People And Nature Written by Simon Pirani.

2-April-2026

We need a collective discussion about “what the hell can we do to get out of the catastrophe that is growing all around us?”, my friend and comrade Bob Myers wrote on this blog (27 March), in a book review. Of course, I agree.

But I think that, to set the terms of such a discussion, we need to do better than what Bob proposes.

A Zapatista meeting in 1996. Photo by Julian Stallabrass / wikimedia commons

Specifically, first, I think that our generation, which set out to try to challenge capital and resist hierarchy half a century or more ago, can convey our experience less one-sidedly.

Second, we can offer a more accurate characterisation of the crisis between humanity and our natural surroundings.

Third, and perhaps most important, in developing our understanding of the gathering catastrophe, we can not only learn from the experience of social movements but also assimilate what science has learned about the world.

On the first point, Bob writes of our attempts to find ways to challenge capitalism:

All around the world, “anti-capitalist” activists are busy trying to galvanise the masses into action. But after more than a century of such activity, the goal seems further away than ever.

The genocide in Gaza shocked millions of people worldwide and certainly has further undermined the authority of all those who uphold the present “civilisation”, but no-one was able to turn this popular horror into anything that practically made any difference to the plight of the Palestinians. We marched, we protested, got arrested and the slaughter went on – and still goes on – relentlessly.

Yes, the slaughter goes on. And yes, the horror expressed on the streets of rich countries makes little difference to the killings in Gaza and the West Bank. But surely people who have been trying to change things for as long as Bob and I have (I dislike the word “activist”) can come up with a more convincing retrospective.

Before the century-plus of activity that Bob points to, there were genocides such as Belgium’s in Congo, and Turkey’s of Armenians. These were covered up from most people. The perpetrators remained unpunished. In contrast, today, we all know about the genocide in Gaza, and despite the best efforts of the world’s most powerful governments, millions of people have been moved to protest against it. The lie that they are motivated by “anti semitism” has been confounded.

Countries that for much of the last century were in the grip of extractive dictatorships – I am thinking of South Africa and Brazil – are leading international legal action against Israel. The US-Israeli relationship, key to the international order for the last half century, is creaking. It may not break; it may produce fresh horrors. But it will not remain the same.

Again, none of this lessens Palestinians’ suffering. My answer to Bob’s picture of catastrophe is not to pretend that there isn’t one. My answer to his view that “the goal seems further away than ever” is not to claim it is closer (although it may be that “the goal” needs clearer definition). But I think we need to get on top of history, to recognise it as an ever-shifting combination of catastrophe, confrontation and resistance.

I agree with Howard Zinn:

If we see only the worst, it destroys our capacity to do something. If we remember those times and places – and there are so many – where people have behaved magnificently, this gives us the energy to act, and at least the possibility of sending this spinning top of a world in a different direction.

Further on in his review, Bob writes about the long process during which capitalist social relations emerged in predominantly feudal societies, culminating in the bourgeois revolutions of the 17th and 18th centuries. He asks:

How does this past reality chime with our present situation? We have no areas of socialised production, no places where people can form new relations, new cultures based on collective productive activity. Capitalism, with all the power of technology, seeks to suppress and destroy even the most marginal attempts to create other ways of living.

All this is too one-sided, in my view. Right through the century-plus during which, according to Bob, “anti-capitalist” activists tried to galvanise masses into action but ended up further than ever from their goal, there were numerous large-scale attempts to bring into being “areas of socialised production” and “places where people can form new relations”. They should be soberly assessed, not written off.

The Russian revolutions of 1917, and the attempt to create a “workers’ state” that followed, failed to defeat hierarchy and exploitation in the way many participants had hoped. (I spent a few years writing a book about why.) But that does not mean it had no purpose. Nor were millions of people in a range of revolutionary situations through the twentieth century put off by that experience from trying to live differently.

Movements such as the Zapatistas in Mexico and the semi-state formations in Rojava aspired to that explicitly. As for the statist “socialism” of e.g. Cuba or Vietnam, we don’t have to share any illusions in its economic and social character to recognise the liberatory potential of the struggles that produced it.

The workers’ rebellions in Europe after the second world war fell well short of overthrowing capitalism, but led to changes that took capital decades to reverse – and, relevant to this conversation, brought into being the world in which Bob, and I, and tens of thousands of others, connected with radical ideas.

The manifold movements that did not articulate their goal as post-capitalist must also be accounted for, to understand their limitations and potentials: feminism and the changes it has wrought; the struggles for democracy across Latin America, east Asia and elsewhere; the “Arab spring”; battles against racism and for civil rights across the rich world; the struggle for Dalit rights in India.

