand the meaning of the modern state. The modern state does not ask its citizens how to dress, how to practice their religion, or how to reconcile their conscience with God. That is not its function. The state's function is security, justice, property, health, education, infrastructure, and the protection of freedoms within the framework of the law. When preachers infiltrate the structure of power, or when personal morality becomes a political issue, the state begins to disintegrate from within. Because then you are no longer dealing with a public administration, but rather with a moral filtering apparatus that judges people based on appearances, not actions. This is the natural gateway to widespread hypocrisy: everyone feigns virtue, while the state itself is eroding.

Syria has paid a terrible price for nearly a century of coups, party dominance, militarization, Ba'athist rule, and the rule of Hafez al-Assad, father and son. After independence in 1946, the country never settled into a healthy constitutional life. Instead, it quickly descended into a period of military coups in 1949, followed by periods of unity and secession, and conflict between the army and political parties, until the Ba'ath Party seized power in 1963. From 1970 onward, Hafez al-Assad established a security state model embodied in the leader, emptying institutions of their meaning and transforming the army, security forces, and the party into instruments of social control rather than servants of the state. Bashar al-Assad inherited this structure after 2000, and with the 2011 uprising, Syria entered a long and devastating war that ended with his downfall in December 2024 and the rise of the current transitional authority led by Ahmed al-Sharaa. This background is crucial because the most dangerous thing Syria could do today is to move from the cult of personality surrounding Assad to the cult of personality surrounding another version of the political figure.

Here, invoking Winston Churchill becomes a very apt example. Churchill led Britain in World War II and was a true national icon, yet he lost the 1945 election to the Labour Party. The British people didn't say, "He's a war hero, therefore he's above reproach." Instead, they essentially said, "You've played your part in history, and now we want a different order for peacetime and social development." The Labour Party won a resounding majority, 393 seats to the Conservatives' 197. The lesson here is brutal and clear: healthy nations thank their leaders, but they don't grant them perpetual power. Heroism doesn't give them a blank check to rule. Even the man who saved his country from disaster can become unsuitable for the next stage.

Other examples from history can be added: Charles de Gaulle led Free France and later returned under a different constitutional framework, but resigned when he lost the referendum in 1969; George Washington could have established himself as a symbol above the republic, but he voluntarily relinquished power, setting a precedent for its peaceful transfer; Nelson Mandela possessed immense moral legitimacy, but he did not transform it into a permanent right to remain in power. Political greatness is measured not only by what a person achieves, but also by what they refrain from acquiring. These are generally accepted historical examples.

The deeper point here is that personal loyalty is the slow poison of any nation emerging from war. When you appoint an official because they are “loyal to the president,” not because they are capable of managing a ministry, a province, or a security or economic portfolio, you are not building a nation; you are building a protective network around the ruler. These networks may seem effective at first, but they quickly breed corruption, cronyism, and fear of independent talent, and then begin to eliminate anyone who doesn't fall in line. Thus, the state is transformed into a vast fiefdom, not a republican institution.

Therefore, the concept of meritocracy is not a Western luxury, but a prerequisite for Syria's survival. The Syria of the future cannot be governed by the logic of "he's one of us," nor by the logic of "he has a history of fighting," nor by the logic of "he's related to so-and-so," or "he's so-and-so's son-in-law," or "he's so-and-so's brother-in-law." A state emerging from devastation needs the exact opposite: expertise, management, the rule of law, oversight, transparency, separation of powers, and accountability. In the reconstruction phase, appointing an incompetent official becomes a political crime, because the price is paid not only from the treasury, but also from the lives of the people.

