Sunday, April 5, 2026

Drums, Dogma, and Defiance: Africa’s Takeover of the Catholic Church Has Begun

 


Catholicism is slipping out of Rome’s hands as Africa explodes in faith and power—rewriting rules, resisting authority, and turning the world’s biggest Church into a restless, unpredictable force.

I have never stepped foot in Kinshasa. I have never sat inside one of those whitewashed churches rising above tin roofs. I am not reporting from the ground. I am a college professor, a writer, and a Catholic trying to make sense of a church that is shifting under my feet. But I do not need to be there to see what is happening. The evidence is loud, global, and impossible to ignore.

Something is changing—and it is not subtle.

Catholicism, for centuries, carried the scent of Europe. Rome spoke, and the world listened. Doctrine flowed in one direction. Culture was something to be managed, sometimes tolerated, but rarely allowed to lead. That era is cracking. And Africa is the hammer.

In places like Kinshasa, the faith does not whisper. It sings, it drums, it dances. The so-called “Zairean rite” is not just a liturgical experiment—it is a declaration. It says that Catholicism is no longer owned by Europe. It says the gospel can wear African clothes and still be the gospel. That alone would be enough to shake the old order. But the real story is deeper, and far more unsettling.

The numbers are brutal. Around 1900, Africans made up roughly 1% of the world’s Catholics. Today, that number has exploded. By 2025, Africa is home to about 270 million Catholics—roughly 20% of the global church. Projections suggest that by 2066, nearly 50% of all Catholics could be African. That is not growth. That is a demographic earthquake.

Meanwhile, Europe is fading. In countries like France and Germany, Mass attendance has dropped sharply over the past few decades, often hovering in the low teens or worse. In some regions, churches that once defined entire communities now stand half-empty or converted into museums and cafés. When the roots dry up, the tree begins to lean. And right now, the tree is leaning south.

But Africa is not just filling empty seats. It is reshaping the entire atmosphere of the church.

There is an energy in African Catholicism that the West has lost. Emmanuel Katongole, a a Ugandan priest and theologian, called it “vitality, energy and dynamism.” That is polite language. What I see is urgency. People who believe. People who show up. People who do not treat faith like a weekend option but like oxygen. And that matters, because belief is not just about doctrine—it is about momentum. That momentum is now spilling beyond Africa’s borders. African priests are being sent to Europe and North America to fill gaps left by declining vocations. The irony is sharp. The same continents that once sent missionaries to Africa are now receiving them. It is history flipping itself on its head.

Globally, there are about 455,000 Christian missionaries, with roughly 30% being Catholic. A growing share of those are African. Some are officially sent. Others are migrants who carry their faith with them, building communities wherever they land. Catholicism is no longer just expanding—it is reversing direction. The hunter has become the hunted; the teacher is now the student.

But here is where the story begins to change. Africa is not just energizing Catholicism—it is transforming  it. On issues of doctrine, African Catholic leaders are among the most conservative in the world. When the Vatican in 2023 allowed priests to bless same-sex couples under certain conditions, African bishops pushed back hard. Not politely. Not quietly. Forcefully enough that Rome had to grant them an effective opt-out. That is not a small disagreement. That is a fracture.

At the same time, Africa introduces its own complications. On polygamy, for example, some African bishops have suggested a more inclusive approach, recognizing the realities of their societies. That puts them at odds with long-standing Catholic teaching on marriage. So what do we have? A church that is stricter than Rome in some areas and more flexible in others. This is causing tension across continents.

And tension is growing. Africa’s influence is rising fast, but its representation in the Vatican’s inner circle is still limited. Africans make up only about 12% of cardinals under the age of 80—the group that elects the pope. That imbalance cannot hold forever. As the numbers shift, so will the power. Some already believe that an African pope is not a question of “if,” but “when.” If that happens, Catholicism will not just look different. It will think differently.

But even without that, Africa is already reshaping the church in ways that go beyond theology. In many African countries, the Catholic Church is not just a religious institution—it is a social and political force. It runs schools, hospitals, and charities on a massive scale. In fact, about 1 in 9 primary school students in Africa attends a Catholic school. That is not symbolic influence. That is structural power. In places like the Democratic Republic of Congo, the church often acts as a mediator in political conflicts, monitors elections, and pushes for democratic reforms. It fills gaps left by weak or failing states. That gives it credibility—but also risk. When you stand in the middle of the road, you get hit from both sides.

Critics say the church sometimes does not go far enough in challenging authoritarian regimes. Others say it goes too far and becomes entangled in politics. Either way, it is no longer neutral.

And as it grows, it will face the same problems that have plagued the church elsewhere. Questions about financial transparency are already surfacing. The issue of sexual abuse, while less prominent in Africa so far, will not remain invisible forever as scrutiny increases. Growth brings attention. Attention brings accountability.

