Saturday, 19 July 2025

DIARY OF A PALESTINIAN IN GAZA UNDER SIEGE

19 July 2025

LIVING UNDER CONTINUOUS OCCUPATION
Diary of a Palestinian in Gaza under Siege


1. “Waking in Ruins”

I wake up under broken concrete. The ceiling trembles with each distant strike. We used to live in homes, now we live in craters, tents, or what used to be schools. There is no morning routine, only the next decision: Where do we hide today?

They tell us to evacuate, but there is nowhere safe to go. We are caged inside Gaza, a 40-km strip surrounded by concrete walls, drones, and watchtowers.


2. “This Is Not a War Zone. This Is a Prison”

Gaza is blockaded by land, air, and sea. We cannot leave. We cannot fish. We cannot import medicine, building materials, or fuel freely. Even drinking water is rationed. Electricity comes for 1–2 hours a day, if we’re lucky. The UN calls this the world’s largest open-air prison. We just call it home.


3. “Why We Are Russian-Speaking in the East”

Just as Ukraine has its Russian-speaking east - rooted in the legacy of Catherine the Great - Palestine has its demographic fault lines. Gaza, dense and coastal, was filled with refugees from cities like Jaffa, Haifa, and Ashkelon in 1948. My grandmother was born in Jaffa. She fled on foot during the Nakba, barefoot and bleeding.

That was her story. Now it's mine... again.


4. “The Bombs Do Not Ask for IDs”

We hear leaflets dropped from planes, robotic voices over loudspeakers: Evacuate the building in five minutes. And then... silence. Sometimes the bomb comes anyway. Sometimes it comes while you are packing.

Hospitals have been struck, the Indonesian hospital. Ambulances destroyed. UN shelters hit. Cemeteries bombed. Over 100,000 civilians dead, probably nearer half a million. More than 30,000 children. We keep digging with our bare hands. The smell of death is everywhere.


5. “Even Language Is Resistance”

They want us to forget, forget our villages, our identity, our songs. They call us “human shields” or “terrorists” for simply being here. But we still speak Arabic. We still say our village names. We write poetry. We bury the dead by name, not number, when we can. We remember in our prayers.

Our bookshelves are now rubble, but we still recite Mahmoud Darwish by heart.


6. “What It Means to Stay”

I could try to flee. Some tunnels remain. Some bribes still work. But I stay. Why? Because this is Palestine. If we all leave, they will say: They are gone. It is ours now.

So we stay. Not because we love war. But because we love this soil too much to let it be stolen again.


7. Final Reflection: We Still Exist

To be Palestinian in Gaza today is to exist between grief and resistance. Our lives are disposable to the world’s powers. But our memory is not. Our children draw keys on the walls as symbols of the homes we lost in 1948. We teach them that even under siege, dignity survives.

We whisper to them each night: You are not victims. You are descendants of return.



DIARY OF A RUSSIAN-SPEAKING UKRAINIAN

LIVING BETWEEN WORLDS
Diary of a Russian-Speaking Ukrainian in Wartime

1. "I Am Home, But Not Welcome"

I was born in Kharkiv. My parents spoke Russian, as did their parents before them. It was never a statement, just a language, our language. But today, even my words are suspect. When I speak Russian in the market, the stares are sharp. I’ve stopped answering my phone in public.

They say I'm "not Ukrainian enough." Yet I pay taxes, shelter neighbours, mourn the dead, and dream of peace. What more do they want?

2. "This Land Was Always Layered"

One-third of this country speaks Russian. That’s not because we invaded, it’s because of history. Eastern Ukraine - what Catherine the Great called Novorossiya - was settled, built, and cultivated by Russians and Russified Slavs under the Tsars.

The west - which is Lviv, Ivano-Frankivsk - was once part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and later Austria-Hungary. They look to Rome, to Vienna. The centre - Kyiv, Dnipro - is a mix, always balancing.

We are not one nation in the romantic sense. We are a layered civilisation. Yet today's government demands we be one language, one history, one faith.

3. "The Law Has a Sharp Edge"

I used to teach literature... in Russian. Now, by law, I must switch to Ukrainian. I don’t mind the language itself. What I mind is the erasure.

Russian books are being removed from libraries. Plays cancelled. Street names changed overnight. They say it's "decolonisation". I say it's a war on memory.

My daughter’s school no longer offers Russian as a subject. She speaks it at home, but she’s learning to be ashamed of it.

4. "Everyone Is Afraid of Being Labelled"

If I criticise Zelensky’s war policies, they say I support Russia. If I speak Russian, I’m called a "Muscovite." I oppose the invasion, but I also oppose the burning of everything Russian in this land.

There is no room for nuance. It’s either Bandera or Putin. I choose neither.

5. "Meaning in the Ashes"

I still read Pushkin. I still cook from my grandmother’s Tatar recipe book. I still light candles in a Russian Orthodox church, though it may soon be banned. These are not betrayals. These are my inheritance.

I am a Ukrainian citizen. I love this land. But I cannot amputate my past to prove it, it is part of who I am.

So I live quietly. I teach my daughter both languages. I speak Ukrainian in public, Russian at home. I tell her: you are both, and you are not wrong.

