Category: US

  • The US has reached a ceasefire deal with the Houthis in Yemen, ahead of a visit to Gulf dictatorships next week. It seems the Houthis’ resilience cost Washington too much money for too little gain. So the imperial power will now rely on its local enforcer Israel to continue the fight, which the apartheid state began itself with its genocide in Gaza.

    Trump steps back in Yemen, but Israel steps forward

    The Donald Trump administration in the US is incredibly pro-Israel. But despite Washington essentially propping up the apartheid state and its crimes against humanity, it remains the shot-caller. And because the economic bottom line matters to Trump, especially at a time when he’s scored so many own goals internationally, the costly and largely ineffective bombing of Yemen had to stop. So he apparently surprised Israel by signing the deal with the Houthis, though the settler-colonial power was already doubtful about US commitment to its campaign in Yemen.

    The Houthis have been resisting Israel’s genocide in Gaza by targeting ships heading to the apartheid state. And the US and UK have been coming to Israel’s aid, but with little success and much criticism.

    When a Houthi missile managed to evade interception and hit near Ben Gurion International Airport on 4 May, it was the “most significant strike” so far for the group. And it was therefore pretty clear that the efforts of Israel and its Western allies to dampen the Houthis’ will to resist weren’t working. So the following day, Israel sent around 30 warplanes to Yemen to bomb the important port of Hodeidah. Then, just hours before the US-Houthi ceasefire announcement, other Israeli planes hit Sanaa airport in Yemen. They caused “around $500 million in losses” and left it “in ruins“.

    The US failed. But Israel and Houthis will continue to fight.

    Trump standing down in Yemen marks a US failure to stop Houthi resistance. He simply realised it was more cost-effective and less embarrassing to let Israel fight its own battle.

    The US-Houthi ceasefire reportedly doesn’t say anything about Houthis’ fight against Israel’s war-criminal regime. Chief Houthi negotiator Mohammed Abdulsalam said there was no mention in the deal about ceasing resistance to Israel’s genocide in “any way, shape or form”. Far from that, the Houthis have clarified that this struggle “will continue”.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By Ed Sykes

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • U.S. and Chinese officials will hold high-level talks in Switzerland this weekend, a first step toward easing trade tensions between the world’s two largest economies over tariffs but experts did not expect immediate breakthroughs.

    Analysts said Wednesday the talks were a necessary step towards de-escalating tensions amid the ongoing trade war, but negotiations to resolve differences between the two countries may be protracted.

    U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Trade Representative Jamieson Greer will meet Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng in Geneva, the first official engagement between the two countries since U.S. President Donald Trump increased tariffs on imports from China to as much as 145%.

    “De-escalating won’t be simple. It’s much easier to ratchet up restrictions versus lifting them,” said Wendy Cutler, vice president of the Asia Society Policy Institute.

    “Expectations should be modest for this meeting. It is a first step in a potentially longer process, which is complicated by a lack of trust and diametrically opposing views on how trade is conducted between the two largest economies,” Cutler told Radio Free Asia.

    Chinese scholar Zhang Li agreed. He expects China and the U.S. to engage in protracted negotiations on a range of issues, including tariffs imposed by both nations, smuggling of the deadly synthetic opioid fentanyl into the U.S., and other trade imbalances.

    “Such protracted negotiations may last throughout the entire term of the Trump administration, resulting in a continuous trade war between China and the U.S., which is also a feature of the new Cold War between China and the U.S.,” Zhang told RFA.

    Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent speaks in the Oval Office of the White House, Feb. 3, 2025, in Washington.
    Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent speaks in the Oval Office of the White House, Feb. 3, 2025, in Washington.
    (Evan Vucci/AP)

    In 2024, China’s total manufacturing output reached 40.5 trillion yuan (US$5.65 trillion). Foreign trade volume – exports and imports – was 43.85 trillion yuan (US$6.1 trillion), of which exports accounted for 25.45 trillion yuan (US$3.49 trillion).

    In March, Chinese imports to the U.S. were the lowest in five years, according to data released by the U.S. Commerce Department. U.S. trade deficit widened to a record $140.5 billion in the month, with imports from at least 10 countries, including Vietnam and Mexico, at record levels.

    Trump – who on Wednesday held a swearing-in ceremony at the Oval Office for the new U.S. ambassador to China, David Perdue – said he was not open to lowering the 145% import duties on Chinese goods.

    His comments came a day after Bessent, in an interview on Fox News, said the current tariffs imposed are unsustainable and that both sides had a “shared interest” in talks.

    “We don’t want to decouple. What we want is fair trade,” Bessent said. He stressed that “de-escalation” will be the focus, instead of a “big trade deal.”

    Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng speaks at the 11th China-UK Economic and Financial Dialogue in Beijing,  Jan. 11, 2025.
    Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng speaks at the 11th China-UK Economic and Financial Dialogue in Beijing, Jan. 11, 2025.
    (Aaron Favila/AP)

    China on Wednesday said the U.S. has repeatedly indicated in the recent past that it wants to negotiate and that the upcoming meeting had been requested by the U.S.

    “China firmly opposes the U.S.’s tariff hikes. This position remains unchanged,” Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Lin Jian said at a media briefing.

    “Meanwhile, as we’ve stressed many times before, China is open to dialogue, but any dialogue must be based on equality, respect and mutual benefit,” Lin said.

    Washington and Beijing have been engaged in a tit-for-tat increase in tariffs ever since Trump imposed a 10% tariff on China on Feb. 4, citing its role in the trade in fentanyl, a deadly opioid that has become a major cause of death in America.

    China, in turn, hit back with a 15% tariff on U.S. coal and liquefied natural gas, and a 10% on crude oil, large cars, and agricultural machinery, prompting Trump to raise China tariffs further by 10% to a total 20%, followed by several more increases until eventually settling at 145%.

    In China, the steep U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods have triggered a wave of factory closures in major export hubs in the country, with sources telling RFA that there is a prevailing sense of helplessness among the general public, given little consumer activity and a rise in protests by unpaid workers.

    Edited by Tenzin Pema and Mat Pennington.


    This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by Qian Lang and Chen Meihua for RFA Mandarin.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Mark Carney, the newly elected prime minister of Canada, robustly pushed back against Donald Trump’s repeated intentions to make Canada the 51st American state. Just two months ago, Trump said:

    Canada only works as a state. We don’t need anything they have. As a state, it would be one of the great states anywhere. This would be the most incredible country, visually…It’s so perfect as a great and cherished state.

    And, with Carney’s visit to the White House, Trump repeated his desire to annex Canada. However, Carney wasn’t having any of it, saying:

    As you know from real estate, there are some places that are never for sale. Having met with the owners of Canada over the course of the campaign … it’s not for sale. Won’t be for sale, ever.

    Trump hit back with:

    Never say never.

    And, as he did so, Carney mouthed “never, never, never, never” to the waiting cameras. It looks like ‘never’ is now for Trump’s absurd attempted conquest of Canada.

    Carney pushes back against Trump

    Throughout their encounter in the White House, Carney took the role of an exasperated parent gently berating a smug toddler. A screenshot of the moment Trump was told Canada isn’t for sale looked much like a disappointed toddler being told they can’t have ice cream for dinner:

    The Canadian leader appeared happy to let Trump ramble on, only stepping in to correct the most egregious lies:

    Carney shot a disbelieving look at camera as Trump claimed to be the greatest thing that had ever happened to the Canadian prime minister:

    Meanwhile, Trump continued to blunder answers and just make up whatever he wanted:

    Trump attempted to impress Carney with the gaudy trappings of the redesigned White House:

    Trade boycott

    Trump’s ongoing tariff war has had a distinct response from Canadian consumers: no thank you – perhaps without the ‘thank you.’ Canadian businesses ranging from supermarkets to bars have continued to refuse American products. Instead, they’re opting to go with home-grown options or non-American trading partners. The number of Canadians taking road trips south of the border has also dropped dramatically, with a 23% drop in visits in comparison to February 2024. As Bloomberg reported, this is having harsh impacts on US border towns that rely on tourism sales from Canadians.

    Of course, Trump hasn’t shown any concern or business sense as there appears to be no sign of Canadians relenting. Now, Carney’s visit has set a tone for Canada’s relationship with America as one of exasperation and pushback.

    The thing is, there’s no tactics world leaders can apply for Trump. The orange one has proven himself to be a capricious fool who cannot be reasoned with. Carney is an experienced politician and economist. That doesn’t mean anything to the tangerine tyrant, who is a runaway train of ignorance, conceived policies, and the ever-changing whims of a racist egotist.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By Maryam Jameela

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Israel’s security cabinet has approved plans to ethnically cleanse Gaza, which includes the expulsion of 2.4m Palestinians. Only three months ago, Donald Trump expressed his desire to do exactly the same.

    Trump gets his Gaza waterfront development

    According to the BBC, Israel will ‘expand its military offensive against Hamas’. But this is the BBC, and we all know what that really means. Israel is planning to wipe Gaza off the map.

     

    The BBC also stated:

    In a briefing later on Monday, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said the expanded campaign would displace most Palestinians in Gaza as air strikes and other military operations continued.

    Which, translated from Israeli war machine propaganda, means they plan to bomb the rest of Gaza to death, or force them to leave – so Trump can then enter.

    Israel: bullshit ‘military conquest’

    They claim the ‘forceful operation’ will save the rest of the hostages, but that’s the same excuse they’ve used for the last 18 months while they’ve obliterated Gaza, and murdered over 50,000 Palestinians.

    Benjamin Netanyahu, Israeli prime minister and war criminal, said they will ‘move’ the population of Gaza – which is over two million people. What he means is they are going to ethnically cleanse, and murder, even more Palestinians from and in their homeland. This is exactly what Trump wanted.

    For two months, Israel has been blocking all humanitarian and commercial aid. The United Nations has said Israel is using humanitarian aid, such as food, as a political tool – which is a war crime.

    Trump and Netanyahu think they can either starve Palestinians to death, or force them to comply.

    Turning a blind eye

    Both Trump and Netanyahu have made their ethnic cleansing plans clear as day. Yet the majority of the media are pretending they’re not. The BBC’s called it ‘expanding their military offensive’, Sky News used ‘capture all of the Gaza Strip’, and the New York Times described it as ‘forceful entry into the territory’. All of them are beating around the bush. And the bush is on fire.

    This was Trump’s plan all along. Gaza wiped off the map so he can build his cushty little waterfront apartments with his pal Netanyahu. Because who cares about Palestinians?

    Israel is doing this in full public view because of the support from Western governments. Which means now, they have been able to formally announce their plans for ethnic cleansing and permanent illegal occupation – knowing they would not be met with resistance from the powers that be.

    Feature image via the Canary

    By HG

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Donald Trump has decided he wants to be the next Pope. Yes, you read that right:

    Trump and that hubris

    Whilst many on social media speculated that he was in fact joking, the level of hubris Trump has shown during his time in office shows that he probably does think he is qualified for the job:

    We’ve known for years that Trump is deranged. However, considering he isn’t even baptised, this is a whole new level of… well:

    Given the huge amounts of his unqualified friends that he has put in positions of power since re-entering the white house though, he probably thinks the position is fair game:

    Suddenly the conspiracy theories about JD Vance killing the Pope are starting to feel a little more believable:

    Of course, the citrus-tanned felon president couldn’t be any more different from the recently departed Pope Francis.

    While Trump was kidnapping the US’s own citizens for opposing genocide, Francis was… opposing genocide. Needless to say, if the head of the Catholic church had made a state visit to the US before his passing, ICE might have spirited him away before he went to meet his maker.

    Obviously there’s nothing devout Catholic about Trump. However, Trump’s right-wing fascistic rhetoric is popular in Bible Belt evangelical America. So it’s hardly surprising that the egocentric president thinks he can muscle his way into the Vatican next.

    There is one way that Trump would fit right in of course. And it’s his horrific history of predatory male behaviour. A rapist president to head the Catholic church swimming in child sexual abuse scandals? He might actually be right at home.

    One thing’s for sure, with the world already going to shit, Trump wouldn’t be a ‘spiritual’ religious leader the world needs. But he sure might be the one the world deserves.

    Feature image via the Canary

    By HG

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Amnesty International’s latest report on human rights around the globe makes for damning reading for Israel, the US, and the UK. While mainstream media is likely to receive the report with typical Western bias that paints Global South countries as backwards, there’s a reason to compare the standards in three nations that form the bedrock of both historical and modern day colonialism.

    Amnesty on Israel

    As the prime example of a modern-day settler colonial state, Amnesty’s assessment of human rights in Israel is damning – to say the least. The report writers paint a much more accurate picture than either current administration in the US or UK (including prior conservative and liberal governments) have done thus far. They write:

    Israel committed genocide in Gaza, including by causing some of the highest known death tolls among children, journalists, and health and humanitarian workers of any recent con ict in the world, and deliberately in inflicting on Palestinians conditions calculated to bring about their physical destruction.

    Charities and organisations have been increasingly likely to call Israel’s actions what they are: genocidal. Amnesty is also careful to point out that Israel’s actions amount to apartheid:

    Israel committed the crime of apartheid, including through the forcible transfer and displacement of Palestinians both in Israel and in the Occupied Palestinian Territory…Thousands of Palestinians were subjected to arbitrary detention and to ill-treatment, amounting to torture in many cases.

    What mainstream media routinely ignores in its reporting on Palestine is that Israel is acting with brazen impunity:

    The International Court of Justice’s instructions to avert genocide and end illegal occupation were ignored. Freedom of expression and peaceful assembly came under attack.

    The organisation documents how Israel has deliberately and purposely damaged infrastructure vital to the continuation of life for Palestinians. In great detail, the report lays out that:

    The high civilian death toll was a result of direct, disproportionate, or indiscriminate attack.

    A shocking 90% of Gaza’s population have been displaced, with most people displaced multiple times. Amnesty found that:

    All humanitarian organizations reported excessive Israeli restrictions and delays on approvals of aid transfers.

    The report details the sheer number of journalists and healthcare workers Israel have targeted. It also notes that “more than 10,000 Palestinians” have been subject to “enforced disappearance or incommunicado detention.” Alarmingly, “all” Palestinian detention facilities have seen reports of sexual assault and rape.

    Choice of pearl clutching

    However, that wasn’t what mainstream media led with when reporting on Amnesty’s findings, if they reported on them at all. The Guardian ran with a headline about Trump leading the charge on repression, whilst the BBC managed a report on a different Amnesty investigation on the death penalty. Whilst the former did include a sentence about Israel’s war crimes, the choices of these mainstream British outlets says a lot about their priorities. They’ll breathlessly run liveblogs on Israeli hostages, but a comprehensive condemnation of Israel’s apartheid doesn’t warrant much attention.

