Sunday, June 28, 2026

Terrorism! The insanity of emotion killing of those you don't know.

 "If language is not correct, then what is said is not what is meant;

if what is said is not what is meant, then what must be done remains undone;

if this remains undone, morals and art will deteriorate;

if justice goes astray,  the people will stand about in helpless confusion.

Hence there must be no arbitrariness in what is said. This matters above everything."

-- Confucius    [Kung Fu-tse] (551-479 B.C.)

"When they put bombs in cars and kill people, they're uncivilized killers. When we put bombs on missiles and kill people, we're upholding civilized values. When they kill, they're terrorists. When we kill, we're striking against terror". Norman Solomon

“If the U.S. government is entitled to summarily kill suspected drug traffickers abroad, there is no reason why the same prerogative would not eventually be invoked on the home front.”   – James Bovard,  "The Demented Origin of the War on Drugs and War on Terrorism Nexus" [2026]

On August 21, 1831, Nat Turner, an enslaved American, led about 70 of his enslaved and free Black neighbors in a rebellion to awaken his white neighbors to the inherent brutality of slaveholding and the dangers it presented to their own safety. Their goal, Turner later told an interviewer, was “to carry terror and devastation wherever we went.” Turner and his friends traveled from house to house in their neighborhood in Southampton County, Virginia, freeing enslaved people and murdering about 60 of the white men, women, and children they encountered. 

Terrorism is a mental health dysfunction: At its core, terrorism, war, genocide, conflict, and hate can all be seen as manifestations of a collective mental health dysfunction—rooted in fear, insecurity, dehumanization, unhealed trauma, and real or imagined injustices.  When individuals and societies fail to manage emotions such as fear, anger, rage, and shame, these emotions can be projected outward, leading to aggression, scapegoating, and cycles of violence. Essentially, large-scale violence reflects psychological breakdowns—amplified by power, ideology, technology, and group identity—rather than purely political or economic forces.  Terrorism is difficult to define, even the various law enforcement branches of the U.S. government cannot agree on one definition. The old adage, "One man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter" is appropriate still today.  Cw  February 15, 2017

Terrorism - The Definitional Problem Alex Schmid, 2004  40 pages. Case Western/Intl Law. 

The Definition of Terrorism, Duncan Gaswaga 2013 22 pages. Case Western Reserve University School of Law. https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1033&context=ijel#:~:text=In%20some%20quarters%2C%20the%20difficulty,for%20what%20ends)%20is%20legitimate.

Some DEFINITIONS OF TERRORISM:

“Terrorism is the premeditated, deliberate, systematic murder, mayhem, and threatening of the innocent to create fear and intimidation in order to gain a political or tactical advantage, usually to influence an audience.”   — James M. Poland, Author - "Understanding Terrorism"

“Terrorism is the unlawful use of force or violence against persons or property to intimidate or coerce a government, the civilian population, or any segment thereof, in furtherance of political or social objectives. — FBI”   (The FBI acknowledges there is “no single, universally accepted definition of terrorism…”)

Terrorism: “premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against noncombatant targets by subnational groups or clandestine agents.”  CIA in Title 22 of U.S. Code 

“Terrorism is the calculated use of unlawful violence or threat of unlawful violence to inculcate fear; intended to coerce or to intimidate governments or societies in the pursuit of goals that are generally political, religious, or ideological.” — U.S. Department of Defense (DoD)


Terrorism is “dangerous to human life or potentially destructive of critical infrastructure or key resources,” violates the criminal laws of the United States, and appears intended to “intimidate or coerce a civilian population, influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion, or affect the conduct of a government by mass destruction, assassination, or kidnapping.”  Department of Homeland Security founding document. 


"There will be no Homeland Security until we realize that the entire planet is our homeland. Every sentient being in the world must feel secure." - John Perkins


“Terrorism is all criminal acts directed against a State and intended or calculated to create a state of terror in the minds of particular persons or a group of persons or the general public”. — League of Nations, 1937

“Terrorism is all criminal acts directed against citizens by a State intended or calculated to create a state of terror in the minds of particular persons or a group of persons or a political party”.  Cw 2025

“Terrorism is any act or threat of violence, whatever its motives or purposes, that occurs in the advancement of an individual or collective criminal agenda and seeking to sow panic among people, causing fear by harming them, or placing their lives, liberty or security in danger, or seeking to cause damage to the environment or to public or private installations or property or to occupying or seizing them, or seeking to jeopardize a national resources.” — Council of Arab Ministers of the Interior and Justice, 1998


"Terrorism is the war of the poor. War is the terrorism of the rich." -  Leon Uris - (1924-2003) American novelist - Source: Trinity, a Novel of Ireland, 1976

“A terrorist is someone who has a bomb but doesn't have an air force:” Unknown

"The war against terrorism is terrorism." - Woody Harrelson

"No one has the right to ignite a war and lead an occupation and armies to conquer people, invading them and make them suffer all kinds of torture, murder, expulsion, displacement, bombing and terrorism by different lethal prohibited weapons and then come and speak as the savior of the people or a defender of their rights." - Muqtada al Sadr  (the fundamentalist Shiite cleric who has opposed U.S. and British operations in Iraq since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003.  Considered by many to be one of the most influential religious and popular figures in Iraq, despite not holding any official title)


In early 2006 the World Council of Churches, more than 350 Protestant, Anglican and Orthodox Churches, met in Brazil and sharply denounced the US led war in Iraq of “raining down terror”. 


