Tuesday, May 12, 2026

The Viral Poison Fueling Modern Antisemitism

 


Antisemitism is spreading again because conspiracy madness, social media propaganda, and political extremism are turning Jews into targets while democratic societies grow weaker, angrier, and more divided. History’s old poison is wearing new clothes.

The smell of fear is back in Jewish neighborhoods again. Not the fear of history books. Not the fear trapped inside black-and-white Holocaust photographs. I mean living fear. Street fear. The kind that makes a man tuck his Star of David necklace under his shirt before boarding a train in London. The kind that makes Jewish parents glance nervously behind them while walking children to synagogue. The kind that whispers, “Keep your head down if you want to get home alive.”

On April 29, two Jewish men were stabbed in London. Jewish buildings were attacked with firebombs. In Manchester, attackers stormed a synagogue and killed two worshippers. In Australia, 15 people were murdered during a Hanukkah gathering on Bondi Beach after months of escalating hate crimes. These are not isolated incidents anymore. They are warning flares. When smoke starts pouring from every window, only a fool says the building is safe.

Many people want to blame everything on anger over the war in Gaza. That explanation is too neat, too convenient, and too dishonest. Rage over Middle East politics may light the match, but conspiracy thinking is the gasoline soaking the floorboards underneath. Antisemitism has always survived by feeding people the same poisonous fantasy: that Jews secretly control governments, banks, wars, media, immigration, or global culture. The costumes change. The hatred does not.

That poison drove Nazi Germany. Adolf Hitler sold Germans the fantasy that Jews caused economic collapse, moral decay, communism, capitalism, and national humiliation all at once. It was insanity packaged as political salvation. Yet millions swallowed it because conspiracy theories thrive during chaos. Germany in the 1930s was drowning in inflation, humiliation, and political collapse. People wanted someone to blame. Jews became the human punching bag.

The same disease infected tsarist Russia long before Hitler came along. Fake documents like “The Protocols of the Elders of Zion” spread the lie that Jews were plotting world domination. Historians later exposed it as fraudulent garbage cooked up by Russian secret police, but the lie survived because conspiracy theories do not survive on facts. They survive on fear. A frightened crowd will often choose a comforting lie over an uncomfortable truth.

Now the disease has mutated for the digital age. Social media has become a global sewage pipe pumping hatred into millions of phones every hour. Algorithms reward outrage because outrage keeps people scrolling, clicking, and sharing. A teenager sitting in a bedroom today can fall into a conspiracy rabbit hole faster than previous generations could buy a newspaper. Neo-Nazis, Islamist extremists, and far-left conspiracy addicts no longer need underground meetings in dark basements. They recruit openly online with memes, videos, livestreams, and fake documentaries disguised as “hidden truth.”

According to the Anti-Defamation League, antisemitic incidents in the United States reached record highs after the October 7, 2023 Hamas attacks and the war that followed. Europe saw similar spikes. Synagogues increased security. Jewish schools hired guards. Some universities became battlegrounds filled with intimidation, harassment, and open hostility. In parts of Europe, police patrol Jewish institutions like they are military checkpoints. Think about that for a second. In supposedly modern democratic societies, people are again needing armed protection simply to pray as Jews.

The ugliness comes from multiple directions. Islamist extremists openly target Jews in the name of rage against Israel. Parts of the far-left recycle ancient fantasies about Jewish “globalists” controlling Western governments and finance. Meanwhile, sections of the radical left reduce every Jew into a symbol of colonialism or oppression regardless of individual beliefs or politics. It is political madness. A Jewish teenager in London gets blamed for decisions made by politicians thousands of miles away. That is not justice. That is tribal stupidity wearing activist clothing.

And social media supercharges all of it. A rumor spreads online in seconds. A manipulated video circulates before fact-checkers even wake up. One influencer screams about secret Jewish control, and thousands repeat it like gospel by lunchtime. The digital age did not kill ancient hatred. It gave it fiber-optic internet and a marketing department.

The terrifying part is how quickly conspiracy thinking spreads beyond Jews. History shows that societies poisoned by antisemitism rarely stop there. Nazi Germany began with Jews, but eventually crushed political opponents, disabled citizens, journalists, homosexuals, religious dissidents, and millions of others. Once conspiracy politics takes over, everyone becomes a potential enemy. Democracies rot from the inside because people stop trusting institutions, elections, courts, science, and even basic reality itself. That is why antisemitism is not merely a Jewish problem. It is a democratic warning sign. When mobs start deciding who deserves safety based on ethnicity or religion, freedom itself begins coughing blood. The rights of minorities become bargaining chips tossed around by angry crowds and opportunistic politicians.

I believe stronger security around Jewish institutions is necessary now because pretending the threat is exaggerated is suicidal stupidity. Synagogues, schools, and community centers need protection. Governments cannot keep acting shocked every time another attack happens after weeks of online incitement. But security alone is not enough. You cannot police your way out of a conspiracy epidemic.

Education matters too, but not the shallow performative kind where politicians pose for photographs during memorial ceremonies and then ignore rising hate afterward. Young people need brutal honesty about what antisemitism actually did in history. They need to understand how propaganda manipulated ordinary citizens into supporting barbarism. They need to see how conspiracy theories mutate across generations while keeping the same rotten core. Most importantly, ordinary people must stop staying silent when antisemitism appears around them. Silence is the oxygen hatred breathes. Too many people excuse antisemitism when it comes wrapped in political language they happen to like. Some excuse it if it comes from the far-left. Others excuse it if it hides behind anti-Israel activism. Both are playing with gasoline beside an open flame.

The lesson of history is brutally simple. Antisemitism never arrives announcing itself honestly. It creeps in disguised as  justice, revolution, religion, or resistance. Then it spreads until fear becomes normal and violence becomes routine. By the time society realizes the monster has entered the house, it is usually already sitting at the dinner table.