    What the Guardian did mention, however, was the following:

    Women, girls and LGBTQ+ people faced intensifying attacks in a number of countries including Afghanistan and Iran, while LGBTQ+ rights were targeted in Uganda, Georgia and Bulgaria.

    Now, that’s accurate – those countries did target queer people. However, it’s a suspect choice of countries to highlight. Unsurprisingly for any queer people in the UK and the US, Amnesty pulled up both countries on degrading queer rights. However, there’s a colonial narrative that determines which countries are considered to be wholly backwards, and which countries’ degradation of human rights doesn’t even warrant a mention. Those countries can easily be separated into the Global North and the Global South. Or, if that’s too tricky a dulux colour chart on human skin will do the job.

    Whilst Trump is undoubtedly to blame for a terrifying rollback of rights, he’s currently been in power for just over a hundred days. And, the rest of Amnesty’s assessment on the US was no less damning.

    Additional barriers

    Amnesty found that abortion bans “severely impacted” rights. As is often the case, the report found that when it came to reproductive rights:

    Additional barriers existed for many people, including Black and other racialized people, Indigenous Peoples, undocumented immigrants, transgender people, rural residents and people living in poverty.

    They also found that anti-immigrant and racist rhetoric rocketed as:

    Authorities expanded the system of arbitrary mass immigration detention, surveillance and electronic monitoring.

    The continued detention of Muslim men at US facility, Guantanamo Bay, was called a “violation of international law.” The US is accused of carrying out extrajudicial killings around the world, and of withholding information from investigations into those killings.

    They noted that campus protests against Israeli genocide were met with stiff violence. Black people were disproportionately targeted by police violence:

    According to media sources, police shot and killed 1,133 people in 2024. Black people
    were disproportionately impacted by the use of lethal force, comprising nearly 22% of deaths from police use of firearms, despite representing 13% of the population.

    And:

    Discrimination and violence against LGBTI people were widespread and anti-LGBTI legislation persisted.

    Transgender people of colour in particular faced horrific violence:

    According to the Human Rights Campaign, 84% of transgender people killed were people of colour and 50% were Black transgender women.

    Then, in a representation of the contemporary colonial powers sticking together, it is of course the US supplying weapons to Israel that makes up a significant part of their denigration of human rights. Amnesty found that:

    US-made bombs and components were identified by Amnesty International in unlawful deadly air strikes by the Israeli military on residential homes and a makeshift camp for displaced people in the occupied Gaza Strip in January, April, and May. The continued supply of munitions to Israel violated US laws and policies regarding the transfer and sale of arms, intended to prevent arms transfers that risk contributing to civilian harm and violations of human rights or international humanitarian law.

    Amnesty: highlighting support of genocide

    The US has been central to Israel’s genocide in Palestine. But, another nation that has also provided support for the apartheid has been the UK. Amnesty strongly rebuked the UK, citing “irresponsible arms transfers”:

    In June, UN special experts called on states to end all transfers of military equipment to Israel to avoid the risk of responsibility for human rights violations. In September, the new government partially suspended export licences, citing a “clear risk” of breaches of international humanitarian law by the Israeli military. However, the UK contribution to the F-35 fighter jet, a crucial element in Israeli military activity, was excluded from this suspension.

    On top of that, Amnesty judged the government to have had “a chilling effect” in its crackdown on freedom of speech in relation to peaceful Palestine and environmental protests. They also referred to the race riots of 2024 as further evidence of:

    anti-asylum seeker rhetoric from figures in politics and the media.

    The report cites the Windrush scandal as something that “confirmed the racism at the heart of government policy” and noted that:

    Children from Black and ethnic minority backgrounds were disproportionately impacted by the high level of child poverty…The statistics demonstrated a disproportionate impact on children from Black and minority ethnic backgrounds, of whom 47% were living in poverty, compared with 24% of white children.

    Social security allowances were found to be “less than the cost of common essentials for a single person.” On top of that, the report also referenced the UK failing to meet its obligations towards disabled people.

    Shithole countries

    It’s no coincidence that the unifying factor amongst these three countries is a deep and abiding commitment to Israel’s genocide and apartheid in Palestine. Israel is a central cog in the contemporary colonial manifestations of the UK and US in the modern age. And, it’s no accident that it’s the most marginalised in society – poor people, trans people, disabled people, and those multiply marginalised – who are facing the brunt of a rolling back of rights.

    Trump famously referred to Haiti and El Salvador as “shithole countries.” Whilst those countries – like any country on Earth – will have problems with human rights and discrimination, it is undeniable that the litany of heinous impacts detailed above are a result of a colonial military industrial complex that hoards power built on the bones and blood of the colonised. It’s down to capitalist rot which means that such vast inequalities can exist in the UK and US. If the sheer amount of human rights abuses detailed above were describing a Global South country, you can imagine the rush of headlines peddling colonialist garbage. But, because it’s the UK and US propping up Israel, they’ll go unnoticed by mainstream media.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By Maryam Jameela

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Apple violated a U.S. court order that required the iPhone maker to allow greater competition for app downloads and payment methods in its lucrative App Store and will be referred to federal prosecutors, a federal judge in California ruled on Wednesday. U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers in Oakland said in an 80-page ruling that…

    The post US judge rules Apple violated order to reform App Store appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • Donald Trump has jeopardised the future of small and independent businesses in the US with the escalation of his tariffs on Chinese imports. 

    Trump: jeopardising small business with his China trade war

    As of 18 April, 2025, the US has imposed tariffs of up to 245% on certain Chinese imports to the country, stoking fears of a global recession. This has come after China refused to back down over Trump’s efforts to assert US dominance over global trade. 

    When individuals or businesses buy from a foreign seller, the Customs and Border Protection charges a tariff as a percentage

    The average tariff on Chinese imports is now at 124.1%. This is already six times higher than when the second Trump administration began on January 20, 2025. 

    This means that for independent US businesses that rely on supplies from Chinese companies, things are already getting very expensive. 

    Jane Richardson is the owner of Very Important Pet Mortuary in Santa Monica. For the last 12 years, she has been offering private pet cremation services for pet owners in Los Angeles. 

    She returns pet ashes alongside clay paw prints to customers in a cedarwood chest, which comes from China. 

    Richardson said:

    During Trump’s first term in the White House, a case of small cedar wood chests already went up from $368 to $466.

    Now, prices are set to skyrocket, leaving her feeling very uncertain about the future of her business. 

    Her initial reaction was to try to order as many chests as she could before tariffs were implemented. However, as a small business, cash flow did not allow it. 

    Richardson has looked into buying cedar chests from American companies. However, they are not the same quality and are “twice as expensive”. She cannot pass that cost onto her customers.

    She said:

    The stress of not knowing what I’m going to wake up to every morning in terms of just surviving as a small business. It’s very scary.

    Costs surged by over 50%

    Mirai Clinical is a direct-to-consumer brand based in Nevada. It sells deodorising soaps, body washes, personal care wipes, and more. Most of its manufacturing is done in the US and Japan. However, 30% of the company’s products are made in China. 

    Following the 145% reciprocal tariff by the Trump administration, Mirai Clinical’s Chinese manufacturing costs “surged by over 50%”. Additionally, it also has to pay a 7.5% Section 301 tariff and various other miscellaneous customs fees, meaning the total duty is well over 150%. 

    Andy Wang, supply chain manager, said:

    As a small business, these increases have had a dramatic financial impact on both our margins and pricing.

    However, unlike other businesses, Mirai Clinical has been able to start diversifying its supply chain to manufacturers outside of China. 

    ‘We’ve survived worse’

    Sebastian Sassi is the VP of Sales at Atlantic Vision, a US company that supplies fibre optics hardware to Data Centres. Its raw materials come from China, meaning that right now, prices are constantly changing with a “Tweet or a Trump social post”.

    A critical component of data centres is fibre optic patch cords. 

    Surprisingly, through Chinese suppliers, Atlantic Vision can deliver the same high-quality product for just $4 versus $14 domestically. So even if tariffs double the price, it’s still cheaper.

    According to Sassi, the net increase on imported fibre optic products is currently 145% above what it was before this administration. This means the total tariff is now around 179%. 

    Ultimately, Atlantic Vision is having to increase its prices by between 30 and 40%. 

    However, Sassi said that this is an industry-wide problem, because:

    There’s no such thing as an Asia-free fibre optic network.

    Sassi said that whilst the tariffs are “disruptive” and “causing customers quite the headache”, Atlantic Vision has “survived worse”. He said: “Business operations will continue as before.”

    By HG

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Seven people were arrested during a blockade that closed the main gate of RAF Lakenheath on Saturday 26 April, during peaceful protests in opposition to any return of US nuclear weapons to the Suffolk air base:

    RAF Lakenheath

    RAF Lakenheath: final day of shut down

    250 people from across the country – as well as international delegates – participated in the demonstration and blockade, which marked the final day of the Lakenheath Alliance for Peace peace camp:

    RAF Lakenheath

    There has been a continuous presence of campaigners outside the main gate of the base since 14 April, as well as events highlighting Lakenheath’s role in Israel’s ongoing genocide in Gaza, the role of the military in climate breakdown, and NATO’s nuclear network in Europe:

    The protests come after the Mirror ran an exclusive investigation revealing a shocking government cover up about the new US nuclear weapons deployment. Legal letters from the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) to the Ministry of Defence resulted in the declassifying of a document exempting US Visiting Forces in Britain from meeting nuclear safety regulations. This blanket exemption not only applies to troops stationed at RAF Lakenheath, but across all US bases in Britain.

    This means that Suffolk County Council will never be informed of the US nuclear bombs arriving at RAF Lakenheath. The council would therefore be under no obligation to have emergency plans in place in the event of a nuclear accident at the base:

    CND General Secretary Sophie Bolt said:

    Solidarity with the seven people who were arrested as part of this successful action which shut down the main entrance to RAF Lakenheath for over three hours.

    Rather than arresting people for peacefully protesting the return of US nuclear weapons to Britain and the base’s role in supporting Israel’s genocide in Gaza, the police should be investigating the clear violations of international law being facilitated by both the British government and US bases in Britain.

    Nuclear weapons don’t make us safer, they make us a target. We’re going to keep on protesting at these bases to stop US nuclear dangers. We want an end to these US bases in Britain.

    Featured image and additional images supplied

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Donald Trump’s latest move reveals a brazen challenge to the established rules of American democracy, something that should alarm those who care about justice and fairness worldwide.

    Trump: fuck US democracy, I’m going for a third

    This week, Trump’s political machine launched a “Trump 2028” red hat, priced at $50, along with a T-shirt sporting the slogan “rewrite the rules” for $36.

    The product description for the hat claims, “The future looks bright! Rewrite the rules with the Trump 2028 high crown hat,” suggesting an overt defiance of the American Constitution’s clear limit on presidential terms.

    The 22nd Amendment, ratified in 1951, plainly states that “no person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice.” Yet, Trump appears to mock this fundamental law.

    Eric Trump, the former president’s son, flaunted the new merchandise on Instagram with a photo of himself wearing the hat alongside screenshots of reporters scrambling for comment. His caption said, “And how was your day?” – a smug taunt at the press and a symbol of their power to manipulate narratives without regard for legal boundaries.

    This comes weeks after Trump told NBC News he wasn’t joking about a 2028 presidential run — a third term bid that would break the very limits set in American democracy to prevent authoritarianism.

    This push to “rewrite the rules” echoes not only Trump’s arrogance but also the reckless ambitions of many leaders in the Global North who act as if laws and norms are mere obstacles to their power grabs.

    Trump’s antics highlight a broader issue: the arrogance and entitlement ingrained in the Global North’s dominant states who disregard laws for their gain.

    Arrogance and entitlement

    While many nations in the Global South fight for genuine sovereignty and justice, leaders like Trump and his administration openly mock constitutional restraints, hoping to cling to power indefinitely.

    The sale of this merchandise, capitalising on the rebellious spirit against democratic limits, is not just a commercial venture—it’s a political statement that threatens the integrity of governance.

    Such actions demand critical attention to how the US and similar powers flaunt their dominance. It signals a disregard for rules designed to protect the public from abuses of power, and it undermines the idea that leaders should be accountable and limited by law.

    Trump’s “Trump 2028” campaign merchandise, along with his public comments, show a belief that rules can be bent or broken by wealth and influence—a dangerous precedent for the world’s largest superpower to set.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By The Canary

  • At 9:30am on Friday 25 April, twelve women, intersex, non-binary and trans activists – aged from 24 to 91 – held a topless blockade of the main gate of RAF Lakenheath, denouncing the deadly entanglements between military emissions, climate destruction, authoritarianism and genocide.

    RAF Lakenheath: blockaded already

    Standing with their mouths taped shut to symbolise the silencing of women/FINT folk’s voices, the rebels also had chains binding their wrists to reflect how they are bound by the structures created by men for profit.

    Their bodies were painted with the words “Violence,” “Displacement,” “Brutality,” “Exploitation,” “Silencing” and “Oppression” as they stood hand in hand forming a powerful image blockading the vast military complex:

    War and climate change are both strongly linked to gender-based violence around the world. Evidence shows climate change and conflict are deeply entwined, each contributing to the other in a vicious cycle.

    Lucy Porter, a local resident who took part in the action, said:

    Women, trans, non-binary, and intersex people are hit hardest by climate change, war, and rising fascism. They often struggle to access food, water, and healthcare, and face a higher risk of violence and displacement during crises. These groups are rarely included in decision-making, and emergency aid often overlooks their needs. At the same time, they are increasingly targeted by far-right groups and media. These patterns aren’t random – they come from systems built on patriarchy and power that value control over care.

    The action is held on the penultimate day of the two-week Lakenheath Peace Camp which has seen activists from near 60 groups across the UK protesting the return of US nuclear weapons to USAF Lakenheath.

    The camp ends tomorrow with a mass blockade which will shine a spotlight on the UK government’s ongoing cover-up of plans for US nuclear weapons deployment to Britain as exposed earlier this month by the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND).

    As the world teeters on the edge of political breakdown and  irreversible climate breakdown, these protesters are calling for urgent demilitarisation, an end to imperialist warfare, and real, intersectional climate justice rooted in global solidarity.

    Standing up against the machine

    Today’s action was a collaboration between a number of groups including XR UK and XR Cymru.

