Politics
Tommy Birch: The architecture of human nature and how you solve the NIMBY problem
Tommy Birch is a behavioural scientist and Leadership Advisor at House of Birch, a local councillor and CPF Area Leader for Hertfordshire.
Britain’s housing debate is often a theatre of convenient myths. One of the most persistent is the idea that our country is cleanly divided into a righteous tribe of “Builders” and a selfish cohort of “Blockers”. In this narrative, the NIMBY is a fixed character: irrational, anti-growth, and fundamentally anti-young. It is a comforting story for politicians because it turns a complex national crisis into a simple moral binary of good versus greed.
It also happens to be wrong. As the party’s current CPF consultation paper on the Housing Crisis notes, the public is not uniformly opposed to building. Polling consistently reveals a far more awkward truth: support for new homes “in principle” often outweighs opposition. Yet, the moment a spade hits the ground, the silent majority vanishes and local resistance dominates the planning process. This is the great housing puzzle: if the majority accepts the need for development in theory, why does NIMBYism win in reality?
The answer is uncomfortable because it suggests that NIMBYism is more than a failure of information and planning law. It is a predictable response produced by the very architecture of human nature. If we are to achieve the national renewal we must first move beyond “better persuasion” and embrace a more sophisticated, biopsychosocial lens to solve what is, at its heart, a behavioural phenomenon.
To understand the NIMBY, we must first look at the biological layer of the problem. A human being is not primarily a truth-seeking machine; we are threat-reducing machines. For most of our evolutionary history, “change” in one’s immediate environment was rarely a harbinger of prosperity; it was usually a sign of danger.
When a large-scale development is proposed, it is not experienced as an abstract national project but as uncertainty landing on one’s own street. Uncertainty activates stress responses that narrow attention and increases risk aversion. In this state, people naturally prefer predictable problems to uncertain improvements. Academics like Helen Bao have explored this through the lens of “loss aversion,” but a biopsychosocial approach goes deeper, recognising that there is an underlying physiological defence mechanism. When the planning system triggers a threat and responds only with cold facts, it creates a misalignment that only hardens resistance.
The second mistake we make is a psychological one: misreading opposition as mere selfishness. Many opponents of development do not experience themselves as “blockers”, they feel they are defending something worthwhile: community, character, and standards. This is what psychologists often call “identity work”. People rarely defend a technical position on housing; they defend what that position protects: their sense of place and their self-image.
This is why the debate is so resistant to data. The conflict is not over numbers; it is over meaning. Once an issue becomes tied to identity, such as the perceived duty of a Conservative to “protect the green belt”, changing one’s mind is no longer a matter of accepting new facts, but of abandoning a deeply held sense of purpose. Katherine Einstein, who have written extensively on the matter, correctly identifies how “Neighbourhood Defenders” capture the planning process, however she often misses the psychological reality that for these residents, resistance is a form of stewardship, however poorly it may serve the national interest.
Finally, we must consider the social layer. Planning battles are not just private preferences expressed publicly; they are social contests. People watch each other, coalitions form, and status is conferred on those seen as protectors of the community. Research in social psychology suggests that when people engage within these like-minded groups, their opinions become more entrenched rather than more open.
The current planning system systematically rewards this socialised objection while penalising support. Those who oppose developments are highly motivated and visible, while the supportive majority stays silent. In this environment, local councillors respond rationally to the signals they receive. If the Right wants to build again, it must stop arguing with human nature and start designing a system that rewards different behaviours.
This is where the vision of Sir Simon Clarke and Build for Britain becomes so vital. By advocating for a pro-growth, pro-ownership agenda, they are seeking to restore the British dream of a property-owning democracy. But to achieve this, we must move from a strategy of “persuasion”, the endless leaflets and consultations that only provide a stage for opposition, to a strategy of design.
A strategy founded in biopsychosocial understanding of the issue means changing the sequence of engagement. We must reduce the perceived biological threat before we make the economic case. This means moving towards models like “Street Votes” or community-led design codes, ideas championed by Sir Simon, that give residents the agency of the “creator” rather than the victim. When people have a hand in the creation of beauty and the mitigation of impact, the threat-response is replaced by a sense of ownership.
