Friday, December 5, 2025

Maryland’s SNAP Time Bomb: Who Really Broke the System?

 


Maryland’s SNAP crisis isn’t federal bullying—it’s the price of years of sloppy management. When leaders ignore warning signs, taxpayers bleed. The state isn’t being punished; it’s finally being confronted by its own reflection.

I watched the news clip twice, maybe three times, just to make sure I wasn’t imagining the punchline. A food court is dark, cops moving across the tiles, and then the story pivots into a different kind of crime scene—one without sirens, without fingerprints, without caution tape. It’s the battle over SNAP benefits, the kind of bureaucratic street fight where nobody throws a punch, but everybody ends up bruised. And as I listened, I felt that familiar burn in my stomach, that sense that once again the people who play by the rules are the ones about to get played. In Maryland, the stakes are high, and the bill is even higher.

When the Trump administration announced it would withhold funding from Democrat-led states unless they handed over enrollment information, my first reaction was the same reaction many had across the state: here we go again. Washington wants answers. Annapolis wants autonomy. And caught in the crossfire are the families who depend on the SNAP card to turn hunger into dinner. But as the cameras rolled, one detail hit harder than all the political back-and-forth. Maryland didn’t just have a SNAP problem. Maryland had a mistake problem. A costly one.

The feds are cracking down on more than fraud—they’re cracking down on errors. The kind of mistakes that don’t involve someone gaming the system but involve the system gaming itself. Overpayments. Underpayments. Miscalculations. The dull, boring mistakes that somehow add up to hundreds of millions of dollars. And the kicker? By 2027, states with an error rate above 6 percent will have to pay part of the SNAP bill themselves. Maryland’s error rate? Nearly 14 percent. When I heard that number, I didn’t gasp. I didn’t blink. I just whispered to myself the oldest truth in public finance: the hole you refuse to fix is the hole that eventually swallows you.

Maryland taxpayers could be staring at an extra $240 million in costs because of that fourteen percent stumble. About $1.l6 billion dollars onto state SNAP cards, and 15 percent of that suddenly becomes Maryland’s problem. It’s like being told you need to pay for a car crash you weren’t even driving in. And everyone on that news broadcast delivered their lines with the same grim tone, as if the mess was so obvious, so predictable, that shock had long left the building.

But here’s the part that stings the most. This wasn’t a federal ambush. This wasn’t a surprise. This wasn’t even new. SNAP oversight problems have been festering for years in states across the country, and Maryland has been at the top of the error list long enough to know better. When taxpayer advocate David Williams said accountability was overdue, he wasn’t throwing shade—he was stating the weather report. The Governor Moore administration is already under fire for wasteful spending, and now the error rate becomes Exhibit A. I’ve seen this movie before, and the ending is never pretty. A house with broken windows eventually invites the wind inside.

Maryland is already juggling budget problems. Agencies struggling. Programs bleeding cash. And now taxpayers are bracing for a bigger hit. Families who rely on SNAP benefits aren’t sure what tomorrow looks like, while officials scramble to buy more time with promises of new staff, new training, new technology. I know a lot about  public policy to know that these sudden bursts of energy always show up right after the threat of punishment, never before. It’s like fixing the roof because the landlord is coming, not because the rain is.

What makes this story feel even heavier is that the SNAP fiasco isn’t a standalone disaster. A new report shows that 42 Maryland state offices spent a combined $8.5 billion dollars last year with minimal oversight. That’s not a red flag—that’s a red parade. The State Highway Administration alone had nearly $300 thousand dollars in questionable charges. And as I heard that number, I looked out my window, thinking of the potholes on roads that cost me two tires and one small piece of my sanity. It reminded me that money doesn’t just disappear; it wanders. And when money wanders in government, taxpayers always end up chasing it.

The irony hits hard: the federal government spent years footing the entire SNAP bill, yet state agencies behaved as if generosity meant immunity. But generosity without discipline becomes a trap. History proves that. When the Earned Income Tax Credit program saw its own error rates climb above 20 percent in the 1990s, Congress intervened with strict enforcement rules. Mistakes dropped. Compliance increased. The same happened when Medicare cracked down on improper billing: after the 2010 Fraud Prevention System was introduced, it saved more than $1.5 billion dollars in three years, according to federal reports. Oversight is not punishment. Oversight is the parent who finally walks into the room after hearing too much noise.

As I sift through the details, I can’t help thinking about the families who get caught in the crosshairs of political theater. They’re not the ones calculating error rates. They’re not the ones approving budgets. They’re not the ones submitting reports with the confidence of people whose paperwork will never be audited. They’re standing at the edge of a cliff, waiting for the wind to decide which way their benefits will fall. Meanwhile, the rest of us—the taxpayers—are gripping the rail, hoping the state doesn’t slip again, because when the elephant falls, it is the grass that suffers.

