-
Recent Posts
- The Mirror and the Mandate: Confronting America’s 34-State Failure on Child Marriage
- When Support Becomes a Transaction
- Save the Beagles: Inside the Fight to Free 2,000 Dogs from Ridglan Farms
- A Shout Out to Bernie Sanders: Always for the People
- The Holocaust, the Orphanage, and the 2026 Warning: The Sovereignty of the Soul
- The Senate’s Vote on Israel Arms Sales: A Defining Choice Between War and Accountability
- Trump Omni-Presidency: Power Above Law and Faith
- The $1.5 Billion “Coincidence”: When National Security Becomes a Market Bet
- The Snap Back: Hungary Just Changed the Global Equation
- Planet Earth: You Are a Crew
Categories
Meta
Tag Archives: Operation Epic Fury
April 7: Has the U.S. Already Crossed the Line into War Crimes?
It is Monday morning, April 6, 2026. We are exactly 39 hours away from a deadline that was set not in a diplomatic cable, and not in a briefing room, but on a social media platform in the middle of … Continue reading
Posted in In the News
Tagged Article 33 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, Article 54 of Additional Protocol I, B1 Bridge, Bridge Day, CAIR, civilian infrastructure, Collective Punishment, Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, Council on American-Islamic Relations, crime against humanity, deadline, discriminatory intent, Doctrine of Command Responsibility, Donald Trump, double-tap, Geneva Convention, guilt, hors de combat, indiscriminate, infrastructure, infrastructure targeting, intent, International Criminal Court, iran, iran war, missile strike, NATO, No Quarter, Operation Epic Fury, Pope Leo XIV, Power Plant Day, Principle of Proportionality, reckless, religion, religious persecution, Rome Statute, Shajarah Tayyebeh girls' school, Sizdah Be-dar, stale intelligence, stone ages, stupid rules of engagement, triple-tap, war crime, water desalination systems
1 Comment
The 24-Hour Betrayal: When “Fighting Together” Only Goes One Way
An Afghan ally dies in ICE custody while Trump demands allies to help secure the Strait of Hormuz as the Iran War escalates. Today’s news cycle contains a contrast so stark it’s hard to ignore. In North Texas, Mohammad Nazeer … Continue reading
Posted in Humanity, In the News, Story
Tagged Afghan allies, Afghanistan, dhs, diplomacy, foreign policy, Greenland, human rights, ICE, ICE custody, immigration reform, International Relations, iran war, JCPOA, Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, military alliances, Mohammad Nazeer Paktyawal, NATO, Operation Epic Fury, Strait of Hormuz, Trump administration
1 Comment
The “47-Year War”: Did the U.S. Actually Start It 73 Years Ago?
We are nearly a week into Operation Epic Fury. Bombs and missiles are now crisscrossing the region. Confirmed strikes and retaliations have taken place in Iran, Israel, Lebanon, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, Iraq, and Jordan. … Continue reading
Posted in In the News, Story
Tagged Article 5, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Britain, capitulation law, Carter, collective defense, family protection laws, General Robert Huyser, hostage crises, immunity, inequality, Iranian George Washington, islamic republic, israel, legal immunity, Man of the Year, middle east, Mohammad Mosaddegh, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, NATO, Nazi Germany, oil, Operation Ajax, Operation Epic Fury, Reza Shah Pahlavi, SAVAK, secret police, shadow war, Soviet Union, Time magazine, UN Secretary-General António Guterres, white revolution, women's rights
1 Comment
War: The Reality Behind the Rose-Colored Glasses
As the glasses shatter, we face the bloody reality of Operation Epic Fury and the cost of impulse. Edwin Starr’s iconic anthem famously asks, “War… what is it good for?” and answers with a resounding “Absolutely nothing!” It’s a sentiment … Continue reading
Posted in In the News
Tagged 1975 Algiers Accord, 2026 winter olympics, Afghanistan, autocracy, bipartisan, casus belli, cia, constitution, dictatorship, DOGE, Donald Trump, fascism, Fox News, freedom, freedoms, george bush, Henry Kissinger, humanitarian fallout, iran, Iraq, islamic republic, israel, Jina (Mahsa) Amini, kurdish forces, Life, Nazi, Operation Epic Fury, Pakistan, Peshmerga, pete hegseth, protests, rose-colored glasses, Saddam Hussein, Shah of Iran, Shiites, Tehran, Tom Fletcher, U.N., U.N. relief, united nations, USAID, venezuela, war of impulse, War Powers Resolution, winter olympics
1 Comment