Still, none of this changes the central fact. Africa is changing Catholicism—and not in a polite, controlled way. The church is becoming less Eurocentric, yes. But it is also becoming more unpredictable, more fragmented, and more difficult to govern. Authority is no longer flowing cleanly from Rome outward. It is being challenged, negotiated, and sometimes ignored.

Agbonkhianmeghe Orobator  of the Jesuit School of Theology of Santa Clara University in California.  described a future where the church becomes a “constellation of peripheries.” That sounds elegant. But let me be blunt: that kind of structure is messy. It means multiple centers of influence. It means competing interpretations. It means a church that must constantly balance unity and diversity without breaking apart.

That is not stability. That is controlled disorder. But maybe that is the price of survival.

Because the alternative is worse. A shrinking, aging, irrelevant church locked in its past. Africa is not letting that happen. It is dragging Catholicism into a new reality—loudly, forcefully, and without asking permission.

And as a Catholic watching this unfold, I cannot pretend it is all comfortable. It is not. It challenges assumptions. It disrupts traditions. It raises hard questions about authority, doctrine, and identity. But it is real. And right now, reality is moving south.

The drums are getting louder. And Rome can either learn to listen—or be drowned out.

 

For readers interested in a separate line of thought, the titles in my “Brief Book Series” are available on Google Play. Read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

An Easter Miracle: Hunted in Iran, the Missing U.S. Airman is Now Rescued by America


The mountains almost swallowed him, Iran almost claimed him—but America ripped him back; blink once in war, and you don’t get rescued, you get erased.

“This is an Easter miracle.” That’s the only way I can say it without lying to myself.

Because let’s call it what it really was. A man fell out of the sky at nearly 200 meters per second squared, slammed into hostile ground, and woke up in a country that wanted him dead. Not captured. Not questioned. Dead. That’s not survival—that’s a countdown.

And yet, somehow, he lived.

When Donald Trump blasted out “WE GOT HIM!” in the early hours of Sunday, it wasn’t just another loud political victory lap. It was a signal flare in the dark: the man they were hunting in the mountains was no longer prey. I picture it clearly. A broken ridge somewhere deep in southern Iran. Dry wind. Sharp rocks. Silence that cuts deeper than bullets. That airman—injured, alone—didn’t have a squad, didn’t have backup, didn’t have a miracle on standby. He had a pistol. Maybe a flare. And a shrinking clock.

When death comes knocking, even the mountains can’t hide you forever.

The F-15E Strike Eagle didn’t just fail. It was hit. A ground-launched projectile—no accident, no malfunction. This was war reaching up and dragging steel out of the sky. The ejection seat did its job, sure. CKU-5 rocket propellant, blast through the canopy, violent escape. But those seats don’t save you clean. Studies from U.S. Air Force data show that up to 30% of high-speed ejections result in spinal compression injuries. You survive the fall, but your body pays interest.

So now he’s down. Hurt. Behind enemy lines. History tells me what usually happens next. I don’t have to guess. In 1965, during the Vietnam War, U.S. Navy pilot Everett Alvarez Jr. was shot down and captured. He spent 8 years as a prisoner. In 1993, in Somalia, Michael Durant was pulled from a crashed Black Hawk and paraded as a trophy. In 2011, a U.S. drone operator captured in Afghanistan didn’t even make it out alive. That’s the pattern. That’s the rule.

But this time, something snapped.

Iran didn’t just want him—they advertised him. A bounty - $60,000 to any Iranian who finds him and hands him over to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps(IRGC). Civilians combing the mountains like prospectors chasing gold, except the prize was a bleeding American officer. That’s not search and rescue. That’s a manhunt.

And still, the man didn’t break.

Airmen are trained for this. SERE—Survival, Evasion, Resistance, Escape. Hide. Move. Wait. Trust that someone is coming. But let me tell you something raw: most people don’t make it 36 hours in that condition, injured, hunted, dehydrated, and alone. Studies from military survival training show that even in controlled environments, psychological breakdown can begin within 24 hours under extreme stress.

This man didn’t crack. He waited.

Meanwhile, the U.S. didn’t blink. They went hunting for their own. This wasn’t some clean extraction. This was chaos with a plan. CIA plays chess while everyone else plays checkers. They fed Iran a lie—a deception operation that shifted attention elsewhere. It worked. That’s not luck. That’s psychological warfare, textbook and ruthless.

Then came the storm.

SEAL Team 6 moved in like ghosts with teeth. Hundreds of commandos. MC-130J aircraft—$100 million machines—landing on dirt like it was a suicide pact. MQ-9 Reaper drones circling overhead, watching everything, waiting to erase anything that moved wrong.

And they did.

A three-kilometre kill radius. Anything that looked like a threat—gone. That’s not pretty. That’s not diplomatic. That’s survival math. You either clear the path, or you bury your man.

Then the twist.