To recognise what these movements achieved, and failed to achieve, is not to downplay the scale of the catastrophe twenty-first century capitalism is inflicting on humanity. In some ways it makes it appear all the more alarming, because it points up the limits of humanity’s ability to resist. But the younger people now trying to challenge capitalism and its evils deserve more from our generation than outbursts of pessimism.

I think Bob is right that we have no areas of socialised production or cultures based on collective activity. It is hard, and to my mind long has been, to envisage how collectivist and communist relations between people can grow at scale in a society dominated by capital.

But I see no justification for Bob’s assertion that “the social disintegration taking place all around us is going to continue and accelerate”. How can you be so sure?

My second point is about the character of the rupture between humanity, organised hierarchically, and nature. Bob writes:

From the earliest hierarchical societies right through to today, this form of human organisation continually tends to consume resources at a quicker rate than the environment can reproduce it.

The word “tends” is doing a lot of work here. I think the damaging impacts on the natural world by forms of human economic activity have unfolded in more chaotic, complicated ways than Bob suggests. It is difficult, if not impossible, to disentangle impacts that result from humans living socially, and those that can be attributed to hierarchy.

I think that “consumption of resources” is an unhelpful framework for judging. And I doubt the arithmetical computation referred to (“quicker rate”) has much meaning.

Bob takes us through the history of hierarchical societies as set out in Roy Ratcliffe’s book, and concludes:

We, one of the most recently evolved life forms, are exhausting the resources needed for existence and changing the environmental parameters within which life is possible.

Of course I agree that human economic activity is “changing the environmental parameters within which life is possible”. Global heating and the destruction of biodiversity are the most alarming manifestations of this. The “planetary boundaries” project presents perhaps the best available overview. But this is not the same as saying that humanity is “exhausting the resources needed for existence”.

For a start, nature is not just “resources”, not in any socialist understanding of humanity’s place in it. And the issue of what “resources” are needed is socially and politically formed. Take oil, for example: right-wing commentators warn that oil resources will run out, whereas it’s clear that the amount of atmosphere in to which greenhouse gases can be pumped is running out much more quickly.

What’s more, there is little doubt that humanity, if its economic activity got anywhere near to being organised rationally, could take from its natural surroundings the means of its existence, while pulling back from inflicting irreversible damage.

It is the anarchic, materials-hungry expansion of capitalist production, driven at an even more frenzied pace in the twenty-first century, that is pushing at limits – not human consumption per se.

I am not quibbling about words. The claim that “resource depletion” is pushing society unilaterally towards disaster is central to the misconceived idea of “social collapse”, popularised by Jared Diamond and challenged by other anthropologists.

In 2018-19, with the emergence of new, potentially radical environmentalist movements in rich countries (e.g. Fridays for Future and Extinction Rebellion), one-sided – and in my view, essentially reactionary – stories of “collapse” were recycled, tending to disarm people politically and drive them away from anti-capitalist perspectives.

I am not suggesting that Bob cares for this type of reactionary doomism. But his sweeping generalisations do us no favours. We need a coherent understanding of capital’s reckless rampage against the natural world, and that means being accurate.

This brings me to my third quarrel with Bob, about how we develop our knowledge of humanity’s relationship with nature.

He writes that:

even while life forms continually changed over time, there was always a balance between the nutritional intake of one life form and the rate at which the supply of that nourishment was itself reproduced. 

This “balance”, in his view, was the prequel and counterpoint to the “resource depletion” now underway. I don’t think this is right, either.

Surely that balance was and is constantly interrupted, by processes that cause life forms to multiply, to need more nourishment than is immediately available, and in some cases to die out as a result. That is how I (no biologist or natural historian) understand one aspect of the theory of evolution.

Charles Darwin wrote, in a section entitled “Complex relations of all animals and plants to each other in the struggle for existence”:

Battle within battle must be continually recurring with varying success; and yet in the long run the forces are so nicely balanced that the face of nature remains for long periods of time uniform, though assuredly the merest trifle would give the victory to one organic being over another. Nevertheless, so profound is our ignorance, and so high our presumption, that we marvel whe we hear of the extinction of an organic being; and as we do not see the cause, we invoke cataclysms to desolate the world, or invent laws on the duration of forms of life!” (from The Origin of Species, chapter 3).