And yet, the solution to this mess is painfully simple. Be responsible with taxpayer money. Fix the errors. Tighten the oversight. Do what should have been done years ago. It shouldn’t take a federal threat to make a state take itself seriously. Accountability isn’t punishment; it’s maintenance. And maintenance delayed becomes maintenance that costs $240 million dollars.

As I turn off the news, I think of Maryland as a car speeding down the highway with the check-engine light blinking for miles. The driver kept going, hoping the light would magically turn off. But lights don’t turn off on their own. Engines don’t heal themselves. Governments don’t correct mistakes they refuse to admit. Maryland has reached the point where denial is no longer a shield but a mirror. The truth is staring back, loud and unblinking.

And now the bill is due.

 

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

How Your “Keyless” Car Became a Criminal’s Playground

 


Your car’s biggest enemy isn’t a thief with a crowbar—it’s a hacker with a signal booster. Keyless convenience has become a trap, and this book is the survival manual automakers hoped you’d never read.

Cars were meant to usher in comfort, not chaos. They promised convenience, status, and a sense of control—press a button, tap a handle, walk away feeling invincible. Instead, they opened a battlefield no one asked for. A silent one. A clean one. A war where the enemy doesn’t break windows, doesn’t hot-wire ignitions, and doesn’t even touch the keys hanging by your front door. That is the unsettling truth Dr. Joseph Ejike Ojih, an adjunct professor at Morgan State University, peels open in “Gone in 60 Seconds Again.”

What he argues—quietly, sharply, unforgivingly—is that the machines built to secure us have turned against us, not through malice, but through weakness. And criminals? They smelled that weakness before the engineers did.

The author dissects incentives the same way a detective dissects a crime scene. Thieves don’t ram doors or smash glass anymore because they don’t have to. Antennas extend the reach of your key fob. Tablets coax onboard computers into trusting impostors. Signal boosters whisper digital lies that cars blindly believe. It isn’t magic. It’s math—cold, brutal, efficient. In suburbs from Maryland to Manchester, relay attackers glide through neighborhoods like shadows with Wi-Fi breath, coaxing sleeping vehicles awake and rolling them out like obedient pets.

And just like the mercenaries of old who fought without fighting, these modern bandits exploit the system because the system pays them to. Why wrestle with steering columns when microchips surrender faster? Why sprint from alarms when alarms don’t bark? Criminals keep their hands clean, their risks minimal, and their profits high. All they need is a quiet driveway and a distracted owner who trusts their car a little too much.

Some models fall more often than others—not because of fate but because of physics. Some fobs shout louder than they should. Some computer modules accept strangers with embarrassing eagerness. A few brands might as well leave their digital doors ajar with a welcome mat rolled out. And people cling to the fantasy that “nice neighborhoods” are force fields, that crime checks ZIP codes before striking. Dr. Ojih laughs at that illusion without ever raising his voice.

But this book does not merely trace the arc of criminal ingenuity; it punctures your assumptions, then hands you a battle plan. It explains how key-fob signals behave, why rolling codes sometimes fail, and how thieves manipulate the electromagnetic weak spots most drivers never knew they had. It strips away the Hollywood theatrics and shows theft for what it now is: a software problem disguised as a hardware crime.

In these pages, knowledge becomes weaponry. Awareness becomes armor. Readers are shown how simple, almost embarrassingly simple, moves can tilt the odds. Park differently. Store differently. Think differently. Because the thieves are not slowing down, and the global rings shipping out stolen SUVs before sunrise aren’t losing sleep over sentimental owners. They evolve. They collaborate. They treat the world like an open-air auction where your vehicle is just another item on the block.

Across the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Germany, and France, Dr. Ojih tracks how this cancer spreads through cities that thought they were too sophisticated, too modern, too well-engineered to fall victim. Relay squads sweep blocks in minutes. Hackers hijack onboard computers faster than a driver can microwave leftovers. SUVs vanish from driveways without footprints or fingerprints, swept into overseas shipping crates where they will live a second life far from the people who paid for them. It is a global hunt, and the prey rarely hears the predator coming.

If the book stopped there, it would be terrifying. But it doesn’t. It pivots, teaching you to see the angles thieves see, to spot the gaps they crawl through. It shows how to strip away the illusions manufacturers wrap around their marketing. Thieves adapt, but so can you. A locked mind is easier to steal from than a locked car, the book seems to whisper, letting the warning simmer beneath the surface.