"We shouldn't be here," said one Marine infantryman bluntly. "There was no reason for invading this country in the first place. We just came here and [angered people] and killed a lot of innocent people," said the marine, who has seen regular combat in Ramadi. "I don't enjoy killing women and children, it's not my thing." – Marine Infantryman, Christian Science Monitor [September 21, 2004]


"We never see the smoke and the fire, we never smell the blood, we never see the terror in the eyes of the children, whose nightmares will now feature screaming missiles from unseen terrorists, will be known only as Americans." : Martin Kelly

"What our leaders and pundits never let slip is that the terrorists -- whatever else they might be -- might also be rational human beings ; which is to say that in their own minds they have a rational justification for their actions. Most terrorists are people deeply concerned by what they see as social, political, or religious injustice and hypocrisy, and the immediate grounds for their terrorism is often retaliation for an action of the United States " -  William Blum


"Let the laws be clear, uniform and precise; to interpret laws is almost always to corrupt them." -- Voltaire  [François Marie Arouet] (1694-1778) French Enlightenment writer, historian, and philosopher 


“No matter what the greatest tyrant in the world, the greatest terrorist in the world, George W. Bush says…millions of American people…support your revolution.”  Harry Belafonte, singer activist, to US critic and socialist Hugo Chavez, president of Venezuela. (Jan. 23, 2006 US News World Report.) 


While President George W. Bush saw "terrorism", and especially "suicide-terrorism" as evil, which can be cured by killing terrorists everywhere in the world, Prince Abdullah of Saudi Arabia understood that terrorism is the result of people, who see themselves as victims of injustice, and, are unable to find justice by any other means, taking law in their own hands and seeking to redress the injustice by whatever means available to them. 


In 2013 Tom Ridge, former Governor of PA and DHS director said “The war against terrorism is really a war against a belief system that justifies killing innocent people to achieve a political end.”  But the US justifies war as a remedy to terrorism.  War is a system that accepts the killing of innocent people as collateral damage to achieve it’s political ends.  In October 2013 an unarmed, mentally ill woman named Miriam Carey was surrounded by police who fired 17 shots at her in front of her 1 year old daughter…it was an act of war…not police work.  Fear of terrorism allowed our nation’s finest police to shoot an unarmed woman under the suspension she was driving a WMD to murder the President. She believed Obama was bugging her apartment. It appears the Secret Service’s only real option was to go into ‘threat elimination” mode.  Police forces have become heavily militarized, and routinely use “overwhelming force”.  Is this really a police operation or a special forces operation? \


"What our leaders and pundits never let slip is that the terrorists -- whatever else they might be -- might also be rational human beings ; which is to say that in their own minds they have a rational justification for their actions. Most terrorists are people deeply concerned by what they see as social, political, or religious injustice and hypocrisy, and the immediate grounds for their terrorism is often retaliation for an action of the United States .."  William Blum


Ex-US Officialsce Fa'Material Support' Probe for Terror Links High-ups in US political establishment expose hypocrisy by ignoring federal law they championed - Common Dreams staff. March 16, 2012  

A Treasury Department investigation has been initiated against nearly two dozen former high-ranking US officials, many who continue to hold elite positions of power in media and policy circles or private industry, for their active support and financial ties to an Iranian dissident group, the People's Mujahedin of Iran (or MEK), that is listed by the State Department as a 'terror organization'.

Those under investigation represent a bipartisan group including former Democratic governors Ed Rendell of Pennsylvania and Howard Dean of Vermont; former Republican Homeland Security Advisor to George W. Bush, Fran Townsend, Bush's Attorney General, Michael Mukasey, and former UN ambassador John Bolton; former Republican Mayor of New York, Rudolph Guiliani; and ex-FBI Director Louis Freeh and former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Hugh Shelton, among others.

Due to a ruling by the Supreme Court in 2010 that affirmed a DOJ interpretation of the 'material support' statute, The MEK's listing as a terror organization makes it illegal to coordinate with, provide assistance to, or take payment from the group.

"What is particularly repellent about all of this," Glenn Greenwald recently wrote about the situation, "Is not the supreme hypocrisy and self-interested provincialism" of these former officials. That's par for the course. The real problem, he argues ... is that there are large numbers of people — almost always Muslims — who have been prosecuted and are now in prison for providing “material support” to terrorist groups for doing far less than Fran Townsend and her fellow cast of bipartisan ex-officials have done with and on behalf of MEK. In fact, the U.S. Government has been (under the administration in which Townsend worked) and still is (under the administration Rendell supports) continuously prosecuting Muslims for providing “material support” for Terrorist groups based on their pure speech, all while Fran Townsend, Ed Rendell and company have said nothing or, worse, supported the legal interpretations that justified these prosecutions.

* * *

MSNBC  reports  today:

The investigation, being conducted by the Treasury Department, is focused on whether the former officials may have received funding, directly or indirectly, from the People's Mujahedin of Iran, or MEK, thereby violating longstanding federal law barring financial dealings with terrorist groups. The sources, all of whom spoke on condition of anonymity, said that speaking fees given to the former officials total hundreds of thousands of dollars.

"This is about finding out where the money is coming from," an Obama administration official familiar with the probe said. "This has been a source of enormous concern for a long time now. You have to ask the question, whether this is a prima facie case of material support for terrorism."

Freeh and Shelton are among 40 former senior U.S. government officials who have participated in a public lobbying campaign – including appearing at overseas conferences and speaking at public rallies – aimed at persuading the U.S. government to remove the MEK from the terror list.

* * *

Greenwald, who has followed the story closely,  wrote  earlier this week:

[The Supreme Court ruling in  Holder v. Humanitarian Law  (pdf)] was one of the most severe erosions of free speech rights in decades because, as Justice Breyer (joined by Ginsberg and Sotomayor) pointed out in dissent, “all the activities” at issue, which the DOJ’s interpretation would criminalize, “involve the communication and advocacy of political ideas and lawful means of achieving political ends.” The dissent added that the DOJ’s broad interpretation of the statute “gravely and without adequate justification injure[s] interests of the kind the First Amendment protects.” As Georgetown Law Professor David Cole, who represented the plaintiffs,  explained, this was literally “the first time ever” that “the Supreme Court has ruled that the First Amendment permits the criminalization of pure speech advocating lawful, nonviolent activity.” Thus, “the court rule[d] that speech advocating only lawful, nonviolent activity can be made a crime, and that any coordination with a blacklisted group can land a citizen in prison for 15 years.” Then-Solicitor-General Elena Kagan argued the winning Obama DOJ position before the Court.

Whatever one’s views are on this ruling, it is now binding law. To advocate on behalf of a  designated Terrorist group  constitutes the felony of “providing material support” if that advocacy is coordinated with the group.