The airman didn’t just wait to be saved. He moved. Broke cover. Climbed a 7,000ft ridge while bombs fell and guns screamed. Injured. Alone. Running toward the very chaos meant to protect him.

That’s not training anymore. That’s will. I have seen enough history to know how rare that moment is. During Operation Red Wings in 2005, Marcus Luttrell survived because he moved, adapted, and refused to die. Same DNA here. Same refusal.

And still, the mission almost collapsed. Two MC-130Js got stuck. Ground swallowed them like quicksand. $200 million in aircraft turned into liabilities in seconds. So the Americans did what professionals do when things go bad—they burned them. Destroyed their own assets to keep them out of enemy hands. That’s cold. That’s necessary.

Three more planes had to be rushed in. Time was bleeding out. And yet—they pulled him out. Alive.

Let that sink in. Two pilots shot down. Both rescued. Separately. Deep inside enemy territory. In modern warfare, that’s almost unheard of. Even the Pentagon doesn’t like to promise that kind of outcome.  Search and rescue missions in hostile zones have historically had success rates below 60% depending on terrain and enemy presence. This one beat the odds twice.

That’s why I call it an Easter miracle.

Not because it was clean. Not because it was holy. But because something that should have ended in a body bag ended in a hospital bed in Kuwait.

Iran tried to spin it. Showed burned aircraft. Claimed victory. Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf sneered that more victories like this would ruin America. That’s propaganda trying to dress a loss in borrowed clothes.

But here’s the truth nobody can spin.

A man fell into hell and walked out. And the message was loud enough to shake mountains: “We will never leave an American behind.” That line has been said before. Sometimes it holds. Sometimes it breaks. In Vietnam, thousands were left missing. In Afghanistan, deals were made that didn’t bring everyone home. Promises in war are often written in sand. But this time, for 36 hours, someone decided the promise still mattered. And they paid for it. Risk. Firefights. Burned aircraft. International tension. All of it for one injured man with a pistol in the mountains. You can call it strategy. You can call it politics.

I call it defiance.

Because in a world where drones kill from miles away and wars are fought on screens, this was something old-school, something brutal, something human. Flesh and blood refusing to be erased.

That airman didn’t just survive. He embarrassed death.

 

Separate from today’s article, I recently published more titles in my Brief Book Series for readers interested in a deeper, standalone idea. You can read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 


Saturday, April 4, 2026

The Day the Dictionary Died—and Nobody Even Noticed

 


The death of the dictionary wasn’t progress—it was the moment we chose speed over wisdom and became addicted to shallow knowledge. Google didn’t just replace dictionaries—it killed deep thinking, erased patience, and raised a generation that can search everything but understand nothing.

I remember a time when a dictionary was not just a book—it was authority. Heavy. Silent. Unforgiving. You didn’t argue with it. You opened it, you searched, you learned, and you shut up. That was the ritual. That was the discipline. Today? I tell a kid, “Go grab a dictionary,” and he looks at me like I just asked him to fetch a fossil. He says, “What’s that?” And just like that, I feel the ground shift under my feet. When the roots forget the soil, the tree starts to wobble.

The truth is ugly, and I will say it plainly: the dictionary didn’t fade away—it got executed. And the executioner was the Internet, with Google holding the blade.

Let’s not pretend this was an accident. This was a slow, calculated replacement. Back in the 1980s and 1990s, dictionaries like Merriam-Webster and the Oxford English Dictionary were everywhere. Homes had them. Schools demanded them. Libraries stacked them like bricks. By 1990, Merriam-Webster was selling millions of copies annually. The Oxford English Dictionary, first published in 1884 and completed in 1928, had already become the gold standard of English language authority. Owning a dictionary was not optional; it was expected.

Then came the 2000s. The Internet didn’t just arrive—it stormed in. By 2004, when Google went public, it was already processing over 200 million search queries per day. Fast forward to 2026, and that number has exploded to over 8.5 billion searches per day. Let that sink in: 8.5 billion times a day, people bypass books and go straight to a search bar. Not a page. Not an index. Not alphabetical order. Just a blinking cursor and impatience.

And just like that, dictionaries became background noise.

You want proof? Look at the numbers. Physical dictionary sales have been in steady decline since the early 2000s. Publishers stopped printing updated editions as frequently. Schools quietly removed “bring your dictionary” from supply lists. Instead, they handed out Chromebooks. By 2015, many classrooms in the United States had already shifted to digital-first learning. The message was clear: why carry a 5-pound book when you can type a word in 2 seconds?

Speed killed the dictionary. Convenience buried it. But let me tell you something nobody wants to admit. We didn’t just lose a book—we lost a way of thinking.

When I used a dictionary, I didn’t just find a word. I wandered. I stumbled into other words. I saw connections. I built memory. The process forced me to slow down. You flipped pages. You scanned columns. You absorbed language like a sponge. It was not just about meaning; it was about depth.