Furthermore, we must change the framing. Development presented as “meeting targets” invites resistance, but development framed as strengthening a community invites cooperation. Language that emphasises continuity and stewardship lowers the psychological bar for acceptance.
The CPF consultation rightly asks how the party can address the challenges facing prospective homeowners. The answer lies in realising that home ownership is the greatest engine of social mobility we possess. Yet, for too long, the party has been caught between national necessity and local revolt.
Treating NIMBYism as a planning technicality is no longer tenable. It is a lived political crisis that is shaping the political allegiance of a generation. NIMBYism is not proof that the public is unreachable; it is proof that policy-makers have ignored a fundamental rule: if you want different behaviour, you need a different system.
Behavioural insight is not a “nice-to-have”; it is a fundamental part of the machinery of government. As Margaret Thatcher famously observed, “the facts of life are conservative”. If we are to build for Britain, we must start by taking human nature seriously. Our housing crisis will not be solved by louder arguments, but by a strategy that finally aligns the instincts of the individual with the renewal of the nation.
Politics
FIFA accused of double standards over response to Israeli racism
FIFA’s handling of the complaint submitted by the Palestinian Football Association against the Israeli Football Association (IFA) raises serious concerns. Specifically, these concerns focus on its objectivity and its commitment to root out racism in football.
Turning a blind eye to Israeli racism
Despite the gravity of the allegations—discrimination, racist fan behaviour, and Israeli clubs competing in illegal West Bank settlements—the penalties imposed are shockingly light.
On the contentious issue of Israeli clubs operating in illegal settlements, FIFA chose not to take action, citing the “complex and undecided” legal status of the West Bank under international law. This leaves a long-standing issue unresolved, despite years of ongoing discussions within FIFA.
FIFA: Strong words, weak actions
The FIFA Disciplinary Committee was more direct, finding that the IFA had “systematically” violated anti-discrimination and fair play rules. They specifically noted the IFA’s failure to address racism within certain fanbases. Most notably, Beitar Jerusalem FC racist tirades and misbehaviour was highlighted.
Notably, the committee described the IFA’s response as “weak and insufficient.” As a result, such behaviour has been allowed to persist unchecked, and is likely to continue—fine or no fine.
The IFA was issued an official warning, fined a paltry 150,000 Swiss francs, and ordered to implement an anti-discrimination program, including awareness campaigns and behaviour monitoring. However, beyond this “wrist slap,” no serious measures have been taken, despite the severity and ongoing nature of its offences.
FIFA’s double standards
Despite acknowledging the issue, FIFA has chosen not to suspend the team. This has left many fans and teams questioning the federation’s commitment to addressing these violations.
This is especially jarring when compared to FIFA’s swift action against Russia. After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the country’s national team and clubs were banned from all international competitions without delay.
The stark contrast raises troubling questions. While Russia faced immediate, severe sanctions, FIFA’s response to Israel was symbolic at best. This is despite the ongoing discrimination against Palestinians and violations of international football rules.
This disparity highlights FIFA’s reluctance to hold Israel to the same standards as other nations when it comes to racial and political issues.
Featured image courtesy of the Palestinian Football Association
Politics
Greyhound racing under renewed scrutiny in Ireland
Politicians across the 32 counties—the six counties of north Ireland plus the remaining counties of the Republic of Ireland—have called on governments North and South to follow the decision to ban greyhound racing by Scotland and Wales last week.
Belfast City councillor Anthony Flynn, representing the Green Party, denounced what he described as:
an unregulated industry operating without transparency or accountability.
He continued:
There is no dedicated legislation governing greyhound racing here. There is no official data on injuries or deaths and no proper oversight from DAERA [Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs]. We know from other jurisdictions that greyhounds are injured and killed on tracks every year. There is no reason to believe Northern Ireland is any different.
Unlike the Six Counties, Greyhound Racing Ireland (GRI) in the South does keep track of its own brutality, at least partially. The campaign group Ban Blood Sports cites GRI’s figures in which they record that:
…since 2014, at least 4,040 greyhounds suffered injuries and 1,593 were killed.
Track deaths and injuries are commonplace, with greyhounds suffering horrific wounds through falls and collisions during races. Many are euthanised after sustaining these wounds. Moreover, Ban Blood Sports highlights that:
The Greyhound Racing Ireland figures are based on “reported” injuries and deaths, suggesting that the actual number could be even higher. They do not include the greyhounds injured at tracks and later killed elsewhere, or the thousands of greyhounds who are killed every year because they are not fast enough to win races.