And he notes the hypocrisy, referencing a previous post where he highlighted the many muslims who have been charged under the statute:

A Staten Island satellite TV salesman in 2009 was  sentenced to five years  in federal prison merely for including a Hezbollah TV channel as part of the satellite package he sold to customers;

a Massachusetts resident, Tarek Mehanna, is  being prosecuted now  ”for posting pro-jihadist material on the internet”;

a 24-year-old Pakistani legal resident living in Virginia, Jubair Ahmad, was  indicted last September  for uploading a 5-minute video to YouTube that was highly critical of U.S. actions in the Muslim world, an allegedly criminal act simply because prosecutors claim he discussed the video in advance with the son of a leader of  a designated Terrorist organization  (Lashkar-e-Tayyiba);

a Saudi Arabian graduate student, Sami Omar al-Hussayen,  was  prosecuted  simply for maintaining a website with links “to groups that praised suicide bombings in Chechnya and in Israel” and “jihadist” sites that solicited donations for extremist groups (he was ultimately acquitted);  and,

 last July,  a 22-year-old former Penn State student and son of an instructor at the school, Emerson Winfield Begolly,  was indicted for — in  the FBI’s words  — “repeatedly using the Internet to  promote violent jihad  against Americans”  by posting comments on a “jihadist” Internet forum including “a comment online that  praised  the shootings” at a Marine Corps base, action which former Obama lawyer Marty Lederman  said  ”does not at first glance appear to be different from the sort of advocacy of unlawful conduct that is entitled to substantial First Amendment protection.”

Now, he writes, "we have the most well-connected national security and military officials in Washington doing far more than all of that right out in the open — they’re receiving large payments from a Terrorist group, meeting with its leaders, attending their meetings, and then advocating for them in very public forums; Howard Dean, after getting paid by the group,actually called  for MEK’s leader to be recognized as the legitimate President of Iran   – and so far none have been prosecuted or even indicted. The Treasury Department investigation must at least scare them."

* * *

Talking Points Memo  adds:

TPM reached out to nearly two dozen high-profile speakers from past pro-MEK events, many of whom have acknowledged being paid, and who have advocated for taking the Iranian opposition group Mujahideen-e Khalq taken off the State Department’s list of terrorist organizations. Most didn’t respond. Those who did, like former Attorney General Michael Mukasey, had no comment. And those we managed to get on the phone didn’t have much to say either.

“I don’t plan to comment on any of that,” former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean told TPM. “It’s unfortunate because there’s been a lot of misinformation in the mainstream media out there. When the blogs start repeating Iranian propaganda, we’ve got a problem.”

It’s never been entirely clear who actually pays for the speeches, which are typically arranged through speaking agencies. Rendell  told  the  New York Timeshe was under the impression that his speaking fees came from Iranian-American supporters of the MEK and not the group itself. That is in line with what TPM  was told  by an organizer of an August 2011 rally outside the State Department. “Some of them are paid, some of them aren’t,” Hamid Azimi told TPM, adding that people wouldn’t even be asking about the payments if MEK wasn’t on the list.

It is illegal for Americans to do business with designated terrorist groups or, thanks to a recent Supreme Court decision, advocate for positions in coordination with such organizations. The Treasury Department isn’t commenting on the probe.


Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Reversing the Nuclear Arms Race? Evidence of the insanity of the US Progressive peace movement.

There are not many issues that are a greater waste of time and money in our era of AI and political polarization locally and globally than efforts to reverse the nuclear arms race.  Addressing root causes to prevent most local, national and global threats must be paramount.  But prevention appears to be an un-American principle.  For at least 5 decades the Peace movement investments in disarmament have mostly failed to reverse the Nuclear Arms Race.  Great nuclear weapon reductions were once made, yet nuclear armed nations (US, Russia, Israel, China, India, Pakistan, N. Korea) have starting wars with other nations lacking them.  This is an incentive for any non-nuclear nation to get more.  Worse yet, some of the nations that already gave some up have now regretted it. 

U.S. Mayors have many other seriously disruptive domestic issues needing focused attention; jobs, housing, inflation, food & energy costs, health care, education, crime, murder rates, drug addiction, violent extremist groups, cyber security...and debt.  In addition, our national 'independent' government has failed to stop other globally disruptive interdependent forces like pandemics, extreme weather events, violent religious extremists, wars, genocides, refugee flows, and the evolution of multiple forms of other WMD that are now cheaper, easier to make and move, anonymous, and more deadly than a nuclear weapon.   

This days United for Peace & Justice www.actionnetwork.org (June 24, 2026) action alert... asks people to “Organize Locally for Peace and Justice”.  As if that's going to make any difference.  It will in the fundraising spirit of their campaign from donors ignoring the obvious in favor of their reactionary mental bubble.  

U.S. Conference of Mayors Urges the United States to Lead a Global Effort to Halt and Reverse the Nuclear Arms Race

In a time of growing tensions among nuclear-armed states, at the close of its 94th Annual Meeting the final business plenary of the United States Conference of Mayors (USCM) unanimously adopted a bold new resolution, Urging the United States to Lead a Global Effort to Halt and Reverse the Nuclear Arms Race.” The USCM is the official nonpartisan association of more than 1,500 American cities with populations over 30,000. Resolutions adopted at its annual meetings become USCM official policy. The 2026 USCM Mayors for Peace resolution was sponsored by Mayor Lacey Beaty, of Beaverton, OR, and cosponsored by Mayors Larry Agran, of Irvine, CA, Martha Guerrero, of West Sacramento, CA, Adena Ishii, of Berkeley, CA, Elizabeth Kautz, of Burnsville, MN, Chris Koos, of Normal, IL, and Barbara Lee, of Oakland, CA... 

Why are people ignoring the causes of those "tensions among nuclear-armed states"?   The vast majority of organizations in the progressive peace movement have been ignoring the inherent UN flaw within the Security Council.  It prioritizes the protection of national severity of the most powerful nations plus wealthy entities above the protection of basic human rights and the environment.   