Even more dangerous is that when religious discourse becomes intertwined with power, it corrupts both: it corrupts religion by transforming it into a tool of control, and it corrupts the state by turning it into a reflection of the whims of the most powerful religious figure, rather than the principle of citizenship. Syria is not a religious lodge, nor a preaching emirate, nor a morality police force. Syria is a diverse country: Arabs, Kurds, Sunnis, Alawites, Druze, Christians, Ismailis, secularists, religious people, tribes, cities, rural areas, displaced persons, and returnees. This complex entity cannot be governed by the mentality of a sheikh who believes that people are a moral herd to be controlled. This is not only backward, but political suicide. Because after all this bloodshed, Syrian society will not easily accept a transition from security-based oppression to moral oppression.

Therefore, serious criticism of the regime must be on this level: not simply that “it’s bad” or “it’s a copy of others,” but rather: if it doesn’t set limits on its own power, it will have reproduced the Syrian problem instead of solving it. And if it doesn’t announce a clear electoral timetable, accept respectable international monitoring, allow for a truly representative national council, and abandon the logic of personal appointments, then any talk of liberation will be incomplete. True liberation is not just about overthrowing the old regime, but about dismantling the notion that Syria needs a new father figure every time.

Received by email from a friend, I don't know who the author is nor his name, but it is indeed a good analysis of the Syrian present situation and some remedies for the political situation, what makes it even more interesting is the fact that it could be addressed to many actual governing entities throughout the world, more so in some supposedly old and established democracies. It is a universal study and analysis indeed, that is worth reading carefully and applied all over or modern political times.

As always, all my thanks to all. 

Monday, April 13, 2026

AN EXCELLENT ANALYSIS......

 

By Giorgos Kentas*
The sudden announcement of a two-week ceasefire between the United States and Iran on April 7, 2026, has temporarily quieted the bombs but also revealed much about how modern republics go to wars, as well as how they choose to pause or stop them. The decision, delivered at the last possible moment and justified as a victory, came like every other major move in this conflict: abrupt, personal, and sealed off from public deliberation. 
The shift from threats of annihilation to calls for peace was not the outcome of national debate or congressional oversight. It was a unilateral calculation, a strategic pivot made by one leader and his advisors, shaped by military reports and political timing. It was, in that sense, the perfect mirror of how the war began. The same process that led to escalation also produced de-escalation: decisions born in the shadows, justified in public only after they were irrevocable. 
From the earliest strikes to the latest ceasefire, the pattern has been unmistakable. A small network at the top controls the narrative, the intelligence, and the pace. Experts who questioned the plan were sidelined; the public, for all its opposition, remained a distant spectator. Yet these moves were presented as the will of a ‘democratic nation’; a paradox that grows harder to ignore each time policy shifts without consent or explanation. 
The comparison between war and peace within this framework is revealing. Both are acts of controlled perception. The war was propelled by confidence in precision warfare and moral certainty; the ceasefire is packaged as strategic triumph and moral restraint. In both cases, the logic belongs to an elite stratum, an elected and or unelected oligarchy , that manages outcomes while insulating itself from accountability. The people who bear the risks and pay the price, remain absent from the calculus. 
What is at stake now is more than the success or failure of a ceasefire. It is the question of how a  republic, a modern democracy, can repeatedly cross the threshold of war and back without a genuine national conversation. The liberal ideal assumes that public scrutiny tempers the impulse to fight; in practice, authority operates through closed councils and instantaneous decrees. The façade holds — elections occur, speeches are made — but the core decisions are oligarchic in nature, taken by the few who possess information and command force. 
The war in Iran, even paused, has already exposed this structural truth. The sudden calm is not the climax of democratic wisdom but the result of political necessity. With markets rattled, allies uneasy, and domestic discontent mounting, retreat was recast as resolution. The ceasefire was declared, like every major action in this conflict, as though the nation itself had spoken, when in truth, the nation had merely been told. 
In the language of power, this is how democracies deceive themselves. The rhetoric of consent persists, but the practice of governance shifts toward concentration and secrecy. When the decisions to bomb and to cease bombing come from the same solitary voice, it becomes clear that what the system enacts is not collective reason but managed obedience. 
The two-week pause may hold or it may not. But either way, it leaves behind a sobering lesson: in the modern liberal order, the war is no longer the exceptional act that democracies’ lexicon restrains. It is the routine act that the polity explains after the fact, and now, even peace follows the same script. 
*Associate Professor in Politics and Governance, University of Nicosia, Cyprus.
kentas.g@unic.ac.cy
Got this article by email from a good friend, as part of a Cypriot site with different articles and news, and I found this one very factual and to the point by this sharp professor, depicting a modern ugly situation culminating in a very destructive war that endanger world stability. 
 My many thanks to all. 