    Chrissy Jenkins, a carer from Cwmbran who took part in the action said:

    When so many people are seeing the impact of food insecurity, housing shortages, global warming, and the biodiversity crisis, it is an absurdity that everyday working people’s taxes are being spent on the murder of innocents and the further destruction of land which could provide food, housing and space for nature to thrive.

    As an auntie and a carer, I cannot stand by and watch the military and fossil fuel industrial complex put profits over people. I have watched in horror the UK and US’s participation in war crimes and genocide in Gaza. Can we not evolve beyond this brutality? I believe we can.

    I am here to make a stand for the most vulnerable in our world, the children, the elderly, women, non-binary, trans, intersex and working class people. These are the people who will be most affected and they deserve our protection.

    Tez Burns, 36, action participant from Swansea said:

    I’m joining the Can’t Bare The Harm demonstration because the manufacture and use of weapons leads to increased carbon emissions, making the climate crisis worse and degrading and destroying the lives of those of us who are vulnerable.

    I’m topless because I want to show how vulnerable I, a non-binary assigned female at birth (AFAB) person, am right now in this present moment. Imagine in a war zone, if I had no shelter or protection, how open to harm myself and all other women and AFAB people are?

    I’m topless so you can witness my vulnerability and relate. How would you feel? People are defenseless right now, because we insist on business as usual, when we need to ‘break the chain’.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • The global markets have been rattled under the presidency of far-right menace Donald Trump, revealing the stark failure of the promises made at his inauguration and exposing the broader fragility of the Global North’s economic models.

    Contrary to the hopeful predictions of a triumphant surge in the stock markets following Trump’s rise to power, the S&P 500 has plummeted by a severe 14% since he took office. This marks the worst start to a presidential term in nearly a century, as reported by the IndexBox Market Intelligence Platform.

    The decline is historic in its scale; the 14% fall in just three months is the most significant drop since 1928 and even surpasses the 9% fall seen during Franklin D. Roosevelt’s third term amidst the cataclysmic conditions of 1941.

    Donald Trump: the worst start to a presidency in 100 years for the stock markets

    The Bespoke Investment Group’s analysis reveals that the initial spike in the market, sparked by Trump’s promises of tax cuts and rolling back regulations, has been swiftly undone by his erratic and unpredictable trade policies, which have sown uncertainty and chaos.

    While the US market has stumbled, the global picture is uneven yet telling. Across the board, 45 country ETFs have been surveyed, and only Taiwan’s market has fared worse, collapsing by 15.5%.

    Meanwhile, European markets have displayed a sharp contrast to this turmoil. Germany’s iShares MSCI ETF climbed by an encouraging 10.8%, and Italy’s stock market rose by 10.2% over the same timeframe, demonstrating a resilience that starkly contrasts with America’s faltering financial stage.

    This unfolding economic drama underscores the failures not only of Trump’s administration but also highlights the inherent weaknesses in the broader Global North’s economic systems.

    Promises of growth and prosperity under leadership primarily focused on corporate and elite interests have resulted instead in instability and fear, hitting ordinary people hard across the US and beyond.

    The Global North: falling apart

    The continued turbulence of US markets reflects deeper systemic issues, where short-term gains for a privileged few come at the grave expense of the majority’s economic security.

    As the shockwaves of Trump’s policies ripple globally, it is clear that the myth of the American economic miracle has taken a hard knock, urging a critical look at the directions championed by the Global North’s ruling elites.

    The sharp market decline acts as a stark headline for the failures many have long warned about—failures which not only devastate domestic livelihoods but also weaken economies worldwide.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • In recent weeks, a small but pointed COVID-based theater project has triggered a strange trail of digital disruption.

    First came the play announcement: a poster featuring an empty chair, an exploding heart, and a quote attributed to “(Not) Eric Bogosian” — “Why is everybody sick all the time?” A riff on his 2002 monologue collection Wake Up and Smell the Coffee, it signalled the arrival of Wake Up and Smell the C*VID: An Evening Without Eric Bogosian — a black-box elegy for prophetic clarity in a time of silence, grief, and ongoing pandemic collapse. Then came the coverage. And then, articles began to disappear from search engines. Quietly. Strategically. Almost completely.

    Now, across cities, empty chairs have started to appear, planted outside theaters, civic spaces and natural environments, in LA, New York, across the Atlantic in Barcelona, even in a shorn springtime cornfield in the Midwest. Each one bears the phrase “Wake Up and Smell the C*VID.” No flyers. No QR codes to ticketing sites. No pamphlets. Just presence. Just absence.

    The Timeline: What Happened?

    • March 31 – The Canary UK publishes the first article on the play, with both COVID and Eric Bogosian in the headline.
    • April 6 – Broadway World publishes an article about a mask handout by Mask for Pleasure. The piece mentions Bogosian in the body, but not in the title.
    • April 13 – The Canary publishes another article: a review of Bogosian’s own play Humpty Dumpty as a canny pandemic parable.

    Then, by the end of April 15:

    • The first and second articles vanished from Google News.
    • The third, just published, was still there. But not for long.

    On April 16, within 12 hours of a public Instagram post drawing attention to these disappearances and asking readers to monitor the third article, it too was de-indexed.

    By the afternoon of April 16, that third article returned. The next day, the first reappeared in some regions. On the 18th, it was fully restored and on first- or second-page results. As of this writing, they are trending in Google News across regions and devices.

    But the second article, the one from Broadway World, has not returned to Google News.

    Even if you search for its title: Mask for Pleasure: COVID-impacted Artists Raise Awareness at George Clooney’s Broadway Opening, nothing appears.

    Even if you search for a unique phrase from the article: mask for pleasure, you get nothing.

    And that raises a question: why this one?

    What Explains The Disappearance?

    We’ve been thinking about this a lot. Here’s what we’ve learned, and what we now believe are the most plausible explanations.

    1. Reputation Management Tools Likely Flagged It.

    Public figures, even those not actively working with PR firms, often have automated digital protection systems in place. These services scan the web for combinations of names and flagged terms (e.g., “COVID,” “critique,” “protest”), and can trigger search suppression requests automatically or semi-automatically.

    Eric Bogosian is not a mega-celebrity. But he is an institution in New York theatre, a public intellectual, and highly visible in TV. It’s entirely plausible that years ago, something was said, like: “Sure, keep my reputation clean. Filter for slander, ragebait— you know, the usual.”

    The system likely did what it was trained to do without needing direct input.

    1. It Was More Vulnerable to De-Indexing.

    Unlike the Canary pieces, the Broadway World article did not include “Eric Bogosian” in the title, metadata, or URL, only in the body of the text. That means it was already less visible to Google’s algorithm when users searched for his name.

    But more importantly: that lack of strong indexing made it easier to remove.

    When an article is weakly anchored in search (i.e., not reinforced by headline or tags), it takes less for it to be flagged or pushed out of results. Even minor algorithmic suppression, from third-party reputation management tools or content sensitivity filters, can cause the system to treat the piece as non-essential and quietly remove it from visibility.

    NOTE: Of course, if the article’s disappearance was triggered by a reputation filter, something semi-automated or quietly flagged because of name and keyword proximity, there are subtle ways it could return.

    If a reputation service or PR contact marked the article as reputational risk, they could simply remove that flag or mark it as resolved. In many systems, doing nothing further also works; most flags expire unless renewed.

    No retraction is needed. No public move. Just a soft release. That alone could be enough to let Google reindex it on the next crawl. It’s a small gesture, invisible to most, but one that would mean a lot to people who saw themselves in that piece. And it would be felt. Quietly. Appreciatively.

    1. So Why Did the Other Two Articles Come Back?

    That’s the real question.

    And it leads us to two possibilities:

    1. The flags were reviewed and rejected, meaning the content was judged to pose no reputational risk.
    2. Or someone, somewhere, let them go, consciously or passively. No further flags, no further pressure. Quiet disappearance followed by quiet reinstatement.

    We don’t know.

    But when we asked readers to watch the third article, it vanished within hours and returned just as fast. Something was tracking visibility. Something, whether human or algorithmic or both, flinched when watched.

    And that makes the silence louder.

    The Bigger Picture: “Why Is Everybody Sick All the Time?”

    That was the first poster. A simple question, attributed to (Not) Eric Bogosian.

    A question you could imagine him asking in a blackout monologue in 1988.

    But ask it in 2025 and watch what happens.

    Type it into Google: “Why is everybody sick all the time?”

    What do you get?

    • Vague speculation about “stress”
    • Hand-waving about “summer flu”
    • Conspiracy theories about “immunity debt” (from lockdowns that happened five years ago)
    • Wellness blogs selling fatigue supplements

    What you don’t get is this:

    1. COVID is not a respiratory illness, it’s a multi-system disease with some respiratory symptoms. Remember how HIV infection starts with a ‘flu’?
    2. COVID is airborne, meaning the SARS-CoV-2 virus is expelled into the air passively, just by breathing, even in the absence of symptoms. It accumulates and spreads out in enclosed spaces. Like theatres. Hand washing won’t prevent its spread.
    3. Rapid tests are as low as 30% accurate because our immune systems have been exposed to SARS-CoV-2, so don’t reach thresholds detectable until three days of being symptomatic, if at all. Molecular testing like PlusLife is more reliable.
    4. It targets the endothelium, the cellular lining of blood vessels, a superhighway to the whole body.

    The damage is cumulative. The virus persists in the body, continuing to cause damage. Infective SARS-CoV-2 has even been found in skull shavings in autopsies.

    1. It is linked to spikes in rare and aggressive cancers, likely due to its oncogenic potential, including mechanisms that parallel HIV, HPV, and hepatitis C.
    2. It causes long-term immune system damage, including T-cell exhaustion —akin to chronic HIV, but with broader systemic damage.
    3. It killed more people in four years than AIDS did in forty. Excess deaths have surged from secondary effects of COVID, especially cardiovascular disease, liver disease, respiratory infections, and other causes.

    It’s frightening enough to imagine that AIDS could happen again.

    It’s more frightening to consider that it already has, and that it’s multi-system AIDS, but happening quietly, globally, and to everyone.

    More terrifying, how could we all be so alienated from our own bodies as not register what’s happening?

    How COVID Is Systematically Suppressed

    This experience of de-indexing has been valuable because it shows what even one moderately resourced public figure can do to shape reality. Reputation management is, at its core, perception control. You can justify it by saying it protects against falsehoods, but if it also suppresses artistic commentary and public health messaging, often automatically, then it becomes part of the very machinery we set out to expose.

    The tools used to defend an image are the same ones erasing truth.

    If one person can suppress reporting, scale that to one billionaire, or several billionaires, and we’re not so much constructing a reality about a person, but about people.

    Why are most people unaware of what COVID is doing to their bodies?

    Because we are being systematically, algorithmically gaslit.

    Here’s what we know, not what we guess:

    Meta (Facebook and Instagram) has implemented broad automated filters for COVID-19 misinformation since early in the pandemic. While Meta says they reduce harmful falsehoods, these systems have flagged legitimate medical reporting and peer-reviewed content, a concern raised by organizations like the Electronic Frontier Foundation and highlighted during a dispute with the BMJ over a flagged article.

    Twitter/X, under Elon Musk, ended its COVID-19 misinformation policy in November 2022, as confirmed by Twitter’s official policy page. Since then, the platform has drawn criticism for becoming a major outlet for anti-mask, anti-vaccine, and anti-public health narratives.

    The Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH) identified a core group of high-profile individuals responsible for the majority of vaccine-related misinformation in its 2021 Disinformation Dozen report [CCDH, 2021]. Stanford’s Internet Observatory has similarly tracked the role of prominent users in spreading COVID misinformation, particularly surrounding vaccine hesitancy [Stanford, 2022].

    While there is no public documentation that Google News deliberately deprioritizes ongoing COVID-19 reporting, patterns in both academic research and lived experience suggest that sustained pandemic coverage — especially stories on long COVID, mitigation, or structural health failures — may not receive consistent visibility.

    A 2021 study published in Patient Education and Counseling found that only 41% of news reports about long-haul COVID mentioned the duration of symptoms, reflecting a broader trend toward underreporting of the long-term impacts.

    YouTube has maintained policies aimed at curbing COVID-19 misinformation, including removing or demonetizing content that contradicts guidance from public health authorities. However, enforcement of these policies has affected videos intended to inform or critique, particularly those discussing masking, air quality, or government response.

    A 2022 study in BMJ Global Health found that a substantial portion of widely viewed COVID-19 content on YouTube still contained misinformation, despite the platform’s moderation efforts. Meanwhile, reporting by Business Insider detailed how automated moderation tools sometimes removed videos that were attempting to debunk false claims or offer critical analysis of public health measures.

    Across multiple platforms, content considered “overly negative” or “anxiety-inducing” has sometimes been subject to throttling or de-prioritization, not because it is factually incorrect, but because it is deemed potentially harmful to engagement or user experience.

    Meanwhile — What Do The Exorbitantly Wealthy Know?

    They know enough to protect themselves.

    The World Economic Forum at Davos is a clear example: Davos has implemented multi-layered COVID protections — including HEPA filtration, Far-UVC lighting, daily PCR testing, mask mandates for staff, and controlled access.

    Patrick Soon-Shiong, billionaire biotech entrepreneur and owner of the Los Angeles Times, reportedly requires routine molecular COVID testing for employees. As a a prominent cancer surgeon and biotech entrepreneur who has recently expressed concerns about a potential link between COVID-19 and the emergence of aggressive cancers, these anecdotal reports and public statements appear to align.

    If it’s true that people with the most resources understand the science, why suppress it?

    Disaster Capitalism, Narrative Control, and Quiet Violence

    There are two primary frameworks for understanding what’s happening. And they aren’t mutually exclusive.

    1. Profit Extraction

    Sick populations are more exploitable. Chronic illness creates dependency on pharmaceutical care, on telemedicine platforms, on gig work, on digital systems that track and monetize every interaction. People who are physically weakened and economically insecure are easier to tether to unstable labor, fragmented social services, and algorithmic governance.

    As Naomi Klein outlines in the Shock Doctrine, disaster capitalism profits from destabilization, extracting value from populations in crisis and consolidating control while the public is too disoriented to resist.

    1. Power Consolidation

    The political logic is just as stark: a population that is chronically ill, cognitively impaired, or preoccupied with survival is easier to govern… or abandon. Governments are cutting public health infrastructure even as tech and surveillance systems expand.

    And if this all seems too coordinated to be plausible, it isn’t.

    History gives us plenty of precedents.