What emerges is neither despair nor paranoia, but something leaner, sharper: clarity. The kind of clarity that makes you step into your garage differently, listen to your car differently, trust your instincts more than the salesman who swore the system was unbreakable. Drivers who finish this book leave with a new spine: stronger, more alert, unwilling to play victim in a game rigged against the unaware.

If you own a keyless car—and at this point, nearly everyone does—then this is not a casual read. It is not comfort food. It is a manual for survival in a world where crime no longer wears ski masks. These days, it carries antennas.

“Gone in 60 Seconds Again” clocks in at 95 pages, but the weight it carries—6.2 ounces or not—lands heavier than many books three times its size. It is Book 71 in the Brief Books Series, but it punches like a standalone wake-up call. Compact, direct, unblinking.

Cars may be getting smarter. Thieves already are. And this book reminds you that standing still is not an option.

 

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Santa Didn’t Get Hacked—You Did

 


Holiday scams aren’t scams anymore—they’re AI-driven ambushes waiting for your next click. Trust nothing. Shop slowly. Or watch your identity vanish like snow in fire.

The first time I realized Christmas had grown teeth was when I opened my inbox and saw an email from “Amazon” offering me a 90% discount on a TV I wasn’t even shopping for. The logo looked perfect. The colors matched. The deal felt like a warm cookie pulled straight from the oven. But something in me twitched. A shadow. A whisper. A warning. It was the kind of feeling you get when the guy in the alley smiles too wide. And that’s when it hit me. The holiday Grinch wasn’t stealing gifts anymore. He was stealing identities—and he had upgraded to artificial intelligence.

That’s the new battlefield we’re fighting on. A digital Wild West where the cowboys don’t ride horses—they ride algorithms. And trust me, the AI gunslingers aren’t missing.

NordVPN dropped the first bomb: fake eBay sites shooting up by more than 500 percent in October alone. Fake Amazon and other major shopping sites climbing beyond 200 percent, spreading like some kind of cyber plague. These aren’t sloppy scams with bad grammar and pixelated clip art. These things look legit enough to fool the devil. You could stare at them for a full minute and swear you’re standing inside Bezos’s living room.

Cybersecurity expert Morgan Wright tried to explain it on TV, but let’s be honest: you could feel the panic leaking through the screen. He said the old email scams—the Nigerian prince offering you millions—are ancient history now. A joke. A relic. Something you tell your kids about around the campfire. The new crooks are smarter, quicker, and more polished than a Wall Street banker on bonus day. They use AI to write the emails, build the sites, and design the traps. They don’t just fool your eyes—they fool your instincts.

And Gen Z? The digital natives? Forty-two percent of scam victims in 2025 were aged eighteen to twenty-nine. The very people who brag about being tech-savvy, who think they can smell danger through a touch screen. Turns out the scammers know those same kids shop fast, scroll faster, and trust anything wrapped in an aesthetic TikTok bow. The irony tastes like burnt popcorn. The generation raised online is now the ripest fruit for digital harvest.

Morgan made a point that stuck with me. He said defenses used to be easy because scams were hard to pull off. Now it has flipped. Scammers have AI tools so simple and so cheap that anyone with a grudge and a laptop can build a fake Amazon site before lunchtime. AI used to be rocket science; now it’s Christmas décor for crooks. Everyone’s using it—including chart-topping country artists and bored teenagers making synthetic pop songs in their bedrooms. If a kid in pajamas can generate a radio hit in two minutes, imagine what a criminal with no conscience can do.

And it’s not just holiday season anymore. These fake sites move early. October. The moment pumpkin spice hits the shelves. That’s when the wolves start hunting. They know the shopping season starts then. They know people start clicking before thinking. Morgan said something his military friends loved to repeat: slow is smooth, smooth is fast. In other words, breathe. Don’t storm the beaches of Normandy every time you see a flashing discount banner.

But here’s the problem. Humans don’t slow down. Not in the age of one-click buying and same-day delivery. We are addicted to speed. We shop like we’re racing ghosts. And scammers know it. They count on it. They build traps in the cracks of our impulse.

History doesn’t lie. Americans lost billions to online fraud in the early 2020s, and the slope never flattened. It shot up like a fever. People thought the warnings were scare tactics. People thought they were too smart to fall for anything fake. People thought the world still made sense. And then deepfake voices started duping CEOs, tricking them into sending out money because the AI mimicked their boss’s speech pattern down to the throat clearing. That was four years ago. Four lifetimes ago in tech time. If AI could fool a Fortune 500 executive then, what chance does a tired parent have clicking through Christmas deals at 1 a.m.?

