Politics
Palestine Action defendants charges dropped
Eighteen defendants from Palestine Action have now been acquitted of aggravated burglary. Earlier this month, a jury cleared six of the Filton24 of aggravated burglary, while leaving the charges of criminal damage and violent disorder undecided. These charges are in relation to direct-action taken targeting Israeli arms company, Elbit Systems in Bristol.
Middle East Eye reported that:
Following the decision to drop the charges, five of the defendants – William Plastow, Ian Sanders, Madeline Norman, Julia Brigadirova and Aleksandra Herbich – were granted conditional bail.
Plastow, Sanders and Norman have been held on remand for the longest period of the 18- spending 18 months in prison. Birgadirova and Herbich has been imprisoned since November 2024.
Bail applications for another eight defendants will be held on Friday.
Palestine Action targeting
Today’s announcement comes as the prosecution have “reconsidered the sufficiency of the evidence”. This move appears to suggest it would be unlikely to achieve the guilty verdicts it is clearly aiming for. However, at this late a stage in a criminal case, the prosecution could not just drop the aggravated burglary charge against the remaining defendants. This left it no option but to concede defeat on that charge if it wished to change course.
Consequently, concerns have resurfaced that the prosecution and government could reconsider their strategy and pursue different charges with a stronger likelihood of conviction.
All of the Filton24 were acquitted of aggravated burglary. SAY IT. https://t.co/ohMIDuUYVb
— Huda Ammori (@HudaAmmori) February 18, 2026
Victory: for now
The Palestine Action defendants have received popular support amongst pro-Palestinian activists and groups. In fact, many pensioners across the country have been seen risking arrest for daring to show public support for then proscribed Palestine Action (PA). The direct-action group has protested against Israel’s settler colonialism for many years, and its members have long sought to call attention to those arming the Zionist entity. The case against them refers to a break-in near Bristol of an Elbit Systems site known to be providing arms and supplies to Israel.
Citizens across the UK have taken to protests in every city since October 7th, 2023, making it clear that the majority of British people do not support the ongoing genocide in Gaza. Moreover, leading Holocaust scholars across the globe and the International Court of Justice in The Hague have identified this as a genocide, while the International Criminal Court has moved forward with arrest warrants at the direction of Prosecutor Karim Khan.
We wrote a few days ago on the court ruling that the proscription of Palestine Action, brought because of their acts of protest, was deemed disproportionate. Yet little has really changed, as Skwawkbox wrote:
The decision was made by a panel of judges who all have strong links to Israel, underscoring just how far the Starmer regime overstepped human rights legislation. It is almost certain to try to appeal, despite the exposed web of lies it created to try to justify the ban.
Nevertheless, people are rightfully celebrating this reprieve across social media:
Victory after victory … what an incredible start to Ramadan, the month of victory https://t.co/zrI9NkAiNi
— Fahad Ansari 🇵🇸 (Stop the Gaza genocide) (@fahadansari) February 18, 2026
Another victory for Palestine Action, defeat for the UK government’s support of genocide. https://t.co/Lw8wj3dV0l
— Syksy Räsänen (@SyksyRasanen) February 18, 2026
Great news BELOW!
There is a CHASM between what the politico-media “elites” think about the GENOCIDE in Gaza and what the general public think
The general public is decent & humane
The “elites” are immoral & cruel https://t.co/Hrw6j3dBgt
— Tom London (@TomLondon6) February 18, 2026
Returning home to their loved ones
Some defendants have since been granted bail following being declared ‘not guilty’ of the original charge of aggravated burglary. This represents a huge relief for the defendants given they will now be able to return home to their loved ones. Nevertheless, some still remain on remand awaiting trial, signaling that not much has changed regarding our government’s intentions.
As Investigative journalist Asa Winstanley reported on X:
BREAKING: Aleksandra Herbich and Yulia Brigadirova both also granted bail in Filton 24 hearing. Both have been on remand for 15 months.
In total, five Palestine Action activists have been granted bail today. Four are expected to be released today.
Brigadirova has a second case… pic.twitter.com/YO6Hkq9WHC
— Asa Winstanley (@AsaWinstanley) February 18, 2026
Although we at the Canary recognise this as a significant victory, it should not be mistaken for a safeguard against future action by the UK government or the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS).
It is clear that accepting defeat on this charge will leave a bitter taste for the Starmer government. Their premiership is already facing serious scrutiny over its significant levels of funding from the Israel lobby. This announcement today raises legitimate concerns that the prosecution may return with renewed determination, pursuing alternative charges it believes are more likely to secure convictions.
The broader fear we must acknowledge is that this effort is not merely about this case, but about setting a precedent – using the Filton 24 as a warning to deter dissent and protest in support of Palestinians.
As Richard Sanders pointed out on X, the British Government have no love lost for these defendants. Something they made clear recently during the defendants’ principled hunger strikes:
A reminder that the government was prepared to let 4 of these people die on hunger strike. https://t.co/9zHFayUSP9
— Richard Sanders (@PulaRJS) February 18, 2026
We must stay vigil
We reported on Palestine Action co-founder Huda Ammori’s comments on the CPS’ case against the six acquitted by jury. Skwawkbox wrote:
This case from the start has been heavily politicised.