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

EVEN NOW, SOMETHING GOOD IS TAKING ROOT.


At Easter, Christians speak of resurrection—of life emerging where it seemed impossible.

But even beyond faith, this season invites all of us to recognize something deeply human:

that even in the darkest moments, people continue to choose life, to build, to stand for one another.

And this year, the darkness is real. In Haiti, communities are facing violence and profound uncertainty. Families are grieving. Entire neighborhoods are living with fear.

And beyond Haiti, our world is marked by conflict and suffering that can feel relentless and without end.

It would be easy to believe that hope must wait. But at the University of Fondwa, hope is not waiting. It is being built—every day.

It is in a young woman studying agronomy so farmers can grow food in a changing climate.

It is in a future veterinarian learning how to protect the livestock that sustain rural families.

It is in classrooms where students are preparing not to leave their communities behind, but to strengthen them.

This is what resurrection looks like here—not as an idea, but as action.

And you are part of it. Yes you in Palestine, you in Lebanon, you in Iran and you in Ukraine, and yes you in Sudan, Yemen, Latin America and Cuba..... (Italics are mine.)

Not as someone standing at a distance, but as someone helping to make sure these students can continue. Helping turn uncertainty into possibility. Helping ensure that talent, determination, and purpose are not lost to circumstances beyond their control.

Right now, there are students ready to continue their studies—young leaders whose path forward is made possible, step by step, through the community that stands with them.

Easter reminds us that the story is not finished.

That what looks like an ending can become a beginning. That what feels fragile can still be strengthened. That even in a world marked by suffering, people—together—can choose to build something different.

Thank you for being part of that choice.

Thank you for standing with these students, with this university, and with a vision of Haiti rooted in dignity, knowledge, and possibility.

May this season bring you a sense of renewal—whatever that means in your own life—and a quiet confidence that even now, something good is taking root.

With gratitude and hope,

Father Joseph's signature

Father Joseph B. Philippe, CSSp

Inspiring words from Father Philippe, of course originally addressed to His university students, faculty and staff, and probably to his constituency as well as to the suffering people of Haiti, the italic one extra line includes other suffering people world wide are mine, turning his words as hope for all oppressed and living under occupation and brutal ethnic cleansing, bombardment and annihilation, unfortunately most if not all emanating from the same sources, nuclear armed fascists. But as we're living the spirit of Easter, the message gives us some hope. 

As always, my deep gratitude to all.   

Friday, April 3, 2026

A FAIR AND FACTUAL DESCRIPTION AND ASSESSMENT.......

 

Unprecedented testimony from an Israeli analyst: No Islamic military power like Iran has emerged since the armies of the Prophet Muhammad left the Arabian Peninsula and changed the world. Any force that enters Tehran by land will be buried there.


"Since the armies of the Prophet Muhammad left the Arabian Peninsula and changed the world, no Islamic military power has emerged like Iran… This statement did not come from an Islamic preacher, a sheikh, an Arab analyst, or an Iranian media figure… This is a very striking statement from the Israeli writer and political analyst Alon Mizrahi."

Mizrahi completely deviated from the usual narrative, saying the opposite of everything being said in the Western media, and clearly reiterated that what is happening now is a "historic moment" that no one expected.
He said all this after witnessing the performance of prayers in the underground Iranian missile cities.