Bob is no help here. In his telling, Darwin was:

Very much a man of his class, the privileged non-working elite, and of his time – with Britain laying hold to a third of the world’s resources. So we get Darwin’s “survival of the fittest” – a notion thoroughly in accord with an elite man in an elite nation.
Darwin saw all life forms battling to survive against all others. However, in his book, Roy [Ratcliffe] outlines the real history of the evolution of all life forms is the story of interdependence. And crucially there was always a “balance”.

Wrong, wrong and wrong. The “balance” and the “struggle for survival”, in Darwin’s understanding at least, were two sides of the same coin.

The “survival of the fittest”, in Darwin’s presentation – the competition for nutrition between and within species, which forms the background to the processes of adaptation and natural selection – is quite different from its presentation by Thomas Huxley, and then by others who exaggerated the element of direct conflict and applied it to society (“social Darwinism”). And different again from its life as an element of ruling-class ideology from that day to this.

What’s more, arguments have been raging around Darwin’s share of responsibility for “social Darwinism” for a century and a half already. Socialist and left-leaning biologists and natural historians have played their part, and their years of work on this deserve our attention. One of them, Stephen Jay Gould, wrote in 1988:

Darwin’s “struggle for existence” is an abstract metaphor, not an explicit statement about a bloody battle. Reproductive success, the criterion of natural selection, works in many modes: victory in battle may be one pathway, but cooperation, symbiosis and mutual aid may also secure success in other times and contexts.

Gould was reviewing an argument in 1909 between the writer Lev Tolstoy and the anarchist naturalist Petr Kropotkin. Tolstoy railed against those who saw the “struggle for existence” as a moral imperative, and held Darwin responsible; Kropotkin argued that this struggle often resolved itself as mutual aid, both among animals and humans.

Stephen Jay Gould at the American Museum of Natural History in the 1980s, next to a
Tyrannosaurus rex specimen that inspired him at the age of five to become a paleontologist

Gould wrote that, when re-reading Kropotkin’s writings, he had found that his research, conducted in nineteenth-century Russia where the low population density of all species meant that animals were more likely to be battling against harsh environmental conditions than against each other, lent credence to his optimistic view of the “struggle for existence”. (If you enjoy Gould’s witty dissection of difficult arguments as much as I do, this one is also worth reading about social Darwinism.)

What does all this matter now? In my view, firstly, because the fearsome dangers of global heating and other breakdowns in human-nature relations should encourage us to think again about how Darwin’s understanding of natural history, and Karl Marx’s understanding of human history, might be synthesised.

This is the subject of Joel Wainwright’s book The End: Marx, Darwin and the natural history of the climate crisis, published in November last year. He argues that Marx was much more strongly influenced by reading Darwin than many Marxists have allowed; that elements of natural history run through Marx’s analysis of the origins of capital and its expansion, in ways that excessively “economistic” readings of Marx have failed to recognise; and that a re-reading of Marx with this in mind can help us to formulate an understanding of the grave crisis capital has brought us into, from a perspective aspiring to supercede capitalism.

Wainwright is clear that Darwin was, in his political and social views, a social Darwinist, and that he “applied his theory to political economy to justify class inequality” (The End, page 79). But he believes, nevertheless, that socialist thinking must assimilate the scientific achievements of Darwin, Alfred Wallace and subsequent natural historians, if it is to confront the crisis we face now. I agree.

What Darwin said also matters, because it is under sustained attack by the most reactionary anti-human forces. Just look at the battle raging in the US between teachers and an alliance of creationists and “intelligent design” advocates. This goes alongside the monstrous assault on climate science that has intensified under Trump’s second administration.

In this world, we need a serious, thought-out appreciation of Darwin, as we do of all science. We need to treat thinkers who have grappled with this – Kropotkin, Tolstoy, Stephen Jay Gould, all the many others – as our predecessors in a collective endeavour.

Bracketing Darwin with social Darwinism, and dismissing him as “a man of his class, the privileged non-working elite”, will not do.

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Knowledge Is Power 🪶 And it Is Produced By Collective Endeavour

Dr John Coulter  Even before the current Iran conflict may finally come to an end, talk of ‘war crimes’ has already been kicked around by some in the liberal, left, woke commentary lobby.

During one intense live television panel debate on the war in which I participated, the question was posed that the International Criminal Court (ICC) lacks jurisdiction over the United States, Israel and Iran, who are all non-members.

The suggestion based on this observation was that it made the prosecution of war crimes alleged by human rights organisations nearly impossible. It was further posed that international law experts have documented alleged violations including strikes on civilian infrastructure, more than 600 schools demolished or damaged across Iran and systematic attacks on residential areas.