Now? You type a word into Google, and you get a definition in 0.42 seconds. No context. No journey. No patience. Just instant gratification. A fast meal fills the stomach but starves the soul. And don’t get me wrong—I use Google too. I am not living in denial. But I know what we traded away. We traded depth for speed, discipline for convenience, and curiosity for shortcuts. There’s irony in this whole thing. The same tool that claims to “organize the world’s information” has made us less willing to engage with it deeply. Google gives you answers, but it rarely gives you understanding. It feeds you fragments. Bite-sized knowledge. Enough to pass a test, not enough to build a mind.

Even dictionary companies saw the writing on the wall. Merriam-Webster went digital. The Oxford English Dictionary moved online, charging subscriptions for access. By 2010, the OED announced it might never print another full physical edition again. That was not evolution—that was surrender.

And here’s the kicker: kids today don’t even realize something is missing. That’s the most dangerous part. You can’t mourn what you never knew. When a child asks, “What’s a dictionary?” that is not just ignorance—that is a signal. A cultural shift. A quiet erasure.

We are raising a generation that knows how to search but not how to study. They can find answers but struggle to hold them. They skim, they scroll, they swipe. They don’t dig. They don’t wrestle with words. They don’t sit in silence with a page and let it fight back.

And maybe that’s the real tragedy. Not that dictionaries are gone—but that the mindset they created is dying with them.

Because let me tell you something real. Life does not work like Google. There is no search bar for everything. There is no instant answer for hard questions. Sometimes you have to struggle. Sometimes you have to flip through pages—mentally, emotionally, spiritually—before you find what you’re looking for. The dictionary trained us for that. The Internet spoils us out of it.

I can already hear the counterargument. “Technology evolves. This is progress.” Sure. But progress is not always improvement. Sometimes it is just speed wearing a shiny mask. Sometimes it is convenience dressed up as intelligence.Not everything that moves forward is moving up.

So what happened to the dictionaries? They didn’t disappear overnight. They got replaced, ignored, and quietly pushed aside until nobody noticed they were gone. The Internet didn’t just deal the last blow—it made sure there would be no witnesses.

And now here we are. Faster. Smarter, maybe. But also shallower. Restless. Dependent. We traded the weight of knowledge for the illusion of access. And I am not sure we got the better deal.

 

Separate from today’s article, I recently published more titles in my Brief Book Series for readers interested in a deeper, standalone idea. You can read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

The Air That Built the World: How Radio Quietly Owns Your Life

 


You think smartphones changed everything? Wrong. Radio did—and it still runs the system. From war zones to poor villages, it’s the one technology that never failed humanity.  Strip away screens and apps, and you’ll find radio underneath. The same invisible force powering your world is still the cheapest lifeline for billions who can’t afford your digital illusion.

I will say it straight, no sugarcoating, no polite academic dance: everything you touch today—your TV, your phone, your precious internet—is just radio wearing a better suit. Strip away the glossy screens and billion-dollar branding, and what do you have? Signals flying through the air. Invisible. Ruthless. Efficient. That idea didn’t start with Silicon Valley. It started with radio. And radio never left the room.

Back in the early 20th century, America wasn’t rich. Not even close. Workers were grinding for about $0.16 per hour. That’s not a typo. Sixteen cents. Now picture this: a radio set could cost $200. Do the math. That’s over 1,200 hours of labor. That’s months of sweat just to bring voices into your living room. So no, radio wasn’t common. It wasn’t some cozy family device. It was a luxury. A statement. A machine that whispered, you are connected, but only if you can pay.

And yet, even then, radio was already flexing its power. During World War I and later World War II, radio wasn’t just entertainment—it was survival. Governments used it to send commands, propaganda, warnings. Armies moved because of it. Nations stood or fell on how fast information could travel through the air. Information is power, and radio was the first machine to weaponize it at scale.

Then came the 1920s boom. Commercial radio stations exploded across the United States. By 1922, there were over 500 stations. Families gathered around like it was a fireplace. Voices, music, news—all flowing through invisible waves. No wires. No delays. Just air doing the heavy lifting. That was the moment the world changed, even if people didn’t fully realize it.

Here’s where the irony kicks in. The same thing that made radio expensive in the beginning—its novelty—also made it unstoppable. Technology improved. Mass production kicked in. Prices dropped. By the 1930s, radios became more accessible. By the 1950s, they were everywhere. Cheap. Portable. Democratic. The rich no longer owned the air. The air belonged to everyone.

Now let’s fast forward. People love to worship television like it’s some revolutionary god. It’s not. Television is radio with pictures. The core idea is the same: transmit signals through electromagnetic waves. Same backbone. Same DNA. The internet? Same story. Wireless routers, satellites, cellular networks—radio frequencies carrying data at insane speeds. Smartphones? Don’t even get me started. That sleek device in your hand is just a high-end radio transceiver pretending to be smarter than it is.