A 2019 RTE documentary—Greyhounds Running for Their Lives—revealed the scale of mass murder conducted by the industry. It is likely thousands of greyhounds are slaughtered every year due to being judged insufficiently competitive. All this for so-called ‘sport’, and to boost another shameful industry, the gambling sector.
The government in Dublin has ploughed a staggering €386,806,146 in public money since 2021 into the murderous greyhound racing business. The figure for 2026 is €19.82 million. People Before Profit TD Ruth Coppinger pointed out that only €6 million had been set aside for animal welfare charities.
Racing at speed on oval tracks is dangerous for dogs in extreme weather. They have poor diet, very little enrichment in their lives and very little traceability.
It is not widely supported in our society any more because people have seen the dangers of having a racing industry that is just propped up by the State and is cruel for the animals involved.
She also cited Ireland’s status as “a complete and utter outlier” in a world where the cruel practice is only legal and active in a few countries. Unsurprisingly, it is the Anglophone world showing its customary barbarism, with England, Ireland, Australia and the United States being the outliers in question.
Ireland should be especially ashamed in joining these colonial nations in the torture of animals for entertainment. It does, however, have form in this regard, still allowing similarly cruel sports like fox hunting and hare coursing.
Seemingly content to maintain that disgraceful status, Minister for Agriculture Martin Heydon said:
I do not intend to ban greyhound racing here.
He lamented what he called Coppinger’s:
…dreadful slight on the thousands of people who work in our greyhound racing industry and who love the dogs and care for them greatly.
That’s lovely to hear, but the verifiable facts of mass greyhound murder matter a great deal more than Heydon’s unverifiable psychic insights into the thoughts of workers in a horribly cruel and exploitative industry.
Similarly in the North, the lobby group Greyhound Racing Constituents NI seems upbeat about avoiding a ban. They boasted about their ability to slither into the corridors of power to get their way, saying:
We have been laying the ground work with decision-makers at Stormont over the last year regarding this issue.
If you want to make a small contribution to undermining this smugness and potential corruption, the Green Party has a petition calling for a racing ban.
Further such efforts will be required to match the achievements of Scotland and Wales. Scottish MSPs voted in favour a ban on March 18, bringing in the Prohibition of Greyhound Racing (Scotland) Bill that:
…makes it an offence to allow a greyhound to compete on an oval racetrack in Scotland, with a maximum prison sentence of up to five years and a fine of up to £20,000.
In Wales the previous day, Senedd members also brought in a ban. However, Llyr Gruffydd of Plaid Cymru criticised the legislation for not being comprehensive enough, saying it:
…doesn’t stop the breeding of greyhounds in Wales for racing. It doesn’t stop the training of greyhounds in Wales. For racing, dogs can still be kept in Wales, raced in England.
Despite this, the ban is still facing a legal challenge from the Greyhound Board of Great Britain, which seem intent on keeping Britain generations behind the times in maintaining cruel practices that treat sentient creatures as mere objects for human entertainment.
Featured image via Rásaíocht Con Eireann
Politics
Antisemitic arson targets Jewish charity ambulances
Early on the morning, 23 March, arsonists set fire to four ambulances owned by Jewish charity Hatzola. The incident is being investigated for possible antisemitic motives.
The attack, which occurred in Golders Green, North London, caused several explosions when the fire hit the vehicles’ gas canisters. Thankfully, no one was injured, and all of the fires have now been extinguished.
At around 1:45am, the London Fire Brigade contacted the Met Police with news of the arson. The Met issued a statement three hours later, confirming that they’re treating the attack as an antisemitic hate crime.
Although the attack has not yet been declared a terror incident, counter-terror police are leading the investigation. At the time of writing, no arrests have been made.
CCTV footage shows three black-clad figures approaching one of the ambulances, which catches fire within seconds. Shortly thereafter, the suspects are seen fleeing the scene. Another video shows a sizeable explosion centered on an ambulance.