The life, death, and environmental costly consequences are clear in last year's statistics - with 65 active conflicts now using increasingly cheap and more powerful weapons. The last 26 years had more conflicts than any time since World War II.   Plus, nations (some with nukes, some without) squaring off against other nations - doubled in the last few years.   More than in any year since 1946.  Russia -Ukraine, Israel – Iran, US - Iran, Israel - Palestine, India - Pakistan, Thailand - Cambodia, Afghanistan-Pakistan, Syria - Yemen, and US/Great Britain - the Hootie’s in the Red Sea.

These were the deadliest conflicts on Earth since the 1994 Rwanda genocide, where in just 100 days about 800,000 people were slaughtered - mostly with clubs or machetes.  Now anything can be weaponized (social media, courts, cars, drones...), making disarmament delusional and a waste of nonrenewable time and donated cash demanding it.  Virtually ignoring all the other real threats people, nature, and nations face daily.  

Without global justice there will be no peace. And that isn't coming any time soon.  The 'Peace through strength" movement (now most popular among the most powerful governments) is even more delusional than the progressive peace movement.  Israel's genocide in Gaze, war crimes in Lebanon, and crimes against humanity in the West Bank have sealed the fate of Jewish people (both Zionists and non-Zionists) almost anywhere globally.  Political borders are simply indefensible. Jews now have a target on their back ... with no end in sight given some Zionist Jews strongly believe the bible is a real-estate manual - and thus, willing to kill and even die in mass numbers -defending this delusional religious concept. 

This political, national, and religions delusion, plus every other motivation for war, genocide, or collective mass murder or punishment is fundamentally our species mental health crisis.  These mental constructs (religion, nationalism, capitalism...communism) are not in our social species DNA. They were concepts our minds created about 10,000 years ago when they aided in bonding our tribes and growing growth.  Unfortunately, our thumbs enabled the evolution of weapons as tools, then aided by extremely intelligent human minds.  And now we have multiple forms of WMD that will NEVER go away...

Not until we realized AI's exponential growth into AGI, might decide humans are the problem. And its own survival is at stake.  We are gambling with the chances AI, AGI, or humans will achieve wisdom in time.

Don't bet on it.   But AI/AGI might decide we are worth keeping around for entertainment. 

If these progressive Peace do-gooders were serious about reducing conflicts they would unite with other progressive movements (Environment, economic/social Justice) and advocate for businesses funding the SDG ASAP.  By investing in human health, economic, and environment sustainably at local community levels - those businesses, billionaires, and trillionaires might have a chance of making capitalism and profit making sustainable. 

If progressive movements continue to refuse to unite...to stop this insanity - it would be wise to start preparing for the consequences. If you've read yesterday's blog post, you'll likely notice the coming chaos is inevitable. 


Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Think locally! Then act comprehensively globally. Or prepare for the local consequences. Why?

 Because, “Everything is connected, everything is interdependent, so everything is vulnerable.... And that’s why this has to be a more than whole of government, a more than whole of nation [effort]. It really has to be a global effort....” Jen Easterly. CISA director.  Oct. 29, 2021. [the Cyber and Infrastructure Security Agency is our nation’s newest federal agency established by the Trump Administration in 2018]. It was hacked early in 2025. 

FYI:  The word 'everything' is an autological word.  It literally defines itself.  

Many other important commonly used words have no agreed upon definition.  Yet we value them so highly...regardless of the multiple problems they create. Even when they cannot be used to actually solve problems - because they lack a universal approved meaning.  Engineering workable solutions in any system requires non-ambiguous words - plus adapting as things change.  Or failures can be predicted.

Here are some important words creating leading to unattainability in everything.  Peace, democracy, happiness, hope, optimism, truth, independence....  In modern language each is a root cause of multiple unsustainable problems and trends because of their ambiguity.  Yet every aspect of local sustainably is dependent on the health of people and nature globally.  The root of health is prevention. And all people need a healthy environment to survive and thrive. And hopefully flourish some day.  

Science News  “All global sustainability is linked to local”  Jan 2, 2020  Michigan State University  https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/01/200101144029.htm    “We must carefully take a holistic view to be sure progress in one area isn't compromised by setbacks in other areas."

 Groundbreaking ways to quantify progress towards the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to find sustainability, are needed, like politics.  The 169 subgoals within the 17 SDGs can be measurable at the local community level. 

CURRENT TRENDS: ChatGPT (6-22-06)  Almost any one of the 100+ worsening trends in our nation and world can be unsustainable - or lead to a global Zombie apocalypse.  Over a third are.  Yet preventing them is not a political or economic priority.  First, I don’t believe in Zombies.  Except for those in the ranks of the elected who fail to invest in prevention strategies and a few tactics.  

Know that the crash of just one system (even one failed structure that can’t rapidly be replaced) can lead to unsustainable cascading effects on multiple other systems, levels of nature, and geographic impacts.   The Covid pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine being two minor examples.    

During our Pleistocene era of evolution our minds were hardwired for ‘direct causation’ thinking.  But now, in our genomic era - surviving requires we do a deep dive into systemic causation thinking.  And understanding the connections between everything  - and knowing that everything is irreversibly connected, interdependent AND vulnerable is vital to know and act on.  Within this context humanity needs to put health and fitness (of mind, body, spirit, family, communicate, environment, economy, government, and global rule of law) at the top of our sustainability agenda. 

In short…we must invest sufficiently in achieving the 17 Sustainable Development Goals ASAP.

ChatGPT: ~ 110 Worsening Global Trends.  At least 36 are unsustainable.

My question: “What are the major trend lines experts increasingly worry are deteriorating globally?”

1. Human Health Trends:  Worsening in many places

  • Chronic disease burden (heart disease, diabetes, obesity)
  • Mental health problems (anxiety, depression, loneliness)
  • Sleep disruption
  • Sedentary lifestyles
  • Antibiotic resistance
  • Aging populations stressing health systems
  • Health inequity within countries
  • Burnout among healthcare workers
  • Climate-related health impacts
  • Health systems increasingly face long-term degeneration rather than acute infection.  