The CPS are now publicly declaring, before the court hearing, that they’ll seek a retrial, despite the defendants having already spent 18months in prison without a single conviction.
This is political theatre.
Sadly, we believe today’s victory may prove similarly short-lived. The actors are currently off-stage changing their outfits and rehearsing their lines. But we must not forget, political theatre is still heavily permeating through this oppressive criminal case against the Palestine Action defendants.
We must stay vigilant and ready for whatever may follow this temporary reprieve.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
US sends USS Tripoli and thousands of troops to Middle East
The US is sending USS Tripoli, along with its Marine expeditionary unit, which can conduct ground operations, to the Middle East.
This comes only one day after the IRGC announced that it had successfully struck USS Abraham Lincoln. Of course, the US denied this claim, but then immediately called up the USS Tripoli.
أهم ما جرى في الساعات الأخيرة!
أحداث حاسمة.
بالنسبة لحاملة الطائرات أبراهام لينكولن هناك إعلان رسمي من حرس الثورة بأنها أصيب وتغادر إلى الولايات المتحدة. سنتكوم نفت وقالت إنها لاتزال في العمليات، في الوقت نفسه استدعيت حاملتا الطائرات تريبولي وبوش إلى الحرب، وهذا يؤشر إلى صحة…
— Mohamad Seifeddine (@mseiif) March 13, 2026
According to Mohamad Seifeddine:
Regarding the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier, there is an official announcement from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps stating that it has been hit and is withdrawing to the United States. CENTCOM denied this and said it remains in operations. At the same time, the aircraft carriers Tripoli and Bush have been called into the fight, which points to the validity of Lincoln’s exit from the theater.
As for the Gerald R. Ford, the buzz is around a fire breaking out on it. The Americans said it was an electrical malfunction, while Iran said it was deliberately set by the carrier’s crew to avoid combat. This might mean it was also struck, with a “conspiracy of silence” from both sides to prevent the cost that could arise from two aircraft carriers being hit in a single day.
The incident with the two pilots is confirmed, and there’s chatter about it—the Iranians say it went down under fire, while the Americans say it was an accident and not from enemy fire or friendly fire. In the end, yes, there is a qualitative leap in the quality and level of the hits. And now a signal from the Houthis of imminent entry. This means we’ve entered the final level of means, or the last hundred meters of the war. Because Houthi involvement means maximum pressure on energy markets. And this assumes it would shatter the markets if it continues for long, in parallel with the closure of the Bab al-Mandab. The next five days are decisive!
This will add thousands of Marines, several warships, and F-35 fighter jets to the region.
The ships are sailing from Japan and will reach the region in around two weeks.
Strait of Hormuz
On March 2, Iran announced it was closing the Strait of Hormuz
Iran has been blocking the Strait of Hormuz in response to the US and Israel’s illegal and unprovoked attacks.
So far, the disruption has caused the US $11bn.
On Thursday, March 12, Scott Bessent, the Treasurer Secretary, said that US Navy escorts for commercial ships could start soon.
On March 4, a US submarine sank the Iranian frigate IRIS Dena off the coast of Sri Lanka. So far, at least 18 vessels have been hit in Gulf waters.
According to Axios, the United States military is planning:
potential operations for taking out land-based anti-ship missiles that the Iranians have deployed in the Strait area.
Pete Hegseth, Defense Secretary, said that:
But it’s not just that Iran doesn’t have a functioning Air Force, or that their entire Navy is at the bottom of the Persian Gulf, or their missile force is shrinking daily.
They also don’t have the ability to build more. That’s the most important component I’d like to emphasize today
But why are the US and Israel allowed to rebuild their armies when Iran shoots down their planes or sinks their ships?
And why do they not want brown Middle Eastern countries to be able to defend themselves?
USS Tripoli
The USS Tripoli is an amphibious assault ship — not an aircraft carrier. However, it functions almost like a small aircraft carrier.
This means that the United States will soon have four aircraft carriers, if we include the USS Tripoli, active in the West Asia.
The US has 11 nuclear-powered aircraft carriers in active service, but it can only deploy about half at any given time.
Aboard the USS Gerald R. Ford, an aircraft carrier currently operating in the Red Sea, a fire broke out, which was ‘unrelated to combat’. Two sailors were injured and received medical treatment.
The Ford has more than 5,000 sailors on board and carries more than 75 military aircraft.
US casualties
On Thursday, March 12, six crew members were killed when a US KC-135 refuelling aircraft crashed in Iraq.
The US claimed it was due to an incident with another aircraft, but the Islamic Resistance in Iraq claimed responsibility for downing the aircraft.
Then, on March 13, Iranian missiles also damaged 5 US Air Force refuelling aircraft at Prince Sultan Airbase in Saudi Arabia.
So far, Iranian strikes have damaged seven US refuelling planes and killed six crew members.
Since the US and Israel launched their illegal attacks on Iran, a total of 13 US personnel have died in the Middle East.