That is why the images coming out of London, Manchester, America, and Australia should terrify anyone who values freedom. Jews hiding religious symbols in public is not merely a Jewish tragedy. It is proof that democratic societies are becoming weaker, angrier, and more vulnerable to mob thinking. When civilization starts whispering instead of standing firm, barbarism stops knocking and simply walks through the front door.

 

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.

 

Burn the Foreigner, Praise the Thief: Xenophobia is South Africa’s New Political Drug



Xenophobia in South Africa is no longer random anger; it is political manipulation, social-media hysteria, and economic failure exploding into street violence against African immigrants. The truth is that South Africa’s politicians wrecked the economy and then handed angry citizens a foreign scapegoat. Nigerians, Zimbabweans, and other Africans are now paying the price while corrupt elites hide behind xenophobic chaos like thieves screaming, “Catch the thief!” during a robbery.

South Africa is playing a dangerous game again, and this time the smoke is not coming from factories producing jobs. It is coming from burning shops, smashed storefronts, and terrified African immigrants running for their lives while mobs scream nonsense about “foreigners stealing our future.” I am tired of the sugarcoated rubbish people keep feeding the public. Let us call this thing what it is: organized stupidity mixed with political cowardice. A country with one of the highest unemployment rates in the world is now blaming Nigerians, Zimbabweans, Kenyans, Malawians, and Basotho for problems created by corrupt leadership, collapsing infrastructure, failed economic policies, and politicians who have mastered the art of talking like saints while governing like pickpockets.

The conspiracy theories spreading across parts of South Africa today sound like recycled garbage dug out from the graveyards of Nazi Germany and tsarist Russia. Back then, Jews were accused of secretly controlling banks, ruining economies, corrupting society, and poisoning national identity. Today, many South Africans are swallowing similar poison about African immigrants. Nigerians are accused of taking over businesses. Zimbabweans are accused of stealing jobs. Foreign Africans are blamed for crime, drugs, prostitution, and corruption. Tomorrow, if rain refuses to fall, somebody will probably accuse a Kenyan mechanic in Johannesburg of stealing clouds too. When a nation starts hunting shadows, even daylight becomes suspicious.

Social media has turned this madness into a 24-hour circus. A drunk fool records a TikTok rant blaming Nigerians for unemployment, and within hours thousands share it like it came down from heaven on stone tablets. WhatsApp groups have become digital taverns where fake statistics and street gossip now pass as economic analysis. One viral post screams, “Foreigners own everything!” Another claims immigrants are controlling politicians. Another claims Nigerians are behind every major crime syndicate in South Africa. The tragedy is not just the lies. The tragedy is how many people are eager to believe them because it gives them a cheap emotional target for their suffering.

And suffering there is. South Africa’s unemployment rate remains above 32 percent. Youth unemployment is even worse. Electricity blackouts have hammered businesses for years. Corruption scandals have swallowed billions. State institutions have been weakened by political parasites feeding on public money like vultures tearing meat from a dead buffalo. Entire municipalities look abandoned. Roads decay. Public trust is collapsing. But instead of demanding accountability from the political class that wrecked the system, mobs are chasing immigrant barbers, shop owners, hairdressers, mechanics, and restaurant workers through the streets. It is easier to slap a taxi driver from Malawi than to confront the minister driving a luxury SUV bought with stolen public funds.

The bitter irony is enough to make a sane man laugh and curse at the same time. Many of the immigrants being hunted are actually creating jobs and economic activity in South Africa. Nigerians have built businesses in telecommunications, logistics, entertainment, food supply, cosmetics, electronics, and hospitality. Walk through parts of Johannesburg and you will find Nigerian-owned restaurants employing South Africans. Enter commercial districts in Pretoria and you will see immigrant-run cellphone shops paying rent, taxes, and salaries. Across areas in Durban, foreign African entrepreneurs operate shipping and import businesses linking South African markets to West and Central Africa.

Take Iyinoluwa Aboyeji, whose influence in African tech and fintech helped push investment and digital business expansion across the continent, including South Africa. Then there is Adebayo Ogunlesi, one of the most influential Nigerian-born financiers globally, whose business reach symbolizes the rising role of African entrepreneurs in international markets. At the local level, thousands of undocumented success stories exist quietly in South Africa every day. Nigerian traders importing electronics. Zimbabwean welders fixing damaged structures. Malawian workers in agriculture. Kenyan professionals in healthcare and education. These are not vampires sucking the economy dry. Many are helping keep parts of it alive while politicians continue holding press conferences filled with polished lies and empty grammar.

But conspiracy thinking does not care about facts. Facts are boring. Fear is exciting. Fear gives frustrated people a villain they can touch. That is why xenophobic violence keeps returning in South Africa like a recurring disease nobody wants to treat properly. In 2008, more than 60 people were killed during xenophobic attacks, and tens of thousands were displaced. In 2015, violence exploded again. In 2019, foreign-owned businesses were looted and burned in waves of coordinated chaos. Each time the politicians appeared on television pretending to be shocked, like actors in a bad soap opera. They condemned the violence with one side of their mouth while some of their rhetoric quietly fed the hostility with the other. A man cannot pour petrol on the floor and then act surprised when the house catches fire.

The ugliest part of this madness is the fear now hanging over ordinary immigrants. Many Nigerians living in South Africa now avoid speaking loudly in public spaces. Some no longer display symbols of their nationality. Some business owners quietly remove Nigerian flags or signs from their shops. Some Zimbabweans keep emergency bags packed because they know violence can erupt overnight after one politician makes a reckless speech or one fake social media rumor spreads through the townships. Imagine living every day wondering whether your accent alone could trigger a mob attack. That is not democracy. That is psychological warfare against civilians.