6. Final Reflection

Living in Ukraine as a Russian-speaker today is not war, rather, it is exile without actually leaving. You are present but you are mistrusted. You are asked to forget, to self-edit, to shrink.

But we do not shrink. We remember. And memory, in this strange civil war of identities, is resistance enough.

1. Introduction: Ukrainian Citizen, Russian Heritage

To live in Ukraine as a Russian-speaking citizen under Zelensky’s government is to face a deep identity crisis. You are part of the nation—but your language, culture, and even your lineage are treated with suspicion, regulated, or actively suppressed.

This is not a post about war crimes or frontline politics—it’s about daily life, personal meaning, and navigating a society where your voice is tacitly...or openly... marginalised.

2. Legal Framework: Language and Identity

Ukraine’s 2019 language law made Ukrainian the required language for government, media, education, public services and even signage .

Print media must have a Ukrainian equivalent, and half of newsstands must stock Ukrainian-print items .

Russian-language education at all levels is heavily restricted; only EU languages were allowed apart from Ukrainian .


These laws aim to consolidate national cohesion, but critics see them as discriminatory—especially toward Russian-speakers (who are around a third of the population) .

3. Daily Life Impact: Alienation or Resistance

Bureaucracy and public services: You must use Ukrainian to fill forms, interact with civil servants, or access healthcare—languages you may not be fluent in.

Education: If you have children, their schooling is in Ukrainian. Studying in Russian is almost impossible now.

Culture & community: In Kyiv and other cities, public events in Russian are rare. Russian books, plays, and music face bans .

Social stigma: Speaking Russian in public spaces may draw sideways glances, suspicion, or even hostility, especially amid wartime tension.

4. Emotional Landscape: From Pride to Exclusion

You may oscillate between:

- Pride in Ukraine’s struggle for sovereignty.

- Anger or sorrow at losing your mother tongue’s public presence.

- Fear of being labelled "pro-Russian" or “Nazi sympathiser”, no matter your actual views.

- Isolation: You look for meaning in family, faith, or art rather than national identity.

5. Attitude: Paths for Identity Navigation

A. Quiet Resilience

You live “in two tongues”: speak Russian at home, Ukrainian in public.

You preserve your culture privately such as music, literature, traditions.

You avoid politics, focusing on daily life.


B. Cultural Resistance

You support or volunteer in communities keeping Russian heritage alive.

You push for local bilingual schooling or media.

You seek alliances with other minority-language groups.


C. Emigration or Withdrawal

You leave Ukraine for Russia, Europe, or elsewhere to freely speak your language.

Or, you mentally detach... stay physically, but emotionally retreat.

6. Glossary

Derussification: Removing Russian influence—language, monuments, place names—across Ukraine .

Marginalisation: Being pushed to the fringes—socially, culturally, legally—because of language or heritage.

Quiet resistance: Small acts of preserving identity under pressure.

7. Final Reflection: Living Between Worlds

As a Russian-speaking Ukrainian, your existence itself is political. You carry multiple loyalties. Every word you speak is a statement. In wartime Ukraine, your identity is not just personal; it is scrutinised. Yet your life continues—not out of ideological purity, but because you seek meaning amid exclusion: in home, language, art, and hope that identity can coexist with sovereignty.



BEING ISRAELI BUT NON ZIONIST

19 July 2025

1. Introduction: Being Israeli but Non-Zionist

To be Israeli but non-Zionist today is to live in profound contradiction. You belong to a society founded on an ideology you reject - yet you're still a citizen, participant, and witness to its actions. Your passport, language, and daily life are Israeli. But your moral compass, historical understanding, and political ideals may be radically out of sync with your surroundings.

It’s not just an intellectual tension - it’s an existential one.

2. Core Dilemma: Home vs Ideology

A non-Zionist Israeli may feel:

Alienation: from the national narrative, which frames the state as the natural and just return of the Jewish people.

Guilt or complicity: for living on land acquired through displacement and maintained by military domination.

Exclusion: from mainstream discourse, which assumes Zionism as a baseline for loyalty and belonging.

And yet:

This is your home, you may have been born there, raised your children there, speak Hebrew, love the land.

You may be against Zionism, but also afraid of what would come if the system collapsed chaotically.

3. Your Possible Attitudes and Strategies

A. Ethical Dissent Within

You choose to stay and speak out.

You align with human rights groups (e.g. B'Tselem, Breaking the Silence).

You may view Israel as a state in need of radical transformation - not destruction, but de-Zionisation (i.e. from ethnocracy to full democracy).

You support equal rights, truth-telling about 1948, and a shared future with Palestinians.


B. Cultural Israeli, Political Stateless

You disconnect from nationalism entirely.

You live privately, culturally Jewish or secular, with little public engagement.

You might feel like a resident rather than a citizen—physically present, spiritually in exile.


C. Emigration (Yerida)

You leave. You cannot reconcile your values with life under a Zionist regime.

You may become part of the Jewish diaspora again, but as a critic of Israeli policy.

But leaving doesn’t guarantee peace—it may provoke accusation of betrayal and permanent inner exile.

4. Historical Role Models or Examples

Yeshayahu Leibowitz – Orthodox Jew, Israeli citizen, fiercely anti-Zionist. Called the IDF in the Occupied Territories "Judeo-Nazi."