What happened to being the president of peace? Trump spent four years promising the American people that there would be no new wars. Yet as soon as he’s back in office, the US is blowing up civilians in Iran.
But the US must already be struggling. It announced it was deploying 2,500 marines, then quickly changed the figure to 5,000. US colonialism is in full swing — and Trump does not care how many black and brown people he murders — as long as he’s distracting us from the Epstein files.
It’s amazing what lengths powerful men will go to, just to cover up the evidence of them raping children.
Feature image via Armory Unveiled/ YouTube
Politics
5 Science-Backed Ways To Speed Up Your Running Pace
I was a relatively normal person before I started running, but now, I accost my friends with topics like my VO2 max and “Jeffing”.
I can’t help it. Every runner I know wants to run a little faster and a little longer than their current PB.
So, we thought we’d share some science-backed ways to boost your pace:
1) Try tempo runs, like Fartlek sessions
The Swedish “speed play” method is a kind of interval training. It involves running at a slower pace for a set period, then sprinting for another preset interval.
There are no set rules as to what those intervals are.
“Fartlek and other types of tempo runs are a great way of getting your body used to small and frequent changes in pace, whether that be during hilly terrain or because you’re struggling during a particular section of the race,” Nuffield Health’s personal training lead, Nuffield Health, previously said.
One paper found that six sessions of sprint interval training improved the pace of seasoned athletes.
This doesn’t strictly have to be Fartlek training; it can be something like “Jeffing”, or the “run-walk-run” method, too.
2) Follow the 80/20 rule
According to Angela Ruskin University, “elite runners spend around 80% of their time training at what’s termed zone 2 running – a running pace which raises your heart rate, but is still slow enough that you can hold a conversation”.
Only about 20% of the time is spent at race pace, they added.
Zone 2 training happens below the lactate threshold, which means your muscles don’t get as tired after long distances.
That means you can build up a better aerobic base, which can really help you run faster for longer.
3) Try a “pyramid” running plan and get your miles in
One paper, which looked at 119,452 marathon runners in the 16 weeks preceding their races, found that “The fastest runners in this dataset featured large training volumes”.
In other words, the more kilometres under your belt, the faster you’ll probably run.
And among the fastest runners, a “pyramidal” running programme was more common.
That is another form of interval training which sees you ramp up from shorter, faster intervals to longer, slower parts, and then returning to smaller, speedier runs again at the end.
4) Don’t neglect strength training
A meta-analysis of 31 studies found that “strength training with high loads, plyometric training, and a combination of strength training methods may improve running economy in middle- and long-distance runners”.
And the better your running economy, the faster and longer you’ll be able to go.
But in this research, high-load strength training – working with heavy weights – might be especially helpful for those with a high VO2 max and faster running speeds.
5) Try plyometrics
Plyometrics, or exercises which lengthen, then rapidly shorten, your muscles, have been linked to improved explosive power.
One paper found that three plyometric sessions a week can reduce the “cost of running” (or energy used running) in athletes by about 6%. And another found that it increases stride length, too; both of which can improve your pace.
Politics
Questions To Ask Young Relatives To Get To Know Them
Baby boomers and Gen-Xers, we know younger generations are giving you a hard time these days. Your millennial and Gen Z relatives don’t always understand where you’re coming from or what you’ve experienced, and their stereotypes about your generation may seem undeserved.
If you’re craving deeper relationships with your younger relatives, one powerful way to bridge the gap is to ask thoughtful questions to get to know what matters to them and how you can best show up for them. Questions like these can open up a more fulfilling way of relating to each other.
We asked three experts on family dynamics to suggest meaningful questions to ask younger relatives, which they’ll deeply appreciate. And they may lead to you learning some important things about your loved ones. Win-win.
1. “How are things going?”
It may seem obvious, but asking this question in a way that shows you truly care about the answer can help your loved one open up.
“Family members tend to assume they know everything about one another,” Everett Uhl, a licensed marriage and family therapist, told HuffPost. “Asking open-ended questions encourages detailed responses rather than a yes/no or simple (good, fine) answer.”
Engaged listening will make all the difference in how the conversation goes. “If one continues to listen, stays curious and makes neutral statements (‘I support your position here; I totally agree with you; you are making total sense’), there is opportunity for continued dialogue with depth,” Uhl said.
“This benefits both parent and child as there will be deeper understanding between generations and each will understand the other’s inner world more.”

FG Trade via Getty Images
2. “Where do you see yourself in three years?”
Your younger relatives are in a different phase of their lives, which means that their days are very different, as are their goals for the short and long term. So asking about their hopes for the future can really help you understand where they’re coming from and figure out how you can support them no matter what stage they’re at.
“This question allows you as the parent to really see and be with your child in their life stage and understand what is important to them,” Uhl said. “This can lead to a back and forth about the life stage the adult child is in and if they are interested in moving to the next one, or if they are happy staying where they are a little longer.”
This question can replace more intrusive ones, such as “When are you getting married?” or “When are you having kids?” with empathy and curiosity. “This open-ended question lets the adult child share their wants, hopes and dreams about the future without the burden of pressure to be in a life stage by a certain age,” Uhl said.