Met deputy chief superintendent Luke Williams stated that:
We are aware of an online claim from a group taking responsibility for this attack. Establishing the authenticity and accuracy of this claim will be a priority for the investigation team, but it is not something we can confirm at this point.
This likely refers to a group called Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamiya—’The Islamic Movement of the People of the Right Hand’. The Iran-aligned organisation made an unsubstantiated claim of responsibility on its Telegram channel earlier today.
About Hatzola
Hatzola describes itself as:
a non-profit, volunteer organisation established in 1979 to provide pre-hospital emergency medical response and transportation at no cost, to the North London community.
Hatzola responds to thousands of emergencies every year, from minor injuries to life-threatening conditions. our average response time to life-threatening emergencies is usually within minutes – because we cherish the value of life, and know that those vital minutes can spell the difference between life and death.
Volunteers are trained by medical professionals, and the charity works collaboratively alongside London hospitals and national emergency services. It provides both emergency first response and hospital transfers, among other services.
‘Hatzola’ is the Hebrew word for ‘rescue’. Similar organisations around the world use the name, although the degrees of direct affiliation between the chapters vary. Although the charity itself is Jewish, it offers aid without regard to “race, religion, ethnicity, or ability to pay.”
An appeal to help Hatzola rebuild their fleet of ambulances has already raised over £38,000.
‘No one should feel that we’re not there for them’
Yossi Pincus, a volunteer senior paramedic for North West London Hatzola, stated that antisemitism is an “intrinsic problem nationwide”. He added that:
We are currently running business as usual. We’re still responding and we’re still available for those that need us and no one should feel that we’re not there for them in any different way that we would normally be.
Pincus added that he was grateful to the UK government for its offer to loan four replacement ambulances until the charity can replace its vehicles.
In an address to the House of Commons, home secretary Shabana Mahmood stated that:
This incident comes at a time of soaring antisemitism in our country and today my message to our Jewish community is clear: we stand with you, we will do everything in our power to protect you and we will fight relentlessly to rid our society of antisemitism.
Green party leader Zack Polanski took to social media to offer his solidarity:
Horrified by the antisemitic attack in our city.
Antisemitism is vile and has no place here. Solidarity with the Jewish community in Golders Green — and with our communities across the country who will be feeling this today.
Likewise, Matthew Taylor, interim chief executive of the NHS Confederation and NHS Providers, said:
This appalling attack on Jewish charity ambulances in Golders Green is profoundly disturbing and will no doubt cause enormous distress to Jewish NHS staff and patients.
This incident comes at a time when the NHS workforce is already facing an unacceptable rise in violence, aggression and abuse. While the motives behind these will be varied, the latest NHS Staff Survey reveals that almost one in seven NHS staff experienced physical attacks from patients or the public last year, the highest rate in three years. These findings paint a stark and troubling picture of the pressures and dangers staff encounter while simply trying to care for the public.
No member of staff should fear for their safety at work, and no community should be subjected to what appears to be hate‑motivated attacks on their essential services.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
How Media Platforms Balance Performance and Accessibility in Image Delivery
Independent media platforms operate in a fast-moving digital environment where speed, accessibility, and reliability all shape how content is consumed. For outlets focused on delivering timely reporting and commentary, every technical decision, from page structure to image handling, plays a role in whether audiences stay engaged or leave.
In this context, visual content presents a unique challenge. Images must load quickly without sacrificing clarity, and they must display correctly across a wide range of devices and browsers. To support this balance, many publishing teams rely on tools like webp tool when managing image formats, ensuring that visuals remain compatible without disrupting performance.
The Technical Side of Digital Publishing
While readers primarily engage with headlines and stories, the infrastructure behind digital publishing is equally important. Websites that fail to load quickly or display content properly risk losing credibility and audience trust.
Media-focused platforms often operate with high publishing frequency, which means that workflows must be efficient and repeatable. Image handling becomes a core part of this process, especially when articles rely heavily on visuals to support storytelling.
Technical optimization is not just a background concern, it directly affects how journalism is delivered and experienced.
According to analysis of digital media infrastructure and performance challenges published on The Canary, platform reliability and accessibility remain central to how independent outlets maintain engagement in competitive online environments.
Why Image Formats Matter for Accessibility
Image formats play a critical role in determining how content is displayed across different systems. While newer formats like WebP offer improved compression and faster load times, they are not universally supported in all environments.