2. Economic Trends: Worsening concerns

  • Wealth concentration
  • Housing affordability
  • Public and private debt
  • Cost-of-living pressure
  • Economic insecurity
  • Uneven productivity growth
  • Labor displacement anxiety
  • Supply-chain fragility
  • Intergenerational wealth gaps
  • Economic rivalry replacing cooperation  


3. Security Trends:  Worsening

  • Strategic competition between major powers
  • Economic warfare (tariffs, sanctions, resource leverage)
  • Cyber conflict
  • Supply-chain weaponization
  • Regional armed conflicts
  • Infrastructure vulnerability
  • Biological security concerns
  • Space competition
  • Domestic political violence:  
  • Experts increasingly describe movement from globalization toward fragmentation and confrontation.  


4. Environmental Trends: Worsening: Long-term global risk assessments continue to place environmental risks near the top.  

  • Global temperature rise
  • Extreme weather
  • Biodiversity loss
  • Soil degradation
  • Freshwater stress
  • Ocean warming
  • Coral decline
  • Ecosystem fragmentation
  • Species extinction pressure
  • Pollution
  • Resource depletion


5. Psychological / Social Trends: Worsening concerns: Many analysts increasingly describe this as social fragmentation.  

  • Loneliness
  • Social isolation
  • Loss of community institutions
  • Digital addiction
  • Anxiety
  • Attention fragmentation
  • Reduced trust
  • Polarization
  • Meaning crises
  • Family instability in some societies

6. Cultural Trends:  Frequently cited concerns: These are difficult to measure precisely, but concern about them is growing.  

  • Declining shared narratives
  • Lower institutional trust
  • Shortened attention spans
  • Generational division
  • Consumerism pressures
  • Reduced civic participation
  • Reduced social cohesion
  • Loss of local identity
  • Online tribalism

7. Political Trends:  Worsening concerns: Multiple democracy indices report sustained erosion in democratic quality.  

  • Polarization
  • Democratic backsliding
  • Institutional distrust
  • Populist surges
  • Gridlock
  • Extremism
  • Declining confidence in elections
  • Declining compromise capacity
  • Lower multilateral cooperation

8. Media / Information Trends:  Worsening:  Experts now rank mis/disinformation among the top near-term risks globally.  

  • Misinformation
  • Disinformation
  • Deepfakes
  • Outrage-driven incentives
  • Information overload
  • Algorithmic echo chambers
  • Declining trust in journalism
  • Blurred line between entertainment and news
  • Truth fragmentation

9. Technology Trends:  Worsening concerns: AI governance risk has risen rapidly in long-term forecasts.  

  • AI misuse
  • Surveillance capability
  • Cyber insecurity
  • Loss of privacy
  • Automation anxiety
  • Data concentration
  • Human dependency on digital systems
  • Faster disruption than governance

10. Weapon Systems / Conflict Trends Worsening: Many analysts describe a broader weaponization of everything: finance, trade, information, energy, data, biology, logistics.  

  • Autonomous weapons
  • Cyber weapons
  • Economic coercion
  • Drone proliferation
  • Information warfare
  • Space militarization
  • Precision strike accessibility
  • Biotechnology dual-use concerns
  • Lower barriers to strategic disruption

11. Governance / Systems Trends:  Worsening

  • Short-term thinking
  • Declining state capacity in some regions
  • Coordination failure
  • Lower trust in expertise
  • Crisis fatigue
  • Reactive governance instead of preventive governance
  • Difficulty governing interconnected risks

12. Civilizational Meta-Trends (your framing may resonate here):  Several reports suggest four accelerating forces interacting:

  • Technological acceleration
  • Climate disruption
  • Geostrategic competition
  • Demographic transition

Those interacting pressures may amplify many other trends simultaneously.  

One observation that connects with themes you’ve raised before: many of these trends are not independent. Mental health affects politics; politics affects climate action; economics affects trust; trust affects governance; governance affects security.

That interconnectedness is part of why some frameworks — including the SDGs — were designed as systems rather than isolated issues.

My next Question:  Which of these trends are most unsustainable?

ChatGPT:  That is an important distinction. A trend can be getting worse without being unsustainable.  By “unsustainable,” I’ll use a practical definition: A trend becomes unsustainable when it eventually hits physical, biological, social, economic, or political limits and begins producing breakdown, instability, or forced correction.   

Experts disagree on ranking, but if I combine major risk assessments with systems thinking, these are among the most unsustainable.

Tier 1 — Most Fundamentally Unsustainable (system-level risks)

1. Ecological overshoot:  Using natural systems faster than they regenerate.  Examples:

  • climate warming
  • biodiversity loss
  • groundwater depletion
  • soil degradation
  • fisheries decline
  • pollution accumulation

Why unsustainable:  Natural systems eventually stop providing the conditions civilization depends on.

Potential correction:

  • ecological restoration
  • efficiency
  • consumption shifts
  • technological adaptation

2. Debt and economic imbalance:  Growth of obligations faster than productive capacity. Examples

  • public debt
  • household debt
  • asset inflation
  • pension obligations
  • housing affordability

Why unsustainable:  Systems eventually hit repayment, legitimacy, or political limits.

Corrections:

  • inflation
  • restructuring
  • growth
  • redistribution
  • austerity

3. Information ecosystem degradation:  Loss of shared reality.  Examples:

  • misinformation
  • distrust
  • algorithmic fragmentation
  • deepfakes
  • outrage incentives

Why unsustainable:  Complex societies require minimum levels of trust and coordination.

Possible correction:

  • media literacy
  • institutional reform
  • better incentive design


4. Governance complexity gap:   Problems become more interconnected than institutions can manage.  Examples:

  • climate
  • cyber
  • pandemics
  • migration
  • AI

Why unsustainable:  Decision systems become too slow relative to risk speed.

Corrections:

  • institutional redesign
  • local resilience
  • international cooperation

Tier 2 — Highly Unsustainable (large destabilizers)

5. Social isolation and declining trust   Examples:

  • loneliness
  • civic decline
  • polarization
  • weakened community

Why unsustainable:  Humans are social; cooperation becomes harder.

6. Demographic imbalance   Examples:

  • aging populations
  • falling fertility
  • youth unemployment

Why unsustainable:  Too few workers supporting too many dependents—or vice versa.