3. “What does support look like to you right now?”
All three experts suggested you ask your younger relatives some version of this question – it’s that important for a thriving intergenerational relationship.
“This question does something quietly radical: It assumes that support is wanted and that the older relative is willing to provide it in whatever form is actually useful, not just the one they’re most comfortable with,” Saba Harouni Lurie, marriage and family therapist and founder of Take Root Therapy, told HuffPost.
“By asking rather than assuming, the older relative opens the door for the younger relative to be explicit, which is itself a form of respect. And for younger generations who have often felt like their needs were either invisible or inconvenient, simply being asked can be meaningful before a word of the answer is even spoken,” she continued.
Whatever the answer is – whether it be financial or emotional support or something else entirely – try your best to be open to it and to find ways to provide that support in a way that works for both of you.
4. “What am I missing?”
This is a winning question because it invites your child or younger relative to share what has perhaps felt difficult in your relationship or simply what’s important to them in life right now, and it demonstrates that you’re willing to look at your “blind spots” (because we all have them), said Harouni Lurie.
“The conversation that follows might surface moments the younger relative felt misunderstood or hurt and never knew how to bring up,” she added. “Or, it might open into bigger territory: the political climate, evolving values, the ways the world has changed in ways that aren’t always visible from the outside.”
Your family member will be grateful for your curiosity and open-mindedness.

zeljkosantrac via Getty Images
5. “Is there an expectation you feel I have of you that is weighing you down that I can release you from?”
We all grow up in families that have specific expectations of us in one way or another, whether these are explicit or implicit. Depending on our individual personalities and trajectories, though, some of these expectations can start to feel heavy – even if it’s totally unintentional.
“Expectations are the dirty word in parenting adult children,” said Catherine Hickem, a licensed clinical social worker. “They ruin relationships, damage trust, hurt a child’s self-worth, and place a burden on them that is not theirs to carry. They can put a child in the position of choosing between keeping peace with their parents or fulfilling their own needs, dreams, and desires.”
Knowing this, you likely want to help free your relative from any inadvertent expectations they may be living with, which is where this question comes in. When you ask, try your best to avoid getting defensive and listen with an open heart.
6. “Is there anything from our family’s history you want to understand better?”
We are all shaped by our family histories in big ways, and chances are your younger relatives have many questions about the values, events and traumas that have made up the generations before them.
“Younger relatives are often deeply curious about, and are being shaped by, family history that they were shielded from or handed down in incomplete or distorted form,” Harouni Lurie said. “Asking this question signals something important: that the older relative is willing to be honest, even about the hard things.”
Where previous generations might have preferred to leave the past in the past, younger generations are often highly introspective and want to better understand their family history.
“And with this question, the older relative becomes someone who wants to reckon with the past rather than guard a particular version of it,” Harouni Lurie added.
7. “What evidence do you need from me to know that I love you unconditionally?”
You love your children (or nephews or nieces, etc.). For you, that’s a given. But for them, they may need more hard proof than you think.
“Listen carefully to how your child responds to this question. Do you notice hesitancy? Defensiveness? Nervous laughter?” Hickem said. “Whatever their response, reinforce that nothing could change your love for them. But let me caution you on this: Do not say this if you are not certain you mean it. It is better to leave this question alone than to offer words you cannot stand behind.”
8. “Do you know what I really like about you?”
Loving your child or younger relative is one thing, but liking them for who they are is another.
“This may sound elementary, but when people are asked what their parents like about them, there is often a puzzled look or a joking response like, ‘I was the kid who didn’t keep them awake at night,’” Hickem said.

When asking this question, “parents should have a list ready in both their head and their heart of what they genuinely like about their child,” Hickem said. “Even if you have to reach back into childhood or adolescence to remember qualities you may not see clearly right now, look for the unique features that make them who they are.”
Asking this question and engaging in the conversation that ensues can help your loved one feel seen and valued, which in turn will naturally deepen your relationship.
9. “Is there any fear connected to our differences that we need to talk about?”
The socio-political climate today creates a huge rift between older and younger generations, something that has a significant effect on families. “We no longer know how to disagree without taking it personally or making the other person wrong or bad,” Hickem said.
Asking whether these differences between you and your younger relative cause them any fear gives “a parent the opportunity to clarify the difference between disagreeing about social issues, political concerns, or personal values and loving their child for who they are,” according to Hickem. “The relationship always matters more than the issue.”
Disagreeing on particular issues can feel really difficult, but it doesn’t mean you can’t have a healthy relationship that also includes disagreement. “Respect, compassion, sincere curiosity, and love can bridge differences,” Hickem said. “Parents may need to say, ‘I may not understand how you landed where you did, but I know you, I respect you, and I trust that you take these things seriously.’”
10. “How do you think we could have more fun at family gatherings?”
Many people end up dreading family gatherings because of their complex relational dynamics, but it doesn’t have to be that way. In fact, why have family gatherings at all if the guests don’t enjoy them? This question can encourage some beautiful dialogue about how to make family get-togethers occasions everyone looks forward to.