For readers using older devices or certain browsers, unsupported image formats can result in missing visuals or broken layouts. In a media context, this can disrupt the narrative and reduce the effectiveness of the content.
Ensuring compatibility is therefore not just a technical consideration, it is an accessibility issue. Readers should be able to engage with content regardless of the device or software they are using.
Managing Performance Without Sacrificing Reach
One of the key challenges for digital publishers is balancing performance optimization with broad accessibility. Highly compressed image formats can improve loading speeds, but they may introduce compatibility limitations.
This creates a need for flexible workflows that allow images to be adapted based on context. Converting images into widely supported formats ensures that content reaches the widest possible audience without technical barriers.
At the same time, maintaining performance standards is essential for retaining readers. Slow-loading pages can significantly reduce engagement, particularly in an era where users expect near-instant access to information.
The Role of Conversion Tools in Editorial Workflows
Image conversion tools have become a practical solution for managing these competing priorities. Instead of manually adjusting each file, teams can automate the process of converting images into the appropriate format.
This is especially valuable in news and opinion publishing, where speed is critical. Articles are often published under tight deadlines, leaving little room for time-consuming technical adjustments.
By integrating conversion tools into their workflows, media teams can ensure that images are optimized and compatible before publication, without slowing down the editorial process.
Supporting High-Volume Publishing Environments
Independent media platforms frequently operate with limited resources while still producing a high volume of content. This makes efficiency a key factor in maintaining consistent output.
Handling large numbers of images manually is not practical in such environments. Automated solutions allow teams to process multiple files quickly, reducing workload and minimizing the risk of errors.
This level of scalability supports continuous publishing without compromising quality, which is essential for maintaining audience engagement over time.
Maintaining Visual Integrity in News Content
Visual accuracy and clarity are particularly important in journalism. Images often serve as supporting evidence, context, or illustration for the stories being told.
Any degradation in image quality or display issues can affect how information is perceived. Blurry or distorted visuals may reduce credibility, while missing images can interrupt the reader’s understanding of the content.
By ensuring that images are properly formatted and displayed, publishers can maintain the integrity of their reporting.
Reducing Technical Friction for Editorial Teams
Editorial teams are typically focused on content creation rather than technical processes. Complex image handling requirements can create friction that slows down production.
Simplified tools help remove these barriers by making image optimization more accessible. With intuitive interfaces and automated processing, even non-technical team members can manage visual assets effectively.
This allows journalists and editors to concentrate on storytelling, while technical systems handle the optimization behind the scenes.
Consistency Across Platforms and Devices
Modern audiences consume content across multiple platforms, including desktops, smartphones, and tablets. Each platform may have different requirements for displaying images.
Ensuring consistency across these environments is essential for maintaining a professional and cohesive presentation. Conversion tools help standardize how images appear, regardless of where they are viewed.
This consistency contributes to a smoother user experience and reinforces the credibility of the publication.
Strengthening Content Delivery in Independent Media
For independent media platforms, maintaining reliable content delivery is a continuous process that involves both editorial and technical considerations. Efficient image handling plays a key role in ensuring that stories are presented clearly and accessibly.
By incorporating structured approaches to image format management, publishers can reduce technical disruptions, support accessibility, and maintain the performance standards expected by modern audiences.
Politics
Is London Still a Good Property Investment Market in 2026?
London has long been considered one of the most resilient property markets in the world. Even with rising interest rates, regulatory changes and economic uncertainty in recent years, the city continues to attract investors from the UK and overseas. Its status as a global financial centre, combined with a large population and strong rental demand, means property in London often remains a long-term investment rather than a short-term speculation.
One of the biggest factors supporting the market is demand for rental housing. London draws professionals, international workers and students from across the world. Major universities such as University College London and King’s College London bring tens of thousands of students into the city each year, many of whom need accommodation. At the same time, London’s role as a business hub continues to attract young professionals who prefer renting close to work rather than commuting long distances.
Infrastructure improvements have also played an important role in shaping investment trends. The opening of the Elizabeth Line has dramatically improved travel times across the city, making previously overlooked districts far more accessible. Areas such as Stratford and Woolwich have become increasingly attractive to investors who believe these neighbourhoods will benefit from continued regeneration and rising demand.