So here I am, typing, thinking, watching my own credit card statement like it’s a hostage situation. Every transaction gets a glare. Every email gets a side-eye. I type Amazon into the browser myself now. I treat QR codes like radioactive material. I’m the kind of person who used to laugh at people who said “technology is dangerous.” Now I’m wondering if I should start shopping with cash and a prayer.

Morgan joked that he clicked a suspicious link himself and is still waiting to see if his order shows up. That’s when it hit me. If the experts are slipping, the rest of us are skating on thin ice, blindfolded, with fireworks strapped to our backs.

The truth is ugly, and I won’t sugarcoat it. The scammer on the other side of the screen doesn’t have to break into your house. He doesn’t have to pick a lock or wear a mask. He just needs you to move too fast. He just needs you to trust your eyes. He just needs you to believe that your inbox is still safe. When it isn’t.

And that’s why I’m here writing this, sounding like an ex-cop who’s seen too much. Because I have seen too much. Because I’ve watched the world slip into a digital trance where people think convenience is the same as safety. It isn’t. A smooth road can still lead to a cliff.

So slow down. Look twice. Question everything with a pulse—or a processor. Because Santa isn’t the one sneaking into your life this year. The thief doesn’t come down the chimney anymore. He comes through your email, wearing a smile, waving a discount, and whispering, “Click here.”

And the next thing you know, it’s not presents you’re unwrapping on Christmas morning.

It’s consequences.

 

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Brazil’s Black Consciousness Month: The Month Brazil Finally Looked in the Mirror

 

                       Source: The Economist

Brazil’s new Black November isn’t culture—it’s confession. A nation built on five million enslaved Africans is finally staring into the mirror, and the reflection is louder, darker, and more honest than ever.

I didn’t need to book a flight to know something strange was happening in Brazil. You could feel it from a distance, like a drumbeat traveling across the Atlantic, steady and echoing with old bones. I was reading through the news when the story hit me: Brazil had turned November into “Black Consciousness Month.” Not a theme week. Not a cultural day. A full-blown national reckoning carved into the calendar like a scar finally exposed to the light.

For a country that once treated November as just another month, this was a plot twist years in the making. Suddenly November twentieth—the day in 1695 when Zumbi dos Palmares was hunted down, decapitated, and displayed like a warning—became a federal holiday. Not to celebrate conquest, but to honor the man who led the greatest settlement of runaway slaves in world history. Palmares sheltered twenty thousand people and stood for nearly a century. It took the Portuguese that long to break it. If you listen closely, you can still hear what it meant: enslaved people built a nation within a nation, and the nation that conquered them never forgot, even if it pretended to.

Brazil is now done pretending. And trust me, that shift is seismic.

The census numbers alone sparked debates hotter than Rio asphalt. For the first time since records began, more Brazilians identified as black or brown than white. In the 1940s almost two-thirds claimed whiteness. Now? Even wealthy families with porcelain skin are digging through family archives, praying a black ancestor will jump out like a lottery ticket. Some call it guilt. Some call it pride. I call it a country waking up, blinking into the sunlight, and finally admitting the mirror has been lying to it for centuries.

Afro-Brazilian religions have exploded. Followers of candomblé and umbanda tripled between 2010 and 2022. That’s not a trend. That’s a spiritual jailbreak. And then came the kicker: in 2023, more tourists chose to visit “Little Africa,” a scruffy, colorful Rio neighborhood that gave birth to samba, than the statue of Christ the Redeemer. Samba beating Jesus in tourism? That’s a plot twist even Hollywood wouldn’t gamble on.

And yet, beneath the celebrations, a darker story keeps whispering. Brazil imported 5 million enslaved Africans, more than any other nation in history. Five million people survived the Middle Passage only to build the sugar, gold, cotton, and coffee empires that made Brazil rich. America brought in about 400,000 by comparison. You can’t carry a past that heavy without your spine bending, and Brazil bent until it almost snapped.

For decades, the country buried its slave history so deep even the ghosts had trouble finding it. Until workers preparing the 2016 Rio Olympics stumbled onto Valongo Wharf—the largest slave port the world has ever known. They found conches used as money, amulets, and bones in the dirt. A million Africans stepped into Brazil at that dock, their ankles bruised, their names stripped, their futures sold. Some of the ships carrying them had names like Charity and Happy Destination. Sometimes history mocks you in ways that make your teeth ache.

And then there were the mass graves. Under a regular home, builders found the bones of tens of thousands of enslaved Africans, dumped and burned to make space for more bodies. You read that kind of thing and realize injustice isn’t just written in books—it’s written in the ground.