And let me say something many people are too scared to say openly. Some South African politicians benefit politically from this tension. A desperate population is easier to manipulate when it has enemies to hate. If citizens become fully focused on failed governance, corruption, decaying infrastructure, and elite theft, many careers would collapse overnight. Xenophobia becomes political mosquito spray. It distracts angry citizens temporarily while the real thieves continue looting quietly in air-conditioned offices. The magician survives by making the crowd watch his left hand while the right hand empties their pockets.

South Africa’s government needs to stop behaving like a sleepy security guard watching thieves empty a warehouse. Police responses during xenophobic attacks are often too slow, too weak, or too confused. Stronger security is needed in immigrant-heavy communities. Fast arrests must happen when mobs attack businesses or homes. Politicians and public figures who spread inflammatory rhetoric should face serious legal and political consequences. Schools should teach young people how propaganda poisoned Germany before the Holocaust and how conspiracy theories destroyed societies long before social media was invented. Ignorance is not harmless. Ignorance armed with anger becomes a flamethrower.

The broader African continent also needs to stop whispering politely about this issue. African governments should pressure South Africa hard whenever attacks erupt. Pan-African slogans mean absolutely nothing if Africans cannot live safely among fellow Africans. Unity cannot survive as a decoration for political speeches while foreign workers are beaten in the streets like stray animals.

I refuse to romanticize this situation or soften my words to protect fragile feelings. A burned Nigerian-owned shop does not create jobs for South Africans. Killing a Zimbabwean mechanic does not repair the economy. Terrorizing immigrants does not fix unemployment. It only exposes how deeply conspiracy thinking has infected parts of society. And conspiracy thinking is political cocaine. Once people get addicted to blaming imaginary enemies for real failures, logic dies first, then morality dies after it.

South Africa still has a choice. It can confront corruption, poor governance, failing institutions, and economic inequality honestly. Or it can continue this cowardly tradition of hunting foreigners whenever frustration boils over. But history is brutally clear about one thing: societies that normalize mob hatred eventually become prisoners of violence themselves. Today the crowd burns the foreigner’s shop. Tomorrow the same crowd may burn the homes of fellow citizens accused of being “traitors.” Hatred never retires quietly. It grows teeth.

And that is the sick joke at the center of this entire mess. While poor Africans attack other poor Africans in the streets, the real looters are probably sitting in luxury mansions somewhere, laughing so hard they can barely hold their wine glasses steady.

 

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.

 


Presidents Trump, Xi, and the Summit Built on Fear


 
The upcoming Beijing summit will likely produce fake smiles and empty promises because fear—not leadership—is driving America and China. Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping are locked in a dangerous power game in which trade, AI, Taiwan, and global finance have become weapons aimed straight at each other’s throats.

President Donald Trump and Xi Jinping are marching into Beijing on May 14–15 for another heavily staged political theater show dressed up as “global leadership.” I have seen enough of these summits to know the script already. Cameras will flash. Translators will smile politely. Expensive suits will glide across red carpets. Trump will probably crack a joke. Xi will probably stare like a stone statue carved in a communist cathedral. Then both men will pretend they are saving the world while secretly calculating how to weaken each other before breakfast.

Let me call this thing exactly what it is: a fear summit. Not a peace summit. Not a friendship summit. Fear is the only glue holding Washington and Beijing together now. America fears losing economic dominance. China fears being strangled before it overtakes America. Both countries are trapped in a toxic marriage where each spouse keeps poison under the kitchen sink just in case negotiations fail. When two armed robbers share the same getaway car, trust becomes a luxury item.

People love using the term “G2” to describe America and China as the two superpowers supposedly leading humanity into the future. That phrase sounds polished and academic. It also sounds like nonsense. These governments are not acting like wise leaders guiding civilization. They are acting like rival street bosses circling each other in a dark alley with switchblades hidden behind their coats. China controls much of the world’s rare earth minerals, the ugly little metals needed for missiles, fighter jets, electric vehicles, smartphones, AI systems, and military hardware. America controls the dollar system, major global banking networks, and many of the advanced semiconductor technologies that power artificial intelligence and modern computing. One side controls the industrial bloodstream. The other controls the financial oxygen tank.

That is why this summit matters. Both sides know they can wound each other badly. China can choke supply chains like a thug cutting off oxygen. America can hammer Chinese companies with sanctions hard enough to make billion-dollar corporations cough blood. This is not diplomacy built on ideals. This is economic blackmail dressed in silk neckties.

The numbers expose the hypocrisy. Even after years of screaming about trade wars, tariffs, and national security threats, trade between America and China still sits in the hundreds of billions of dollars. Factories remain connected. Financial systems remain connected. Tech industries remain connected. Unlike the old Cold War between America and the Soviet Union, these enemies are deeply chained together economically. During the Cold War, Washington and Moscow still managed to negotiate nuclear treaties because both sides understood that turning the planet into radioactive ash would be bad for business. Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev fought like ideological enemies, yet they still understood basic survival instincts.

Trump and Xi are different animals. Both leaders increasingly see cooperation itself as weakness. Every agreement looks suspicious. Every compromise smells like surrender. Xi believes America is declining and that China’s rise is inevitable. Trump believes China exploited America for decades and must be economically cornered before it becomes unstoppable. Both men feed nationalism because nationalism sells. Fear keeps voters loyal. Anger keeps headlines alive. Nothing fattens politicians faster than a frightened population.

Meanwhile, the world’s biggest dangers keep growing while these two giants play geopolitical poker. Artificial intelligence is advancing faster than governments can control it. AI-assisted cyberwarfare, deepfake propaganda, autonomous weapons, and even bioterrorism risks are no longer science fiction. Yet America and China barely cooperate seriously on AI safety because neither side wants the other gaining strategic advantage. Instead of building guardrails together, both governments are racing toward technological dominance like drunk drivers speeding toward the same cliff.