Another reason London remains appealing is the ongoing imbalance between housing supply and demand. New housing construction has struggled to keep up with population growth, which helps support both rental prices and long-term property values. While the market may experience periods of slower growth, this structural shortage often provides a level of stability that investors look for.
What Types of Property Perform Best?
When investing in London property, choosing the right type of home can make a significant difference to both rental yield and occupancy rates. Some property types tend to perform more consistently because they appeal to a broader tenant base.
One-bedroom apartments are often the starting point for many investors. They typically require a lower purchase price than larger homes and are relatively easy to rent out. Demand is particularly strong among young professionals and couples who want to live close to business districts or transport hubs. In neighbourhoods near universities, these flats can also appeal to postgraduate or international students who prefer private accommodation.
Two-bedroom apartments are another popular option. Their main advantage is flexibility. A two-bedroom property can be rented to professional sharers, couples who need extra space, or small families. This wider tenant pool can help reduce vacancy periods and may allow landlords to charge higher total rent.
Some experienced investors also consider HMOs (houses in multiple occupation), particularly in areas with large student populations. While these properties can generate higher rental yields, they come with stricter regulations, licensing requirements and more complex management. For many investors, apartments offer a simpler and lower-risk approach.
Location is still one of the most important factors. Business districts such as Canary Wharf continue to attract professionals working in finance and technology, which supports demand for nearby apartments. Regeneration areas with strong transport links are also popular among investors who are looking for long-term growth potential.
Why Many Investors Still Look at London
Despite challenges such as higher mortgage rates and changes to landlord taxation, London’s property market continues to evolve rather than decline. Investors today tend to be more selective, focusing on neighbourhoods with strong transport connections, steady tenant demand and future development plans.
Properties that are well located and realistically priced still tend to rent quickly. Rather than chasing rapid price growth, many investors now prioritise consistent rental income and long-term capital appreciation. For buyers who take a patient approach, London property can still offer stability that is difficult to find in many other markets.
Another Way People Dream of Owning Property
With property prices remaining high in major cities, some people are exploring alternative ways to get onto the property ladder. One option that has gained popularity in recent years is online house competitions, where participants purchase a small entry ticket for a chance to win a house or a large cash prize. While the odds vary depending on the competition, the appeal is obvious: for a relatively small cost, entrants have the opportunity to win a house that might otherwise be far beyond their budget. As more platforms launch these competitions, they are becoming an increasingly talked-about route for people who dream of owning property.
Politics
Israel destroys another key bridge along Lebanon’s Litani River
Israel’s openly colonialist assault on Lebanon continues, with the Israeli army destroying another key bridge. The systematic attacks on vital infrastructure have fuelled fears of a full-scale annexation by Israel. The latest strike targeted the Qasmiyeh bridge, along the Litani river, 14km north of Lebanon’s UNESCO world heritage city of Tyre.
Israel has been hitting bridges along the river in an attempt to cordon off the south of Lebanon. And one far-right Israeli politician has even declared the new Israeli border with Lebanon is now the Litani river—around 30km north of the current frontier!
من جسر #القاسمية.. مشاهد خاصة لريد تي في توثق #الدمار
https://t.co/K1UE4PoQNH— Lebanon Debate (@lebanondebate) March 23, 2026
Middle East Eye (MEE) reported:
The Israeli army appeared to destroy the Qasmiyeh Bridge near the city of Tyre, hours after the country’s defence minister, Israel Katz, ordered all crossings over the Litani River and several homes close to the Israeli border to be destroyed.
Israel’s attack has caused mass displacement, drawn wide condemnation for brazen attacks on civilian infrastructure and their means to life.
Suspicious schemes
In theory, Hezbollah breached a US-brokered ‘ceasefire’ with Israel in early March which had held up since their last war in 2024. In practice, the US gave Israel carte blanche to strike Lebanon, which it has done constantly since the deal was struck. During the intervening period, Israel attacked southern Lebanon about 15,400 times.
You can read about the secretive Israel-US ‘side letter’ pact here, as well as our extensive coverage of Israel’s ceasefire breaches and ongoing invasion here.