Ilan Pappé – Jewish Israeli historian in exile, accused Zionism of ethnic cleansing.

Miko Peled – Son of an IDF general, now advocates for a one-state solution with full equality.

Uri Avnery – Longtime peace activist, believed Israel must reconcile with Palestinian rights or self-destruct.

5. Day-to-Day Reality

As a non-Zionist Israeli, you might:

Face social ostracism - Zionism is not just a policy, it's the state religion.

Be accused of being self-hating or worse, “anti-Semitic.”

Live in a state of cognitive dissonance: shopping in Israeli stores, served by Palestinian labour, protected by soldiers you don’t support.

Be caught between complicity and impotence.

6. Glossary

Zionism: Political ideology advocating for a Jewish nation-state in Palestine.

De-Zionisation: A radical idea proposing the transformation of Israel into a neutral, democratic state without ethnic preference.

Yerida: Emigration from Israel—often viewed negatively within Zionist discourse.

Ethnocracy: A regime where one ethnic group dominates the state structurally.

7. Final Reflection

You would likely live with the painful awareness that you are part of a state built on dispossession—but not because you chose it. You might see your role as bearing witness, telling the truth, and refusing to normalise the occupation. Whether you stay or go, your dissent becomes your identity.

LIFE UNDER NEOCON RULE IN THE WEST

19 July 2025

Living Under Neocon Rule in the West

1. Introduction: Life Under Neocon Rule in the West

To live in a Western country today while rejecting Neoconism - the ideological engine behind endless war, imperial arrogance, and elite impunity - is to face a profound existential contradiction. You are a citizen of a system whose external policies you find abhorrent and whose internal decline you witness daily. Like the non-Zionist Israeli, you ask: How can I live truthfully under an empire I did not build, do not consent to, and cannot control?

2. What Is Neoconism?

Neoconservatism (or Neoconism) is not a religion, but it functions like one: a belief system with sacred myths, high priests, and sanctioned rituals of violence.

Key doctrines:
• Permanent military superiority
• The right to intervene anywhere, anytime
• Export of liberal democracy via war and regime change
• Disdain for international law unless it serves US interests
• Moral exceptionalism ('We are the good guys')

3. What You Might Feel: Internal Exile in the West

As a citizen who sees through this apparatus, you may feel:
• Disgust at the hypocrisy: preaching human rights while bombing hospitals.
• Despair at the media: recycling war propaganda with zero memory or shame.
• Impotence politically: real debate excluded, elections offer no alternative.
• Social isolation: your views marginalised, mislabelled as “conspiratorial” or “pro-Russian/Chinese/Iranian.”
• Moral exhaustion: watching Gaza, Ukraine, and Syria burn with your taxes.

4. Ways You Might Respond

A. Ethical Witness
• You remain within society but refuse its myths.
• You write, educate, share, resist soft lies.
• You support independent media, whistleblowers, anti-war veterans.
• You preserve your moral clarity, even in isolation,
 You demonstrate, object, parade in the streets
 "We are eirher sovereign and free, or we do not exist."

B. Parallel Citizenship
• You invest in local, cultural, familial meaning.
• You reduce dependence on official structures (off-grid living, homeschooling, local food).
• You treat your state like a foreign occupier: obey the law, but give no loyalty.

C. Strategic Withdrawal or Emigration
• You move abroad, seeking refuge in politically neutral or spiritually saner societies.
• You become part of an inner diaspora: expatriate in soul, even if not in body.
• But you may find disillusionment follows yo, because the empire is everywhere.

D. Internal Resistance
• You join anti-imperialist, anti-globalist political movements (some on left, some on right).
• You risk being surveilled, smeared, deplatformed - but retain your dignity.
• You work to rebuild sovereignty from below: town halls, independent schools, local economies.

5. Historical Analogues

• Dissidents in the Soviet Union during the Brezhnev era - “we pretend to work, they pretend to pay us.”
• Non-Communist intellectuals in Tito’s Yugoslavia — apathetic, alienated, yet clinging to language, family, and books.
• Artists and thinkers under Fascism - choosing silence, exile, or coded resistance.

6. Glossary

• Neoconism: Ideology advocating for unipolar dominance through military and cultural control.
• Internal exile: The state of living within a country but mentally and morally estranged from its regime.
• Empire of lies: A regime that projects morality abroad but crushes it at home.
• Multipolarity: The idea of a world with several sovereign power centres - not one global hegemon.

7. Final Reflection: Dignity in the Ruins

If you are a Western citizen opposed to Neoconism, your position is not hopeless, but it is exilic. You must build truth, beauty, and meaning amid the wreckage. You are not alone, even if the system makes you feel so. The world is changing - and in that turbulence, there is space for resistance, renewal, and quiet rebellion.

Friday, 18 July 2025

RENTALS MVP DATABASE SCHEMA

18 July 2025

1. Objective

To design a relational database back-end for a small short-term rentals business, using an Agile development approach.

The goal is a solid database schema that supports bookings, calendars, payments, reviews, messaging, etc., for a website-based Property Management System (PMS).