Yet Brazilians once sold themselves the myth of racial harmony. No civil war, no segregation laws, lots of interracial families—so it must all be fine. But data doesn’t lie. In 2021 black workers earned only about 60 percent of what white workers earned, a number that has barely moved since 1986. Less than half of black adults finish high school. And in 2024, 83 percent of people killed by police were black.

An old proverb says the river never forgets the stone that broke its flow. Brazil is that river, and its history is full of stones. Then there’s Lula—loved by some, hated by others, but impossible to ignore. He didn’t just look toward Africa; he practically sprinted. During his early years in power he opened nineteen embassies on the continent, led trade missions, and raised Brazil-Africa trade from under five billion dollars in 2002 to twenty-six billion in 2012. He once told African leaders, “We want to give back what you gave us in the form of workforce for 350 years.” That’s the kind of line that makes diplomats choke on their water—but it hit like truth wrapped in politics.

And now he’s back, pushing the same bridge-building. Brazil’s agricultural scientists are sharing drought-resistant crops with African nations. Nigerian businessmen are importing Brazilian cattle and even bovine embryos. Embrapa, Brazil’s agricultural research giant, has so many partnership requests it can’t keep up.

But inside Brazil, the question remains: does all this celebration and diplomacy change the streets? Ana-Paula Escarlate, a guide in Little Africa, put it bluntly: “The majority of people in favelas, prisons, and who are homeless are black. It’s not a coincidence.” She’s right. You don’t need a holiday to see the truth. You just need eyes.

Still, something real is happening. A country that once hid its African roots is now braiding them into the national story. A country that once ran from its past is finally turning around.

History may be messy, but a buried truth is a seed, and seeds crack open even the hardest earth. Brazil didn’t dig up the past by accident. The past dug up Brazil.

 

Friday, November 21, 2025

Elon Musk’s Law: The Robotic Fantasy That Falls Apart When the Lights Come On

 

Elon Musk sells a future without work or money, but robots require supervision, systems break, scarcity survives, and money outlives every miracle. His “post-money” paradise is just communism wrapped in steel.

I sat with Musk’s words for a moment—“work will be optional” and “money will be irrelevant”—and they hit me the way a bright neon sign hits a man walking into a dark alley. It blinds first, dazzles second, then reveals absolutely nothing behind it. It sounded good on paper, clean like a manifesto drafted in a quiet room by someone who knows the world mainly through spreadsheets, simulations, and stainless-steel dreams. But that is the problem. Communism also sounded good on paper. And we all know how ugly the application became—breadlines, fear, empty shelves, and a mass of ordinary people crushed under a promise that never matched reality. Musk’s version is the same fantasy wearing a shinier suit.

He says work will be optional in ten to twenty years because robots will handle the heavy stuff. I almost laughed. Even if every factory, office, and street corner is swarming with robots and AI systems, someone still has to watch them. Supervising machines is not optional any more than watching a toddler with scissors is optional. You don’t get to wander off. Machines fail, and they fail spectacularly. The Boeing 737 Max crashes—born partly from automated system errors—killed 346 people and showed the world what happens when humans trust machines too much. That is not optional work. That is survival.

Then there is the cold truth AI engineers whisper when the cameras are off: AI makes mistakes like it’s being paid to. Every LLM hallucination, every misclassified image, every faulty robotic movement, every software bug—those errors don’t fix themselves. Someone has to correct them. Someone has to retrain them. Someone has to update them. That is labor. That is work. And pretending it can be turned off like a video game is either naïve or reckless.

And I haven’t even started yet. Even in Musk’s fantasy world, robots have to be built. They need raw materials. They need parts. They need cooling systems and electricity. They need engineers, programmers, safety inspectors, cybersecurity teams, and technicians who crawl into tight places with a wrench and a prayer. Try telling any of those people that their work is “optional” and watch the expression on their face. Even when Amazon introduced warehouse robots, the company hired more humans because robots create more complexity, not less. That’s the irony Musk doesn’t talk about: automation expands work; it doesn’t erase it.

Now let’s talk money—the part where Musk’s dream drifts into full-blown science fiction. “Money will stop being relevant,” he says. My first instinct was to check if this was satire. Money is not just paper or digits. Money is the social glue that allows humans to exchange value without chaos. Nature itself runs on exchange. Energy for survival. Effort for reward. You eat because you exchanged something for something. Nothing in nature gets a free ride except parasites, and even they eventually get hunted down.