“We might not be able to take a family trip to Disney World anymore, but creating quality time and fun memories matters,” Uhl said. “This could allow for flexibility around who hosts during the holidays, roles that members play and/or contributions that family members provide. Sharing what would improve the overall experience or motivate family members to have more quality time together can strengthen the connection between generations.”
Politics
Trump Says Iran War Will End ‘When I Feel It In My Bones’
President Donald Trump did little to reassure Americans that war with Iran will end anytime soon, saying it will end only “when I feel it in my bones.”
It’s another stunning admission that Trump and his administration have no real timeline for ending the conflict in Iran started by the US and Israel just two weeks ago. Speaking to Fox News’ Brian Kilmeade on Friday, Trump said the economy “will bounce right back” when the war ends.
“We had the greatest economy in history, and we still do,” Trump said. “Oh, this will bounce right back. When it’s over ― and I don’t think it’s going to be long ― when it’s over, this is going to bounce right back, so fast.”
“When are you going to know when it’s over?” Kilmeade asked about the ongoing war.
“When I feel it,” Trump said. “When I feel it in my bones.”

Trump has repeatedly said the war will soon end, despite giving no substantial updates on how that goal will be achieved. At the start of March, Trump claimed the war could end as soon as “four weeks.”
“It’s always been a four-week process,” Trump told The Daily Mail at the time. “We figured it will be four weeks or so. It’s always been about a four-week process so — as strong as it is, it’s a big country, it’ll take four weeks — or less.”
On Monday, Trump boasted that war with Iran was “very complete, pretty much.”
The next day, Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth wouldn’t say the same.
“So it’s not for me to posit whether it’s the beginning, the middle or the end,” Hegseth told reporters about when the war might end. “That’s his, and he’ll continue to communicate that.”
Then on Wednesday, Trump took things a step further when he claimed that Iran was “about to surrender” in a call with G7 leaders. Just one small problem:
“Nobody knows who is the leader, so there is no one that can announce surrender,” Trump added.
Since starting war with Iran, 13 US service members have died. Trump attended the dignified transfer of six service members killed in action while wearing a white baseball cap with “USA” written on it. And despite Trump’s attempts to deflect blame, mounting evidence suggests it was the US that bombed a school in Iran, killing more than 170 people.
Adding to Trump’s troubles has been Iran’s ability to block the Strait of Hormuz, a key artery in the transport of the world’s oil supply. Trump said he’ll order an emergency release of strategic oil reserves to soften the blow of rising oil prices after Iran struck two oil tankers in Iraq on Thursday.
Hegseth promised Friday to carry out the highest volume of strikes yet against Iran.
For all his bluster about how soon the escalating war will end, Trump seemed to drop the veil when speaking to a crowd of supporters in Kentucky on Thursday.
“We don’t want to leave early, do we?” Trump asked. “We’ve got to finish the job.”
Politics
Trump Calls On UK To Send Ships To Hormuz After Days Of Sulking
Donald Trump has called on allies including the UK to send ships to the strait of Hormuz amid Iran’s attempts to effectively close the major shipping lane.
The waterway, which sits at the south of Iran, transports a fifth of the world’s oil supply.
Tehran has been targeting any ships which use Hormuz as its war against the US and Israel escalates, meaning the price of oil has started to skyrocket and the global economy is showing signs of strain.
Initially Trump said the hike in the price of oil was a “small price to pay”.
But in a new post on TruthSocial, he wrote: “Hopefully China, France, Japan, South Korea, the UK and others that are affected by this artificial constraint, will send Ships to the area so that the Hormuz Strait will no longer be a threat by a Nation that has been totally decapitated.”
According to the UK Maritime Trade Operations, 16 British ships have been operating around Hormuz, the Arabia Gulf and the Gulf of Oman since the war began a fortnight ago.
Despite claiming the US has destroyed “100% of Iran’s military capability” in his post, Trump also suggested Tehran could easily still “send a drone or two, drop a mine, or deliver a close range missile”.
But Iran’s new supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei promised to continue obstructing the strait on Thursday and Israel claims to it have detected new attacks from Iran over the weekend.
The president’s request for help follows a turbulent period in relations with the UK.
Just six days ago, Trump accused Keir Starmer of seeking to “join wars after we’ve already won”.
He also claimed the US did not need Britain to send two aircraft carriers to the Middle East, after alleging that Downing Street was considering it.
The White House has been fuming over Starmer’s refusal to allow the US to use British military bases to initiate pre-emptive attacks against Iran.
Starmer has since allowed Trump to use UK military sites for “limited and defensive” strikes, but the president publicly criticised Downing Street for not granting his first request.