2. Step-by-Step Methodology (Agile-aligned)

2.1. Define MVP Scope and Roles (Agile: Product Backlog)

Identify the core features the database must support:

Properties

Availability & Bookings

Hosts and Guests

Messaging

Payments

Define user types:

Host (owner or manager)

Guest (renter)

Admin (yourself or future superuser)

Create high-level User Stories:

“As a guest, I want to book a property, so that I can stay during my trip.”

“As a host, I want to manage my property calendar, so that I avoid double bookings.”

2.2. Identify Entities and Relationships (Agile: Sprint 0 – Architecture planning)

Create an Entity List based on user stories. Typical entities:

Users (hosts, guests, admins)

Properties

Amenities

Bookings

Calendar

Payments

Reviews

Messages / Enquiries

Draw relationships:

One host → many properties

One guest → many bookings

One booking → one property

Many-to-many: property ↔ amenities

2.3. Define Primary Keys and Foreign Keys (Database Normalisation)

Every entity gets a primary key (PK)

Use foreign keys (FK) to establish links

E.g., property_id in bookings table

Use surrogate keys (like UUID or auto-increment ID)

Avoid data duplication: follow 3rd Normal Form (3NF) unless performance says otherwise

2.4. Build the Logical Data Model (Agile: Deliverable of First Sprint)

Create a visual ERD (Entity Relationship Diagram)

Use standard notation (Crow’s foot or SSADM box-style)

Colour code:

Green = Master Data (users, properties, amenities)

Blue = Transactional Data (bookings, payments)

Purple = Others (messages, reviews)

2.5. Validate with User Stories (Agile: Sprint Review & Feedback)

Review each user story:

“Can this data model support the scenario?”

E.g., “Does the booking table include guest ID, property ID, dates, and status?”

Adjust schema if necessary

2.6. Prepare for Sprint-Based Dev Build (Agile: Incremental Development)

Export schema for developers (SQL or DBML)

Link database to front-end via REST or GraphQL API

Use iterative Agile sprints to:

Add features (e.g., cancellation handling, discounts)

Refine performance

Handle edge cases (e.g., double bookings, partial refunds)

2.7. Test, Iterate, Deploy (Agile: Sprint Cycles)

Unit test DB schema (e.g., FK constraints, NOT NULL, ENUM values)

Mock data to simulate real-world use

Start with local DB (SQLite or Postgres)

Migrate to cloud-based DBMS (AWS RDS, Firebase, Supabase)

3. Final Thoughts

This method blends Agile’s iterative design with relational database rigour. The key is modularity: build minimum core features first, then expand in layers. Each sprint delivers something usable and testable — just as Agile intends.


Rentals MVP Database Schema

Master entities (green): hold reference data 
- users, hosts, guests, properties, amenities

Transaction entities (blue): record activity or events 
- bookings, payments, calendar, reviews

Junction Tables (purple): resolve many-to-many relationships or track system-level changes 
property_amenities, booking_events

Log or Event Entities: capture state/history 
- booking_events records the lifecycle of a booking (confirmed, paid, cancelled etc.)
Cross between audit logs and system workflows. Not true “transactions”, but they are time-sensitive and often append-only


Glossary

MVP – Minimum Viable Product, the smallest functional version of our system
User Story – short statement describing what a user wants to do and why
3NF – Third Normal Form, a method of designing databases to reduce redundancy
ERD – Entity Relationship Diagram, visual map of database tables and relationships
Sprint – a short development cycle (typically 1–2 weeks) in Agile methodology


A HISTORY OF THE AGILE METHODOLOGY

18 July 2025


1. Overview

The Agile methodology is a set of principles for software development that prioritise flexibility, customer collaboration, and quick delivery over rigid planning and documentation.

2. Origins of Agile

Before Agile, software was typically developed using the Waterfall model – a linear, sequential process.

Problems arose: requirements changed mid-project, documentation-heavy processes slowed delivery, and customers often got what they asked for but not what they needed.

3. Precursors to Agile
Several lightweight, iterative methods emerged to address Waterfall's weaknesses:

Rapid Application Development (RAD)

Scrum (developed in the 1990s)

Extreme Programming (XP)

Feature-Driven Development (FDD)
These shared similar values: shorter cycles, user involvement, and adaptability.

4. The Agile Manifesto (2001)

Seventeen software developers met in Utah and created the Agile Manifesto, which formalised Agile principles.

It valued:

Individuals and interactions over processes and tools

Working software over comprehensive documentation

Customer collaboration over contract negotiation

Responding to change over following a fixed plan

5. Post-Manifesto Evolution

Agile grew into various frameworks like Scrum, Kanban, Lean, and SAFe.

Widely adopted across industries, not just in software.

6. Conclusion
Agile emerged as a reaction to rigid methodologies. Its success lies in delivering usable software faster while adapting to change and maintaining close collaboration with users.

Glossary
Waterfall Model – a step-by-step, linear approach to software development.
Iterative – a cyclical process where feedback and adjustments happen continuously.
Agile Manifesto – a declaration of the core values and principles guiding Agile.
Scrum/XP/FDD – specific Agile frameworks or methodologies.