This prompted the question from a political and legal perspective, what does this jurisdiction gap mean for the future of international criminal law if the ICC cannot touch the most powerful actors in the world’s consequential conflicts, what is its actual function, and what, if anything, can constrain the behaviour of states outside its jurisdiction?

Another supposed analysis for discussion asks what it calls the most obvious question the so-called liberal media refuses to ask: that the Iran war itself is criminal, unjustifiable and illegal under international law and that any remaining doubt should have disappeared when the US-Israeli strikes hit civilians areas, including schools and residential districts, killing many civilians including women and children.

Bearing this liberal analysis in mind, the obvious question is: do supporters of the Trump administration agree with this assessment, and if the Iran war itself is illegal, what legitimacy can any ceasefire or agreement negotiated under its shadow possibly claim? Hard-hitting and soul-searching questions!

From a purely cynical point of view, has all this talk of ‘war crimes’ hit the headlines because of the cinematic success of the latest blockbuster, the two and a half hour epic Nuremberg, starring movie icons Russell Crowe and Rami Malek, which dramatises the trial of Nazi war criminals in Germany in 1946?

Then again, given the history of legacy issues arising from the Troubles in Ireland, could the so-called finger of alleged legacy ‘war crimes’ be pointed at the United States over the civilian deaths in 1945 when the Americans dropped two atomic bombs on two Japanese cities bringing the Second World War to a swift conclusion?

Or in that same war, what about the Allied bombing of German cities such as Dresden, Cologne and Hamburg which saw tens of thousands of civilians killed? Should Germany as a nation still be held accountable for the deaths of civilians during World War Two in the Blitz of British cities?

One of the tragedies of war over the ages is that in almost all cases, it is the civilian populations which bear the brunt of the conflicts. If this is the reality of warfare, is there any such thing as a righteous war? Indeed, what is the difference between a terrorist campaign and a legal war, if the latter actually exists?

As mankind develops even more deadlier weapons of mass destruction, could a time come when wars actually cease because those nations are too scared to deploy these horrific weapons? Or will there be always that one nation or group which decides to try and gain the upper hand in a conflict by using weapons which either their opponents do not possess, or deploy them on a ‘first strike’ basis?

Can serious ‘rules of engagement’ ever be drawn up for conflict, or are we just entering the fantasy world of computer games? The bitter reality of human nature is that what one person calls a ‘war’, another person can see the same conflict as a ‘criminal terror campaign’.

The famous wartime British Prime Minister Winston Churchill is credited with the saying that it was better to ‘jaw, jaw’ up, than ‘war war’. But can a mediation panel ever be conceived internationally that when a potential conflict is looming or bubbling up, those panellists can be sent in to defuse the situation?

Or given human nature, is it totally cynical thinking that in some situations, conflicts erupt because the leaders of those nations simply just want to get all their pent-up aggression out of their systems? Could the Christian churches act as mediators across the globe, or is the reality that religions have been the causes of many wars?

For example, in Christianity, many quote the example of Jesus Christ Himself when He physically threw the money changers out of the temple. Then again, others point to the fact that when His disciple Peter hacked off the ear of one of those coming to arrest Jesus, Christ healed the wounded man.

Perhaps the even more bitter reality which folk have to face is that man will always want a fight with his fellow man, so that the best people can hope for is to develop a comprehensive clean-up operation after the destruction.
 
Follow Dr John Coulter on Twitter @JohnAHCoulter
John is a Director for Belfast’s Christian radio station, Sunshine 1049 FM. 

When Is A ‘War Crime’ Not A War Crime?

Lynx By Ten To The Power Of One Thousand Nine Hundred And Sixty One

 

A Morning Thought @ 3135


Azar Majedi ðŸŽ¤ writing on 17-March-2026.

The American/Israeli Narrative: The Axis of Evil or Resistance

What is known as “Axis of Resistance" has found a "prominent" place In Iranian leftist literature especially since the beginning of the new round of Israeli genocide in Palestine. The image given of this phenomenon is that of an Islamic monster that threatens the region and its people, jeopardises the security of the region, and is considered the "main enemy." This description is practically based on the American and Israeli narrative. The majority of the Iranian left has swallowed the American/Israeli narrative of the Islamic Republic's position in the region and this so-called Axis of Resistance, what Netanyahu calls the Axis of Evil.