Even today, your 5G network runs on radio waves. Frequencies. Spectrum. The same invisible highway first explored by pioneers like Guglielmo Marconi in the late 19th century. People act like we’ve moved on from radio. That’s a lie. We just renamed it, dressed it up, and sold it back at a higher price.

But here’s the part most people don’t want to talk about. While the rich world chases faster streaming and sharper screens, billions of people are still living in a different reality. In many parts of Africa, South Asia, and rural Latin America, radio isn’t outdated—it’s essential.

According to UNESCO and other global studies, radio reaches over 75% of the world’s population. Let that sink in. Not smartphones. Not broadband internet. Radio. In sub-Saharan Africa alone, radio remains the most widely accessed medium. Why? Because it’s cheap. Reliable. Doesn’t need expensive infrastructure. Doesn’t care if the power grid is unstable or if the internet is down.

I’ve seen the numbers, and they don’t lie. A basic radio receiver can cost less than $10 today. Sometimes even cheaper. Compare that to a smartphone, data plans, charging costs, and network availability. In many poor communities, those things are luxuries. Radio is not. Radio is survival.

During crises, radio shows its true teeth. When earthquakes hit Haiti in 2010, radio became the primary source of information. When Ebola spread across West Africa between 2014 and 2016, radio campaigns were used to educate millions about prevention and symptoms. Not apps. Not social media. Radio. Because when everything else fails, the air still works.

Even in developed countries, radio refuses to die. In the United States, over 80% of adults still listen to radio weekly, according to Nielsen data. People driving to work, truckers crossing states, emergency alerts cutting through the noise—it’s all radio. Quiet. Persistent. Unkillable.

And here’s the brutal truth: radio doesn’t need you to look at it. It doesn’t beg for your attention like your phone does. It slips into your life, feeds you information, and moves on. Efficient. Cold. Effective. Like a ghost that pays rent.

I laugh when people say radio is obsolete. That’s like saying oxygen is outdated because you bought a new air purifier. You can dress it up however you want, but the core hasn’t changed. The world still runs on signals moving through the air. Always has. Always will.

The price drop tells its own story. What once cost $200 when people earned $0.16 per hour is now practically free. That’s not just technological progress—that’s a shift in power. Radio moved from elite novelty to global necessity. From luxury to lifeline. And yet, it never lost its throne. Not really. It just stepped back, let television and the internet take the spotlight, and kept running the system from behind the curtain. The loudest man in the room is rarely the one in control.

That’s radio. Silent. Invisible. Everywhere.

So when you pick up your smartphone, stream a video, or scroll through your feed, just remember—you’re not escaping radio. You’re using it. You’re living inside it. And whether you admit it or not, radio is still the backbone holding your entire digital world together.

 

As a side note for regular readers, I have also written many titles in my Brief Book Series, now available on Google Play Books. You can also read them  here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

The Silent Hitman in Your Fridge: How Weight-Loss Drugs Are Strangling Big Food

 


Big Food companies built empires on cravings; now science—Wegovy and Zepbound—is erasing those cravings, and the empire is collapsing.

I will say it straight: the food industry is not under pressure—it is under attack. And the attacker is not a rival brand, not inflation, not even regulation. It is chemistry. It is science. It is the cold, clinical hand of appetite control delivered through drugs like Wegovy and Zepbound.

These drugs are not just helping people lose weight. They are quietly killing hunger itself. And when hunger dies, the entire business model of Big Food starts to choke. I look at what is happening, and I do not see a normal market shift. I see a slow, calculated strangulation.

For decades, companies like Unilever, Kraft Heinz, and Nestlé built empires on one simple truth: people eat when they feel like eating, not when they need to. That gap—between need and desire—was their goldmine.

Now that gap is closing. Let me break it down. These drugs belong to a class called GLP-1 receptor agonists. Scientists did not design them to destroy snack companies. They designed them to treat diabetes. But the side effect turned out to be the real headline. They suppress appetite. They slow down how fast food leaves the stomach. They change how the brain responds to cravings. In simple terms, they make people full faster and keep them full longer. That is not just medicine. That is market disruption.

A survey by EY already put a number on the damage: $12 billion in lost snack sales in America over the next decade. That is about 3% of the entire snack market. And let me be blunt—3% is not a small dent. In a mature industry, 3% is blood in the water.

When the stomach shrinks, so does the market.

I have seen this movie before. History does not repeat itself cleanly, but it rhymes with a punch. Think about tobacco. For years, cigarette companies laughed off early warnings. Then science caught up. Lawsuits followed. Public opinion flipped. Consumption dropped. Giants fell. The same pattern is creeping into food. This time, the weapon is not regulation alone. It is biology.