Trump’s full post reads:
Many Countries, especially those who are affected by Iran’s attempted closure of the Hormuz Strait, will be sending War Ships, in conjunction with the United States of America, to keep the Strait open and safe. We have already destroyed 100% of Iran’s Military capability, but it’s easy for them to send a drone or two, drop a mine, or deliver a close range missile somewhere along, or in, this Waterway, no matter how badly defeated they are. Hopefully China, France, Japan, South Korea, the UK, and others, that are affected by this artificial constraint, will send Ships to the area so that the Hormuz Strait will no longer be a threat by a Nation that has been totally decapitated. In the meantime, the United States will be bombing the hell out of the shoreline, and continually shooting Iranian Boats and Ships out of the water. One way or the other, we will soon get the Hormuz Strait OPEN, SAFE, and FREE! President DONALD J. TRUMP
Politics
All Arguments For And Against Daylight Savings Time (BST)
On Sunday, March 29, the clocks are set to go forward in the UK.
It’s been that way since 1916, though we’ve experimented with sticking to “British Summer Time” (BST) for the whole year and following “double summer time” since.
Some experts, though, say we should stop making people’s clocks jump fprward an hour in spring. For instance, the European Parliament has backed a proposal to get rid of daylight saving time (DST).
Here are some of the arguments for and against BST, sometimes also called “DST”:
Against: more heart attacks may happen right after BST
One study found that heart attacks rise by 24% the first working day after BST or DST (in the UK, BST always starts on the last Sunday of March).
Yet another paper noted an 8% increase in ischemic stroke in the two days following the clock change.
And a New York paper found that hospital admissions for atrial fibrillation rise in the Monday to Thursday following DST, but not during the clock change in autumn.
For: it’s linked to lower car accidents
The Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents have called for the UK government to adopt BST year-round.
The charity previously told parliament, “more people are killed and injured on the road because of darker evenings in autumn and winter than would be if we adopted British Summer Time all year round… In 2017, the number of pedestrian deaths rose from 37 in September to 46 in October, 63 in November, and 50 in December”.
A University of Surrey paper found that car acccident go down by about 15-20% in the days leading up to BST, as drivers have more light in the evenings. And when we leave BST in winter, accidents rise by 13%.
Against: it wreaks havoc on your sleep
You lose an hour of sleep during BST, and your body doesn’t really care that the clock says seven o’clock; that first day you wake up, it’ll feel like rising at six.
Some sleep experts from the British Sleep Society have called for both BST and the winter clock changes to be abolished, because they mess with our body clock so much.
These disruptions to our sleep lead to a dip in “performance, productivity and safety for both paediatric and adult populations,” the researchers added.
Unsure: some say BST makes us more money, others say it doesn’t
Some people want us to adopt BST year-round because they say it’ll keep our working hours close to those in many EU countries and save us money on heating and lighting later on in the year. Others say those on the continent don’t actually have uniform working hours, and the energy savings are contested.
Even more confusingly, others, like Lib Dem MP Alex Meyer, have called to “double summer time” or “Churchill time,” which we followed in WWII. This meant the clocks sprang forward two hours in spring, and stayed at what is now BST in winter.
This was done to increase productivity in daylight and save electricity costs, Meyer called this “a low-cost, high-impact proposal” to “help meet climate goals, reduce energy bills, and boost our High Streets by making better use of the daylight hours we already have”.
But some research suggests that the energy we save by having brighter evenings is more than offset by “increased energy consumption in the warmer lighter evenings”.
Politics
Trump Boasts About Tomahawks And Critics See A Problem
President Donald Trump made sweeping claims on Friday about the United States’ weapons capabilities, only for users on social media to quickly point out how those claims drastically differ from comments he made days earlier.
“Look, nobody has the technology or the weapons that we have, and the Patriots are an example of it,” Trump told Fox News’ Brian Kilmeade in discussing the missiles at the US military’s disposal. “We have the Tomahawks, we have the Patriots, we have stuff that nobody’s ever been able to produce, and they can’t produce it like us.”
This counters Trump’s suggestion earlier this week that Iran had somehow obtained the American-made Tomahawk missiles and was possibly responsible for the Tomahawk strike on an Iranian girls’ school during the first days of the war. The strike killed at least 175 people, most of them young girls.
“I will say that the Tomahawk, which is one of the most powerful weapons around, is used by, you know, is sold and used by other countries,” Trump said on Monday.
“Whether it’s Iran, who also has some Tomahawks, they wish they had more, but whether it’s Iran or somebody else, the fact that a Tomahawk is very generic. It’s sold to other countries, but that’s being investigated right now,” he continued.
Trump had pinned the destruction of the girls’ school on Iran earlier in the month.
“In my opinion, based on what I’ve seen, that was done by Iran,” Trump said on March 7 when asked about the strike. “We think it was done by Iran, because they are very inaccurate, as you know, with their munitions. They have no accuracy whatsoever. It was done by Iran.”
There is no evidence supporting Trump’s claim that Iran had obtained a Tomahawk missile or carried out the strike on the girls’ school.
Users on X jumped on the inconsistencies.
“I’m old enough to remember when Trump claimed that the Iranians had Tomahawks in an attempt to blame the Iranians for the girls’ school he bombed,” user Polly Sigh wrote on X.
“But when he was asked about the bombing of the girls’ school, he said Iran had tomahawks,” MeidasTouch Editor-in-Chief Ron Filipkowski wrote.