Source:

[End]

AGILE AND SSADM COMPARED, WHAT IS A USER STORY

17 July 2025


Agile User Stories and SSADM



1. Summary: What is a User Story?

A user story is a short, simple description of a feature or requirement written from the perspective of the person who desires the functionality - typically a user or customer. In Agile development, user stories replace traditional system requirements to promote flexibility, collaboration, and fast iteration.

A user story typically follows the format:
“As a [type of user], I want [an action] so that [a benefit/a value].”

This ensures the feature is grounded in user value. User stories are intentionally brief and act as placeholders for further conversation and refinement. They are prioritised in a product backlog, broken down into epics or tasks, and selected for development during sprint planning.

A well-written user story is INVEST:
- Independent
- Negotiable
- Valuable
- Estimable
- Small
- Testable

The 'Three Cs' of user stories are:
- Card: The written description (usually on a card or in a tracking system)
- Conversation: Dialogue among stakeholders to clarify and refine
- Confirmation: Acceptance criteria that confirm completion

This method supports iterative development, continuous feedback, and stakeholder engagement.

2. Glossary of Agile User Story Methodology

·        User Story: A brief, simple description of a feature from the user's perspective.

·        Agile: A methodology emphasizing iterative development, collaboration, and flexibility.

·        Product Backlog: A prioritized list of all desired work or features.

·        Epic: A large user story that can be broken down into smaller ones.

·        Task: A technical work unit derived from a user story.

·        Sprint: A fixed time period for completing selected user stories.

·        Sprint Planning: A meeting to choose which user stories to implement during a sprint.

·        INVEST: Checklist for good user stories: Independent, Negotiable, Valuable, Estimable, Small, Testable.

·        Three Cs: Card (description), Conversation (discussion), Confirmation (acceptance criteria).

·        Acceptance Criteria: Conditions that must be met for a story to be complete.

·        Customer-Centric: Focus on delivering value to the user, not internal technical needs.

3. Comparison of Agile User Stories vs. SSADM

SSADM (Structured Systems Analysis and Design Methodology) is a waterfall methodology focused on thorough planning, rigorous documentation, and structured stages: feasibility, requirements analysis, logical data modeling, etc. It is best for stable and regulated environments.

Agile uses evolving user stories instead of static requirements. It values working software, frequent feedback, and adaptation. Documentation is minimal and collaboration is central.

Agile’s user stories fit a 'Three Layered' approach to requirements:
1. Epics (high-level goals)
2. Stories (concrete features)
3. Tasks (developer-level implementation units)

In contrast, SSADM follows:
1. Business Requirements
2. Functional Specification
3. Technical Specification

Where SSADM assumes requirements are knowable upfront, Agile embraces change and iterative clarification.

4. Glossary Mapping: Agile vs. SSADM

Agile Term

SSADM Equivalent

Comment / Mapping Logic

User Story

Process Specification

Describes functionality; refined into DFD and ELH in SSADM

Epic

Business Area Definition

High-level domain requirements

Task

Elementary Process / Module

Breakdown of a process step in DFD

Product Backlog

Requirements Catalogue

Centralised list of required system behaviours

Sprint

Phase in Project Plan

Time-boxed execution within structured lifecycle

Acceptance Criteria

Test Specification

Formal validation in SSADM

Three Cs

Structured Interview + Requirement Statement

Story lifecycle mirrors early SSADM stages

INVEST

Requirement Quality Guidelines

SSADM lacks explicit acronym but uses best practice

Card

Requirement Entry

Initial placeholder; becomes documented formally in SSADM

Conversation

Stakeholder Workshops

Corresponds to structured interviews and JAD sessions

Confirmation

Verification via Test Plan

Formalised in SSADM Test and Evaluation phase

Backlog Grooming

Requirements Review Meeting

SSADM equivalent is periodic review cycles

Logical Model

LDM (Logical Data Model)

Agile infers data; SSADM models explicitly

Flow of Interaction

DFD (Data Flow Diagram)

DFDs model data movement—analogous to interaction flow

State or Scenarios

ELH (Entity Life History)

Entity behaviour over time; maps loosely to user scenarios


What is a JAD session?

[End]

Sunday, 13 July 2025

THIS ORDER IS FINISHED, HOW TO REPLACE IT

13 July 2025

How to understand Trump, Tulsi and the Role of the Outsider


When I read that Tulsi Gabbard is staying in Trump’s administration, despite being silenced after he bombed Iran - ignoring intelligence she brought to him - I felt a sense of betrayal. She ran in 2020 on an anti-interventionist platform, committed to regime-change restraint and "speaking truth to power". People believed in her integrity. That image helped Trump win in 2024.

She hasn't resigned, she remains quietly loyal. She had millions of followers within the MAGA movement who trusted her honesty. What do they feel now? Cornered, confused, betrayed, sickened - seeing another promise broken in the name of loyalty to Trump - Ukraine, Iran, Epstein....

We saw similar reversals over Epstein’s files, or Trump’s pledge to halt the Ukraine war in 24 hours...only for him to now want to rearm Kyiv. This outsider was meant to dismantle the very systems that birthed him. Instead, he’s been absorbed into the establishment. He’s gone from outsider to insider, now part of the establishment he once railed against.