In 2002, after the invasion of Afghanistan, George Bush introduced the term "Axis of Evil." At that time, Iran, Iraq, and North Korea were included in this axis. George Bush announced that this axis was the source and main supporter of terrorism and intended to acquire weapons of mass destruction. It didn't take long before they attacked Iraq under the pretext of destroying weapons of mass destruction. The bombs they dropped on the Iraqi people, based on a historical lie, killed one million and displaced several million. Iraq fell into constant chaos and unrest. The Iraqi people have been entrapped by two terrorist forces: state and Islamic terrorism. Still 23 years after the second war the society is in a complete state of chaos and terror. (US and its allies attacked Iraq in 1991 and then enforced a severe sanction on Iraq which led to a million deaths of the especially most vulnerable section: children and the elderly.)

Iran was then declared another military target. In reality, the US and NATO cannot attack North Korea because it has nuclear weapons. Such an attack will only take place when either military technology has developed to the point where it can disable nuclear weapons before the attack or when conditions have reached a point where nuclear war has become inevitable. It should be noted that Israel and the US are now threatening Iran with nuclear weapons.

The face of the Middle East has completely changed since 2001, when the US and its allies attacked Afghanistan and then Iraq. In fact, its existence as a geopolitical entity is under question. Now talks are about the next destructive aims of the US and the West, spearheaded by Israel, to occupy and destroy a wider region; Turkey and Pakistan are being talked about as the next targets.

The Middle East has been completely destroyed and almost any sign of civility and the ancient civilization in the region has been razed to the ground. (Now they are busy destroying Iran.) They are even destroying the nature of the region through bombing, aerial chemical spraying and uprooting olive trees in Palestine. The scenario is that in fifty years no one will remember the Middle East, its people, its culture and its civilisation. In early 2026 former CIA Director U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo stated that history should focus on Israel as the victim rather than Palestinians in Gaza, saying:

We need to make sure that the story is told properly, so that when the history books write this, they don't write about the victims of Gaza.
 
This destruction is paving the way for the new Middle East and Greater Israel. (Their plan for Gaza, the “Middle East Riviera” with Trump’s hand-crafted Board of Peace presents the future of the region before our eyes.) In his speech to the US Congress several months after the genocide in Gaza began, Netanyahu spoke of the axis of evil versus the axis of civilization. He declared that the axis of evil must be destroyed. Iran was introduced as the head of this axis and the main threat to Western civilization. The other members of this axis are a number of Islamic terrorist organisations in Iraq, Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas and the Houthis in Yemen.
 
The term “Islamic terrorism” was coined by the so-called Zionist intellectuals and it was first publicly mentioned in a conference in DC in 1984 by Netanyahu. Since the 1990s when the “Clash of Civilisations” was introduced as the dominant discourse and order of the time the term became widely used. And the rest is history: the destruction of the region under the pretext of fighting Islamic terrorism. Israel and the US have been using the term Islamic terrorism for four decades now to justify genocide, killing, destruction and cleansing of the people of the region; they created all Islamic terrorist organisations and provided them with full financial, political and logistical support. The Mujahideen organisation in Afghanistan, the Taliban, al-Qaeda, Hamas and ISIS were all created and paid for by the CIA, Mossad and MI6. There are dozens of videos in which Netanyahu, Hillary Clinton, senior American and Israeli politicians, CIA personnel, journalists and reputable researchers have documented this history by presenting the facts. In addition, America, with the support of the West, brought the Islamic regime to power in Iran in 1979 and aborted the people's revolution. This is also a proven historical fact.

America, Israel and the West fed the people a fabricated narrative, created their own actors and unleashed them onto people. Like a Hollywood movie that was not made for the cinema screen but for the purpose of killing people and destroying a region. With this self-made monster of Islamic terrorism, they justified killing millions of people and causing a complete destruction in the entire region.


 The whole world believed this story. The world fell into the trap of this false narrative and was mainly divided into two parts. Opponents of Islamic terrorism mainly sided with US and the West or imperialism, and on the other hand, opponents of American imperialism, people who had experienced the crimes of America, the West and Israel for decades, mainly tended towards the other pole.
 
In 2001, after the September 11th incident and the US and its allies' attack on Afghanistan, Mansour Hekmat in order to build a barrier against this trap, rightfully, identified American imperialism as State terrorism. He declared that two poles of terrorism, State and Islamic are threatening the world and they must be confronted by the third pole, the pole of freedom-loving and egalitarian humanity.

Now, twenty-five years later, after reaching the final stage of the new Middle East project, after all the historical facts that were previously called conspiracy theories in the mainstream media have been leaked, and recently parts of this project have been revealed in Epstein's emails, there should no longer be any doubt for any intelligent and truth-seeking person to see the true narrative and history of Islamic terrorism.