The New York Times reported on Wednesday that a preliminary military investigation found the US was responsible for the strike on the girls’ school. When asked on Wednesday about the report and whether the US would take responsibility for the strike, Trump responded: “I don’t know about it.”
Politics
2028 Dem veteran? Uncle Sam wants you.
In the 15 days since President Donald Trump launched Operation Epic Fury on Iran, Sen. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.) is approaching nearly a dozen media appearances, offering his often visceral reaction to the conflict.
Gallego, a 46-year-old combat veteran who deployed to Iraq as an infantryman in 2005, has emerged as a blunt, clear voice for the Democratic Party on foreign policy, speaking as someone whose own generation experienced the forever wars.
There he was on CNN’s “The Source with Kaitlin Collins” saying Secretary of State Marco Rubio was doing “CYA” and noting that the “MAGA base is pissed.” There he was sitting down with the AP speaking “as someone who lives with PTSD,” adding “it’s not been an easy week.” And there he was on Derek Thompson’s podcast, speaking about “going town to town searching for insurgents” 21 years ago, “but there was no clear direction of what victory looked like, what the end goal was, what was going to be the after-action report on Iraq.”
Gallego isn’t alone. Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.), a Navy captain who flew combat missions during Operation Desert Storm in 1990, has also racked up a run of high-profile media appearances, as has former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, a U.S. Navy Reserve intelligence officer who deployed to Afghanistan. Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, who served in Afghanistan in the Army’s 82nd Airborne, went on local radio this week to link Americans’ affordability woes to the war.
In a year after many Democrats pined for a metaphorical fighter, the party is now having a conversation with itself about whether it needs a literal fighter — a veteran who can speak with credibility on issues of war and national security.
In an interview with POLITICO, Gallego spoke of “dodging bullets, IEDs, RPGs, clearing towns and then coming back to the same towns with insurgents” and of “losing friends and still not understanding what the end goal was the whole time.”
“It leaves a mark on you, and you start seeing it happening again, you know, you don’t really think about the politics,” Gallego said. “You think about the people who are going to be potentially dying. And that’s why I think I was not hesitant to speak my mind on that.”
Later this month in San Antonio, Texas, Gallego will join VoteVets Action for its third town hall featuring potential 2028 Democratic presidential candidates, promising “fresh voices to the national conversation — those who have worn the uniform and served alongside us, who connect with everyday Americans others can’t,” according to a promotional video. (They’ve also done town halls with Buttigieg and Michigan Sen. Elissa Slotkin.)
“On foreign policy, the Dems need a candidate who is seen as strong/tough — not in rhetoric or bravado political platitudes but who conveys a sense of judgement and resolve with which voters connect instinctively,” said Doug Wilson, the former assistant secretary of Defense for Public Affairs during the Obama administration and co-lead of Buttigieg’s 2020 foreign policy team.
The “Iran war underscores the need” for such a candidate, Wilson added.
Whomever the Democrats select as their nominee could potentially face a Situation Room-steeped ticket deep with national security credentials, including a Marine Iraq war veteran in Vice President JD Vance or Rubio, with his secretary of State experience.
Depending on how the many conflicts the U.S. is engaged in at the moment resolve, that experience could cut against them.
But right now, Democrats who can match those bona fides have some currency others without them can’t.
“That’s obviously going to be helpful to them,” said Matt Bennett, co-founder of the center-left think tank Third Way. “It’s gonna be a big part of what they’re talking about for the next little while. But you know, how long does it last? We just don’t know, right? In my professional lifetime, foreign policy stuff and national security has mattered in a presidential race once — in 2004. That’s it. Otherwise, it comes up, but it’s not driving the conversation.”
Some potential Democratic candidates without such credentials have still managed to break through amid the Iran news cycle. Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-Ga.) has said the White House has treated aspects of the war “as a video game,” in a clip gaining traction on X. “When American service members killed in action are returning to the United States in flagged-draped coffins, and even more Americans have lost limbs or suffered terrible brain injuries or are fighting for their lives, this White House treats war like a game, and it’s a disgrace,” Ossoff said.
When asked whether military service is an essential for the party’s eventual nominee, Gallego acknowledged there is a benefit for someone who can “speak with that type of credibility.”
“I’m not the type of person that’s like, ‘you have to be a veteran — Iraq War veteran,’” Gallego said. “This is a democracy. We’re still one, and there’s a lot of people that can bring valuable experience and knowledge. But you know, someone that actually has a nuanced understanding of foreign policy; that doesn’t go to the total knee-jerk reactionism that sometimes we see where we go to the point of, you know, isolationism; or the other way, where we go to full neocon. There needs to be a very balanced way to how we approach the world.”
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Politics
Israel murders medics in Lebanese hospital strike
Israel’s war-criminal tactics of the Gaza genocide and its war of aggression on Iran have been inflicted on Lebanon last night, 13 March 2026. The colony, which has slaughtered almost 700 Lebanese civilians and forcibly displaced around a million people, has bombed a health centre in the south of Lebanon. At least twelve medical workers were murdered, though more are still unaccounted for.