If Musk truly believes money will vanish because robots make everything abundant, then he misunderstands the entire point of economics. Abundance does not erase scarcity; it shifts it. Even if robots produced a mountain of goods, someone controls the robots. Someone owns the infrastructure. Someone owns the land the factories sit on. Someone owns the energy grid. And ownership is power. Power demands exchange. Exchange requires value. Value requires money. The idea that robots can delete money is like believing smartphones can delete hunger. It is sweet, hopeful, and hopelessly false.

Look at history. When the printing press was invented, people said books would become so abundant that education would equalize across all of society. Instead, information became the new currency, and those who controlled it became the new elite. When electricity arrived, some believed it would bring universal comfort. Instead, energy became the most fought-over resource on earth, triggering wars, cartels, and entire national strategies. When the internet exploded, some claimed it would democratize opportunity. Instead, data became the new oil, and a handful of companies—ironically including Musk’s friends—became trillion-dollar giants.

Robots and AI will follow the same pattern. They will not erase money; they will make it more powerful. Ask yourself: if robots produce unlimited goods, who sets the price? Who manages distribution? Who owns the robots? Who maintains the network? Who controls access? Even in Star Trek—Musk’s favorite utopia—resources were still allocated by hierarchy, and scarcity existed everywhere outside the Federation. He skipped that part.

Let me give you something practical. You want food? You pay for seeds, storage, electricity, distribution, land, water, transportation. Robots don’t change that; they complicate it. You want healthcare? You pay for machines, drugs, technicians, power, research, maintenance. Robots don’t change that; they raise the cost of failure. You want a house? You still need land. Land is finite. Robots don’t create more land. They don’t negotiate with zoning boards. They don’t make political fights disappear. In Musk’s world, money doesn’t vanish—it becomes sharper.

And the biggest flaw in Musk’s fantasy is the same flaw that destroyed every utopian dream before it: humans. We don’t live like machines. We compete. We desire. We hoard. We envy. We compare. We fight for advantage. The moment you suggest money is irrelevant, someone will invent a new form of currency—status, access, influence, rarity, land, power, identity. The currency changes; the system doesn’t.

That’s why Musk’s vision feels like communism with Wi-Fi—a promise of freedom built on a foundation of illusions. The world doesn’t run on dreams. It runs on incentives, value, effort, and consequence. You can automate work, but you cannot automate human nature.

And maybe that’s the twist Musk didn’t expect. AI won’t make money irrelevant. It will make it matter even more. Because when machines handle the labor, the only thing left to fight over will be who owns the machines.

 

Thursday, November 20, 2025

“Peace” or Surrender Manual? Why the American-Russian “Deal” on Ukraine Looks Like a Russian Wish-List

 

This “peace deal” is a Russian trap in American clothing—designed to disarm Ukraine, reward Putin, and sabotage Europe if anyone is foolish enough to sign it. If the world wants real peace, it must demand a deal built on sovereignty, not submission; on equality, not coercion; on justice, not fear. Until then, any document like this belongs where it came from—the scrap pile of failed attempts to dress capitulation as compromise.

I won’t sugarcoat it, because the moment demands blunt honesty. This so-called American-Russian plan to “end” the war in Ukraine is not a peace proposal. It is a political landmine wrapped in diplomatic ribbon, a document so lopsided it might as well have come straight from the Kremlin printer with an American postage stamp slapped on top. When Steve Witkoff, President Trump’s ‘errand boy’,  and Vladimir Putin’s envoy Kirill Dmitriev sat down to draft a 28-point plan without Ukraine’s knowledge, they didn’t design a roadmap for peace—they wrote a surrender manual. And they expected Ukraine to sign it while fighting off invasion and enduring a corruption scandal designed to weaken its political muscles. If that isn’t geopolitical opportunism dressed up as diplomacy, I don’t know what is.

When I read that Ukraine would be forced to slash its military to 40 percent of its current size while Russia gets to keep every boot standing, it reminded me of the old saying that a farmer who sharpens only one blade before a duel already knows who he wants to win. This deal disarms Ukraine while letting Russia pose for victory photos. That alone exposes the plan’s core intent. But the proposal goes further, demanding that Ukraine cede more territory beyond what Russia already occupies illegally, ban long-range weapons that could deter future attacks, keep foreign troops out, stop foreign diplomats from flying into Ukraine, restore a pro-Kremlin church that Ukraine dissolved for espionage concerns, and declare Russian a second state language. In other words, Russia gets land, leverage, language, and spiritual influence—Ukraine loses sovereignty, security, and the ability to breathe politically. This is not a peace offer; this is Moscow ordering from a menu and expecting Kyiv to pay the bill.