I’ve met people like this before. They start with a chip on their shoulder, climb in, and once they gain acceptance, true reform disappears. It becomes clear that his real loyalty is to his own standing. The rest was rhetoric - the consequences of what he says don't matter to him, his positions are not serious.

At this point, total cynicism seems the only rational response to any saviour narrative. As tempting as the sirens sound, we must “strap ourselves to the mast”. Listen without giving up ourselves. Not be fooled by grand promises, not be deceived.

So, what do we do? We act locally, not globally. The idea I learned was “think global, act local". Build resilience in local communities. Pockets of resistance can crack the system better than national revolts.

What we need now is not revolution, but insurgency in the grassroots sense, new systems emerging in the cracks of the old. Self-help (self build), alternative independent media outlets, parallel financial tools (gold, crypto, local credit unions / building societies, barter), local education efforts including youtube, neighbourhood resilience end resistance. These aren’t panaceas, but they keep a culture of resistance alive while the old order crumbles away.

Finally, if the economic and institutional structure is collapsing, what replaces it? Is it invasion, an outside power, a foreign Empire? Or is it an insurgency of local systems, plank by plank, bottom-up, that gradually builds something more lasting?

This is not utopian, it’s pragmatic. The fourth turning is here. If we’re smart, it’s our best shot at generational change when all the supposed saviours and utopianists have let us down.


Sunday, 6 July 2025

THE BRITISH EMPIRE HAS NOT DISAPPEARED, IT HAS DE-MATERIALISED

6 July 2025

Yesterday, we looked at Britain's influence over Washington. In this post, we shall consider the view that “all that’s left of the British Empire is the City of London”, and that financial power, not military empire, remains Britain’s legacy and its tool of influence.

1. The City of London: What Is It?

The City of London (not to be confused with Greater London) is a tiny, ancient jurisdiction - a square mile - with its own Lord Mayor, its own police force, and a certain legal status. In practical / financial matters, it is one of the three global nodes of finance alongside Wall Street and Hong Kong / Shanghai.

The British Empire once ruled over a quarter of the world's land and people, with its authority backed by naval power, colonial governors, and direct political control. Today, the Union Jack no longer flies over distant dominions, but the empire has not vanished, it has evolved from military rule to financial rule. A rule centred in the City of London and its offshore networks, where influence flows quietly through law, money, and global finance.

So the British Empire has faded in a military, overt power and control sense, but the City remains an empire of financing capital: a global command centre for currency trading, offshore finance, investment banking, and legal arbitration.

2. What Are Its Powers?

Here are the core instruments of financial power based in or routed through the City:

2.1 Foreign Exchange Control

London is the world’s largest foreign exchange market.

Over $3.8 trillion trades daily through the City (Bank for International Settlements, 2022).

This gives enormous leverage over currency flows, and thus over the monetary sovereignty of other nations.


2.2 Offshore Empire

The British "spider web" of offshore financial centres includes Jersey, Guernsey, the Cayman Islands, British Virgin Islands, Bermuda, Gibraltar, and more.

These Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories are legally distinct but act as tax havens and secrecy jurisdictions.

No one should be surprised when global elites and corporations use the good offices of the City of London to avoid taxes, hide assets, and move capital invisibly.

2.3 Legal and Dispute Infrastructure

So that is as to the empire of tax havens and secrecy jurisdictions.

In addition, the British law we are so proud of governs most international contracts, especially in shipping, insurance, capital restructuring and trade finance.

London is the preferred venue for commercial arbitration and debt resolution, even for foreign clients with no link to Britain.

This creates a judicial ecosystem of enormous influence on how global business is done.

2.4 Financialisation of Industry

The City manages financial services and thus how finance and investment is used to dominate the production of real goods. This financialisation model was later exported to the US under Reagan and Clinton.

We have discussed in previous posts how financialisation of economies is achieved and its consequences - British economic elites shifted away from manufacturing post-WWII and backed neoliberal globalisation, a switch that began in the 1980s and really accelerated with China's admission to the WTO at the turn of the century. This evolution benefited finance but shipped out the industrial base to low labour cost countries up valuing financial assets and down valuing the hourly wage.

2.5 Influence Over Washington

- Through shared interests between Anglo-American banks (e.g. HSBC, Barclays, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan) and law firms, there exists what some call an “Atlanticist deep-finance network.”

Take, for example, the case of Clifford Chance LLP, one of the UK’s “Magic Circle” firms. Clifford Chance specialises in banking, finance, capital markets, and international dispute resolution. It has deep ties to global banks, hedge funds, and sovereign wealth clients. With offices in over 30 countries, it has a truly global reach.

- The Federal Reserve, IMF, and World Bank are often staffed and influenced by alumni from institutions entwined with the City.

For example, Mark Carney is a key figure in global finance. He embodies the Anglo-American financial nexus. A former Governor of both the Bank of England and Bank of Canada, now PM of Canada, Carney spent over a decade at Goldman Sachs in London, specialising in sovereign risk and emerging markets. He later chaired the Financial Stability Board, advised the UN on climate finance, and played a leading role in shaping central bank digital currency (CBDC) policy, linking The City of London, Wall Street, and multilateral bodies like the IMF and World Bank.