But among a large section of the Iranian left, this false narrative still plays a role. What Netanyahu calls the axis of evil is called the “axis of resistance” by the Islamic Republic and opponents of the United States and Israel. And this mouthful of a term has trapped the Iranian left movement. The section that calls itself a left movement but considers the United States to be the greater enemy is known as the supporters of the axis of resistance. This section is more active in Iran.

The other section of the left has allowed its rightful deep hatred of the Islamic Republic to blind its critical mind and practically swallow the entire American and Israeli narrative about the role, position, and power of this so-called axis of resistance. We have seen the destructive effect of this approach and vision, especially in the past two and a half years, since the beginning of the recent Israeli genocide in Gaza. Amidst the astonishment and criticism of the international left, the Iranian left has played a largely passive role in relation to the genocide in Gaza, in support of and solidarity with the people of Gaza and the region, and in condemnation of Israel, the United States, and the West. In relation to Palestine, the presence of Hamas and the fake support of the Islamic Republic were cited as an excuse and justification for this inaction.
 
This section of the Iranian left accepted Israel’s October 7 narrative: a narrative that has been exposed to be false by Israel’s own media. Sometimes, even after two years of genocide and brutal crimes, every time they condemned Israel, they also felt obliged to condemn Hamas. This tactic has, incidentally, ended up harming the leftist movement and benefiting the Islamic Republic and Hamas. In the eyes of justice-seeking, conscientious, humanitarian, and freedom-loving people, the Islamic Republic has acquired a positive image, and its false position as the axis of resistance is receiving wider acceptance in the region and the world. People, fed up with the killing, suppression, exploitation, occupation, and bullying of American imperialism, with the complicity of the West and the spearheading of Israel, automatically consider the force that fights this pole of violence and oppression to be their friend and ally. This is common logic and reasoning. The psychology and mentality of a large part of the people act in this way. Therefore, conscious, radical and communist forces must explain the situation and spread awareness.

However, majority of the Iranian left movement has adopted a more or less passive approach towards the movements seeking justice and the resistance of the oppressed against violence and killing from Palestine to Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Iraq, Sudan and Somalia. It can be said that the Iranian left suffers from a degree of nationalism. It reacts immediately and with passion in regards to issues related to Iran and Kurdistan, but a kind of inertia prevails over the rest of the world. In addition, where the Islamic Republic, Hamas or the axis of resistance are involved, this passivity leads to complete boycott. This policy of passivity and boycott has severely damaged the image of the left movement and has made the Islamic Republic more popular.

Now a similar method has been adopted regarding the war of the US and Israel on the people and society of Iran. Accepting the narrative of the US and Israel, that the main cause of chaos and destruction in the region is the axis of resistance and at its head the Islamic Republic, has led the majority of the left to a wrong analysis of the war, in such a way that they call the Islamic Republic the main cause of this war and define the war between the Islamic Republic and the US and Israel.
 
This war is first and foremost a war against the people and society of Iran; a war of US imperialism spearheaded by Israel to destroy the society and the lives of the people. They intend to raze Iran to the ground like Syria, Libya and Iraq and destroy any kind of civilization in society. Creating a dark scenario is their primary goal. Eliminating or reshaping the Islamic Republic is also their other goal. As we have previously mentioned on various occasions, in the “New Middle East”, Islam’s position and role must change. Their project is to completely marginalise Islamic terrorism and bring modern Islam to the forefront. The sheikhdoms, in particular, have displayed some aspects of this new Islam on various occasions over the past few years.

It is clear that the Islamic Republic is in war to preserve its existence. And it is also clear that it is a repressive and reactionary state. But just because the Islamic regime is launching missiles in response to the bombings and killing of its leader does not make this war a “war between two reactionary states.” US and Israel attacked Iran - according to Pentagon they began military actions in the middle of the negotiation. This war has killed many, ruined many densely populated residential areas, hospitals and schools, ruined many important infrastructure of the country; it has created an environmental disaster which would take victims for decades. This is first and foremost a full force attack on the society and the people.
 
But why does it matter how we formulate the war? If you define a war as an attack by an aggressor against a people and a country the reaction of the people across the world will be different compared to when it is defined as a war between two reactionary states. In the first case people’s solidarity will be stronger and more active. If the two poles of reaction are fighting each other, the role of resistance and protest against that war will be diminished. In addition, the criminal and oppressive role of the United States and Israel will be largely whitewashed. Islamic Regime is a brutal and repressive dictatorship. All Iranian people and many people in the world are aware of this truth. We don’t need to add more crimes to its case. We have enough evidence to convict all its top echelon figures of crimes against humanity. Balance and coherence of analysis and a principled political stance dictate that we open our eyes to the truth, and look more sharply and critically at the world and its political institutions and equations.