The dangerous irony is that Russia hasn’t earned these terms on the battlefield. Analysts note that Moscow has not made a major breakthrough since 2022, meaning Ukraine is bloodied but not broken. History teaches us that peace deals forced on nations that have not actually lost wars only plant the seeds for more conflict. Think of the Munich Agreement in 1938, when European leaders handed Hitler the Sudetenland hoping it would “preserve peace.” Instead, it became the appetizer before a much darker main course. This Witkoff-Dmitriev document has the same bitter aroma: concessions now, disaster later.

The timing is too convenient to ignore. The proposal was presented the very moment Zelensky faced his worst political crisis since the war began. It feels like someone threw a drowning man an anchor instead of a lifeline. Sources in Ukraine worry that American actors are exploiting a corruption scandal to push Kyiv into a corner. And considering that Witkoff reportedly walked into the discussions without understanding the political firestorm he was entering, it raises the suspicion that his role may be more messenger than mastermind—someone carrying a trial balloon designed to embarrass or pressure Zelensky, even if unintentionally.

This tactic isn’t new. The playbook of pressuring Ukraine during moments of internal crisis has been Russia’s signature move since at least 2014. During Euromaidan, during the annexation of Crimea, during the breakdown of the Minsk agreements—each time Russia advanced when Ukraine was consumed by internal strain. And every time Ukraine accepted a “compromise,” Russia treated it as a down payment, not a settlement. That is why this proposal is so dangerous: it assumes Russia negotiates in good faith, when history repeatedly shows the opposite.

Look closely and you’ll see a strategic trap. If Ukraine accepts troop reductions, Russia gains a permanent military advantage. If Ukraine accepts territorial losses, Russia gets a legal stamp on illegal conquest. If Ukraine allows the Russian Orthodox Church back in, Russia regains an internal propaganda pipeline. If Ukraine restores the Russian language to state status, Russia regains a cultural foothold used in the past to justify interventions under the excuse of “protecting Russian speakers.” When the fox writes the rules for the henhouse, peace is just another word for dinnertime.

Europe cannot stand on the sidelines here. Ukrainian containment has become a pillar of European security because every kilometer Russia seizes pushes its shadow deeper into Europe. If Ukraine is forced into a weak, disarmed, neutralized buffer state, Russia doesn’t stop—it reloads. European history screams this truth across centuries: unchecked aggression never freezes; it spreads. One only needs to recall that after Russia invaded Georgia in 2008 and faced no real consequences, Ukraine became the next target. If this deal passes, Moldova and the Baltics may hear Russia’s footsteps next.

There is also an economic angle the plan’s authors conveniently ignore. Ukraine has already seen millions displaced, thousands of businesses destroyed, and major infrastructure damage since 2022. To impose further territorial and military losses on top of that is to engineer a failed state. A weakened, fractured Ukraine would destabilize Europe’s energy routes, agricultural supply chains, and migration flows. The cost of that instability would fall heavily on Europe, not Russia.

The creators of this deal must know that no Ukrainian president could survive signing such a document. It would be political suicide. And perhaps that’s the goal: to make Zelensky look unreasonable if he refuses terms designed to humiliate him. But the Ukrainian people have shown since 2014 that they will not trade freedom for a cease-fire. They understand that a bad peace can be worse than war because it sets the stage for a larger, deadlier conflict.

That is why this plan must be rejected loudly, publicly, and without polite diplomacy. It is not a peace plan; it is a blueprint for future war. It rewards aggression, punishes the victim, and assigns America the role of co-author in Ukraine’s surrender. To accept it would be to hand Putin a victory he has not earned and cannot be allowed to claim.

If the world wants real peace, it must demand a deal built on sovereignty, not submission; on equality, not coercion; on justice, not fear. Until then, any document like this belongs where it came from—the scrap pile of failed attempts to dress capitulation as compromise.

 

Sunday, November 16, 2025

The Light That Fights Back: How I Learned Winter Doesn’t Always Win

 


Bright light isn’t just a mood trick—it’s beating winter depression, outperforming meds, and exposing how darkness controls us only when we surrender. The sun isn’t coming to save you, but your lamp might.

I have always believed winter carries its own kind of cruelty. The darkness doesn’t just fall; it seeps. It crawls into the corners of the room, sits on your chest, and whispers things you don’t want to hear. When the nights get too long and the mornings barely show their face, you start to feel like the sun is ghosting you on purpose. People call it seasonal affective disorder, but on the street we just call it “the slump,” the moment when your mind feels like the power company cut your lights without warning. And the more I dug into this thing, the more I realized that a lot of people are stuck in the same dim place. Studies suggest nearly a tenth of people in high-latitude countries get hit with this winter depression every year, and that’s not counting the folks who never walk into a clinic to get a name for what’s eating them.