Climate cooperation is collapsing too. Pandemic prevention remains poisoned by accusations over COVID-19 and the Wuhan laboratory controversy. Trust between scientists, governments, and intelligence agencies has been shredded. The world learned during COVID-19 how quickly a virus can shut down economies, overwhelm hospitals, and expose weak governments. Yet the two strongest countries on Earth still behave like divorced parents fighting over furniture while the house burns down around them.

Then there is Taiwan, the loaded pistol sitting on the negotiation table. China wants Taiwan absorbed into Beijing’s control. America sees Taiwan as both a democratic ally and a strategic fortress because Taiwan produces some of the world’s most advanced semiconductor chips. Those chips power nearly everything now: military systems, smartphones, AI infrastructure, hospitals, banking systems, and communication networks. If Taiwan erupts into war, the global economy will not merely stumble. It could collapse face-first onto concrete.

China also continues supporting Vladimir Putin economically during the Ukraine war through energy purchases and trade ties that soften the impact of Western sanctions. Beijing talks about peace while helping Moscow survive financially. Washington talks about defending democracy while fueling proxy conflicts across the globe. Both sides accuse the other of hypocrisy while standing knee-deep in their own contradictions. The pot is calling the kettle black while both are sitting in the same burning kitchen.

This is why I expect almost nothing meaningful from the Beijing summit. There will be polite statements about “stability,” “dialogue,” and “mutual respect.” Financial markets may temporarily calm down like nervous patients swallowing painkillers before surgery. Television analysts will act excited for a few news cycles. But underneath the staged smiles sits a brutal truth neither side wants to admit publicly: America and China no longer trust each other enough to build anything lasting together.

The terrifying part is that both countries still hold enormous power over the rest of humanity. America remains the world’s largest military force and financial superpower. China remains the manufacturing engine of modern civilization. If these two powers continue treating every global challenge as a contest for dominance instead of a shared survival problem, the world may stumble into a future ruled by economic sabotage, technological paranoia, supply-chain warfare, cyber conflict, and permanent instability.

So when Trump and Xi shake hands in Beijing, I will not see statesmen rescuing the world. I will see two powerful men staring across a poker table covered in chips, sanctions, tariffs, missiles, AI systems, rare earth minerals, and fear. The smiles will be fake. The tension will be real. And the world will remain trapped between two superpowers that increasingly behave less like leaders and more like rival landlords threatening to burn down the same apartment building if either one stops collecting rent.

 

An update for those who follow my work: My Brief Book Series titles are now available on Google Play Books. You can also read it here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Billionaires, Buffoons, and Bullshit: When Stupidity Gets Elected to Congress

 


Stupidity becomes dangerous when politicians replace facts with slogans. Billionaires are not automatically criminals, just like poor people are not automatically saints. Wealth can come from building products millions love, while economic ignorance can destroy nations faster than greed ever will.  America cannot survive if success itself becomes a crime. Demonizing billionaires may sound heroic on television, but it punishes innovation, kills ambition, and feeds resentment. A society that hates builders eventually collapses under the weight of its own bitterness.

Let me put it as politely as I can: Life is hard. But it is harder when you are stupid. Just consider Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the U.S. representative for New York's 14th congressional district, who claimed in an interview that nobody can legally earn $1 billion unless they break rules or engage in illegal activities. Basically, she is saying that all billionaires are criminals. That means the mechanic who built a tiny online bookstore called Amazon and turned it into a global machine is a crook. That means the software nerds who built Microsoft are gangsters in suits. That means every entrepreneur who created products used by millions of people must secretly be running a cartel behind the curtain. A goat that follows the crowd into the market may end up in the butcher’s shop.

I hear statements like that, and I shake my head. Not because billionaires are saints. Many are ruthless. Some are greedy. Some have done dirty things. But saying nobody can legally earn $1 billion is not an argument. It is intellectual laziness wearing designer glasses. It is envy dressed up as moral philosophy.

Let me call a spade a spade. Wealth is not automatically proof of crime. Sometimes wealth is proof that millions of people voluntarily handed over their money because they wanted a product, a service, or an invention. Nobody forced people to buy iPhones from Steve Jobs. Nobody forced businesses around the world to use Microsoft products created by Bill Gates. Nobody forced millions to search the internet through Google, founded by Larry Page and Sergey Brin. These companies exploded because consumers chose them. Choice matters. Voluntary exchange matters. Capitalism is not armed robbery.

According to Forbes estimates in 2025, there are more than 2,700 billionaires worldwide. Are we really supposed to believe every single one of them became wealthy through crime? That is not analysis. That is conspiracy thinking with a political microphone attached to it.

The absurdity gets worse when you look at how wealth is actually created. A billionaire’s net worth is often tied to ownership of company stock, not piles of cash sitting in a vault like a movie villain stroking a white cat. When Amazon stock rises, Jeff Bezos becomes richer on paper. When Tesla stock rises, Elon Musk becomes richer on paper. If the stock crashes, billions vanish overnight. In November 2021 alone, Musk reportedly lost about $50 billion in net worth within days because Tesla shares fell. Criminal empires do not usually evaporate because Wall Street had a bad Tuesday.

What fascinates me is how politicians love billionaires when they fund campaigns, create jobs, or invest in green energy, but suddenly become villains when it is time to excite angry crowds. It is political theater. One minute the billionaire is a climate hero. The next minute he is Darth Vader with a tax return. The same mouth that praises honey suddenly calls it poison when the crowd changes.

And this is not the first time America has heard economically absurd statements delivered with absolute confidence. I have seen this movie before.

Back in 2019, Bernie Sanders blasted millionaires for years until he himself became a millionaire after book sales exploded. Suddenly, millionaires were no longer the main problem. Billionaires became the new enemy. The goalpost moved faster than a getaway car after a bank robbery. Nothing changed except the size of his own bank account.