In analysing the US/Israel’s war against Iran, we must also take the international reactions into consideration. One must see and understand how millions around the world who have been suffering in the hands of US imperialism and Israeli aggression, killings and ethnic cleansing of the region are actually jubilant in the way Islamic Regime is defending itself, attacking Israel and American bases in the region. It is decades that all the states in the region, the so-called “Arab” or “Muslim,” have tolerated Israeli crimes and genocide. This is automatic human reaction to rejoice when their enemy is being attacked. Therefore, as the Iranian progressive, left or Communist movement we need to voice our hatred against the war and the Islamic regime and bring awareness in the international anti-imperialist movement or among ordinary people who are daily repressed and oppressed by US/Israel.
 
By boycotting the anti-war, anti-US/Israel war against Iran because there are some Islamic regime’s flags in the protest, the left is shooting itself in the foot, as it only leaves the scene for the regime and the soc-called Axis of Resistance. A very vivid example of how Islamic Regime is becoming popular can be seen in Sudan. Following the Islamic regime's missile attacks, the United Arab Emirates has suffered blows that have forced it to withdraw its support for the RSF terrorist group in Sudan. This terrorist group has been responsible for widespread killing, rape, starvation, and displacement of the Sudanese people. The United Arab Emirates is plundering Sudan's gold and diamonds. The recent withdrawal has reduced the atmosphere of death and killing in Sudan, and people are taking a breather. It is reported that celebrations and joy have begun in Sudan. It should be easy for a communist and Marxist to understand these conditions, but a significant part of the left in Iran has turned its back on this reality and has condemned, rejected and branded anyone who rejoices in the attacks by the Islamic Republic with the axis of resistance.

This part of the left has fallen between two stools! Soon it will be completely irrelevant in the Iranian and regional politics. We must understand these conditions; try to reveal the true and criminal nature of the Islamic Republic to the widest possible section of the people of the world. We must try to show that the enemy of my enemy is not necessarily my friend. We must try to join the world justice-seeking, freedom-seeking and humanitarian movement. We must try to expose and discredit the Islamic Republic. By confronting the war and bullying of America and Israel, as well as by organising the people to confront the dangers of war and maintain hope and solidarity within the country and help organise a broad anti-war movement abroad, we can protect society from complete collapse and destitute, and in appropriate circumstances, use our organised power against the regime and for its revolutionary overthrow.

No to war,
No to Islamic Republic!
No to foreign intervention!
Power in the hands of the people!

 Asar Majed is the Chairperson of Organisation for Women’s Liberation.

The "Axis Of Resistance" 🪶A Trap For The Left!

Ukraine Solidarity Group ✊ A Digest of News from Ukrainian Sources ⚔ 27-April-2026.

In this week’s bulletin

⬤  Ukraine defence update.
⬤ Ukraine and Palestine.
⬤ Russia “Spring” trial/.
⬤ Try Me For Treason: the film.
⬤ Russia fails to silence Crimean Tatars.
⬤ Could Belarus join war?
⬤ Kherson torture diary.

News from the territories occupied by Russia

Russia banned the voice of the Crimean Tatars — the Mejlis — 10 years ago, but failed to silence it (Crimea Platform, April 26th)

Russian FSB tortured Kherson men and fabricated “terrorism” case against them (Meduza, 24 April)

26-year-old Ukrainian sentenced to 22 years for alleged ‘plan to kill’ a Russian occupation prison chief (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, April 24th)

Russian occupation court sentences 66-year-old doctor to 14 years for supporting Ukraine through war bonds (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, April 24th)

Mission Discusses the Situation of Women’s Rights in Temporarily Occupied Crimea (Crimea Platform, April 24th)

EU Imposes Sanctions on Individuals Involved in Illegal Excavations in Crimea and the Militarisation of Ukrainian Children (Crimea Platform, April 24th)

The Face of Resistance: Crimean Tatar Activist Seyran Murtaza (Crimea Platform, April 24th)

From hell: the secret diary of a Ukrainian imprisoned and tortured by the FSB in Kherson (Mediazona, 23 April)

Russia stages fourth ‘trial’ of 67-year-old Crimean political prisoner to ensure he dies in captivity (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, April 23rd)

Russia abducts Crimean Tatar trying to see dying aunt and accuses her of ‘treason’ for donations to Ukrainian Army (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, April 22nd)