I remember reading how scientists still can’t fully explain what causes it. Maybe the body makes too much melatonin in the dark months, pulling you toward sleep like a magnet. Maybe serotonin drops too low, flattening your mood like a tire after a long night on a bad road. Maybe the circadian clock—the one buried deep inside you—is just tired of being knocked around by sunrises that come late and sunsets that come early. Whatever the reason, antidepressants help some people, but they bring their own demons. Side effects chase them around like unwanted shadows. And so more and more people go searching for something cleaner, something simpler. They reach for light.

Light therapy. It sounds almost mystical until you realize there’s nothing mystical about craving brightness when the world feels too dim. Doctors often recommend these gadgets as a first-line treatment for SAD. You’ve probably seen them—lamps that look innocent enough, glowing white or blue or green, claiming they can bring back the sun in a plastic frame. Some people swear by the 10,000 lux lamps, bragging they can blast your senses with the force of a decent summer noon. But here’s the twist: the research says intensity isn’t the magic number the ads promise. Lower light works too, as long as you give it time.

That was the part that caught my attention. Because life rarely gives you shortcuts, even when the commercials tell you otherwise. Sometimes you just need consistency, not fireworks. And the evidence backing light therapy didn’t come from hype men or late-night infomercials. A review published last year by Tu Zhe-Ming and his team at the Jingzhou Mental Health Centre looked at 21 studies and concluded the stuff really works. Another review just months ago—this one led by Mihaela Bucuta from Lucian Blaga University—said 60% to 90% of patients saw their symptoms melt away after steady daily use. Those aren’t soft numbers. Those are the kind of numbers that make you sit up and think maybe the sun doesn’t have to be overseas for half the year for you to feel human.

What struck me next was how researchers didn’t stop there. They’ve been asking another question: if light helps SAD, can it help depression in general? Turns out the answer is leaning toward yes. Bucuta’s review said that for other forms of depression, light therapy alone improves about 44% of cases. Combine it with antidepressants and the number jumps to 76%. That’s not fringe science—that’s real-world change. And the history backs it up. Back in the 1980s, when SAD was first studied in the United States at the National Institute of Mental Health, the earliest trials showed dramatic improvements when patients sat in front of bright lamps for just a few days. Multiple follow-up studies through the 1990s and 2000s confirmed light therapy consistently outperformed placebo conditions, even though controlling for “fake light” in trials was notoriously difficult. Yet despite the messy methods, the consistent pattern held: people got better.

I couldn’t ignore the statistics. In 2020, a meta-analysis in the American Journal of Psychiatry reported that light therapy showed effectiveness comparable to some antidepressants in non-seasonal depression. In Canada, where winters feel like they last a decade, public health agencies have recommended light therapy for years for people struggling with winter mood drops. Even in Nordic countries, which practically live inside darkness half the year, light rooms—spaces flooded with bright artificial illumination—are used as community tools for improving mental clarity during long dark stretches.

And the side effects? Barely a ripple. A mild headache here, a little eye irritation there. No laundry list of warnings, no whispered caution about addiction, no need to brace yourself for a dozen “rare but serious” problems. In a world where almost every cure seems to come with a catch, this one feels different. Clean. Almost too clean, like a deal you’re afraid to trust until you read it twice.

But here’s the part that really pulls you in: the idea that a simple lamp could help people climb out of a place so dark they can’t even see their own hope. Because depression doesn’t hit softly. It lands like concrete. And for many people—millions, based on global estimates—antidepressants alone don’t get the job done. The World Health Organization reports that more than 280 million people worldwide live with depression, and almost a third don’t respond fully to medication. Science keeps pointing back to the same message: no single tool solves everything, but combining tools can move mountains.

So imagine someone sitting at their kitchen table in January, feeling like the walls are closing in. Their thoughts slow. Their energy leaks. Their motivation falls to the floor and refuses to stand up. Then imagine they switch on a lamp that looks like nothing special, and over days or weeks, the fog begins to thin. It isn’t magic. It isn’t instant. But it’s something. A slow sunrise, built with human hands.

That’s the real story here. Winter may try to swallow us whole, but humans have a habit of fighting back with whatever light they can find. That’s what the research is saying. That’s what patients are saying. And that’s what I’ve come to believe: sometimes the way out of the darkness doesn’t require a miracle. Sometimes it just requires a lamp, a little patience, and the stubborn belief that gloom doesn’t get the last word.

 

Maryland’s SNAP Time Bomb: Who Really Broke the System?

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