Israel’s current assault has displaced one in five Lebanese people and repeatedly struck densely populated areas. According to Anadolu Agency:
at least 1,029 people have been killed and 2,786 injured in Israeli attacks since March 2 [2026].
Lebanese prime minister Joseph Aoun described the latest bridge attack as:
an attempt to sever the geographical connection between the southern Litani region and the rest of Lebanese territory.
Adding that it falls:
within suspicious schemes to establish a buffer zone along the Israeli border, solidify the reality of the occupation and seek Israeli expansion within Lebanese territory.
‘Litani is the new Israeli border’
Data journalist Ben van der Merwe has documented seven bridges over the Litani river hit by Israel. This amounts to a systematic effort to cut off southern Lebanon from the rest of the country.
The IDF has now struck seven bridges over the Litani river. Documenting them in this thread.@GeoConfirmed pic.twitter.com/8q7RtkYxw4
— Ben van der Merwe (@_BvdM) March 23, 2026
Israel’s direct attacks on vital civilian infrastructure recall its so-called Dahiyeh Doctrine. The Canary analysed the origins of this genocidal scorched earth approach here. Peace Studies professor Paul Rogers describes the method as:
the deliberate application of “disproportionate force”, such as the destruction of an entire village, if deemed to be the source of rocket fire.
Rogers added:
One graphic description of the result was that “around a thousand Lebanese civilians were killed, a third of them children. Towns and villages were reduced to rubble; bridges, sewage treatment plants, port facilities and electric power plants were crippled or destroyed.”
Human Rights Watch (HRW) has condemned Israel’s assault on 23 March, saying:
Forcible displacement, wanton destruction and attacks deliberately targeting civilians are war crimes.
They added that:
Countries that continue to provide Israel with arms and military aid risk complicity in the Israeli government’s serious violations in Lebanon.
Meanwhile, Israel’s far-right finance minister Bezalel Smotrich made it very clear that the Israeli invasion has colonialist, expansionist aims.
Reuters reported on 23 March:
Smotrich told an Israeli radio program that the military campaign in Lebanon “needs to end with a different reality entirely, both with the Hezbollah decision but also with the change of Israel’s borders.”
Smotrich added:
I say here definitively…in every room and in every discussion, too: the new Israeli border must be the Litani.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
The world cannot afford the continued existence of so-called ‘Israel’
The editor-in-chief of neoliberal propaganda factory the Economist, Zanny Minton Beddoes, spectacularly fumbled her attempts to push out Zionist talking points during an interview with right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson.
Minton Beddoes attempted to ask the former Fox News host whether he believed in so-called ‘Israel’s’ right to exist. In doing so she functioned as the troll guarding the bridge that provides a route to acceptance within the British and US ruling class. The question serves the same role as a previous favourite — “Do you condemn Hamas?” — a litmus test to establish whether the person being interrogated is ‘one of us’.
When pushed by Carlson to define the question, Minton Beddoes immediately seemed taken aback and began to stutter and flail as she attempted to work out what her own enquiry meant. Understandably so, given that like all good propaganda phrases, it doesn’t mean anything. There is no concept in law of a state’s right to exist.
As pointed out by former UN official, Moncef Khane:
Statehood is a political reality not a legal one.
Israel and its ‘right to exist’
Prompting people on the Zionist entity’s right to exist is a bit like questions demanding whether people “support the troops”, used during the illegal 2003 US-led assault on Iraq. Well, what exactly is being asked? If it’s just “Do you wish this particular group of random people no harm?” then the answer may well be “Yes, of course” — but that would be meaningless. Why ask about this group of people rather than any other?
Clearly the aim is to insist on specific allegiance to a politically relevant group of people — in this case US soldiers — for the sake of pursuing a geopolitical goal. To entrap people into backing a war by proxy via ostensibly apolitical support for the lives of those fighting it.
The question on the Zionist settler-colony is a similar ruse — an attempt to align the answerer with the Zionist cause out of fear that replying in the negative would imply a violent desire to annihilate a ‘state’ and its people. However, one can reject the legitimacy of ‘Israel’s’ creation, and its continued existence, without the desire for any use of force.
Its birth was the result of land theft, mass murder and ethnic cleansing, followed by apartheid and genocide. Were there such a concept as a state’s right to exist, this criminal ethnostate would be the last one entitled to it.