    Iran–Contra revealed a covert, international operation in which U.S. intelligence agencies facilitated arms deals with Iran and redirected the profits to the Contras, a U.S.-backed paramilitary group in Nicaragua, in direct violation of federal law. This required coordination between the CIA, National Security Council, Pentagon, foreign governments, shell companies, and known drug traffickers. The CIA Inspector General’s 1998 report confirmed that U.S. officials were aware of Contra-linked cocaine trafficking into the U.S. and failed to act. The result was a weapons-fueled proxy war abroad, and a crack epidemic at home.

    During the 1918 influenza pandemic, U.S. and European governments censored coverage to preserve wartime morale. Under the 1917 Espionage Act, American newspapers were barred from reporting the scale of the outbreak. Civilian deaths were downplayed or misattributed. The disease became known as the “Spanish flu” not because it began in Spain, but because Spain, as a neutral country with a free press, was among the first to report on it. That misnaming, and the broader information suppression, directly contributed to delayed responses, disorganized public health efforts, and over 50 million deaths worldwide. (Barry, J.M., The Great Influenza, 2004)

    Look at what happens when the state’s legitimacy and the wealthy’s accumulation strategy begin to align.

    If this moment feels like it doesn’t make sense, it’s because it’s probably not just about profit, and maybe not even about power.

    If you take COVID seriously, both the irreparable damage being done to the global population and the systematic suppression of this information by people who are aware the damage SARS-CoV-2 causes, and who take precautions but are getting infected anyway because hubris can’t contain something that lives in the air, and then you ask who benefits from this suppression, you start to hit something more difficult to name. You see the contradiction at the heart of it:

    Some people at the top are probably grabbing what they can most likely out of nothing more interesting than habit, even if it means shortening their own lives and those of the people closest to them. Perhaps they aren’t even planning to survive. They’re enraged. Their mortality is catching up to them. And they are trying to take everyone down with them.

    If this is the case, the head-scratching over the regime’s policy decisions dissolves as the strategy becomes more legible as a murder-suicide pact that none of us signed up for.

    These conjectures are beyond science, or even activism that grounds itself in rigorous methodologies, but if you look at the big picture with an artist’s clarity,  especially the kind that once cut through media illusion and unflinchingly mapped the rot at heart of anti-human impulses, it starts to feel like the final act of a dying men who know they’re dying, and want to script the ending.

    And if you’re someone like Eric Bogosian, who used to name contradictions before they solidified into ideology, then deep down you may already see it.

    COVID. The Play.

    The disappearance of reporting on this project, and its partial, unexplained return, proves its own point. Articles vanished from search not because they were untrue, but because they were most likely flagged. Whether this was done by automated reputation management software, personal intervention, or a combination of both, the outcome was the same: manipulation of reality.

    What is a modest but weird transdisciplinary arts collective supposed to do when its reporting disappears, and it becomes clear that algorithmic suppression is most likely not a glitch, but a mechanism of reality control? What does it mean when the very person invoked in the work, a self-styled provocateur, a prophet of uncomfortable truths, appears to be using those same systems to maintain the curated unreality of a brand?

    The usual impulse — and we felt it too — is to go full scorched-earth. Make it a callout. Draw the lines. Call him Emil Jannings and wonder if he flinches.

    The irony stings.

    But it also creates an opening.

    Because this isn’t really about any one person. It’s about the systems we’re all trapped inside, systems of brand protection, narrative control, and passive digital repression. Systems that even someone like Eric Bogosian, whose public identity was built on confronting suppression, may now be complicit in, passively, unknowingly, in service to maintaining a reality built on narratives people with money control rather than one that’s more complex, messy, terrifying, but also real and could point a way out of the self-referential, nihilistic illusion.

    So, What’s the Play Here?: COVID as Aperture

    SARS-CoV-2 is not just a virus. COVID is not just a pandemic. It’s an aperture, a breach in the fabric of our shared reality.

    It makes things visible.

    And once you see it — really see it — you can’t unsee anything.

    Which leads us to what we are asking for.

    We want you—Eric Bogosian (and anyone else who considers themself a truth-teller, or who is starving for something real in a curated unreality)—to use your gifts to document, expose, and pressure this moment before it hardens into myth. Not to react from a distance, but to shape it.

    Part of the reason you may have stayed quiet is that the language has shifted, not just in terminology, but in tone, gatekeeping, and risk. You’ve been publicly dragged on social media before: for earlier work taken out of historical context, and for political positions misrepresented online.

    You’ve been called a Zionist despite having voiced support for Palestinian liberation well before it became a litmus test that, partially driven by algorithms that promote all-or-nothing thinking that punishes the good in the name of an unachievable standard of perfection, becomes for some a performative activism that stifles real action while saving no lives of people experiencing genocide.

    And you’re not alone.

    The critical theory frameworks that emerged in the 1970s by punk philosophers like Foucault, Deleuze, Spivak — particularly the turn toward language, discourse, and constructedness — have since been flattened by digital culture. What was once a tool for careful analysis has, in many cases, become a bludgeon, pushed by algorithms that reward ideological purity, escalate conflict, and fragment coalitions.

    That environment punishes people trying to re-enter the conversation in good faith. It obscures the fact that many of us are building differently now: collectively, imperfectly, and with the understanding that our differences, of voice, of method, of generational experience, make our work stronger. You are not unwelcome. The punitive discourse you may have seen isn’t representative. It’s shaped by systems designed to isolate, discredit, and exhaust, the very same dynamics your early work critiqued with precision.

    We discovered this writing in your rhythm: the clipped, spiraling cadence, the tension that builds like a pressure cooker and then cuts sideways into revelation. That sharp, observational edge. The way you stack discomfort until it cracks. We already have. You can’t copyright vibes.

    But you can still use it yourself. We’ve sharpened the tools, and we’re handing them to you.

    Maybe write a monologue from the perspective of Peter Thiel, someone whose main motivation for burning down the world might be that no amount of money will make white supremacists want to fuck him.

    Write the play about the Gleichschaltung happening in the U.S. now, except rich people are paying PR firms to generate puff pieces saying they were in the resistance from the beginning.
    Write about how some feckless, masked punks terrorized a man who had earned his peace by mourning him in public while he was still alive.

    If you’re wondering why we don’t just create ourselves, why it was a choice to inhabit a vibe, whether anonymity is an affectation, then you haven’t looked around properly. Some people can no longer safely exist publicly. Some people have been exiled to their bedrooms by the cumulative effects of this virus, some people have been exiled from their country because this regime has already put a target on their backs. Professional development is off the table indefinitely. Having a face and voice right now is a hefty privilege and we hope you use it well.

    Perhaps this will also resolve any questions about motivation, that there’s no money or clout to be gained. All that can be gained is what you can offer to this world. You’ve already seen that the tools used to maintain your brand, likely without your knowledge, can be used to amputate what’s real. Since there is no opting out of constructing our shared reality, why not take responsibility for it and shape it?

    The other ask is that can protect yourself not through silence or omission, but by wearing a mask and requesting other COVID safety measures like testing and air filtration in the spaces you work. Your insight and fire are not disposable, and the rest of you, according to one of our collaborators, is ‘too pretty to be shredded by a bat virus.’

    If tomorrow, Sunday April 20 2025, turns out to be the moment everything shifts, the Reichstag Fire decree moment where a dictatorship is formalized, or if it comes soon, just know that a group of people were aware of that, and still thought it was a sound use of their time to make art that posed this question.

    Can we unbury the soul of a nation by calling its prophets back from the dead?

    Here’s your first monologue. We think you can write it better.

    ERIC (spotlight, standing still now, no pacing — it’s all tension):

    So let me get this straight.

    You call yourselves HEPA.

    Holy Erotic Propaganda Arson.

    Jesus Christ. That’s not a collective — that’s a downmarket poetry MFA polycule.

    Empty chair — I get it.

    Daddy’s not coming. The State’s your father.

    Oedipal rage turned into a Tumblr moodboard.

    You made a play, and you buried it in hashtags and elegies and blurbs that read like someone Xeroxed The Wooster Group through a zine about grief kink

    And now you want the guy whose voice you’ve been parroting in post-ironic sepia to step back into it.

    For what?

    You want me to wear a mask in rooms where a fucking air purifier is a conspiracy theory.

    To make art that names the machine, while the same people calling for that art are already one social media post away from calling me a Nazi?

    I’ve been called everything.

    Crypto-fascist. Genocide apologist.

    All because I didn’t say the exact right thing, in the exact right tone, at the exact right moment, through the exact right filter.

    Half these kids don’t even know “crypto” means something other than an mlm written in code. They just throw it at anything with a pulse and a publication date before 2005.

    And you, in your masks, taking no personal risks, want me to burn down my own house for a world that already unfollowed me?

    Let me tell you something.

    Yeah, you’ve got it bad.

    You’ve got front row seats to extermination.

    I see that.

    But don’t think for a second I don’t know what happens to people like me under dictatorships.

    I’ve read the book. I’ve written the book.

    You think old men who talk too much and don’t fit the new moral syntax get to slip away quietly?

    They come for us too. Just later. After the lights are off.

    So why not sit it out?

    Why not enjoy the peace I earned by screaming into the void long before you knew it had acoustics?

    Because maybe what scared you about that voice wasn’t the rage.

    It was the residue under it.

    Maybe it scares me…

    That little pilot light buried under prophetic ashes that said:

    This could be different.

    I don’t want to just survive this.

    I want to meet it on my own terms.

    So maybe I’ll write.

    Not to resurrect a brand.

    Not to rise to your bait.

    But because they’re coming for culture. They always do.

    When the regime decides I already spoke.

    When the archives are mined for contamination

    That turns me into a liability.

    You think they’re gonna see “provocateur” and clap?

    They’re gonna see degenerate art.

    Rot in the social body.

    Something to cut out.

    Doesn’t matter what I meant.

    Doesn’t matter what I wanted.

    The dictatorship isn’t placated by silence

    it hunts for pretext.

    And when they come digging through the record?

    They won’t say I slept through it.

    They’ll say I lit the match

    And I’m going to make that inevitable indictment true.

    So no, this isn’t guilt.

    It’s not some plea for understanding.

    It’s a final entry.

    So when they try to twist it,

    they choke on the truth.

    Legal Disclaimer

    This work is a piece of political art, cultural commentary, and speculative criticism. All analysis, interpretations, and character monologues presented herein are offered in the spirit of fair use, protected speech, and public interest.

    The figure of Eric Bogosian, a well-known public figure, is discussed solely in relation to his public artistic legacy, published works, and cultural visibility. No claim is made regarding his private conduct, personal beliefs, or direct actions unless otherwise supported by publicly available sources. Where plausible inferences are made, they are clearly identified as speculation, not fact.

    Any fictionalized monologue or dialogue attributed to Eric Bogosian is a transformative, creative work intended to reflect on contemporary political and artistic conditions. It is not affiliated with, authorized by, or representative of Mr. Bogosian. These portions are artistic pastiche or parody in accordance with the U.S. Copyright Act’s fair use doctrine (17 U.S.C. § 107), particularly for non-commercial, critical, and transformative purposes.

    All citations have been drawn from publicly available sources to the best of the authors’ knowledge at the time of publication. If errors of fact are discovered, they can be corrected upon request. No harm, misrepresentation, or malicious intent is intended.

    This article is not monetized, does not promote commercial products or services, and exists solely for expressive and educational purposes under the protection of the First Amendment.

    Featured image supplied

    By HEPA (Holy Erotic Propaganda Arson)

    This post was originally published on Canary.


  • This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Another Columbia student, Mohsen Mahdawi has been detained by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Mahdawi is a green card holder who, alongside Mahmoud Khalil, organised protests against Israel’s genocide in Palestine. Now, senators in Vermont, where Mahdawi was apprehended have released a blistering statement:

    Earlier today, Mohsen Mahdawi of White River Junction, Vermont, walked into an immigration office for what was supposed to be the final step in his citizenship process. Instead, he was arrested and removed in handcuffs by plainclothes, armed, individuals with their faces covered.

    Whilst such a form of detention is not unheard of, it is extremely rare. The senators continued:

    These individuals refused to provide any information as to where he was being taken or what would happen to him. This is immoral, inhumane, and illegal. Mr. Mahdawi, a legal resident of the United States, must be afforded due process under the law and immediately released from detention.

    The Trump administration is evidently carrying out a terrifying campaign of detainment and deportation for Palestine supporters of colour. The manner of Mahdawi’s detention reads more like a state abduction than any form of due process.

    Mohsen Mahdawi detention: ‘unconstitutional’

    Footage of Mohsen Mahdawi’s arrest has been posted on social media:

    Mohsen can be seen being led away by plain clothes officers wearing hoods. He flashes a peace sign at the camera as he’s brought to a waiting car. Mohsen’s lawyers have, alarmingly, said that they don’t know where he’s been taken. His attorney Luna Droubi said:

    We have not received confirmation as to his whereabouts despite numerous attempts to locate him.

    Droubi also explained that:

    We have filed a habeas petition in the District of Vermont and have sought a temporary restraining order restraining the government from removing him from the jurisdiction or from the country.

    U.S. District Judge William Sessions granted the request. Other students in similar situations have been moved to detention facilities in Louisiana or Texas. As CNN reported:

    Such transfers underscore ICE’s power in deciding where to house detained migrants – a power that some immigration attorneys say the Trump administration is now using to move disfavored migrants far from their attorneys, families and support systems.

    Droubi also made it clear exactly why Mohsen was arrested:

    the Trump administration detained Mohsen Mahdawi in direct retaliation for his advocacy on behalf of Palestinians and because of his identity as a Palestinian.

    She also said:

    his detention is an attempt to silence those who speak out against the atrocities in Gaza. It is also unconstitutional.

    Organising

    Mohsen Mahdawi’s lawyers have also explained that the Columbia student was:

    an outspoken critic of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza and an activist and organizer in student protests on Columbia’s campus until March of 2024, after which he took a step back and has not been involved in organizing.

    Just as with Mahmoud Khalil, Mahdawi is facing deportation under a rarely used invocation. As the Canary previously reported:

     Mahmoud has US residency via a green card which are rarely revoked without a criminal conviction. Khalil has no such criminal conviction and is instead facing deportation regardless because the US government:

    has reasonable ground to believe that your presence or activities in the United States would have potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences for the United States.

    Mahdawi was born in the West Bank, and has been a legal resident in the US for 10 years. He’s due to graduate from Columbia next month, and begin a Masters programme at the same university in the autumn semester. Just as with Khalil, Mahdawi’s detention is a punishment for advocating for Palestine, and condemning Israeli genocide.