Look at the numbers from clinical trials. Patients on semaglutide, the active ingredient in Wegovy, lost about 15% of their body weight on average. Tirzepatide, used in Zepbound, pushed that number toward 20% in some studies. That level of weight loss is not cosmetic. It is behavioral. It rewires how people eat.

And when behavior changes, industries collapse.

Big Food already weakened itself before this storm arrived. Between 2021 and 2024, these companies raised prices 11 percentage points above inflation. They squeezed consumers hard. For a while, it worked. Profits climbed. Executives celebrated. But they forgot one rule: you can milk a cow, but you cannot bleed it.

Consumers started fighting back. They moved to cheaper store brands. They tried new startups like Goodles, which grabbed 6% of the macaroni-and-cheese market in record time. That alone should have been a warning. Then came the second wave: health awareness. Searches for ultra-processed food exploded 30-fold since 2022. People began reading labels. Governments stepped in. Some states banned food stamps from being used on junk food. Britain tightened advertising rules. The walls started closing in.

Now comes the third wave—the knockout punch. These drugs do not argue with consumers. They do not educate them. They simply remove the urge to eat more than necessary. I imagine a conversation inside a boardroom.

“Why are snack sales dropping?”

“Consumers are changing habits.”

“No, they are not. Their bodies are.”

That is the difference. Behavior can be influenced. Biology is harder to fight.

Even worse for Big Food, this trend is spreading beyond the rich world. Generic versions of these drugs are entering markets like India. That was supposed to be the next growth frontier. Instead, it may become the next battlefield. And let us not pretend this is a slow burn. The adoption curve is steep. Prescriptions for GLP-1 drugs in the United States have surged into the millions. Some estimates suggest over 15 million Americans could be using them within a few years. That is not a niche. That is a shift.

Every one of those users eats less. Snacks less. Craves less. Multiply that across households, and you start to see the scale of the problem. This is why companies are scrambling. Danone is buying into meal replacements. Nestlé is pushing healthy frozen meals. Unilever is stepping away from food entirely. These are not small adjustments. These are survival moves. When the house is on fire, you do not rearrange furniture—you run.

But here is the part nobody wants to say out loud: Big Food cannot fully adapt to a world where people simply eat less. Their business model depends on volume. More bites. More packs. More repeat purchases. You cannot scale “less eating.” It is a contradiction. Even if they pivot to “healthy snacks,” the core problem remains. Appetite is shrinking. Consumption is shrinking. Revenue follows.

And the irony is brutal. For years, these companies were blamed for overfeeding society. Now society is finding a way to underfeed itself—on purpose, with medical help. This is not just economics. It is a shift in power. The control is moving away from corporations and into the human body itself.

I look at this and see a cold truth: the food industry is facing something it cannot easily out-market, out-advertise, or outmaneuver. Because you cannot sell food to someone who is not hungry. And right now, hunger is being engineered out of existence.

 

On a different but equally important note, readers who enjoy thoughtful analysis may also find the titles in my  “Brief Book Series” worth exploring. You can also read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

 

 

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Boots, Not Bombs: If We Won’t Finish Iran, Then Why Do We Even Have an Army?

 


When I hear “no boots on the ground in Iran,” I don’t hear wisdom. I hear fear dressed up as strategy. We built the most powerful military on earth. Not to sit on the sidelines. Not to fight halfway. But to finish what we started. I’m not blind to the risks. Ground operations in Iran mean exposure—IEDs, ambushes, drones. It means American soldiers in harm’s way. But that’s already happening. The difference is that right now, we’re taking hits without delivering a knockout.

I keep hearing it like a broken record—“no boots on the ground.” That phrase gets thrown around like it’s holy scripture. Like it’s the last commandment carved into stone. And every time I hear it, I ask the same simple question: what exactly is the U.S. Army for?

We already sent the United States Navy to choke the sea lanes. We unleashed the United States Air Force to dominate the skies. Bombs dropped. Missiles fired. Targets hit. The opening act is done. The stage is cleared. And now, when it’s time to finish the job, suddenly everyone develops cold feet.

That makes no sense.

War is not a half-measure business. You don’t start a fire and then complain about the smoke. If the objective is to stop Iran’s nuclear capability, secure the Strait of Hormuz, and dismantle what’s left of the regime under Ali Khamenei, then airstrikes alone won’t cut it. Air power can break things. Ground forces control them. That’s not opinion. That’s military doctrine going back to World War II.

Let’s call a spade a spade. The Pentagon is already preparing for ground operations. Thousands of troops are moving into position. Not for sightseeing. Not for diplomacy. For combat. Officials are talking about weeks—maybe a couple of months—of targeted operations. Raids. Seizures. Surgical strikes on coastal defenses and strategic assets like Kharg Island. This isn’t theory. It’s already war-gamed, planned, and staged.

And yet, politicians stand in front of cameras and say, “we can achieve our objectives without ground troops.” That’s fantasy.

