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When Ben Gvir - that puffed up bladder of vanity and noise, a man who struts like a rooster on a rubbish heap - bellows about humanity, the loudest voices demanding outrage seem to treat human life like a chessboard in a dim backroom - power sliding pieces while ordinary families carry the bruises. The outrage being marketed to the world feels bloody selective, a theatre of morality where grief is rationed and empathy is switched on or off like a flickering streetlight in a storm.
Empathy should never require permission.
When leaders preach outrage while ignoring decades of occupation, sanctions, and humiliation, it feels like watching a rigged carnival game where the prize is justice and the house always wins. The hypocrisy hangs in the air like a thick fog - choking truth while politicians polish their halos.
Humanity is not selective outrage.
America and Israel lecturing the world about restraint is rich - like arsonists running a fire safety seminar while the sky glows orange behind them. For decades they have bulldozed international law, shrugged at civilian suffering, and then acted shocked when resistance answers back - the geopolitical equivalent of taking the piss while the world burns.
The U.S. has imposed over 10,000 sanctions on Iran - a slow economic suffocation hanging over ordinary people like a rusted chain around a nation’s lungs.
We must break the war spell.
Somewhere tonight a child stares into the dark with questions no one answers, and the silence around them spreads across the night like a cold shadow - the kind that settles into the bones of the world and reminds us that behind every speech about war is a small heartbeat trying not to disappear..
For profound insights into the true nature of the Empire, watch The Trust Fall: Julian Assange.
THE TRUST FALL isn’t just a film. It’s a peace movement.