The bombing, on the village of Burj Qalaouiyah in the Bint Jbeil district, killed doctors, paramedics and nurses on duty at the health facility. As scant cover for its crimes, the occupation has issued unsubstantiated claims that Lebanese resistance forces are using ambulances for transport:
As usual with the terror state, every accusation is a confession: Israel used two Lebanese ambulances to infiltrate the Bekaa Valley on 8 March to massacre more than forty people.
The attack mirrored Israeli tactics of destroying health facilities relied on by its victims. Israel destroyed or badly damaged every hospital in Gaza and frequently targeted ambulances. It launched its illegal war on Iran with the bombing of hospitals, as well as the murder of close to 180 girls studying at their school in Minab.
Israel killed Lebanese Dr. Hisham Ismail today in south Lebanon.
Israeli occupation forces committed another massacre against paramedics and doctors after bombing a medical center and clinic belonging to the Islamic Health Authority in the town of Bourj Qalawayh, southern… pic.twitter.com/LgFrBiCFqd
— Pheebs (@galpalpheebs) March 13, 2026
The deadly attack on Burj Qalaouiyah was the second Israeli murder of health workers in just a few hours. Israel bombed a paramedics’ centre in Souaneh village, killing two paramedics and wounding five others.
Israel is a terror state. And any support for it is collaboration in its racist crimes.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Call for banks to chip in and protect UK from “Trumpflation”
The Trades Union Congress (TUC) has renewed its calls for an increase in the bank surcharge tax. This comes as UK households and firms face the effects of “Trumpflation”.
The bank surcharge is an additional 3% corporation tax on the profits of banking companies exceeding £100m. In April 2023 the Conservatives reduced it to this level from 8%.
With Donald Trump’s illegal war unleashing economic chaos, the union body says it’s vital that banks play their part in any efforts to protect the economy by paying their fair share in tax.
The longer the war goes on, the more likely support for households and industry will be necessary. And that will require funding.
The TUC says working people are facing the impact of the Trump-made cost of living crisis. And it urges the government to pull out all the stops to protect households and firms.
The union body adds that banks must play their part in rebuilding Britain and funding our public services like schools, hospitals and local councils.
City of London fat cats
The call comes as analysis reveals City bonuses have reached record levels as banks continue to enjoy sky high profits.
In 2025 the average bonus in the finance and insurance sector was £20,300 – the first time it has topped £20,000. City bonuses grew 6.3% in 2025, which represented the highest growth for three years.
For the economy as a whole, total bonuses in the City amounted to £23.6bn in 2025. Again, this is the highest figure on record.
Using the latest HMRC corporation tax receipt figures, the TUC estimates bank profits were £35.2bn in 2024-25. Over the last three years profits have averaged £36.5bn. This is 57% higher than the average of profits in the three years ahead of the global financial crisis (£23.2bn).
Time for action on banks
The TUC is calling for an increase in the bank surcharge, which it says could raise significant funds over the coming years. Particularly given the scale of banks’ current windfalls,
Bank profits have been turbocharged by the removal of the bank surcharge. And this has come just as high interest rates meant excess profits for banks. Together, this has led to higher returns both from net interest (the difference on interest charged to borrowers and paid to savers) and interest paid to banks on reserves they hold at the Bank of England.
As a result, bank profits are now much higher than they were in the period before the financial crisis. But after the pandemic, the Conservatives slashed taxes on banks.
TUC analysis reveals an increase in the bank surcharge could raise between £23bn-55bn over the next four years:
- A 16% surcharge, which is doubling what it originally was before the Conservatives cut it, would deliver £23bn.
- A 35% surcharge, which would be the same level as the windfall tax the Conservatives imposed on energy companies, would deliver £55bn.
- Even just reversing the Tory cuts and setting it at 8% – which the TUC says is the “bare minimum” – would raise £9bn over the next four years.
The union body also warns that if interest rates remain higher for longer, banks will make even more money.
Public support
Recent TUC polling shows significant support for a windfall tax on banks, with two in three (66%) backing this approach. This rises to 83% among Conservative to Labour switchers in the 2024 general election and 73% among Labour voters from the 2024 election now leaning to Reform.
The TUC is also calling for the government to reinstate the cap on banker bonuses to curb excessive pay for senior City executives while the rest of the country struggles with a continued cost of living crisis.
The EU still has a bonus cap, which seeks to reduce excessive risk taking (of the sort that led to the last financial crisis) and align pay with long-term stability not short-term gains.
TUC General Secretary Paul Nowak said:
Donald Trump’s illegal war abroad risks unleashing economic chaos at home.
It’s absolutely right that the government does everything it can to protect British households and firms from Trumpflation.
The longer this war goes on, the more likely the government will need to step in with increased support.
That’s why it’s now more vital than ever that banks pay their fair share in tax. Getting banks to contribute more is just common sense.
After the Tories slashed the bank surcharge, high interest rates created a profits bonanza for banks. And if rates remain higher for longer, banks are set to cash in even more.
Instead of lining their own pockets with eyewatering bonuses, it’s only right that banks’ bumper profits are taxed fairly to invest in our hospitals, schools and local councils.
Featured image via the Canary
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