Look at history. In Iraq War, the U.S. used “shock and awe” bombing to cripple Saddam Hussein’s forces. It worked—partially. But Baghdad didn’t fall from the sky. Ground troops rolled in. Tanks. Infantry. Boots. Without that final push, Saddam stays in power. The war drags. The mission fails.

Same story in Afghanistan. Same story in every war where territory matters.

You don’t win by hovering above the battlefield like a nervous spectator. You win by stepping into it. Right now, Iran still has assets on the ground. Intelligence points to roughly 400 kg of highly enriched uranium (HEU). That’s not abstract. That’s real material, sitting somewhere, guarded by real people with guns. You don’t secure that with tweets or airstrikes. You secure it by sending soldiers to physically take it. Anything less is theater.

And let’s not pretend this war is clean. It’s already messy: 13 U.S. troops are dead in just the first month. Over 300 wounded. Drones hitting bases across at least 7 countries. This is not a video game. The enemy is firing back.

So what exactly are we protecting by avoiding boots on the ground? Lives? That ship has sailed. War always costs lives. The only real question is whether those losses lead to victory or drag on into a slow bleed. When you hunt a snake, you don’t stop after cutting the tail—you crush the head. Right now, we’re cutting tails.

The Strait of Hormuz is still a choke point. Nearly 20% of the world’s oil flows through it. That’s not a side note. That’s global economic oxygen. If Iran mines it or disrupts it, oil prices spike, markets panic, and the ripple hits every American household. Gas. Food. Everything. You don’t secure that with drones flying overhead. You secure it by putting forces on the ground, clearing coastal missile sites, and holding key positions. That’s exactly what military planners are discussing—fast, mobile raids along Iran’s coast. Hit. Move. Hit again. Keep the enemy off balance.

But here’s where the fear kicks in.

Polls show 62% of Americans oppose ground troops. Only 12% support it. Politicians read those numbers like gospel. They don’t see strategy. They see elections. So they hedge. They stall. They talk about “options” and “alternatives.” Meanwhile, the war keeps moving.

Even within Congress, the split is obvious. Some want limited special operations—quick in, quick out. Others flat-out reject any ground presence. Then you have voices like Lindsey Graham saying, in plain terms, we’ve done harder things before. He pointed to Iwo Jima, where about 6,800 U.S. troops died taking a single island. Brutal. Costly. But decisive.

People don’t like hearing that kind of truth anymore. They want clean wars. Cheap wars. Wars you can watch on a screen and forget before dinner. That’s not reality. That’s denial.

Even critics inside the system admit the obvious problem. Seizing territory like Kharg Island isn’t the hard part. Holding it is. Protecting troops from drones, missiles, and counterattacks—that’s the real challenge. And yes, it’s dangerous. Nobody sane denies that.

But danger is not an argument against action. It’s part of the job.

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps is not going to fold because we flew over them. They will dig in. They will fight. They will use every advantage they have, including oil infrastructure as cover. That’s what enemies do.

So again, I ask: what’s the plan?

Bomb from a distance and hope the regime collapses? That didn’t work in North Korea. Didn’t work in Vietnam. Didn’t even fully work in Iraq until ground forces stepped in. This idea that we can “win without boots” sounds good in a press briefing. It collapses under real-world pressure. And here’s the uncomfortable truth nobody wants to say out loud: If we refuse to commit ground troops now, after already escalating the conflict, then we risk the worst outcome of all—a long, drawn-out war with no clear end. More strikes. More retaliation. More casualties. No closure.

Half a war is worse than no war at all.

I’m not blind to the risks. Ground operations mean exposure—IEDs, ambushes, drones. It means American soldiers in harm’s way. But that’s already happening. The difference is that right now, we’re taking hits without delivering a knockout.

War doesn’t reward hesitation. It punishes it.

So when I hear “no boots on the ground,” I don’t hear wisdom. I hear fear dressed up as strategy. We built the most powerful military on earth. Not to sit on the sidelines. Not to fight halfway. But to finish what we start. If we’re not willing to use it when it matters most, then maybe the real question isn’t about boots on the ground.

Maybe the real question is this—why do we even have an Army?

 

For readers interested in a separate line of thought, the titles in my “Brief Book Series” are available on Google Play. Read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

 

Monday, March 30, 2026

Chokepoints of Chaos: When the World’s Narrowest Passages Become Its Biggest Threat


Ships carry the world, but narrow chokepoints control everything—close one, and chaos spreads fast. This isn’t risk; it’s a ticking economic time bomb waiting to explode. In plain terms, the world economy is built on bottlenecks—Hormuz today, Malacca tomorrow. When these choke, your fuel, food, and future choke with them.