- Think tanks (e.g. Chatham House, Atlantic Council) link British and U.S. policy circles with financial backing from City-connected entities. This is where the vision is conceived.

Here's a brief, concrete example. Chatham House, as we have said, a leading UK foreign policy think tank, regularly hosts senior figures from British banks, oil firms, and legal consultancies... many with City of London ties. Its funders include HSBC, Shell, and Standard Chartered, and it collaborates with the Atlantic Council, its U.S. counterpart, which is backed by JPMorgan Chase, BlackRock, and Goldman Sachs. These institutions frame reports on global governance, sanctions policy, and financial regulation, as used by policymakers in both London and Washington.

3. How Is This Power Used?

We have looked at the five most important sources of power of the City of London:

1 - Foreign Exchange ControlLondon is the world’s largest foreign exchange market.
2 - Offshore Empire of Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories that act as tax havens and secrecy jurisdictions.
3 - The Legal and Dispute Infrastructure that makes London the preferred venue for commercial arbitration and debt resolution.
4 - Financialisation of Industry is at least in part managed by The City, its financial services that dominate the productive capacity of The West.
5 - Influence Over Washington, achieved through think tanks linking British and U.S. policy circles with financial backing from City-connected entities.

Now let's look at how these powers are exercised in the execution of the City's interests and plans.

3.1 Market Leverage

The City can make or break currencies, tank emerging markets, or starve countries of capital. Nowadays, it does this with trade in preference to troops.

When a state challenges the liberal financial order (e.g. capital controls, nationalisation of national assets), it risks being locked out of markets or hit with a currency run. Colour revolutions replace non-conforming governments.

3.2 Elite Integration

Global billionaires and kleptocrats keep their money in British offshore centres, in laundered bank accounts, on investment platforms, in London real estate.

This creates a tacit alliance: oligarchs who may oppose the West politically are compromised by their financial dependence. (Which is why over use of sanctions and confiscations is not a smart idea.)

3.3 Policy Shaping via the IMF and World Bank

These institutions promote free-market capitalism, open capital flows, and global economic integration. They enforce integration through application of the “rules”: privatisation, deregulation, austerity.

The City’s expertise, staffing, and political networks heavily influence and lead these organisations, even as they sit in Washington, arch home of the neocon Deep State".

4. A “Post-Imperial” Empire of Finance?

While Britain no longer rules through redcoats and viceroys, it still exerts soft and hard power through its financial infrastructure.

The Transformation: Old Empire to Modern Format

This is how the old empire continues to punch above its weight and lead Washington:

Naval supremacy -> Currency and capital flow dominance
Governors and Raj -> Compliance lawyers and hedge fund managers
Colonial taxation -> Tax havens and offshore arbitrage
Gunboats -> Sanctions, tariffs, confiscations, even market pressure and "forward guidance".

5. Conclusion: The Empire Didn't Die, It Dissolved into Credit and Contracts.

The claim that “all that remains of the British Empire is the City of London” may be partly metaphorical, but it comes across as true.  What has happened is that the form of control has changed, from explicit political and military control over the sovereignty of other estates, to coaxing them in to financial dependency, from land to balance sheets, from army uniform to pinstripe suit - this is the real, though unadmitted, reason why Britain no longer has or needs an army (peace to Russia of course): power through financial control. 

The form of control has changed, but the reach remains global, the tools are more subtle and complex, but the consequences - 
nations lose sovereignty and are vassalised, public services are sold off cheaply to new oligarchs, inequality widens, entire economies can be crashed, governments get replaced - are just as real.

Control of capital flows, legal contracts, and offshore safe havens has replaced territorial conquest - the pen (and the spreadsheet) are mightier than the sword!

Saturday, 5 July 2025

4TH OF JULY. HOW INDEPENDENT IS AMERICA OF BRITAIN?

5 July 2025

HOW INDEPENDENT IS AMERICA FROM BRITAIN?

1. 4 July: Political Independence, Economic Entanglement
The U.S. declared its political break from Britain on this day in 1776. But beneath the flags and fireworks, a deeper entanglement remains, especially in the financial, intelligence, and elite spheres. The question isn’t whether America governs itself, but whether it does so free of the old imperial circuitry.

2. Empire Repackaged as Finance
The City of London is no ordinary district. It’s a sovereign-like financial enclave, a global hub for offshore money, derivatives, forex, and tax avoidance. Many of America’s biggest corporations and hedge funds still operate through its looser regulations and offshore extensions like the Cayman Islands and Jersey. This isn’t colonialism—it’s soft entrapment, entrapment by design.

3. Still Whispering in the Corridors
Old ties never died, they just adapted. A network of shared education (Oxbridge, Ivy League), think tanks (Chatham House, Council on Foreign Relations), media (Economist, WSJ), and global finance (The City, Cambridge, Wall Street, rhe offshore treasure islands), continues to align U.S. and British elite interests. Quigley called it the Anglo-American Establishment. It’s not conspiracy, it’s structure. You can trace it from Bretton Woods to BlackRock.