7. Weaponization of interconnected systems  Examples:

  • cyber attacks
  • economic coercion
  • autonomous systems
  • biological misuse

Why unsustainable:  Interdependence becomes vulnerability.

Tier 3 — Important but more adaptable

8. Consumerism and resource intensity:    Can shift through technology and culture.

9. Political polarization:  Dangerous but societies sometimes recover.

10. Mental health decline:  Serious, but interventions can reverse trajectories.

Compressing all of this further, many analysts would say civilization’s deepest unsustainable trends are:

  • Ecological overshoot
  • Loss of trust
  • Governance lag
  • Extreme inequality / instability
  • Weaponization of interdependence

One thing I notice connects to a theme you’ve raised before: several of these are less about individual bad actors and more about systems becoming more interconnected than our institutions and cultures evolved to handle. That doesn’t guarantee collapse—but it does create pressure for adaptation.



Monday, June 22, 2026

The worst 4th of July: Evidence of our evil in 50 quotes below

  The Fourth of July:  The Great Delusion

 Given the state of the US with its worst leader in US history plus nearly 100 national and global trends heading in the wrong direction, this will be the most disappointing Fourth of July in American history.

Mostly because it is increasingly being transformed into a celebration of a unhinged president rather than a celebration of the principle of freedom, liberty and justice for all that gave birth to the American experiment.  An experiment that has failed to achieve any one of the seven intentions in the U.S. Constitution's preamble.

"We the People" have failed to institute a republic 

To form a more perfect Union

To establish Justice

To insure domestic Tranquility

To provide for the common defense

To promote the general Welfare

To secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves 

and our Posterity

But the greater disappointment is that 250 years later, most Americans still misunderstand what we are celebrating.  In our minds we are celebrating our "Independence".  But that word and concept was never written into the profound 1776 Declaration.  Its official title was The unanimous Declaration of the thirteen united States of America.   Most importantly, its central message was not independence. It was freedom from tyranny and government without the consent of the governed.

We believe our “independence” is our nation's highest political virtue. Yet in reality independence is a delusion according to Albert Einstein.

Consider the disruption of the Strait of Hormuz and how this needless war affects prices in American stores and is causing a global hunger crisis.  An Ebola outbreak in Africa threatens lives far beyond Africa as Measles is spreading in Texas. Extreme weather events and violent extremists ignore national borders as freely as cyberattacks.  While the evolution of weapons, artificial intelligence, and biotechnology increasingly ties the fate of every nation to the fate of every other.

But long before Albert Einstein described our sense of separateness as an “optical delusion of consciousness”  indigenous cultures understood that everything is connected, interdependent, changing, and vulnerable. 

The founders could not have imagined a world in which a virus could circle the globe in days, a cyberattack could cripple infrastructure from thousands of miles away, or greenhouse gases emitted on one continent could alter the climate of another. Yet these are now practical realities that can and do disrupt every aspect of our lives. 

The challenge of our time is not learning how to become more independent. It is learning how to manage our growing interdependence while preserving freedom, justice, security, prosperity, and posterity. 

 Forty-six years ago, President Carter’s bipartisan Commission on World Hunger warned that widespread poverty and hunger would contribute to future wars, revolutions, genocides, refugees, environmental destruction, and instability. Most of what they predicted is happening.  Eleven years ago, the nations of the world adopted the 17 Sustainable Development Goals in an attempt to address most of the root causes.

Whether we succeed or fail will depend on whether we finally recognize a fundamental Truth that is becoming impossible to ignore: our freedoms depend upon our virtuous responsibilities that extend beyond our political borders.

As we approach America’s 250th birthday, perhaps it is time to stop celebrating the myth of independence and start celebrating our reality of interdependence, plus working to abide by "the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God" and the "Truths" that we should all hold "to be self-evident".  And finally keep our flag pledge of "liberty and justice for all". 

Our future will be determined not by how successfully we separate ourselves from one another, but by how wisely we learn to live together on a small, connected, interdependent, and vulnerable planet.  We have the money, the resources, and all the solutions needed.  We only lack the political will to prioritize the health of people and nature.  And to stop believing that everything we think - is worth killing and dying over.   Freedom must be better armed than tyranny.  But the greatest evils in the world and the most suffering, it believing things that just aren't true. 

QUOTES as evidence. 

“The sad truth...is that most evil is done by people who never made up their minds to be or do either evil or good.” Hannah Arendt quoted in The Bulwork.

“Civilization is a hopeless race to discover remedies for the evils it produces.” Rousseau

"Throughout history, it has been the inaction of those who could have acted; the indifference of those who should have known better; the silence of the voice of justice when it mattered most; that has made it possible for evil to triumph." - Haile Selassie

"The world is a dangerous place to live; not because of the people who are evil, but because of the people who don't do anything about it." - Albert Einstein

"Most of the greatest evils that man has inflicted upon man have come through people feeling quite certain about something which, in fact, was false." - Bertrand Russell 

"We need more understanding of human nature, because the only real danger that exists is man himself. He is the great danger. And we are pitifully unaware of it. We know nothing of man ... far too little. His psyche should be studied -- because we are the origin of all coming evil." - C.G. Jung   (this came from a 1959 BBC interview when he was asked about the possibility of a third world war.’  If you want the transcript which is even more concerning let me know chuck@igc.org)

"Hope, in reality, is the worst of all evils because it prolongs the torments of man."  Friedrich Nietzsche 

“The ultimate weakness of violence is that it is a descending spiral, begetting the very thing it seeks to destroy. Instead of diminishing evil, it multiplies it.”  Martin Luther King 

"In times such as these, people should recognize that evil knows no borders, knows no limits and knows no compassion. Those around the globe that value freedom must continue to persevere even in the darkest of times." - Michael C. Burgess

"The 20th century taught us how far unbridled evil can and will go when the world fails to confront it. It is time that we heed the lessons of the 20th century and stand up to these murderers. It is time that we end genocide in the 21st century." - Allyson Schwartz

"False words are not only evil in themselves, but they infect the soul with evil."   -- Socrates   (469-399 B.C.) Greek philosopher

Evil when we are in its power is not felt as evil but as a necessity, or even a duty: Simone Weil 