    Campaign of intimidation

    Bizarrely, Trump’s administration has claimed that Mohsen Mahdawi, a student, could “potentially undermine” the Middle East peace process. However, as reported by The Verge, Mohsen is well known in the local activist community for reaching out to both Palestinian and Israeli individuals. On the other hand, it is becoming increasingly clear that facts have nothing to do with the Trump administrations dogged pursual of a campaign of terror and intimidation against Palestine advocates.

    Mohsen has built a life in the US after being born in a refugee camp. However, that life means nothing to the Trump administration and to border agents. It doesn’t matter to them that Mohsen built a life that featured family, loved ones, study, because Palestinians aren’t humans as far as the Trump administration is concerned. Mohsen has effectively been abducted during what was supposed to be an interview to secure his permanent residency.

    The time is far past for pleas to care about Mohsen Mahdawi and Khalil in case it might happen to you. This is happening to Palestinians across the US, and either you believe in their rights, or you’re happy to have those rights trampled over by a fascistic government.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By Maryam Jameela

    This post was originally published on Canary.


  • This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • TAIPEI, Taiwan – Two Chinese nationals captured while fighting for Russia in Ukraine said they were tricked by false promises and online recruitment ads into enlisting, and criticized Moscow for exploiting foreign fighters in its war effort.

    “I wanted to make money, but I didn’t expect to end up in a war,” said Zhang Renbo, a former firefighter from China, during a Ukrainian government press conference on Monday.

    He and Wang Guangjun, both born in the 1990s, are the first confirmed Chinese nationals captured fighting in the Russian ranks against Ukraine. Their capture was announced by President Volodymyr Zelensky earlier this month, who said “several hundred” Chinese citizens are believed to be fighting for Russia.

    Wang said he lost his job last summer and came across a TikTok ad offering a lucrative opportunity to join the Russian military. The recruiter promised him a salary far above the Chinese average and offered to pay for travel and paperwork.

    But soon after arrival, Wang claimed, the Russians confiscated his phone and bank card. He was unable to access the promised pay or contact anyone back home.

    “Everything we heard from the Russians was a lie,” Wang said.

    Radio Free Asia has not independently verified the men’s claims.

    The two men said they signed enlistment contracts voluntarily but without any connection to the Chinese government.

    Both claimed they were initially offered non-combat jobs – Wang in the military directly, Zhang through construction work – only to be placed on the battlefield later. Their route into the war passed through Moscow and Russian-occupied Donetsk before they reached the front lines.

    Wang said he had been at the front for just three days before he was captured.

    He described being sheltered by Ukrainian soldiers during a Russian gas attack after his capture and said he had been treated well ever since. In the video of the press conference, the two men appear to be in good health.

    Zhang, who comes from a wealthier background, said he never saw any Ukrainian troops until the moment he was taken prisoner. Both men said they had not killed anyone during their time on the battlefield.

    The two criticised Russia sharply during the press conference and discouraged other Chinese nationals from joining the conflict.

    “It’s better not to participate in wars at all,” Wang said. “Real war is completely different from what we have seen in movies and on TV.”

    They also denied any involvement by the Chinese state in their recruitment.

    When asked whether Beijing was aware of their actions, they said China had issued general warnings against travelling to conflict zones and noted that Chinese citizens who join foreign militaries could face legal consequences. Still, both said they hoped to return to China as part of a future prisoner exchange.

    “I understand there may be punishment,” Zhang said. “But I still want to return home and to my family.”

    Russia has increasingly turned to foreign nationals to fill its ranks in Ukraine, recruiting fighters from countries including India, Nepal, Syria, and reportedly North Korea.

    As many as 12,000 North Korean soldiers are in Russia to fight Ukrainian forces who occupied parts of Kursk in an August counterattack, according to the U.S. and Ukraine. Neither Pyongyang nor Moscow has acknowledged their presence.

    According to Wang, he was placed in a training camp alongside recruits from Central Asia, Ghana, and Iraq, and said communication with commanders was limited to gestures.

    Edited by Stephen Wright.


    This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by Taejun Kang for RFA.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Three students at Paul Revere Middle School in Houston have been violently attacked in a likely Islamophobic attack. Three hijabi Afghan girls were attacked by a group of 20 fellow students. The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) found that:

    One student was reportedly beaten so severely that she became unresponsive to teachers and was taken to Texas Children’s Hospital in the Medical Center, where she remained for four days.

    She is now required to wear a neck brace and continues to suffer both physical and emotional trauma from the assault.

    The Houston chapter of CAIR have spoken to the families of the attacked students, and then explained:

    The girls were allegedly attacked based on their ethnicity and discriminated against because they wore the Islamic headscarf (hijab) when the group wrongfully targeted them for what was believed by the families to be a case of mistaken identity over middle school drama in the school.

    However, the girls school district doesn’t appear to have their back.

    Houston attack at Paul Revere Middle School

    Houston Press, a local paper, referred to an unnamed spokesperson of the administrators of the school, Houston Independent School District (HISD). They reported:

    This spokesperson also said that this was not a case of mistaken identity as the families thought might be the case. Instead, it was it due to an underlying conflict not because she was wearing an Afghan wearing a hijab. [sic]

    Presumably, they meant ‘an Afghan girl wearing a hijab.’ And, the spokesperson from HISD contradicts many of the details from the girls parents and CAIR themselves. They said:

    While some of the details shared in CAIR’s press release do not match the facts of the investigation, the district shares CAIR’s belief that the incident warranted both consequences for the aggressors and care for the victim. 

    HISD also insisted that there was one victim, not three:

    Although the CAIR report alleged that three Afghan girls wearing hijabs were attacked, beaten and stabbed with pencils, the HISD spokesperson said it was only one victim — she was taken to the hospital where she stayed for several days and was placed in a neck brace. The mother of that girl, when meeting with school officials, asked that not only her daughter but the other two girls be moved to another school.

    Regardless of how many children ended up in hospital, it is clear that three students were attacked. In a video posted by CAIR a large group of students can be seen attacking the three Afghan girls.

    The attitude of the district’s spokesperson is a disappointing and damning display of hostility towards the attacked girls. Instead of listening to CAIR’s expertise and testimony from the girls and their parents, they chose to debate details and insist that the girl who was hospitalised:

    was not targeted because of her identity but because of previous conflict with the group of seven girls who attacked her

    ‘Traumatised’

    In a report from local news station KPRC 2 Houston, two of the girls and a parent spoke to reporters. One of the girls, who have been anonymised for her safety, explains that a large group of students forcibly pulled off their hijabs and beat them. Another girl recounts how she was beaten and bloodied.

    However, the journalist at the scene notices contradictions from HISD in response to the horrific attack. Jaewon Jung reports that:

    We reached out to HISD, and the district gave us a conflicting statement. District officials told us there was only one victim and seven aggressors although you can clearly see more than seven students in the cell phone video.

    William White, director of the Houston chapter of CAIR, responded:

    It is absolutely unacceptable for any student to be allegedly violently assaulted and then abandoned by the very institution that is supposed to protect them.

    These students came to this country in search of safety and stability—what they endured instead is a complete failure of accountability and compassion. HISD must act immediately to ensure their safety, support their healing, hold the students responsible accountable, and send a clear message that violence and bias will not be tolerated in our schools.

    Islamophobia in Houston

    The fact that the district chose to challenge testimony from the girls and their parents, and experts at CAIR is abhorrent. There are reports that the girl’s requested transfers to other schools were a protracted process.

    The fact is, it’s only CAIR’s advocacy that has drawn further attention to the case. It’s deeply unfortunate that their intervention was necessary for the district to do the bare minimum for their students.

    HISD’s refusal to acknowledge the Islamophobia and racialisation behind the attacks is disappointing but typical of a hostile environment for Muslims. It’s entirely possible that the students involved had their own interpersonal issues in addition to this being a racialised attack against visibly Muslim children.

    A refusal to consider the attack an Islamophobic one is dangerously short-sighted and shows how unsafe the Houston district is for Muslim students.

    Featured image via screengrab

    By Maryam Jameela

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Lakenheath Alliance for Peace are returning to the US-controlled RAF Lakenheath to stop the threat of US nuclear weapons coming to Britain. Activists will set up a peace camp and vigil from Monday 14 to Saturday 26 April. Their actions will then culminate in a blockade of the base on the final day to call on the government to refuse the siting of these nuclear weapons in Britain.

    Lakenheath documents revealed

    This protest comes after the Mirror ran an exclusive investigation revealing a shocking government cover up about the new US nuclear weapons deployment. Legal letters from the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) to the Ministry of Defence resulted in the declassifying of a document exempting US Visiting Forces in Britain from meeting nuclear safety regulations. This blanket exemption not only applies to troops stationed at RAF Lakenheath, but across all US bases in Britain.

    This means that Suffolk County Council will never be informed of the US nuclear bombs arriving at RAF Lakenheath. The council would therefore be under no obligation to have emergency plans in place in the event of a nuclear accident at the base.

    CND General Secretary Sophie Bolt said:

    Nuclear weapons are the most destructive in the world. They put us all at risk every day. Whether they are from the dangers of accidents involving Britain’s own nuclear weapons or US ones deployed at RAF Lakenheath. Far from keeping people safe, all these nuclear weapons make Britain a target. Yet the government is more concerned about its special relationship with the US than people’s safety.

    Planned activities

    The new camp will see a ramping up of activities since the last peace camp in July 2024. Alongside the 24/7 vigil, there will be a programme of events and actions taking place at the base and in nearby towns and villages including:

    • 17 April, Greenham Women’s Day: Women who protested US nuclear weapons at RAF Greenham Common in the 1980s will lead the demonstration at the main gate.
    • 21 April, War Crimes & Genocide Day: Solidarity groups and activists, including a doctor who has volunteered in Gaza, will gather to protest at RAF Lakenheath’s involvement in war crimes being committed by US/UK/NATO forces and its military support which enables Israel to commit genocide in Gaza. 
    • 24 April, International Peace Conference: Members of peace campaigns from across the world will join local and national speakers for a one-day conference in Bury St Edmunds. Participants will challenge US militarism and the drive to never- ending wars, the build-up of US controlled NATO bases in Europe and how these impact the environment and people.
    • 26 April, Base Blockade: The final day of the camp will see activists engage in a blockade of the main gate of the base. CND will organising a stunt in reference to the British government’s nuclear secrecy.

    You can find a full programme and timetable on LAP’s website here.

    Lakenheath: risk and destruction

    Bolt also said:

    The peace camp comes just as we learn that Britain’s cover-up of a US nuclear weapons deployment has been in the works for at least four years, alongside proof that people living close to any US base in this country, not just in East Anglia, are at great risk.

    We encourage everyone to get involved with this camp, whether its attending one of the vigils, joining the blockade on the final day, or taking part in the international peace conference.

    Meanwhile, Lakenheath Alliance for Peace co-founder Angie Zelter said:

    It is horrifying and shameful that USAF Lakenheath, on British soil and with the connivance of the UK government is involved in war crimes and genocide. Pilots from Israel and Saudi Arabia are trained at Lakenheath and US planes and bombs go out to take part in the bombings in Gaza and Yemen.

    We are here to say this is not in our name and to warn service personnel in the base that they should never obey illegal orders and refuse to take part in the never ending wars that are destroying people and planet.

    Zelter explained:

    To mark the Genocide and War Crimes Day, we will hold a symbolic death march with baby shrouds, Red Rebels, and hanging baby clothes on the fence of the base. This is to remind everyone of the impact of these planes on babies and children. It is blood on their hands and from their planes.

    Greenham Common Woman Ginnie Herbet said:

    Women who protested at Greenham in the 1980s are now protesting at the return of US nukes to Lakenheath. The cruise missiles left Greenham Common, international law changed and the Common was handed back to the people. Forty years later and here we are protesting again as secret decisions are made and US nuclear weapons return to Lakenheath. Not in our Name!”

    Featured image via the Canary

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • In yet another erratic pivot, Donald Trump hit the brakes on his cataclysmic tariffs, in a move that raised eyebrows as his billionaire buddies cashed in when the prices were low.

    But whilst many of the world’s poor people were fearing the catastrophic impact this might have on their finances and businesses, Trump instead took to his Truth Social platform to tell his followers to:

    BE COOL! Everything is going to work out well. The USA will be bigger and better than ever before.

    This was all despite global markets tanking.

    Trump tariffs: a ‘GREAT TIME TO BUY’ for billionaire capitalists

    As the markets opened at the New York Stock Exchange, Trump practically hailed a golden era of corruption as he told his followers:

    THIS IS A GREAT TIME TO BUY!!! DJT.

    Laughing and ridiculing the American public, a video hours later emerged of Trump talking to his wealthy pals, as he pointed to them and said:

    He made $2.5 billion today and he made $900 million. That’s not bad.

    Not even hiding the fact that this was never about tariffs but simply market manipulation, the oligarchy was yesterday in full view of the public, as its ugly head emerged from the shadows.

    Just four hours later, the president changed his mind, he paused and lowered tariffs on goods from most nations for 90 days.

    Suddenly, stocks and shares were soaring, and social media erupted into a frenzy, as journalists and members of the public questioned Trump’s “pump and dump” scheme.

    Republican US representative for Georgia, and close Trump ally Marjorie Taylor Greene, had disclosed to her fans that she had made several purchases in stocks and shares on 3 and 4 April. These were two days that the markets were at a critically low point, due to Trump setting out his reciprocal tariff plan on 2 April. Conveniently shares in Amazon and Apple rose by 12% and 15% on 9 April, allowing Greene to cash in.

    The S&P 500 blue chip index had closed by more than 9% whilst stocks rose in Asia and Europe, with the FTSE 100 index rising by 4%.

    Insider trading: anything goes in Trump’s America

    In any other democracy, this would be classed as a criminal offence, or named “insider trading”, but for Donald Trump, who is treated like God incarnate, this appears completely acceptable.

    Democratic Senator, Adam Schiff, has called for an investigation into the alleged insider trading, as he raised grave concerns over people buying up the stocks when the prices were low before they rose again.

    Economically, diplomatically, and politically illiterate, Trump’s on-and-off-like-a-tap tariffs, create an environment where corruption is able to breed in the petri dish swamp that is the White House.

    Yet again shedding a light upon Trump’s parasitic administration Schiff stated, “these constant gyrations in policy provide dangerous opportunities for insider trading”.

    “Who in the administration knew about Trump’s latest tariff flip flop ahead of time? Did anyone buy or sell stocks and profit at the public’s expense?”.

    This was followed by democrat Steven Horsford’s remarks as he expressed his frustration at the Trump regime “WTF! WHO’s in charge”. “The empathy I have is for the American people, whose wellbeing and livelihoods are being affected. This is not a game. This is real life”.

