Recep Tayyip Erdoğan just stood before an international audience in Istanbul and issued one of the most direct threats yet against Israel: "There is nothing to prevent us from doing it." That "it," as he made unmistakably clear, was military intervention--an invasion.
Something has gone deeply wrong when Easter--the most sacred moment in the Christian calendar--is marketed with the language and imagery of sexual innuendo. At what point did reaching the lost become indistinguishable from imitating them?
The initiatives are disguised as efforts to improve the social, emotional, and mental wellbeing of children. But in reality, the bills are yet another foundational step toward a national system for psychological conditioning and manipulating children's attitudes, beliefs, and worldview.
The next world order will not be decided by a vote, a revolution, or a declaration. It will be decided by a test result in a laboratory. By the moment one system crosses a threshold that no other system has reached.
What began as an effort to address violence has morphed into an ever-expanding identity checklist, one that now includes a wide range of categories spanning sexuality, gender identity, and abstract classifications that the average person can barely define, let alone keep track of or even pronounce.
Imagine saving for years--working overtime, sacrificing vacations, doing everything right--only to be told at the final step that you're not allowed to buy a home. Not because you broke the law. Not because you failed a financial check. But because the government doesn't like what you believe.
The "Board of Peace" is confronting a harsh reality: Hamas, like Iran, is not motivated by deadlines, incentives, or promises of reconstruction. It is motivated by ideology and by war.
The question now is simple: can an alliance survive when partners do not fully agree on every mission, yet still rely on each other in moments of crisis? The answer will shape U.S.-European relations for decades, and define whether NATO remains a pillar of shared security -- or becomes a relic of assumptions the modern world no longer tolerates.
If Iran is willing to threaten the entire ceasefire arrangement over Israeli strikes on Hezbollah, then it tells us something critical: Hezbollah is not a side asset to Iran. It is central to Iran's future war plans.
|
[ Page
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
]
Next
|