Then came the famous “defund the police” slogan pushed by several progressive activists after the death of George Floyd in 2020. Some politicians screamed that policing itself was the disease. Cities like San Francisco, Portland, and parts of Chicago experimented with reducing police presence or budgets. Crime surged in several urban areas during the following years. Homicides in the United States rose nearly 30% in 2020 according to FBI data, the largest single-year increase ever recorded at the time. Suddenly ordinary citizens trapped in violent neighborhoods were begging for more police patrols. When the roof starts leaking, ideology quickly loses its romance.

Then there was the magical belief that printing trillions of dollars would not fuel inflation. During and after the COVID-19 pandemic, Washington pumped enormous stimulus spending into the economy. Some economists warned about inflation risks. Others brushed it aside like dust on a jacket. Then reality arrived swinging a baseball bat. By June 2022, U.S. inflation hit 9.1%, the highest level in about 40 years according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Grocery prices exploded. Gas prices exploded. Rent exploded. Working-class Americans got punched in the throat by economic reality while politicians argued on television.

I also remember hearing activists claim standardized testing was racist and should be eliminated because unequal outcomes existed between groups. Never mind whether the tests measured actual academic readiness. Never mind whether removing standards would weaken education itself. The solution became lowering the thermometer because the fever looked politically uncomfortable. Several elite schools changed admissions systems, only to face lawsuits, backlash, and declining confidence from parents who feared merit was being replaced by ideological roulette.

And then came the fantasy that biology itself is merely a social suggestion. People were shouted down for saying men and women are biologically different in sports. Yet when transgender athletes began dominating certain women’s competitions, public debate exploded. Female athletes started speaking out about fairness, scholarships, and physical advantage. Suddenly basic biology returned like an unpaid debt collector kicking down the door.

What ties all these examples together is not simply politics. It is arrogance. Dangerous arrogance. The belief that slogans are smarter than economics, emotions are smarter than evidence, and applause is smarter than reality.

I grew up understanding one brutal truth: the world does not care about your feelings when math enters the room. If a business creates value for millions, it can become enormously valuable. That is not theft. That is scale. That is enterprise. McDonald’s sells billions of burgers because billions of customers choose to buy them. Walmart became massive because people wanted cheaper goods. Amazon conquered retail because customers loved convenience. Nobody held a gun to consumers’ heads.

Now, can billionaires manipulate systems? Absolutely. Can corporations lobby politicians, crush competitors, dodge taxes, or exploit loopholes? Of course. History is filled with robber barons, corrupt monopolies, insider trading scandals, and corporate fraud. The collapse of Enron in 2001 proved greed can rot a corporation from the inside out. The 2008 financial crisis exposed reckless behavior by major banks. But isolated corruption does not magically mean all wealth is criminal. That is like saying every doctor is a fraud because one surgeon committed malpractice.

What worries me is how easy it has become to sell economic ignorance to frustrated people. A struggling worker hears “all billionaires are criminals” and thinks someone finally understands his pain. But rage is not policy. Jealousy is not economics. Screaming at success does not create prosperity. It only creates more screaming.

America became an economic superpower because it rewarded innovation, risk-taking, invention, and ambition. The moment society starts teaching young people that extreme success itself is immoral, ambition begins to rot from the inside. The inventor stops inventing. The entrepreneur stops building. The dream shrinks. And when the dream shrinks, nations decline quietly at first, then all at once.

I have learned that stupidity becomes truly dangerous when it gains political power and moral certainty at the same time. A fool with a microphone can damage more lives than a thief with a pistol. One steals your wallet. The other steals your understanding of reality.

 

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.

Friday, May 8, 2026

Epstein’s Chicken-Scratch Goodbye Smells Like a Manufactured Ending

 


I believe Jeffrey Epstein’s sloppy “suicide note” raises more questions than answers because an arrogant billionaire facing prison would never leave behind such a weak, careless goodbye. The messy handwriting, vague words, and unanswered mysteries make the whole story feel suspicious and manufactured.

I have read Jeffrey Epstein’s newly released “suicide note,” and honestly, the thing reads like a man scribbled it while arguing with a bartender over an unpaid tab. That is supposed to be the final message of one of the richest, most connected sex traffickers in America? Please. I have seen grocery lists with more emotion. The note is sloppy, vague, lazy, and empty. It looks like something written by a bored teenager in detention, not by a billionaire who knew half the political and financial elite on Earth.

And that is exactly why I do not buy it.

I believe Jeffrey Epstein’s sloppy suicide note raises more questions than answers because an arrogant billionaire facing prison would never leave behind such a weak, careless goodbye. Men like Epstein are not built that way. This was not some shy accountant from Iowa quietly disappearing into the night. This was a man who spent years acting like the world was his private nightclub and everybody else was just lucky to stand near the velvet rope. Men that arrogant usually talk too much, not too little. They blame people. They expose people. They scream betrayal. They drag names into the fire like a mobster flipping on his crew after the FBI kicks down the door.

But this note? This thing sounds like somebody quitting a bowling league.

“No fun, not worth it.”

That line alone makes my eyebrows jump into the next ZIP code. A man staring at federal sex-trafficking charges, possible life imprisonment, global humiliation, destroyed friendships, and endless media coverage writes a farewell note that sounds like he is canceling a Netflix subscription? Come on now. Even a drunk raccoon digging through garbage puts up more of a fight than that.

The defenders of the official story keep saying, “Well, suicide notes are different for everybody.” Fine. True. Some are long. Some are short. Some are emotional. Some are cold. But context matters. And the context surrounding Epstein’s death looks like a circus run by blindfolded clowns carrying gasoline cans.