    UK feeling the effects

    With the UK economy already in a grave state of health due to chancellor Rachel Reeve’s disastrous budget and callous cuts to benefits, one thing is clear, the poorest people in our society will bear the brunt of yet more economic instability whilst the rich take advantage of market turmoil.

    The Bank of England (BoE) has warned that higher government bond yields would “reduce their capacity to respond to future shocks”.

    British economic growth is therefore likely to be severely impacted by these on and off tariffs, as the trade war continues to haunt countries across the globe.

    Furthermore, the BoE’s Financial Policy Committee (FPC) said that the shift in geopolitical relations from both an economic standpoint, and the vast rifts between traditional allies, has reduced the likelihood of trading partners wishing to co-operate.

    Hence:

    the probability of adverse events and the potential severity of the impact have also risen.

    It is therefore clear that Keir Starmer and Reeves must wake up and smell the coffee; the US is no longer an ally but rather a country that wishes to inflict peril and confusion, whenever it is given the opportunity.

    Trump: world leaders lining up to kiss ‘my a** to negotiate’

    At the National Republican Congressional Committee dinner in Washington, Trump appeared to be gushing over the leverage that he holds over the rest of the globe.

    Gleefully mocking the weakness of world leaders, who appear to be submissively bowing down to Trump in the hope that he might be merciful, he said:

    They are calling us up, kissing my a** to negotiate…Please, Sir, make a deal. I’ll do anything. I’ll do anything Sir.

    Despite this, world leaders will continue to attempt to appease Trump, but they must be reminded what happened when a certain dictator was appeased back in the 1930s; he soon became a genocidal war criminal.

    Import prices will inevitably rise, and domestic products will simply inflate in price, and even the rich billionaire tech bros are beginning to have serious doubts about Trump’s policies.

    This of course includes Elon Musk, the former big pal and bestie of Trump, who had until recently enjoyed tampering with the government’s finances.

    But as his Tesla sales plummeted, and the tariffs came into fruition, the tech bro saw his finances plummet by billions and it was announced that he would depart from DOGE in early May.

    He has recently had a very public spat with Peter Navarro, a member of Trump’s cabinet who is dubbed in political circles as the “architect“ of Trump’s catastrophic tariffs. Navarro called Musk a “car assembler” as he criticised his Tesla company with Musk then responding to this by calling him, “dumber than a sack of bricks”.

    Trump ‘abusive’ tariffs on China

    Aside from the rift between Trump and some members of his possie, tensions have also deepened with China.

    Despite pausing the tariffs for 90 days for other countries, he has kept them for China, as he set the rate to 125% earlier on Wednesday, accusing them of showing a “lack of respect”.

    This therefore means that every single country with existing tariffs, will receive the lowered rate of 10% except for China.

    In response, China’s foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian hit back and said that the US uses bullying practices and that it:

    continues to impose tariffs on China in an abusive manner.

    The spokesman also said that if America hopes to resolve any of these problems through negotiation, the US must show:

    an attitude of equality, mutual respect, and reciprocity

    Speaking to journalists in the oval office about his trade war with Xi Jinping, he said he believed that a deal could be struck with China:

    we’ll end up making a very good deal.

    But whilst he dubbed the Chinese president “one of the smartest people in the world”, he warned the country of their extensive weaponry:

    we have weapons that nobody even knows.

    Of course, it shows that Trump is clearly enjoying the power struggle between the two world powers.

    The ‘art of the deal’ is only for the rich elite

    However, despite the reversal of this decision, this is inevitably a time of grave instability. The Bank of England has warned that the:

    Major shift in the nature and predictability of global trading arrangements could harm financial stability by depressing growth.

    Whilst Karoline Leavitt and MAGA die-hards continue to argue and portray this move as a success for Trump, calling it the “art of the deal”, the deal is only for the elite few who took advantage of the volatility of the stock market as a chance to get even richer.

    Meanwhile the poor people of the world are left to suffer under a capitalist system that benefits the few, not the many.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By Megan Miley

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • In a landscape often marred by disinformation, recent social media chatter has ignited concerns around a rumour involving US president Donald Trump and the potential declaration of martial law. Specifically, a number of users have shared a prediction claiming that on April 20, 2025, Trump may invoke the Insurrection Act of 1807, effectively allowing for military control over civilian governance during times of unrest.

    Martial law/marshall law…

    The origins of this rumour can be traced back to a series of articles on the publishing platform medium. The author, who goes by the handle Aletheisthenes, has put forward alarming projections of future events, warning that this declaration could lead to a cascade of oppressive state measures, including the arrest of journalists and politicians, restricted movement at state borders, and postponed elections.

    Aletheisthenes outlined concerns in their writing, stating:

    On April 20, 2025, the United States may initiate its final steps into authoritarian rule.

    This echoes other fears that have permeated discussions during Trump’s presidency, especially in light of his previous comments suggesting he considered invoking martial law during times of social upheaval.

    These anxieties resurfaced prominently in communications that highlighted an executive order issued by Trump on January 20, 2025, which declared a national emergency at the southern US border and required reports from the secretaries of defence and homeland security within 90 days. This timeframe points directly to 20 April, leading some to speculate that the day will mark a significant turning point in U.S. governance.

    Trump: no word as yet

    However, as of 10 April there has been no official confirmation or substantive evidence supporting these claims from the Department of Defense, Homeland Security, or the White House, which raises questions about the credibility of the rumour. Inquiries sent to these entities have gone unanswered as of the current reporting.

    These discussions are not merely rooted in speculation; they tap into a broader narrative of fear and distrust cultivated throughout Trump’s time in office. There is an irony in the fear-mongering coming from a space often associated with conspiracy theories.

    One reader reached out to Snopes, voicing concern over the rampant discussion online regarding Trump’s supposed plans for martial law. Another noted the potential for the executive order to set the stage for drastic legal changes.

    Yet, it is worth noting that previous analyses by legal experts, such as Joseph Nunn of the Brennan Center for Justice, clarify that the Insurrection Act does not give the authority to declare martial law, which is typically understood as military oversight over civilian governance.

    In his response to the examination of these predictions, Aletheisthenes brushes aside legal objections, asserting:

    Trump has a history of testing what he can and can’t do.

    This highlights a prevailing sentiment among those wary of Trump’s disregard for established norms that govern democratic processes.

    Martial law: not too far from the truth…?

    Reality may differ from the predictions made by Aletheisthenes, as the author openly acknowledges the shifting language in their writings. “I decided to tone it down,” reflecting a tactical pivot in communication, as accusations of inciting panic circulate.

    This begs the question of how much fear is justified in a political climate where the former president has previously flirted with ideas akin to martial law.

    In historical context, the Insurrection Act of 1807 was created to allow presidential authority in quelling insurrections. Its last invocation was in 1992, during unrest provoked by police violence against Black communities.

    Today, discussions around the Act arise amid a broader conversation about civil rights, racial justice, and the preparedness of American governance to respond to internal crises equitably.

    As 20 April looms closer, the rumour of even harder authoritarian governance lingers, with detail and conjecture fuelling the anxiety surrounding Trump’s already far-right administration.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • On Tuesday 8 April, the White House confirmed Donald Trump’s desire to have US citizens deported to El Salvadorian prisons.

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt stated that Trump was looking at “if there is a legal pathway” to deport US citizens who are “heinous, violent, criminals”.

    Trump: deporting… US citizens?

    As Reuters reported:

    The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday allowed Donald Trump to pursue deportations of alleged Venezuelan gang members using a 1798 law that historically has been employed only in wartime as part of the Republican president’s hardline approach to immigration, but with certain limits.

    The court, in an unsigned 5-4 ruling powered by conservative justices, granted the administration’s request to lift Washington-based U.S. Judge James Boasberg’s March 15 order that had temporarily blocked the summary deportations under Trump’s invocation of the Alien Enemies Act while litigation in the case continues.

    Moreover, as it detailed:

    Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act on March 15 to swiftly deport the alleged members of the Tren de Aragua gang, attempting to speed up removals with a law best known for its use to intern Japanese, Italian and German immigrants during World War Two.

    Dissenting Justice Sonia Sotomayor spelled out what this really means:

    So now, the court has effectively greenlit Trump’s administration deporting US citizens for imprisonment, under wartime laws because – *checks notes* – it feels like it:

    US citizen already trapped in an El Salvadoran mega-prison

    Only a few days ago, Trump said during an interview with Newsweek that:

    If they can house these horrible criminals for a lot less money than it costs us – I’m all for it. . .

    Why should it stop just for people who cross the border illegally? We have some horrible criminals. American grown and born

    And the kicker with this Supreme Court ruling? Trump has already sent a US citizen one a one-way ticket to the maximum security ‘Terrorism Confinement Center’ of the repressive El Salvadoran regime.

    Last month, the US deported Kilmar Abrego Garcia from his home in Maryland. He was taken into custody, and eventually found himself in El Salvador – at a prison notorious for housing gang members. Since then, the US government have said that he was deported due to an ‘administrative error’.

    Even so, he is still locked up and unable to return home to his young son. According to the BBC, Trump officials are now claiming they cannot force El Salvador to return Garcia.

    Call it what it is… fascism

    However, this is also just the tip of the iceberg – or – the immigration enforcement ICEberg if you like. This is because the so-called “land of the free” under Trump’s steer has been literally kidnapping citizens and non-citizens alike. 

    If you’re a student speaking out against Israel’s genocide in Palestine – the state will nab you. A scholar criticising the US for its complicity in Gaza? Prepare to be detained. Maybe you’re a British backpacker – detained for weeks by ICE. Or perhaps a British punk rock band or a French scientist who has made anti-Trump comments: denied entry.

    The point is, if you say something Trump doesn’t like, the violent policing arms of MAGAland can silence you – by literally spiriting you away to wherever the felon president fancies. 

    Let’s call all this what it is: authoritarian fascism, plain and simple:

    Trump and Biden: two sides of the same coin

    But let’s be real – the UK and US right now are two sides of the same coin.

    And perhaps it’s little wonder that spineless Starmer eyeing up a trade deal with the US, has made not even a mealy-mouthed attempt at calling out Trump’s repressive administration. After all, the state here has weaponised anti-terrorism laws to go after journalists and activists speaking against Israel. 

    In fact, only today the Canary’s Steve Topple has reported on the preposterous draconian ‘conspiracy to cause a public nuisance’ powers the Met Police wielded to nick Youth Demand protesters. 

    Ultimately, none of this is a far cry from Trump’s disappearing of citizens. The deportation to El Salvador’s human rights violating detention facility might be a step further down the line towards fascism, but the parallels are scarily similar all the same. 

    What democracy with Trump?

    The Supreme Court ruling upends any notion that the US is a democracy. Before the fascist felon president, US administrations operated in some pseudo-democratic fashion – though arguably, the corporatisation of the US had long been in play.

    Now, Trump has blown this blatant myth wide open. What the Supreme Court ruling and Garcia’s case has shown is that the US is rapidly careering into full-blown fascism. If a government can simply ignore all the checks and balances that prevent it from authoritarianism, gone should be any sense that it is a bastion of democracy.

    However, the US has been treating marginalised communities like this since time immemorial. To Black and brown communities, chronically ill and disabled people, migrants, and others, it never really was anything but a playground for the fascistic corporate capitalist tendencies of the rich.

    The US elected a convicted felon as a president. Now, that criminal is getting away with sending US citizens to what amounts to foreign concentration camps – and keeping them there despite false charges.

    Welcome to Trump’s America. The land of the free market predatory billionaires, but certainly not the land of the free.

    Feature image via the Canary

    By HG

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • A legal non-profit in the US has sent damning evidence of US border force officials appalling persisting record of human rights abuses at open air detention sites, to the United Nations.

    US border force reported to the UN for human rights abuse

    On Monday 7 April, the Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law (CHRCL) and the Southern Border Communities Coalition (SBCC) submitted a report to the United Nations Human Rights Council (HRC) on US Customs and Border Protection (CBP)’s continued human rights abuses at open air detention sites.

    The CHRCL is a legal non-profit that protects and advances the rights of migrants. SBCC is a coalition of organisations from San Diego, California, to Brownsville, Texas that seeks to hold US border force accountable and ensure they respect migrants’ human rights.

    Every five years, members of the UN HRC review all member countries’ human rights records in a unique process known as Universal Periodic Review. Therefore, SBCC and CHRCL submitted a joint report to the UN as part of this process. It’s to urge the council to hold the US accountable for CBP’s continued human rights abuses, including open air detention along the southern border.

    As part of this process, SBCC and CHRCL also joined a coalition of two dozen migrants’ rights groups urging action on the deteriorating human rights situation for migrants in the US.

    Trump expanding human rights violating detention

    On March 19 2025, media announced that the Trump administration may expand open air detention along the border in New Mexico, Arizona, and California.

    Reportedly, the government would do so by having the military:

    take control of a buffer zone along a sprawling stretch of the southern border and empower[ing] active-duty U.S. troops to temporarily hold migrants who cross into the United States

    This would be alongside the Roosevelt Reservation, a narrow 60-foot stretch of land that the federal government controls. Historically, the Department of the Interior has managed it.

    Since 2023, SBCC has documented, and members have provided aid at, and advocated against open air detention sites at the US-Mexico border.

    In 2024, CHRCL conducted multiple monitoring visits to the sites in its capacity as co-counsel in the Flores Settlement Agreement.  This governs conditions for children in US government custody.

    The visits led Flores Counsel to successfully file for enforcement of the Agreement with respect to open air detention sites in February of 2024.

    Migrants subjected to ‘inhumane conditions’ by US border force

    Border Policy Counsel for the Southern Border Communities Coalition Ricky Garza said:

    We reject military occupation and the Administration’s attempts to normalize open air detention.

    Human rights law is clear that all people must be treated with dignity and respect regardless of immigration status.

    Executive director of the Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law Sergio Perez echoed this:

    The cruelty of forcing asylum-seekers – many of whom have fled unimaginable horrors – into squalid, virtually unsheltered sites along the border is self-evident.

    No human being, least of all pregnant persons and vulnerable children, should be subjected to these inhumane conditions. There is no possible justification for such deplorable treatment, and we call on the United Nations to hold the U.S. accountable for violating its human rights treaty obligations and failing to properly care for people seeking a better life.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • More than 7,500 people have sent letters to prime minister Keir Starmer – via EveryDoctor – demanding that he keeps the NHS off the table in trade negotiations with US president Donald Trump. Campaign group EveryDoctor instigated the call to protect the public health service from predatory US interests. It is asking as many people as possible to join them in writing to the prime minister.