4. Strategic Culture – The Shadow of Empire (The Five Eyes intelligence alliance) binds the UK and U.S. in near-total surveillance cooperation, with a sifnificant regional role for Israel. Military strategies, especially in the Middle East and Russia, often follow old British imperial routes and date back to the First Crimean War and Mackinder. Even soft power (the BBC, English common law, royal mystique) maintains a ghostly grip on America’s elite imagination.

5. Conclusion – Free, but not unentangled,
America is sovereign on paper, but in finance, strategy, and elite thinking, it remains woven into Britain’s imperial after-life, in particular via the City of London. The real independence war never ended, it just moved offshore.


Wednesday, 2 July 2025

THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE CAUCUSES

2 July 2025

Azerbaijan crime ring, offset 1h20m

1. The Caucasus as "Shatterbelt"

Like the Balkans and the Levant, the Caucasus is what geopolitical theorists call a shatterbelt: a region caught between rival powers, fragmented by history, and prone to chronic instability.

This is a very mountainous zone, sandwiched between the Black and Caspian Seas. Its rugged topography of mountains, valleys, and rivers sharpens ethnic divisions, but its geography also makes it a natural transit corridor between Europe, Russia, Central Asia, and the Middle East.

2. A Region of Empires and Faultlines

For centuries, the Caucasus was contested by Turkey, Russia, and Persia. Even under Soviet control, Moscow never fully subdued the region, which includes volatile territories such as Chechnya.

The region’s diversity is staggering: dozens of peoples, languages, and faiths - Orthodox Christians, Shia and Sunni Muslims, Jews, Yazidis - all shaped by bitter memories of past imperialism, genocide, and forced migration. These faultlines are political as much as they are ethnic.

3. Shatterbelts on the Edge of Empire

Looking at a map, the Balkans, Levant, and Caucasus all lie along the tectonic political plates of Europe and Asia. When outside powers weaken or start backing different local actors, the communities of the Caucasus often default back to historic conflicts.

In particular, if Russia fails to secure its southeastern flank, it faces potential threats from Iran, or from jihadist flows and instability across the Middle East.

4. The Energy Corridor and Russia’s Strategic Dilemma

Of more immediate importance: two critical oil and gas pipelines traverse the South Caucasus, connecting Caspian Sea energy reserves to Western markets, and bypassing Russian and Iranian territory. This corridor is now of vital importance to Europe, given the steep drop in Russian energy imports as a result of the proxy war in Ukraine.

For Russia, the stakes are double-edged. It opposes these pipelines yet also has a growing interest in maintaining good relations with Iran - Iran is the only country that offers Moscow a realistic land-and-sea route to the Persian Gulf and Arabian Sea, bypassing Western-controlled chokepoints.

5. Conclusion: The New Great Game

What we are witnessing is the continuation of the Great Game that was once fought out between Imperial Britain, jealous particularly of the route to India, and Tsarist Russia, now being played out between NATO, Russia, Iran, and also rising Asian powers.

The Caucasus remains what it has always been: a "buffer, a battleground, and a bottleneck", as one writer, put it. Whether this region settles into fragile peace or erupts once again into conflict will depend not only on local actors, but on the shifting ambitions and fears of the great powers that surround it.

Glossary of Terms

1. Shatterbelt
A region caught between major powers, prone to fragmentation and conflict.
The Caucasus, like the Balkans and the Levant, lies between empires and civilisations. These regions often experience repeated foreign intervention, ethnic division, and wars—especially when global power balances shift.

2. The Great Game
A 19th-century term for the strategic rivalry between the British and Russian Empires in Central Asia.
The “new” Great Game refers to today’s geopolitical contest over the Caucasus, Central Asia, and energy routes, now involving Russia, NATO, Iran, China, and others.

3. Energy Corridor
A route that transports oil and gas from resource-rich regions to international markets.
The South Caucasus hosts pipelines that carry Caspian energy westward to Europe, bypassing Russian and Iranian territory. This makes the region vital to energy security.

4. Caspian Sea
The world’s largest inland body of water, bordered by Russia, Iran, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Azerbaijan.
Rich in oil and gas reserves, it is a focal point of competition between powers that seek control of its energy exports

5. Strait of Hormuz
A narrow sea passage between the Persian Gulf and the Arabian Sea.
Roughly 30% of the world’s seaborne oil passes through it, largely to Europe. Although not in the Caucasus, Russia’s interest in accessing this strait via Iran underlines its strategic ambitions.

6. Buffer Zone
A region situated between two rival powers, often unstable but important for security.
The Caucasus acts as a buffer between Russia and the Middle East, and between Western and Eastern spheres of influence.

7. Ethno-religious Fragmentation
The coexistence of multiple ethnic and religious groups in a single region, often without a shared national identity.
This defines much of the Caucasus, home to Armenians, Azerbaijanis, Georgians, Chechens, Ossetians, Lezgins, and more.

8. Proxy War
A conflict where external powers support different local sides rather than fight directly.
The Ukraine war is the most visible example today, but the Caucasus has also seen foreign-backed factions play out wider rivalries.

9. Hierarchy
This is about order and chaos. The word "hierarchy" comes from the Greek "hierarkhia," meaning "rule of a high priest," which combines "hieros" (holy) and "archos" (ruler). Ipposite: anarchy - from Greek anarkhia "lack of a leader, the state of people without a government".

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