Unprecedented admission from within Israel

Mizrahi stated explicitly that the world is witnessing extraordinary military power, and that Iran has been able to do what no one else has been able to do before, and he went so far as to compare it to the Islamic power in its early days, when it emerged from the Arabian Peninsula and changed the balance of power in the entire world.

This in itself is shocking… because the words are coming from inside Israel, not from outside!

Iran's strikes changed the game and cost America trillions of dollars.

According to his analysis, Iran carried out precise and wide-ranging strikes on American and Israeli bases, which led to the destruction of massive military installations that had been built over decades and cost trillions of dollars.

He explains that in just 4 days, there was massive and widespread destruction of some of the most important military bases in the Gulf, such as those in Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi Arabia, to the point that a large part of the American military spending disappeared in moments.

- Destroying billions of dollars worth of equipment in seconds

The biggest surprise, from Alon Mizrahi’s point of view, was in the details… radars costing hundreds of millions being destroyed in seconds, entire bases being evacuated, burned and destroyed, and scenes unprecedented even in the history of modern warfare.

Mizrahi says that America itself has never seen destruction like this before, and can only compare it to "Pearl Harbor," but even that was a single attack, not a continuous war like this.

The impossibility of invasion

Mizrahi asserted that the idea of ​​invading Iran is almost impossible, due to its vast size and decades-long military preparedness, and stated clearly that any ground forces entering Iran would be "completely swallowed up".

Underground military infrastructure

One of the most important strengths he mentioned is that the Iranian military infrastructure is not exposed, but is located underground in scattered locations, and this makes access to it almost impossible even for the strongest armies.

Did they lose the war?

The biggest shock was in Alon Mizrahi's final conclusion regarding what
He said that the United States and Israel had already lost the war, and that they might cause destruction, but they would not be able to actually win.

As received, in Arabic, this would be the second time I forward through our blog words of Alon Mizrahi, a bright analyzer and political reporter,(the first on Oct. 2024) I'm surprised the Israeli system allows him to speak freely, while they sensor and stop every other reporter saying anything against the official thinking, or even taking pictures, that's of course when they don't eliminate them. of course we're trying to do the same here nowadays in the US as well.  

As always, my many thanks to all. 


Saturday, March 28, 2026

The Crusade to Liberate Iran and Bring on The Rapture

 

American troops across at least 30 military installations have complained that their commanding officers have used Christian nationalist language to rationalize the Iran War

An American combat unit commander told his non-commissioned officers that President Trump was “anointed by Jesus to light the signal fire in Iran to cause Armageddon and mark his return to Earth,” according to a complaint flagged by the Military Religious Freedom Foundation (MRFF).

“The complaints came from more than 40 different units spread across at least 30 military installations,” writes Jonathan Larsen, who first broke this shocking story at his Substack. That number is only increasing. Larsen tells me there are now over 200 similar complaints filed over the past three days

According to the complaint that MRFF sent Larsen, the commander told troops that attacking Iran was “all part of God’s divine plan” that would help facilitate the return of Jesus Christ and trigger Armageddon.

This toxic form of white Christian nationalism that uses Jesus as a mascot for white supremacy and militarism is now the functioning ideology of the Trump White House. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth is proudly affiliated with a church started by Christian nationalist Doug Wilson, who doesn’t believe in the separation of Church and State or the 19th Amendment. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito’s wife flew two flags at two properties associated with the January 6th insurrectionists, including one “Appeal to Heaven” flag that Christian nationalists now use. US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee is a proud member of this extremist branch of Christianity who believes almost the entire Middle East belongs to Israel.

Israel and the United States could now trigger a global “holy war” after assassinating the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khameini in their disastrous, reckless, and bloody “pre-emptive” war with Iran. Many Shia Muslims see the Ayatollah as a significant religious figure who provides spiritual guidance. If our commanders are openly telling troops this war is a Christian war, how will that fall upon the ears of Muslims around the world? We’ve already seen Shia Muslims in Pakistan attack the U.S. consulate in Karachi, resulting in numerous deathsCNN just reported the U.S. consulate in Dubai is on fire.