I don’t buy the comforting lie that global trade is strong, stable, and untouchable. That story belongs in textbooks, not in the real world where ships burn, routes choke, and economies flinch at the squeeze of a narrow passage. Sir Jacky Fisher once bragged that a handful of strategic keys could lock up the world. He was right—but he underestimated how fragile those keys really are. Today, Hormuz is locked, and the world is gasping. But let me be blunt: Hormuz is not the only weak spot. It is just the loudest crack in a system already breaking.

I see the numbers, and they don’t lie. Around 85% of global trade by volume still moves by sea. Strip away the planes, the pipelines, the digital illusions—this world still runs on ships crawling through narrow chokepoints like cattle through a gate. Close the gate, and everything backs up. That is not theory; that is physics. That is supply and demand colliding with geography. A chain is only as strong as its weakest link, and global trade is one long chain stretched across water.

Right now, the Strait of Hormuz is choking roughly 20% of global oil and liquefied natural gas. That alone is enough to shake markets. But the real danger is not Hormuz—it is the pattern. The Bab el-Mandeb used to carry about 9% of global trade. Drone attacks and missiles from Yemen’s Houthis cut that down to about 4%. Ships now crawl around Africa like fugitives dodging bullets. That detour adds thousands of miles, burns more fuel, and raises costs. No sugarcoating it: the shortcut became a death trap.

History already warned us. During the Peloponnesian War, Sparta choked off grain through the Dardanelles and starved Athens into surrender. No nukes, no satellites—just control of a narrow waterway. Fast forward to the 20th century, and the Gallipoli campaign proved the same lesson in blood. Geography does not care about technology. It never has.

Now look at the Black Sea. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine did not just redraw borders—it strangled grain exports. Ports like Odessa went silent, and global food prices jumped. When Ukraine managed to reopen a corridor, it felt like oxygen returning to a suffocating patient. That is how fragile the system is. One blockade, and millions feel it at the dinner table.

Then there is the Strait of Malacca, the real kingpin. It handles more trade than Hormuz and carries about 80% of China’s oil imports. Even Hu Jintao called it the “Malacca dilemma.” He was not exaggerating. If that strait closes, China does not just slow down—it bleeds. And here is where things get ugly. Taiwan sits right in that neighborhood, producing about 90% of the world’s advanced semiconductors. You do not need a war to understand the risk. You just need imagination. Block the sea lanes there, and the global economy does not bend—it snaps.

I watch China respond like a man who knows his house has too many doors and not enough locks. Pipelines to Russia, routes through Central Asia, ports scattered across the globe under the Belt and Road Initiative. A navy growing larger than America’s in raw numbers. Military bases popping up like chess pieces in the South China Sea. This is not paranoia; it is preparation. China understands the rule: control the chokepoints, or be controlled by them.

And then comes climate, the silent saboteur. The Panama Canal, which handles about 3% of global maritime trade but around 40% of U.S. container traffic, is now hostage to drought. Water levels drop, ships wait, and some reroute around Cape Horn like it is the 19th century again. That is not progress—that is regression forced by nature. Meanwhile, melting Arctic ice is opening new routes, shifting the map and creating fresh chokepoints like the Bering Strait. The board is changing, and the players are scrambling.

Europe is not safe either. Russian oil now flows through narrow passages controlled by NATO countries, including the Turkish and Danish straits, which handle about 20% and 35% of Russia’s crude exports. That is leverage, pure and simple. When politics meets geography, trade becomes a weapon.

Even when ships find alternative routes, the cost hits hard. About 300 oil tankers are already stuck or rerouted. Charter rates have jumped from about $90,000 per day to around $230,000. Fuel prices for ships have doubled. Some fleets are moving 2% slower just to save fuel. That slowdown may sound small, but in global logistics, it is a tremor that ripples everywhere.

And let’s not pretend there is an easy fix. Trucks, pipelines, and rail lines cannot replace ocean shipping at scale. Reports of a 30 km traffic jam in Fujairah show what happens when you try to force land routes to do a sea’s job. It is like trying to pour an ocean through a straw.

I think about what Alfred Thayer Mahan said: whoever controls the seas controls power. He called the oceans a “wide common,” but that idea is fading. The seas are no longer open highways; they are contested chokeholds. And the scary part? It does not take a world war to break them. A few drones, a handful of mines, a political standoff—that is enough.

So I call it what it is. The global trade system is not a fortress. It is a fragile network balanced on narrow passages that can be blocked, bombed, or dried up. Hormuz is just the headline. Malacca, Panama, Suez, Gibraltar—they are all pressure points waiting for a crisis.

The bottom line is harsh, and I won’t soften it. Global trade depends on fragile chokepoints. If wars, politics, or climate keep disrupting them, the system will keep shaking. The world’s economy is only as strong as its narrowest passage. And right now, those passages are under siege.

 

As a side note for regular readers, I have also written many titles in my Brief Book Series, now available on Google Play Books. You can also read them  here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 


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