This was a high-profile inmate who had reportedly attempted suicide weeks earlier. He was supposed to be watched carefully. Yet somehow the guards failed to check on him for hours. Surveillance cameras malfunctioned. Records were allegedly falsified. Employees reportedly slept through critical periods. If this had happened in a movie script, critics would reject it for being too unrealistic. The whole thing smells like somebody burned the kitchen and then blamed the toaster.

The U.S. Justice Department’s Inspector General later admitted there was serious negligence and misconduct at the jail. That alone should have made every American stop and say, “Hold on.” But instead, officials acted like people were crazy for asking questions. That is the part that irritates me most. Citizens are expected to swallow every bizarre coincidence like obedient little goldfish while elites stand behind podiums pretending the public is stupid.

No. People are skeptical because the story deserves skepticism. And let us talk about the note itself. The handwriting looks terrible. Not “slightly messy.” Terrible. I am talking about billionaire-penmanship-that-looks-like-it-lost-a-bar-fight terrible. One commentator joked that if Epstein truly wrote that mess, parents should pull their kids out of elementary school immediately because apparently education means nothing anymore. I laughed, but I also understood the point. Epstein was not some uneducated drifter. The man surrounded himself with professors, scientists, bankers, lawyers, and politicians. He cultivated an image of sophistication for years. Yet suddenly his final written words look like a raccoon dipped its paws in ink and tap danced across paper.

Then there is the tone. The note lacks rage. That is what bothers me. Jeffrey Epstein was the kind of man who reportedly manipulated people for decades. Men like that usually have gigantic egos. They want control until the very last breath. If he truly believed he was being framed, railroaded, abandoned, or betrayed, I would expect fury. I would expect accusations. I would expect names. Maybe even blackmail threats. Something ugly. Something sharp. Something poisonous.

Instead, we got the emotional energy of a man returning cold fries at a drive-thru window.

That disconnect is why millions of Americans still do not trust the official explanation. Polls conducted after Epstein’s death showed huge numbers of Americans believed there was more to the story than suicide. And honestly, can you blame them? Broken cameras. Sleeping guards. Missing checks. Strange paperwork. A dead billionaire tied to powerful figures across politics, business, royalty, and entertainment. If coincidence were rain, this case would drown a city.

Then came the endless document releases. Epstein files. Flight logs. Court records. Witness statements. Every few months, another little breadcrumb gets tossed into the public square like scraps thrown to pigeons. Politicians tease disclosures. Media outlets scream “bombshell.” Internet detectives light up social media like a casino on payday. Then nothing truly satisfying arrives. The public keeps waiting for the giant revelation that never comes. It feels less like justice and more like watching a slot machine eat quarters for 7 years straight.

And here is another thing people avoid saying out loud: powerful people often survive scandals because they know where the bodies are buried. Epstein reportedly moved around billionaires, politicians, royalty, and celebrities for decades. That kind of access creates paranoia all by itself. Americans have seen too many cover-ups over the years to simply shrug and move on. Watergate destroyed blind trust in government. The Pentagon Papers exposed lies about Vietnam. The Catholic Church abuse scandal showed how institutions protect themselves first and victims second. Wall Street bankers nearly collapsed the economy in 2008 and many walked away rich. So when officials say, “Nothing suspicious here,” the public hears it the same way gamblers hear a magician saying, “Trust me, the deck is clean.”

I am not claiming I possess some secret smoking gun proving murder. I do not. Nobody outside that prison cell truly knows what happened. But I know human ego. I know arrogance. And Jeffrey Epstein’s entire public life screamed arrogance louder than a nightclub speaker at 3 a.m. Men who spend decades believing they are untouchable do not usually leave behind farewell notes that sound like bored text messages written during a DMV lunch break.

If Epstein truly killed himself, I believe he would have left behind something bigger, uglier, and more dramatic. Maybe revenge. Maybe blame. Maybe self-pity dripping from every line. Maybe a final middle finger to society. But not this weak little chicken-scratch note that reads like a failed rough draft from a cheap crime show.

That is why this story refuses to die. The note did not close the case. It ripped the wound open again. And every time officials tell the public to stop questioning things, more people lean forward and whisper the same dangerous sentence:

“Something about this still does not smell right.”

 

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.

 

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Cheap Oil, Dirty Deals, and China’s Silent Hijack of Trump’s Iran War

 


America, Israel, and Iran are stuck in a dangerous staring contest where nobody trusts anybody and China keeps gaining power without firing a shot. Trump needs a tougher deal than Obama’s, Iran wants leverage through oil routes, and one mistake could send markets into panic again.

Oil prices are dropping again, and the financial crowd is already acting like the fire is out. That is the funny thing about modern politics. A few cheaper barrels of crude oil and people suddenly forget that missiles are still sitting in silos, warships are still floating in the Gulf, and nervous men with itchy fingers are still staring at radar screens in the middle of the night. A snake does not become a shoelace just because it stops moving for five minutes.

Mark Esper, a former U.S. Army officer who served as Secretary of Defense from 2019 to 2020 under President Trump, described this as a “strategic stalemate” -  a global staring contest between three angry powers and one smiling opportunist. Iran refuses to blink. President Trump refuses to crawl back into another weak nuclear deal dressed up in diplomatic perfume. And China is sitting behind the curtain counting money, collecting leverage, and enjoying the show like a landlord watching two broke tenants fight over unpaid rent.

That is the real war now.

Everybody keeps talking about missiles and ceasefires, but the real weapon is the Strait of Hormuz. About 20% of the world’s oil still passes through that narrow waterway. One serious Iranian naval move there and the global economy starts coughing blood. Tehran knows it. Washington knows it. Beijing definitely knows it. That is why Iran made it crystal clear that control of the strait is not some side issue to negotiate away like cheap furniture at a yard sale. It is the crown jewel. It is leverage. It is blackmail wearing a military uniform.