    Crucially, the group has launched the letter campaign in response to worrying signals from Starmer that the Labour Party government is gearing up to use the NHS as a bargaining chip.

    EveryDoctor says the NHS is not a bargaining chip for Trump trade negotiations

    Ahead of trade negotiations with the White House, multiple UK trade experts have repeatedly warned that Trump will make a full trade agreement with the US conditional on opening up the NHS to US corporations.

    Big Pharma from the US has long lobbied for reforms to UK drug pricing. This is what keeps the costs of medicine low, and accessible on the NHS. Notably, as Labour chair of the House of Commons Business and Trade Committee told the i Paper in January:

    American drug firms want a looser regime from Nice [the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence] when it comes to drug pricing. They will argue that Nice needs to focus more on value than price.

    But the bottom line to that is they’re seeking freedom to sell more US medicine at higher prices to the NHS. And the NHS is obviously a monopoly buyer, so has real power to drive prices down. I’m sure Big Pharma will make that case to Trump. Whether he would put that front and centre we have to see.

    Moreover, there’s also the infamous right-wing think tank the Heritage Foundation’s agenda for a Republican presidency – Project 2025. Crucially, although Trump has distanced himself from the roadmap, the think tank drew it up under the previous Trump term. Multiple officials from his administration were involved in drafting it. And despite his protestations of involvement with the neoliberal wishlist, much of it Trump has predictably begun taking up.

    What does this say on the NHS? Unsurprisingly, it calls for the Trump administration to open up UK services to the US.

    And patient data is another avenue in which the US could crack open the NHS to US corporate profiteering. Groups like Global Justice Now have warned that Starmer’s efforts to negotiate a Big Tech-focused deal could invariably lead to the export of private NHS data to the US. This, it warns, could pave the way for companies weaponising this data to manufacture new healthcare technologies it will sell back to the NHS at exorbitant prices.

    Now, there are alarming murmurings from the UK government that the NHS is indeed up for grabs in trade negotiations.

    NHS should not be ‘on the table’

    EveryDoctor’s founder Dr Julia Grace Patterson has therefore written to supporters. In particular, its over her alarm at a recent comment the prime minister made in the Telegraph. Writing on Trump’s sweeping new tariffs, Starmer leaned into famous World War 2 iconography, stating that:

    That is why on tariffs, the immediate priority is to keep calm and fight for the best deal. Nobody wins from a trade war. The economic consequences, here and across the globe, could be profound.

    However, he followed this noting that with regards to a “economic prosperity deal”:

    all options remain on the table.

    Of course, EveryDoctor is therefore concerned that this means the NHS would be up for sale to secure a trade deal with Trump.

    It’s why the group has started a campaign to demand Starmer keep the NHS off the table. So far, more than 7,500 people have used its letter tool to send a clear message to the prime minister.

    The letter template notes the “particularly concerning” fact that Labour didn’t stipulate its opposition to serving the NHS up on a platter in its election manifesto. As such, it sets out how:

    The British people voted based on your party’s stated positions and promises; therefore, you have no democratic mandate to include our National Health Service in any such negotiations. To do so would represent a significant departure from the platform on which you were elected and a breach of the trust placed in you by the electorate.

    Demanding that his government exclude the NHS from any trade negotiations, it states the public’s:

    overwhelming support for keeping the NHS publicly owned, free at the point of use, and protected from commercial interests. Any compromise on these principles in trade negotiations would be a betrayal of public trust and the founding values of the NHS.

    EveryDoctor is urging as many people as possible to send Starmer a letter. It needs the British public to spell out in no uncertain terms how the NHS:

    is not an asset to be traded.

    You can send a letter here.

    Whether demonstrating the depth of public dissent for this will stop Starmer from capitulating to Trump yet remains to be seen – but EveryDoctor are going to try.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By Hannah Sharland

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • The sweep of impending Medicare and Medicaid cuts in the US under Donald Trump could be about to put a severely chronically ill patient’s life at risk.

    Living with multiple complex and under-recognised conditions including hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (hEDS), myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), tethered cord syndrome, postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS), and mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS), 34 year-old US resident Emily Johnson has been in palliative care since the age of 28.

    Trump: the thin end of the US healthcare wedge

    Now, the Republicans’ plans under Trump to slash these programmes could mean losing access to the vital care currently keeping her conditions stable.

    What’s more, not only will the cuts sever her financial bridge to her daily treatment, but it could stop her getting the surgeries she sorely needs. These are crucial treatments that could improve her long-standing health issues. These would help her regain a quality of life that enables her to not just survive, but live with fewer life-threatening, debilitating symptoms, and she hopes, even pursue her passions.

    However, none of this was a given from the get-go. This is because, notwithstanding the cuts, these US’s healthcare insurance schemes were already leaving Emily falling through the gaps.

    Of course, Emily won’t be the only US citizen facing a situation like this. Crucially though, her story encapsulates the devastating impact Medicare and Medicaid cuts could unleash on patients, particularly from low income households. There’ll be countless US residents living with a multitude of chronic health conditions, without access to the necessary financial aid for treatment if these cuts go ahead.

    A catastrophic combination of chronic illnesses

    Emily lives with a number of chronic health conditions that severely impact her daily life. These include, but are not limited to:

    • Hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (hEDS).
    • Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS).
    • Tethered cord syndrome.
    • Myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME/CFS).
    • Mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS).
    • Craniocervical instability (CCI).
    • Dystonia.
    • Scoliosis.
    • Intracranial hypertension.
    • Lumbar herniation (slipped disk in the lower back which causes nerve compression).

    EDS is a group of connective tissue disorders in which collagen doesn’t work. It’s characterised by joint hypermobility, skin hyperelasticity, and tissue fragility.

    Her accompanying POTS is a type of dysautonomia – a dysfunction of the autonomic nervous system. It causes an abnormal increase in heart rate, as well as low blood pressure and volume when a person transitions from laying down, to standing.

    Similarly, tethered cord syndrome is a disorder of the nervous system as well. Essentially, it’s caused by tissue attaching itself to the spinal cord, and restricting its movement. A neurosurgical condition, it’s common in EDS patients. While some may be born with tethered cord syndrome, it’s also possible to develop it. It can get progressively worse over time. Emily has had surgery to fix this – so it isn’t currently a problem. However, it’s possible it could re-tether at any point.

    Meanwhile, ME is a chronic systemic neuroimmune disease which affects nearly every system in the body. It causes debilitating symptoms. These typically include influenza-like symptoms, cognitive impairment, multiple forms of pain, and heart, lung, blood pressure, and digestive dysfunctions. Post-exertional-malaise (PEM) is the hallmark feature of ME. This involves a disproportionate worsening of other symptoms after even minimal physical, social, mental, or emotional exertion.

    Both CCI and MCAS are also common conditions for people living with EDS. The former involves increased mobility at certain junctions in the neck, while the latter is a disorder that manifests in excessive release of chemical mast cells, such as histamine.

    Her dystonia is a neurological movement disorder that can trigger uncontrolled and painful spasms.

    What’s more, a CCI and EDS expert in New York – neurosurgeon Dr Paolo Bolognese – has also identified that Emily has a number of serious spinal problems, and as a result:

    Emily had developed dozens of neuromuscular, seizure, neurological and other diagnoses limiting her ability to work, continue a higher education, drive, exercise, run, walk or sit upright for very long, and even daily activities like eating meals, showering and household chores. Emily has had to rest at home in bed for most of the day, every day for 8 years. She has been in Palliative Care since age 28.

    A perfect Trump storm in a privatised health system

    For many patients, this catastrophic combination of chronic health conditions often co-occur in conjunction with each-other. There are multiple factors, including genetic mutations in EDS and POTS for instance, that link the conditions together. Another is the vagus nerve, which plays a major role in the parasympathetic nervous system. You can read more about some of these connections here.

    Like for others living with a cluster of these, they have compounded Emily’s health and put her in life-threatening circumstances on a number of occasions.

    When she was 22, an Epstein Barr infection worsened her POTS. As part of this, she suffers severe hypovolemia – low blood volume – which impacts her body’s ability to pump blood around the circulatory system as it should. Essentially, it’s a state of abnormally low fluid volume in her body, including with her blood plasma. Meanwhile, her CCI and intracranial hypertension (pressure build-up around the brain), alongside a suite of spinal injuries and conditions from years of all going untreated, has caused her cerebral spinal fluid leaks (CSF). Together, the pair have meant she has needed home IV infusions to replenish her fluid loss.

    Repeated infections have also worsened her MCAS to near fatal consequences. And, as a result, this has exacerbated her EDS connective tissue damage and a number of spinal issues as well. As her GoFundMe describes:

    She was admitted into Palliative Care at age 29, and with appropriate MCAS care she was able to return from near-fatal status by late 2020. However, MCAS going undiagnosed and untreated so long played a pivotal role in corroding tissue and further damaging Emily’s spine and organs.

    If all that weren’t enough, her spinal problems, coupled with MCAS, as well as both Covid-19 infections and vaccines, have caused her to develop serious clotting conditions. Alarmingly, Emily has already had a pulmonary embolism due to these issues.

    Her ME and long Covid have likely additionally contributed to her severe microclotting problems too – which required urgent treatment. Without this, her microclotting would have left her at risk of a second pulmonary embolism, or other life-threatening health emergencies like heart attack, or stroke.

    It’s not just ‘having to lay down’, it’s living with literal brain damage

    Emily expressed to the Canary how important it is that people understand how “devastating” these conditions are to live with:

    Like, it’s not just having to lay down because I sort of don’t feel well.It literally feels like, the benign proximal peripheral vertigo, like I’m falling off the top of a building every time I have these flares. And that feeling persists for like several days, sometimes a couple of weeks for several hours a day.

    Of course, Emily is referring to the tendency for the media, public-facing organisations, and politicians to vastly underplay the impact of many enormously debilitating conditions. What’s more, so often, they misrepresent how dangerous the intersecting of these conditions can be. That is, the impact of the plethora of debilitating symptoms is inordinately more than the majority of people realise.

    Emily gave just one example of the type of life-threatening experience and daily lived reality she contends with that might come as a shock to most. An MRI showed that flares of Emily’s intracranial hypertension has literally been causing her brain damage.

    Emily explained the symptoms and processes causing this:

    When the cerebellar tonsils in the back of my skull are being sucked down into my brainstem, it’s pushing down on the cerebral spinal fluid flow to my brain. So it’s not just the leaks, it’s like the whole pathway for the flow to get to my brain is being suppressed. So a lot of my worst symptoms occur during these flares. The way the flares kind of work is it’s a roller coaster. The pressure surges begin, it starts causing pituitary damage in the front of my brain.

    This pituitary brain damage causes a whole suite of metabolism and hormone issues. More specifically, the pituitary gland regulates many of the body’s functions as it oversees the endocrine system. The severity of her condition has meant Emily has needed specialist tests. This has included one where clinicians at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York “put a bolt” into her brain:

    They drill a hole in my head and they put a probe that goes and touches my brain.

    And then they have me lay down, sit up, stand up, sit back down, lay down over a couple of minutes each. And then they measure how the pressure in my head responds. And I’ve also tilted my head from side to side when laying down and when sitting up.

    Emily approaches her terrifying experience with humour – a coping mechanism so many chronically ill people have to turn to amid a toxic medical environment that dismisses, gaslights, and trivialises their under-recognised conditions. While she is now getting some help from clinicians in the field, it’s almost inconceivably unconscionable she has been left without the investigations and treatment she has desperately needed for decades. Yet, Emily’s experience is characteristic of so many living with chronic illnesses. The paucity of care has consigned her to live in immense pain and with a genuinely life-threatening suite of symptoms on a regular basis:

    I’ve had to have my brain probed twice and I’m may have to have my brain probed a third time. And to the point where I’ve told my friends that for my birthday, I want a t-shirt made that says like, I got my brain probed three times and I didn’t even get to see any aliens. I’m trying to keep humor about it, you know, but it’s really hard.

    Overall then, it has been a perfect storm of health problems feeding into one another. It’s why, under the US’s privatised healthcare system, Medicare and Medicaid have both been essential to Emily.

    Medicare and Medicaid make treatment possible… but for how much longer

    To this point, Emily has only been able to access the care and surgeries she has needed due to Medicare and Medicaid.

    These are the US’s two joint federal and state health insurance programmes. Not everyone is eligible for them – but as a disabled person who also claims Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) benefits, Emily qualifies for some of their coverage. Like the name suggests, SSDI is the US’s main social security support for disabled people. As her GoFundMe notes however, the SSDI alone covers only her most basic daily needs, if that:

    The majority of Emily’s SSDI goes to home health and prescription copays, out-of-pocket supplements and care, and medical equipment and garments recommended by doctors. The rest of her SSDI covers her phone, home infusion care, and expensive allergy-free groceries. She lives with family for care assistance, transit, and free housing so she can afford the care she has received so far.

    In other words, her SSDI hasn’t enabled her to seek out the treatments she needs to stop her conditions getting increasingly worse. That’s where both Medicare and Medicaid have come in – but only to a point.

    Currently, her Medicaid helps her to afford the IV fluids she requires daily to keep her conditions as stable as possible.

    What’s more, her Medicare insurance has made it so she could access important surgeries. Right now, she’s recovering from her second intracranial hypertension pressure surgery test, and a right styloidectomy. The latter was a surgical procedure to shorten the styloid bone in her neck. She’s hoping to follow this up with a left styloidectomy in the summer. After that, she might then be able to pursue surgery for her CCI and intracranial hypertension as well.

    Trump cuts incoming…

    Now though, things could be about to get inordinately worse. This is because the Trump administration has pressed forwards with plans to unleash a wave of trillions in public spending cuts. Naturally, in the firing line, will invariably be Medicare and Medicaid.

    On the campaign trail, Trump had promised not to touch these. However, unsurprisingly, Republicans are making a move to slash them anyway. Crucially, commentators and opposition politicians have already pointed out that to meet this $2tn budget-saving agenda, it’s highly likely some of this will come from these.

    For instance, in February, the US Congress House Budget Committee set out that the Energy and Commerce Committee would need to make $880bn in savings over the next decade. This is the body which oversees Medicaid, among other programmes. And Republican representatives have already confirmed that Medicaid will be a target for reform – meaning cuts of course.

    So, Emily is concerned that any forthcoming cuts to these programmes could mean losing access to her care and surgeries altogether. She told the Canary that:

    I also don’t know how much it would cost to try to access IV fluids if I lose home infusion via losing Medicaid — whether I try to get fluids at infusion centers or whether I’d have to go to urgent care or ERs to get them, as many commercial infusion clinics don’t take insurance and I can’t afford to pay hundreds of dollars per IV bag.