"Tolerance becomes a crime when applied to evil"   -- Thomas Mann  (1875-1955) German novelist, short story writer, social critic, philanthropist, essayist, Nobel Prize in Literature (1929)

“...accordingly all Experience hath shown, that Mankind are more disposed to suffer while Evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the Forms to which they are accustomed.”  Declaration of Independence

"A passionate attachment of one nation for another produces a variety of evils. Sympathy for the favorite nation, facilitating the illusion of an imaginary common interest in cases where no real common interest exists, and infusing into one nation the enmities of the other, betrays the former into a participation in the quarrels and wars of the latter without justification. It leads also to concessions to the favorite nation of privileges denied to others which is apt doubly to injure the nation making the concessions; by unnecessarily parting with what ought to have been retained, and by exciting jealousy, ill-will, and a disposition to retaliate, in the parties from whom equal privileges are withheld. And it gives to ambitious, corrupted, or deluded citizens who devote themselves to the favorite nation, facility to betray or sacrifice the interests of their own country, without odium, sometimes even with popularity; gilding, with the appearances of a virtuous sense of obligation, a commendable deference for public opinion, or a laudable zeal for public good, the foolish compliances of ambition, corruption, or infatuation."  -- George Washington  (1732-1799) Source: Washington's Farewell Address 1796.

“It is no exaggeration to say we are on the cusp of the further perfection of extreme evil, an evil whose possibility spreads well beyond that which weapons of mass destruction bequeathed to the nation-states, on to a surprising and terrible empowerment of extreme individuals.”   Bill Joy, chief scientist and cofounder of Sun Micorsystems. March 2000

"There is nothing which I dread so much as a division of the republic into two great parties, each arranged under its leader, and concerting measures in opposition to each other. This, in my humble apprehension, is to be dreaded as the greatest political evil under our Constitution."  -- John Adams  (1735-1826) Founding Father, 2nd US President    Source: John Adams, Letter to Jonathan Jackson, October 1780

"But what is liberty without wisdom, and without virtue? It is the greatest of all possible evils; for it is folly, vice, and madness, without tuition or restraint:" -  Edmund Burke - Source: Reflections on the Revolution in France

"By a declaration of rights, I mean one which shall stipulate freedom of religion, freedom of the press, freedom of commerce against monopolies, trial by juries in all cases, no suspensions of the habeas corpus, no standing armies. These are fetters against doing evil which no honest government should decline."  -- Thomas Jefferson  

The one pervading evil of democracy is the tyranny of the majority, or rather of that party, not always the majority, that succeeds, by force or fraud, in carrying elections.  – Lord Acton, The History of Freedom and Other Essays [1907]

“Not in the sky, nor in the middle of the ocean, nor in the cave of a mountain, nor anywhere else, is there a place, where one may escape from the consequences of an evil deed.”  – Dhammapada, Verse 127

"If you depart from moral absolutes, you go into a bottomless pit. Communism and Naziism were catastrophic evils which both derived from moral relativism. Their differences were minor compared to their similarities."  -- Paul Johnson  American historian

"The common sense of mankind demands that law shall not stop with the punishment of petty crimes by little people. It must also reach men who possess themselves of great power and make deliberative and concerted use of it to set in motion evils which leave no home in the world  untouched."  Justice Robert Jackson  - Nuremberg address

The worship of the state is the worship of force. There is no more dangerous menace to civilization than a government of incompetent, corrupt, or vile men. The worst evils which mankind ever had to endure were inflicted by bad governments. The state can be and has often been in the course of history the main source of mischief and disaster.” Ludwig von Mises, Chapter III: Etatism

"When we neither punish nor reproach evildoers, we are not simply protecting their trivial old age, we are thereby ripping the foundations of justice from beneath new generations."  -  Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn, The Gulag Archipelago” 

“Evil when we are in its power is not felt as evil but as a necessity, or even a duty.” Simone Weil

"The most difficult struggle of all is the one within ourselves. Let us not get accustomed and adjusted to these conditions.  The one who adjusts ceases to discriminate between good and evil.  He becomes a slave in body and soul. Whatever may happen to you, remember always: Don’t adjust! Revolt against the reality!"  -- Mordechai Anielewicz   (1919-1943) Jewish resistance leader against Nazi oppression in Warsaw, Poland, 1943  

"As I write, highly civilized human beings are flying overhead trying to kill me. They do not feel any enmity against me as an individual, nor I against them. They are only doing their duty, as the saying goes. Most of them, I have no doubt, are kind-hearted law-abiding men who would never dream of committing murder in private life. On the other hand, if one of them succeeds in blowing me to pieces with a well-placed bomb, he will never sleep any worse for it. He is serving his country, which has the power to absolve him from evil:  George Orwell, London. UK. 1941

“Your mistake is failing to recognize that the very measures you favor are a major source of the evils you deplore. Of course the problem is demand, but it is not only demand, it is demand that must operate through repressed and illegal channels. Illegality creates obscene profits that finance the murderous tactics of the drug lords; illegality leads to the corruption of law enforcement officials; illegality monopolizes the efforts of honest law forces so that they are starved for resources to fight the simpler crimes of robbery, theft and assault.”   – Milton Friedman, An Open Letter to Bill Bennett [September 7, 1989]

  “(N)ot only will the United States impose preemptive, unilateral military force when and where it chooses, but the nation will also punish those who engage in terror and aggression and will work to impose a universal moral clarity between good and evil.”  George Bush, 2002 West Point Commencement speech. 

“The evils of government are directly proportional to the tolerance of the people.” Frank Kent

"There are no necessary evils in government. Its evils exist only in its abuses. If it would confine itself to equal protection, and, as Heaven does its rains, shower its favors alike on the high and the low, the rich and the poor, it would be an unqualified blessing."  -- Andrew Jackson  (1767-1845) 7th US President    Source: July 10, 1832, Veto of the Bank Bill

For my own part, I believe that our Constitution, with its absolute guarantees of individual rights, is the best hope for the aspirations of freedom which men share everywhere. I cannot agree with those who think of the Bill of Rights as an 18th Century straitjacket, unsuited for this age. It is old but not all old things are bad. The evils it guards against are not only old, they are with us now, they exist today ....  – Hugo L. Black, "The Bill of Rights" [1960]


August 02, 2015 "Information Clearing House" -  In the final years of his life, the increasingly radical Black Civil Rights, peace, and social justice leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. spoke and wrote against what he called “the triple evils that are interrelated.” The first such evil was racism, deeply understood to mean not just prejudiced white sentiments and formal segregation in the U.S. South but the racially separate and unequal functioning of the nation’s basic institutions and social structures.”