And honestly, Iran learned this game from history. In 1973, Arab oil producers squeezed the West during the oil embargo and America practically looked like a nation trapped inside a giant traffic jam. Gas lines stretched for blocks. Panic buying exploded. Inflation hit like a baseball bat. Then came the 1979 Iranian Revolution, and oil prices exploded again. The Middle East learned a brutal lesson decades ago: you do not always need to defeat America militarily. Sometimes all you need to do is choke its fuel supply and watch politicians start sweating through expensive suits on live television.

Iran understands that perfectly. That is why this conflict is far from over, no matter how many times politicians say the war has ended. Wars do not end because somebody gives a press conference with patriotic background music. Wars end when the guns disappear, armies withdraw, treaties hold, and enemies stop preparing revenge. None of that has fully happened here. The American military is still heavily positioned across the region. Iran is still flexing power. Israel still sees Tehran’s nuclear ambitions as an existential threat. Everybody is pretending to smile while secretly checking where the exits are located.

And now enters China, the quiet gambler at the poker table. This is where the story becomes dangerous for America.

Iran’s foreign minister rushed to Beijing because Tehran knows China is now its economic lifeline. China buys massive amounts of Iranian oil despite sanctions. Without Chinese money flowing in, Iran’s economy would be gasping for oxygen like an old smoker climbing stairs. But here comes the geopolitical joke that should make Washington uncomfortable: Trump also needs China now.

Yes, the same China America calls its biggest long-term threat has quietly become the middleman in the Iran crisis. That is not strength. That is dependency wearing a necktie.

Esper hinted at it clearly. Iran wants Chinese help with Trump. Trump may also need Chinese pressure on Tehran. China now sits in the middle like a casino owner loaning money to both gamblers while secretly owning the building itself. Beijing does not need to fire missiles into the Gulf. It does not need dramatic speeches. It simply waits while America burns billions of dollars, drains military resources, and creates fresh enemies across the Middle East. Then China walks in smiling politely, offering diplomacy, trade deals, and “stability.”

When two lions fight, the hyena quietly drags away dinner. That is China’s strategy in one sentence.

While America spent decades bleeding money in Iraq and Afghanistan, China spent those same years building ports, naval bases, technology dominance, manufacturing power, and economic influence from Africa to Southeast Asia. Washington was busy hunting terrorists in deserts while Beijing was buying influence like a billionaire buying real estate during a foreclosure crisis.

Now China is flexing harder in the South China Sea while America remains trapped in Persian Gulf drama again. Esper noted that  China is currently building another base near critical waters east of Vietnam. That matters. Nearly one-third of global shipping passes through the South China Sea. China wants control of the arteries that keep the global economy alive. Iran threatens Hormuz. China eyes the Pacific shipping lanes. Different tactics. Same philosophy: control the choke points and you control nervous governments.

Meanwhile Iran itself is becoming more hardline, not softer. Western analysts keep pretending there is still some powerful moderate faction waiting to hug America if sanctions disappear. That fantasy belongs in Hollywood, not geopolitics. In plain terms, the IRGC now holds stronger influence inside Iran after recent leadership losses. The new Ayatollah has deep military ties dating back to the 1980s. That matters because military men do not negotiate like professors at a peace conference. They negotiate like men who believe survival comes through force, fear, and revenge.

And honestly, President Trump has his own political trap closing around him. He cannot afford a weak agreement that resembles the old Obama-era JCPOA. Conservatives hated that deal because they believed it delayed Iran’s nuclear ambitions instead of burying them permanently. If President Trump fights a costly regional war only to sign a slightly edited version of the same agreement, Democrats will mock him as a man who spent blood and treasure to arrive back at the same parking spot. Politically, that would be gasoline poured onto a fire.

Financially, America is already feeling the pressure. Fuel markets remain unstable. Shipping insurance costs jumped during the conflict. Global investors panicked every time Hormuz looked threatened. Asian energy markets tightened badly. Even temporary disruptions sent waves through global supply chains. Wars in the Gulf do not stay in the Gulf. They creep into grocery stores, trucking prices, airline tickets, factory costs, and electricity bills. When oil sneezes, the global economy catches pneumonia.

That is why I laugh when television experts casually say the war is “cooling down.” Cooling down is not the same thing as ending. A volcano also cools on the outside before it explodes again.

The ugly truth is that every side now benefits from keeping the conflict alive without triggering full catastrophe. Iran uses the crisis to justify military dominance and nationalist anger. Israel uses the threat to maintain pressure on Tehran’s nuclear infrastructure. Trump uses the confrontation to project strength ahead of political battles at home. China quietly gains leverage over everybody while looking like the calm adult in a room full of reckless drunks. Defense contractors make fortunes. Oil traders profit from panic swings.

Ordinary people get inflation, anxiety, and flag-draped coffins. That is the bitter comedy of modern war. The men shouting about peace are usually still preparing for the next fight behind closed doors.

Right now the Middle East is not standing on stable ground. It is standing on a gasoline-soaked floor while world leaders walk around holding matches and pretending they are carrying candles for peace. One naval clash. One missile mistake. One Israeli covert strike. One Iranian retaliation. Then the entire region explodes again and the same politicians who promised stability will appear on television blaming everybody except themselves.

And somewhere in Beijing, a few powerful men will probably smile quietly and pour another cup of tea.

 

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.

 

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

The United Nations Has Become a Five-Star Hotel for Hypocrites

 


The United Nations has become a polished global theater where oppressive regimes lecture free nations about morality while American taxpayers foot the bill. Rogue countries like Iran gets influence, Israel gets condemned, and America keeps paying for a machine that often works against its own interests. In fact, if hypocrisy were gasoline, the UN headquarters could power Manhattan for 50 years.

I am angry. Not the fake kind of anger politicians perform for television cameras before they sneak into cocktail parties with lobbyists. I mean real anger. The kind that sits in your chest like a burning coal. The kind that makes you stare at the television and mutter, “What exactly are we paying for?”