Are you prepared to die for Jewish and Christian religious zealots? Should we go to war for a genocidal Israeli regime and white Christian nationalists who are praying for the end of times?

Copied from  "THE LEFT HOOK with Wajahat Ali",  it depicts a new version very much in circulation as to what is happening with our messianic headings to all our latest adventures in the world and domestically. Are we really under the full control and influence of our messianic allies and their crazy regime, or did God also promise us a total supremacy over the entire glob. 

As always, my many thanks to all. 

 

Monday, March 23, 2026

DECLARATIONS AND INTENTIONS......

 

Israeli Prime Minister  Benjamin Netanyahu declared  on Friday that he did not intend to offend anyone with his statement on Thursday that Jesus was no superior to Genghis Khan, saying he "did not insult" Christ.


Netanyahu wrote on the X platform: "Another fake news story (this time) about my attitude toward Christians," adding, "Let's be clear, I did not insult Jesus Christ during my press conference."

He continued, "On the contrary, I quoted the great American historian Will Durant," noting that this individual, "a great admirer of Jesus Christ (...) emphasized that morality alone is not enough to guarantee survival."

Speaking at a press conference Thursday evening, Netanyahu quoted Durant, saying, "History, unfortunately, proves that Jesus Christ has no advantage over Genghis Khan. Because if you are strong, ruthless, and powerful enough, evil will triumph over good."

These remarks sparked a wave of criticism on social media, particularly from believers who expressed their dismay at the comparison between Jesus Christ and Genghis Khan, the founder of the Mongol Empire in the 13th century.

While The Israeli army  spokesman said  the army intends to escalate its military operations and increase pressure on Hezbollah and Lebanon, noting that the next phase will see an expansion of the ground operation in southern Lebanon in the next few days. 

 

The spokesman explained that Israeli forces have so far carried out attacks targeting about two thousand targets inside Lebanese territory, resulting in more than a thousand civilian deaths and thousands injured, and a million displaced refugees stressing that the army is continuing to carry out more strikes as part of what he described as efforts to weaken Hezbollah’s military capabilities.


AS WELL Israeli Defense Minister Yisrael Katz announced on Wednesday that the army had bombed and destroyed two more bridges on the Litani River in Lebanon, noting that Hezbollah had been using them to smuggle weapons south.


Meanwhile a report by Francesca Albanese, the top UN expert, says Palestinians in custody ‘subjected to exceptionally ruthless physical and psychological abuse’ and systematic torture to all under detention as collective punitive vengeance since Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza started.

no comments, except that Israel using messianic and religious dogma and ideology is openly trying to annex a major part of Lebanon and empty it from all its indigenous people, an old Godly dream coming true. 

As always my many thanks to all. 

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

ISRAELI PM BENJAMIN NETANYAHU IS BLATANTLY THREATENING THE WEST.

 


The right wing Israeli government is the biggest threat to world peace.

The city of Tehran is burning.

The images that have come out over the past couple of days have been incredibly disturbing. Akin to apocalyptic with flames reaching the sky, and black rain pouring over an ancient, beautiful, historic city filled with ten million men, women, and children. Babies have been slaughtered in their schools, and a whole population will never be the same.

But it’s not ending there.

Evidently, the state of Israel feels bold enough to threaten the West as well, too.

On camera, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says:

“I demand that western governments do what is necessary to fight antisemitism and provide the required safety and security for Jewish communities worldwide. They would be well advised to heed our warnings. I demand action from them-now.”

There are genuinely no words to describe how much I have come to loathe this man and everything he represents. Considering…

Some very strong words from an article by this courageous columnist, copied from an email I received few days back and forwarded through our blog. Not to mention the hundreds of children killed in their schools in Iran and Lebanon plus the entire area. As well as the millions of refugees and displaced.

As always, all my thanks to all.