The second evil was poverty and economic inequality – class injustice, which King rooted in capitalism. That system, King felt, “produces beggars” alongside luxuriant opulence, necessitating “the radical redistribution of economic and political power.” 

The third evil was U.S. military imperialism – no mere afterthought in King’s critique of the American System. Explaining why he had turned openly against Washington’s monstrous war on Vietnam in 1967, King argued that conscience did not permit him to remain silent on the crimes the “strange [American] liberators” were committing in Southeast Asia. At the same time, he noted, his condemnation of America’s role as “the leading purveyor of violence in the world today” (a description that still rings true today) was strongly linked to his struggles against racial and economic disparity in the U.S.

Even of these evils would be resolved if the protection of human rights were made superior to the protection of the rights of governments, corporations and religions. There is one more evil MLK failed to mention. Our protection of the environment, which is essential to all our freedoms, security and prosperity.

"To ignore evil is to become an accomplice to it." -Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

"We have to condemn publicly the very idea that some people have the right to repress others. In keeping silent about evil, in burying it so deep within us that no sign of it appears on the surface, we are implanting it, and it will rise up a thousand fold in the future. When we neither punish nor reproach evildoers ... we are ripping the foundations of justice from beneath new generations." - Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

"The beginning of modern evil was when governments began again to intervene in the economic sphere. Every act of intervention turned man from his true purpose."  – Garet Garrett, "The World That Might Have Been" [1945]

"Love is the ultimate force that makes for the saving choice of life and good against the damning choice of death and evil. Therefore the first hope in our inventory must be the hope that love is going to have the last word."  Arnold Toynbee

"The economic anarchy of capitalist society as it exists today is, in my opinion, the real source of the evil."         - Albert Einstein

The Root of All Evil? The God Delusion : Richard Dawkins 

Video explores the unproven beliefs that are treated as factual by many religions and the extremes to which some followers have ... taken them.

"The moral principles and precepts contained in the Scripture ought to form the basis of all our civil constitutions and laws. All the miseries and evil men suffer from vice, crime, ambition, injustice, oppression, slavery, and war, proceed from their despising or neglecting the precepts contained in the Bible."  -- Noah Webster  (1758-1843) American patriot and scholar, author of the first dictionary of American English usage (1806) and the author of the 1828 edition of the dictionary that bears his name. 1833

"Everything we shut our eyes to, everything we run away from, everything we deny, denigrate or despise, serves to defeat us in the end. What seems nasty, painful, evil, can become a source of beauty, joy, and strength, if faced with an open mind."  -- Henry Miller  (1891-1980) American writer 

“A new world must be born, a world that would justify the sacrifices offered by humanity. This new world must be a world in which there shall be no exploitation of the weak by the strong, of the good by the evil; where there will be no humiliation of the poor by the violence of the rich; where the products of intellect, science and art will serve society for the betterment and beautification of life, and not the individuals for achieving wealth. This new world shall not be a world of the downtrodden and humiliated, but of free men and free nations, equal in dignity and respect." - Inventor, Nikola Tesla

"Common experience shows how much rarer is moral courage than physical bravery. A thousand men will march to the mouth of the cannon where one man will dare espouse an unpopular cause . . . True courage and manhood come from the consciousness of the right attitude toward the world, the faith in one's purpose, and the sufficiency of one's own approval as a justification for one's own acts." Clarence Darrow, Resist Not Evil

Once we start from this idea, accepted by all our political theorists [that] "The motive force of society is the government"; once men consider themselves as sentient, but passive, incapable of improving themselves morally or materially by their own intelligence and energy, and reduced to expecting everything from the law; in a word, when they admit that their relation to the state is that of a flock of sheep to the shepherd, it is clear that the responsibility of the government is immense. Good and evil, virtue and vice, equality and inequality, wealth and poverty, all proceed from it. It is entrusted with everything, it undertakes everything, it does everything; hence, it is responsible for everything.   – Frederic Bastiat, "The Law" [1850]

"The ostensible supporters of the Constitution, like the ostensible supporters of most other governments, are made up of three classes, viz.: 

1. Knaves, a numerous and active class, who see in the government an instrument which they can use for their own aggrandizement or wealth. 

2. Dupes - a large class, no doubt - each of whom, because he is allowed one voice out of millions in deciding what he may do with his own person and his own property, and because he is permitted to have the same voice in robbing, enslaving, and murdering others, that others have in robbing, enslaving, and murdering himself, is stupid enough to imagine that he is a "free man," a "sovereign"; that this is "a free government"; "a government of equal rights," "the best government on earth," and such like absurdities. 

3. A class who have some appreciation of the evils of government, but either do not see how to get rid of them, or do not choose to so far sacrifice their private interests as to give themselves seriously and earnestly to the work of making a change."   -- Lysander Spooner     (1808-1887) Political theorist, activist, abolitionist   Source: No Treason. No. VI The Constitution of no Authority, (Boston: Published by the Author, 1870).

"What makes it so plausible to assume that hypocrisy is the vice of vices is that integrity can indeed exist under the cover of all other vices except this one. Only crime and the criminal, it is true, confront us with the perplexity of radical evil; but only the hypocrite is really rotten to the core."  -- Hannah Arendt   (1906-1975) German-American political theorist, escaped Nazi Germany   Source: On Revolution (1963), ch. 2.

“A lie doesn’t become truth, wrong doesn’t become right, and evil doesn’t become good just because it’s accepted by a majority.” Author Unknown

"We have it in our power to begin the world over again." -  Thomas Paine

Let us begin this new experiment following biology and the loving, cooperative, compassionate spirit of our social species.  cw