    To make matters worse, it could also impact her care prospects in New York and Iowa, where she hopes to get her surgeries.

    Further implications

    Specifically, her Medicare won’t cover her living in a medical facility to get daily IV fluids. Therefore, if she loses the Medicaid, and consequently, her home infusion, she’ll have to rely on doctors sending her to infusion centres. However, Emily detailed the barriers she anticipates with this already.

    For one, Emily isn’t sure that infusion centres wouldn’t just turn her away. Notably, she explained that:

    Due to venous insufficiency and vein fragility from EDS and sodium overload issues from POTS, I can’t run a bag of IV fluids any faster than 3 hours, and that’s only if I haven’t had to skip any days of IV fluids so my veins are hydrated enough to rush a bag.

    Generally, she needs IV fluids for four hours at a time, daily. But centres often aren’t equipped for daily patients – or willing to take them at that:

    As you can imagine, even if my doctors order IV fluids to urgent care or emergency rooms, these facilities don’t like being burdened with infusion patients needing to stick around for hours, and they’ve turned me away without IV fluids despite severe symptoms in the past

    On top of this, she worries centres won’t be trained or able to give her the IV fluids correctly anyway. Notably, due to years of peripheral catheters causing EDS connective tissue damage, and MCAS reactions making this worse, she can only have an intravenous catheter direct to her central vein. So the loss of her home infusion could put her more at risk as well.

    And, even supposing she does manage to get the surgeries she needs, she told the Canary that:

    If Medicaid is cut, I can’t get a waiver for a home health aid to help with surgical recovery which would be necessary, so not having this would mean I may not be able to get the cervical fusion and/or decompression even if I’m approved for one or both surgeries.

    Not uncommon conditions, just shamefully ignored and stigmatised

    And Medicare cuts are one thing, but Emily now faces these unaffordable costs for another reason too. That is, the persistent failure of the medical system that put her in this disgraceful health scenario in the first place. Notably, Emily has lived with some of these conditions her whole life, and others, for many years before she could get a diagnosis. All told, it has been an uphill battle for recognition, let alone getting the medical help she has needed.

    So, she hoped to drive home that while there are no curative treatments for many of her conditions, with the right surgeries and therapeutic treatments, at the right time, she might not be so dangerously sick now:

    It’s not at all uncommon for EDS patients to have several conditions from these sectors restricting blood flow and causing regular issues that can be dangerous and even fatal. The goal is try to get as much care as possible in the best order possible that improves quality and functionality of life before patients are in a dangerous or fatal situation.

    Emily expressed to the Canary that medical inattention and inaction has irrevocably damaged her body. But, she wanted her story to raise awareness for others. She hopes it will help them find correct diagnoses, and get treatment before things become more severe as they have for her.

    Clinicians should know – but don’t

    Moreover, she pointed out how her conditions are hardly uncommon:

    even though my type of EDS, hEDS, is common at 1 in 500, and even though the Covid pandemic doubled the POTS population, and even though MCAS was extremely common before Covid at 1 in 6 people, and even though Covid has massively increased the MECFS population (and with all of these, the populations of patients with severe microclots and craniocervical instability and intracranial hypertension and tethered cord syndrome and lumbar herniations and scoliosis all present in the above diagnostic populations have increased and worsened in severity) — despite all of this, most clinicians still mistakenly believe these aren’t common issues or that these aren’t severe issues, and as the patient populations and needs have grown considerably, the number of clinicians trying to learn from existing clinicians who are experts in these conditions hasn’t kept pace.

    And Emily is right. Given the high rates of all these, you’d be forgiven for thinking that clinicians would know how to diagnose and treat them. In reality, this couldn’t be further from the case.

    Notably, as the Canary has consistently reported, ignorance and stigma persists across the medical establishment.

    It’s the very epitome of the metaphorical mascot animal – the zebra – encapsulating the experience of EDS and other patients with ‘rare’ illnesses. That is, medical professionals “hear the sound of hooves, think horses, not zebras” when they look at a person’s symptoms. In short, these conditions, that aren’t rare in reality, get missed, when they really shouldn’t.

    In big part, it’s because doctors have long peddled the biopsychosocial brand of junk psychologising science. This dismisses the biophysiological pathologies of these under-recognised chronic health conditions. With it has come decades of patient gaslighting, neglect, trivialisation, and medical abuse.

    ‘Clinician associated trauma’ and life-threatening complications

    Predictably then, it’s the same old story in Emily’s case too. Her crowdfunder page details this, stating:

    Some doctors have refused care for Emily just because she has EDS, and this diagnostic discrimination interrupted and prevented critical care over the years. Other doctors suggested Emily was faking having these symptoms and conditions, despite specialist diagnoses and even confirming diagnoses from two or three or four other specialists. Also, despite fantastic mental health providers affirming these were biophysical issues and that Emily wasn’t faking seizures, collapses, blackouts, vomiting and other issues. Some doctors forced her to take psych medications that worsened these conditions significantly due to prescription interactions and condition interactions.

    She was even forced into a psych ward when she was unable to walk and experiencing severe symptoms, where she was abused severely and denied medical care.

    Emily told the Canary that ultimately, it was clinician malpractice that had repeatedly put her life at risk:

    Unfortunately I have been in a handful of life-threatening situations before and since being admitted to palliative care when I was 28 years old. All of them were a result of not having access to medical care I knew I needed, and my knowledge of these conditions not being taken seriously by local clinicians who didn’t have the knowledge to help me but also didn’t want to listen to me about how to learn how to help me or transfer my care to someone who was knowledgeable who could help.

    And her story could be a carbon copy of many others living with these and other chronic illnesses. The Canary has reported on numerous patients in the UK, and elsewhere, with strikingly similar experiences.

    Crowdfunding to survive in 2025: nothing new, because nothing changes

    It’s important to note that while Medicare has covered some of Emily’s treatments, it never has met all the expenses for her surgeries.

    Medicare has accounted for 80% of Emily’s health insurance covered costs. The rest would ordinarily be paid for by Medicaid. However, there’s a catch. Medicaid would ONLY cover the remaining 20% for care in the same state that Emily lives in. Unfortunately, as many people living with chronic illnesses like hers will know, specialists are few and far between.

    Unsurprisingly then, Emily has had to travel out of state to get tests and surgeries from experts in her conditions. Consequently, the international community has been stepping up. Together, they have been filling in for the gaping holes in the US’s social safety net. She has managed to fundraise some of these costs on a GoFundMe.

    However, she hasn’t yet met her goal for all the upcoming surgeries she desperately requires. So her crowdfunder still needs all the help it can get.

    It was another severe ME patient that the Canary has previously reported on who brought Emily’s story to our attention. Nevra, based in Pakistan, has been a long-time friend of Emily’s. She relayed to the Canary how Emily had been an unwavering source of support for her over the years, as she has for many other chronically ill patients.

    Nevra shared a video with the Canary that she shared to her followers to amplify Emily’s story. In this, she articulated:

    I think Emily is one of the bravest people that I know, if not the most brave. I think that we absolutely cannot lose somebody like her. It’s not just because she is an amazing person and does so much for the community behind the scenes, uncredited – it’s also that, she deserves to live.

    Nevra therefore urged people to support Emily if they can. You can contribute to her GoFundMe page here.

    Trump: putting chronically ill people’s lives at risk

    The fact that these life-saving treatments could become even more out of reach for Emily is a scandal. Yet, states everywhere devalue disabled people so systematically, that the resources and treatments to even keep chronically ill people alive, is all too often, too much to ask.

    Nobody should have to crowdfund to survive. However, this is still the shameful reality for too many chronically ill patients like Emily the world over – not just under Trump in the US.

    Featured image supplied

    By Hannah Sharland

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Donald Trump has imposed a 10% tariff on an island of Penguins.

    The sweeping tariffs, brought in on what he has coinedLiberation Day‘, have sparked fears of a global trade war.

    Trump announced a 10% ‘baseline’ tariff on imports to the US, however 60 countries will face much higher tariffs of up to 50%. The UK is facing a 10% tariff, whilst the EU is set at 20%.

    Hilariously though, he has imposed 10% tariffs on both Heard Island and McDonald Islands (HIMI). The islands are covered in volcanoes and glaciers, meaning no one lives there. That is, other than thousands of Penguins.

    Trump: waging a Penguin trade war

    HIMI, and the waters surrounding them provide vital feeding grounds for whales, seabirds, seals, fish. Additionally, it is the home to some of the most ‘iconic and ecologically significant penguins species’.

    The most common Penguin on HIMI is the Gentoo Penguin, and around 21% of the global population of Gentoo’s live there. There is also Eastern Rockhopper Penguins and King Penguins.

    There is no official data since 2003, however that data suggested there were around 32,000 Gentoo Penguins – 21% of the total global population, 160,000 King Penguins, 20,000 Rockhopper penguins and 2m macaroni penguins populating HIMI.

    Countries around the world are warning of a trade war. Trump has clearly not thought this one through though, because sticking a 10% tariff on an island full of Penguins is not going create any extra revenue for the US.

    Putin, or Penguins?

    Importantly, Trump has imposed a higher tariff on an island of Penguins than he has on Russia.

    MAGA fans claimed this was due to insignificant trade. However X users pointed out that the US imported $3.5bn worth of goods from Russia in 2024.

    Maybe Trump has spent too much time watching Pingu and thinks all Penguins can boil a kettle, answer a phone, and trade goods internationally. Because, lets face it, its probably one of the few shows his lack of intelligence could actually handle.

    Maybe next he’ll stick a tariff on Narnia?

    Was in Zelensky sat in the White House a few month back? Or Pingu?

    Penguins cannot fly – but I doubt Trump knows that.

    It was recently announced that the US is looking abroad to end its egg shortage. Maybe that’s the grand plan here. Scrambled or fried?

    Trump imposed his thick as penguin guano tariffs, then waddled off to his golf course in Miami – leaving the US on thin ice. He has been winging it from the start – and every day it becomes even more clear that he has no business in the White House – or on uninhabited islands.

    But what did the US expect?

    One thing’s for sure, wherever this felon power-tripping president tries to make a state visit next, he’ll get a frosty reception, because Trump is poles away from acting like an actual head of state. And even Pingu knows.

    Feature image via the Canary

    By HG

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • US president Donald Trump has imposed sweeping tariffs on countries around the world. But in doing this, Trump is raising the import prices for some of the largest US companies. Predictably, they’ve dropped in the market. What’s more, the US president himself owns shares in some of the companies.

    While we have the world’s smallest violin for these huge companies, is this what Trump wants?

    Trump tariffs backfiring – majorly

    Take Apple. The trillion pound company has supply and manufacturing chains all around the world, including in China, India, Vietnam and Taiwan. And Trump hit all these countries with tariffs: China at 54%, India at 27%, Vietnam at 46% and Taiwan at 32%. Import tariffs such as these have resulted in Apple’s share prices dropping 9%, wiping £191 billion from its value. The US president owns shares in Apple worth £382,000.

    Analysts at Rosenblatt Securities said Apple could raise iPhone prices by 43% because of the tariffs. That’s if they pass the costs on to consumers, despite Apple making net profit of £72 billion in 2024.

    The tariffs have also impacted retail giants such as Amazon, Walmart and Target. All of these companies saw a share drop of more than 10% in March.

    Trump is going further than his trade wars in his last administration. Everyone knows how damaging it is to American companies themselves (and say US farmers who are then hit with retaliatory tariffs). So the policies may not result in good faith favourable trade deals for the US. This is not a surprise from Trump who has bankrupted six of his own businesses.

    Indeed, China responded:

    There is no winner in a trade war, and there is no way out for protectionism

    As the second largest economy, the country has promised countermeasures.

    In response to all this, the UK could look to forge new relationships with other nations in order to provide an effective response to Trump’s tariffs. The US president imposed tariffs of 10% on UK imports. And business secretary Jonathan Reynolds told MPs that the Britain could retaliate with its own tariffs.

    But with Keir Starmer acting as a midwife to the far right through ushering in Nigel Farage and Reform in the UK, it’s unlikely they will properly stand up to Trump.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By James Wright

    This post was originally published on Canary.


  • This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by Radio Free Asia.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • As the US under Donald Trump’s leadership considers slapping tariffs on UK goods, a group of protestors from Fossil Free London gathered outside London’s US Embassy in Nine Elms, near Vauxhall in London:

    Just Stop Trump’s Oil!

    As the UK considers how to retaliate to these tariffs, campaigners encouraged the UK to ‘Unchain from Trump’ by stopping importing US fossil fuels at current rates. In 2023, US oil and gas made up 23.5% of all UK imports for fuels. Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the UK has become increasingly reliant on US liquified natural gas; making up a total of 26% of our imports for energy use.

    This growing reliance on the US leaves UK energy supplies exposed to Trump’s trade and tariff policies. Responding to the energy crisis of 2023, the International Energy Agency stressed “the transition to a more electrified, efficient, renewables-rich energy system will reduce overall exposure to fossil fuel price volatility”. Oil prices are at a five-week high in response to Trump’s ‘trade wars’.

    Campaigners assembled around a large placard depicting a British bulldog at the feet of a caricatured Trump and other placards read ‘Just Stop (importing Trump’s) Oil!’ and ‘Invest in homegrown renewables, Defund Trump’s oil machine’:

    Trump Tariffs protest Fossil Free London

    A Trump impersonator held up a storm trooper, in a nod to Trump’s use of federal forces to support his agenda during his last presidency:

    Protestors chanted ‘Tangerine in a toupee! We won’t buy Trump’s oil, no way!’

    Tariffs away!

    Robin Wells, director of Fossil Free London who was there at the protest, commented:

    Claims we have a special relationship with the USA are pure gaslighting right now. We’re being bullied by the USA and, as ever, our leaders are lapping it up.

    The only way we can shield ourselves from price shocks is by funding and growing our local renewable sources and that needs to start today. It’s a long term vision for what needs to happen but we need to Just Stop Trump’s Oil!

    That starts with building our storage and renewable capacity so that the UK can break free from this tangerine tyrant throwing his toys out of the pram, and from all the others who will be just like him in the future. The UK must unchain ourselves from the bully boy tactics of states gone rogue, and invest in a stable energy supply for our future.

    Featured image and additional images/video via Fossil Free London

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Australia will not negotiate with the Trump administration on domestic rules that force US tech companies to pay for Australian news, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Tuesday. It followed the Australian rules being flagged as US trade barriers to be monitored by a big tech friendly Trump administration, as it prepares sweeping tariffs globally…

    The post PM stares down US trade complaints on tech policy appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.