America keeps pouring mountains of money into the United Nations like a gambler feeding a broken slot machine in Las Vegas, hoping this time it will finally spit out something useful. Yet every few months, the same circus returns to town. Countries with terrible human rights records suddenly become guardians of “human rights.” Dictators lecture democracies about justice. Regimes that jail women for showing their hair sit comfortably inside committees discussing women’s freedom. When the fox starts teaching chickens about security, somebody has lost his mind.

The United States remains the largest financial contributor to the UN system. In 2025, America was responsible for about 22 percent of the UN regular budget and roughly 26 percent of peacekeeping costs. That is more than $820 million toward the regular budget alone. Meanwhile, many countries that scream the loudest against America contribute only a fraction of that amount. America pays premium price for front-row seats at its own humiliation.

And what does Washington often get in return? Condemnation. Lectures. Sneering anti-American rhetoric wrapped inside polished diplomatic language.

Then comes the part that really turns my stomach. Iran. Yes, Iran. A regime accused for years of suppressing and executing protesters, arresting dissidents, crushing women’s rights demonstrations, and funding militant groups across the Middle East somehow keeps finding itself inside major UN structures connected to human rights and policy influence. In 2022, Iran was kicked out of the UN Commission on the Status of Women after the death of Mahsa Amini and the brutal crackdown that followed. But like a bad horror movie villain, the regime keeps crawling back into the building through another door.

In April 2026, Iran was nominated to the UN Committee for Programme and Coordination, a body connected to policy discussions involving human rights, women’s rights, and counterterrorism matters. The United States reportedly stood alone in openly objecting during the ECOSOC session (the United Nations Economic and Social Council session). Just pause there for a second and let the absurdity sink in.

America pays the lion’s share of the bills. Iran gets the microphone.  That is not diplomacy. That is political insanity dressed in a suit and tie.

The defenders of the UN always say the same thing. “Well, engagement matters.” “Dialogue matters.” “International cooperation matters.” Fine. I understand diplomacy. I understand alliances. I understand that the world is messy. But there is a difference between diplomacy and moral surrender. There is a difference between cooperation and self-humiliation.

The UN has spent decades building a reputation that often feels openly hostile toward both America and Israel. Many critics have pointed to the overwhelming number of resolutions targeting Israel compared to countries with far worse human rights records. In 2024, the UN Human Rights Council again pushed resolutions demanding actions against Israel during the Gaza conflict while countries like China, Cuba, and others continued maintaining influence within UN systems. The imbalance is so obvious that even people who are not strongly pro-Israel can see it from space.

And let us stop pretending anti-Semitism at the UN is merely an invention of political talk shows. Former UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon himself admitted in 2016 that there has been a “disproportionate volume” of resolutions criticizing Israel. That statement did not come from a conservative podcast host sitting in a basement. It came from the top of the UN itself.

The problem is deeper than one resolution or one committee seat. The problem is structural. The UN was born in 1945 from the ashes of World War II. At the time, the mission sounded noble: prevent another global catastrophe. Fine. But over the decades, the institution grew bloated, political, ideological, and addicted to symbolism instead of solutions. It became a massive diplomatic theater where countries often posture for cameras while real problems keep exploding outside the building.

Look at the record. Russia sat on the UN Human Rights Council before eventually being suspended after the invasion of Ukraine. China, despite accusations regarding Uyghur Muslims and crackdowns in Hong Kong, continues holding major influence internationally. Iran still maneuvers through UN systems despite its record on political dissent. Saudi Arabia has previously held positions connected to women’s rights discussions despite global criticism over its own restrictions on women. If hypocrisy were gasoline, the UN headquarters could power Manhattan for 50 years.

The defenders will quickly point to humanitarian work. Yes, some UN agencies do valuable work involving refugees, disease control, food aid, and disaster response. I am not blind to that reality. But that does not erase the larger political rot inside the institution. A restaurant may serve one good meal, but if the kitchen is full of rats, customers still have the right to complain.

The uncomfortable truth is this: many authoritarian governments love the UN because it gives them legitimacy they do not deserve. A dictator can crush protests at home on Monday, then fly to New York on Wednesday wearing an expensive suit while talking about “international norms.” Cameras flash. Diplomats clap politely. Press releases are issued. The performance continues.

Meanwhile, ordinary Americans are struggling with inflation, debt, housing costs, medical bills, and taxes. Yet Washington keeps writing checks to organizations that often treat America like the villain of the planet. That is why many citizens are losing patience. Not because they hate international cooperation, but because they are tired of financing institutions that appear deeply allergic to moral consistency.

I also believe many globalist organizations have developed a dangerous habit of treating national sovereignty like an outdated inconvenience. They speak as if borders are primitive ideas and patriotism is some embarrassing disease. But here is the reality: when disaster strikes, people still run to nations for protection, not abstract speeches from conference halls.

The UN today often feels less like a guardian of peace and more like a diplomatic nightclub where bad actors buy moral respectability with political alliances. America keeps paying the cover charge while getting insulted at the bar.

At some point, somebody has to say enough is enough. I am not saying America should isolate itself from the world. That would be foolish. But I am saying blind loyalty to failing institutions is not wisdom. It is weakness. Institutions are supposed to serve people, not the other way around. And when an organization repeatedly rewards hypocrisy, protects political theater, and allows serial abusers to posture as guardians of justice, criticism becomes necessary.

The UN may still have pockets of usefulness. I will grant that. But its moral authority has been bleeding for years, and much of the world can now see the stain spreading across the carpet. The institution that once promised moral leadership increasingly looks like a tired empire of bureaucracy, contradictions, and selective outrage.

And honestly, I am tired of pretending otherwise.

 

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.

 

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