Birthday of illegally imprisoned Andrii Kuliievych (Crimea Platform, April 22nd)

Weekly Update On The Situation In Occupied Crimea (Crimea Platform, April 21st)

Ukrainian ex-military man sentenced to 18 years in Russian-occupied Crimea on surreal ‘treason’ charges (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, April 21st)

Russia’s war for demographic control (Engelsberg Ideas, April 14th)

News from Ukraine

How Ukraine solved the hardest problem in defence (Exponential View, April 24th)

Miners’ union new organisation near the front line (Confederation of Free Trade Unions of Ukraine, 8 April)

War-related news from Russia

Required Reading: Russia’s new mandatory history textbook offers a glimpse of the present (The Insider, April 28th)

Russian losses in the war updated (Mediazona, 24 April)

Toxic smoke and ‘oil’ pours from fire at Russian oil terminal (Meduza, 24 April)

Censorship is reshaping Russia’s publishing industry (The Insider, 24 April)

Putin restores Soviet secret police founder Dzerzhinsky's name to FSB Academy (Ukrainska Pravda, April 22nd)

The Verdict on Spring: The Vesna Case (Russian Reader, April 21st)

Security forces raid Russia's largest publisher and detain its CEO in ‘LGBT propaganda’ case (Novaya Gazeta, April 21st)

Analysis and comment

Russian ministry spokeswoman in lying attack on Latvian “Nazism” (The Insider, 25 April)

Zelensky claims danger: Might Belarus join Russia in the war? (iStories, 22 April)

Some facts: Ukraine, Russia, Palestine and Israel (Ukraine Solidarity Campaign, 21 April)

Research of human rights abuses

Growing up waiting for their fathers: photo exhibition on children of Crimean Tatar political prisoners opens in Berlin (Zmina, April 20th)

How to prevent torture in places of detention: ZMINA held a specialised training (Zmina, April 21st)

ZMINA joined the presentation of the Crimea Global outcomes and the discussion of plans for 2026 (Zmina, April 17th)

Upcoming events

Sunday 17 May: premiere of Try Me For Treason, the film. In-person premiere in London: 6.30pm, Upstairs room, the Lucas Arms, 245a Grays Inn Road, London WC1X 8QY (arrive for drinks from 6.0pm). Youtube premiere at 8.0pm. Information at trymefortreason.org. 

    

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News From Ukraine 💣 Bulletin 193

Friendly AtheistLDS leaders claim the podcast causes “confusion” over the brand, but the lawsuit looks more like an attempt to silence a powerful ex-Mormon voice.

The founder of a prominent podcast critical of the Mormon Church is now being sued by the Church for trademark and copyright infringement… as if there’s any way listeners might be confused between the podcast and the subject of it.

John Dehlin began the Mormon Stories Podcast in 2005 when he was questioning whether or not to leave the LDS Church. It soon became a haven for other critics and former Mormons—and a landing space for listeners who harbored the same doubts but knew the Mormon Church wasn’t a safe place to get their questions answered in a meaningful way. (True story: I’ve met a lot of ex-Mormons over the years, and my first question to them is inevitably whether they’ve heard of Dehlin and his podcast. The answer is, almost without exception, yes. It’s the podcast you listen to when you’re walking away from the religion.)

In 2015, Dehlin was officially kicked out of the Church . . . 

Mormon Church Sues Critic John Dehlin Over "Mormon Stories" Podcast

Right Wing Watch 👀Written by Kyle Mantyla.


Shane Vaughn Makes Up Details About Correspondents' Dinner Attack

There are few MAGA activists as blindly committed to President Donald Trump as admitted "cult follower" pastor Shane Vaughn, who insists that Trump was raised up by God to become king of America.

It was no surprise then that Vaughn was distraught over the attack at last weekend's White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner in which a gunman attempted to break through security with the intention of assassinating Trump and other top government officials.

Vaughn was apparently so distraught that it seems he couldn't even bring himself to learn what actually happened and decided instead to just make up a story about God performing a "bona fide miracle" to save Trump.

"All of our leadership was sitting ducks in a closed-in room," Vaughn said during a recent broadcast

All someone had to do was stand up, grab their rifle, and literally, pow, pow, pow, and the entire leadership of our nation would be killed in one sitting.

After providing some details about the suspect, Cole Allen, Vaughn then marveled at the supposed "miracle" that saved Trump's life.

Continue @ RWW.

A Bona Fide Miracle?

Lynx By Ten To The Power Of One Thousand Nine Hundred And Sixty