It’s normal for states to peacefully disappear
Its end need not be one of violence, but ideally of peaceful dissolution into one democratic state for all those in historic Palestine. It is normal in other contexts to wish for a state to cease its existence without fear of being labelled a budding genocidaire.
When republicans and nationalists in Ireland say they want their country to be reunited, this necessarily involves the disappearance of so-called ‘Northern Ireland’. Only the most extreme loyalists would suggest this is a call for mass murder or ethnic cleansing.
When Koreans speak of uniting their country, everyone understands that the subsequent non-existence of North Korea and South Korea isn’t genocidal in nature.
In this regard, once again the Zionist entity is subject to special privileges, whereby questioning its fictional right to exist is seen as a call to arms, or antisemitism. In reality, the most pressing question now is not nonsense centred on whether ‘Israel’ has the right to exist. Instead it is can the world afford its continued presence?
The arrival of Zionists in Palestine has always been an existential threat to Palestinians. Since the entry of mostly European colonists, they have been subjected to brutal ethnic cleansing and, latterly, a holocaust. That alone should have made ‘Israel’s’ existence intolerable long ago. However, as Zionist violence now engulfs all of West Asia, the scale of its bloodlust now imperils the entire planet.
Zionism endangers the world
The criminals in Tel Aviv aim to rip Iran apart, causing the fragmentation of a nation of 92 million people. The destabilisation likely wouldn’t stop there, and neighbouring countries with ethnic and religious tensions would likely be similarly affected.
Europe is so racist that even minor flows of refugees have seen far-right and overtly fascist parties flourish as they blame immigrants for all social ills. That would only deepen in the event that a far bigger crisis were to emerge and vast numbers of desperate people from west Asia sought sanctuary in Europe.
The world sadly still relies on climate wrecking fossil fuels. While that is the case, destruction of the facilities that produce them is liable to cause massive economic crises globally. The Zionist entity insisted on bombing the world’s largest natural gas condensate field at South Pars. That prompted Iran to respond in kind, attacking oil production in Gulf nations backing the settler-colony.
Fuel price inflation pushes up the price of everything else. When people on average incomes struggle, there is again the potential they look to far-right demagogues for salvation.
Many democracies have already been degraded through Zionist influence, with basic rights suspended in the name of backing the atrocities of the land theft project. That process is only likely to continue in the event of further financial chaos if reactionaries take the levers of power.
Respected commentators, such as economist Jeffrey Sachs, have warned the current conflagration started by so-called ‘Israel’ may ultimately trigger terminal warfare. Sachs said:
We are probably in the early days of World War III.
The Samson option
It may not even take that for the Zionist entity to bring about worldwide devastation. Numerous Zionists have fantasised about, or actively threatened, use of the ‘Samson option’. That is, the criminal pseudo-state using its vast nuclear arsenal to attack nations across the world in the event of its own impending demise, similar to the biblical figure of Samson bringing down the temple upon himself and his enemies.
Zionist university professor, David Perlmutter, imagined a glorious nuclear wasteland triggered by ‘Israel’. In an 2022 LA Times column, he wrote:
What would serve the Jew-hating world better in repayment for thousands of years of massacres but a Nuclear Winter. Or invite all those tut-tutting European statesmen and peace activists to join us in the ovens?
For the first time in history, a people facing extermination while the world either cackles or looks away — unlike the Armenians, Tibetans, World War II European Jews or Rwandans — have the power to destroy the world. The ultimate justice?
‘Israeli’ military historian, Martin van Creveld, threatened, in response to a scenario in which the world attempted to prevent forced transfer of Palestinians:
But would the world permit such ethnic cleansing? That depends on who does it and how quickly it happens. We possess several hundred atomic warheads and rockets and can launch them at targets in all directions, perhaps even at Rome. Most European capitals are targets for our air force.
Let me quote General Moshe Dayan: “Israel must be like a mad dog, too dangerous to bother.” I consider it all hopeless at this point. We shall have to try to prevent things from coming to that, if at all possible. Our armed forces, however, are not the thirtieth strongest in the world, but rather the second or third. We have the capability to take the world down with us. And I can assure you that that will happen before Israel goes under.
Tucker Carlson was ultimately too cowardly or indoctrinated to challenge all premises of the Economist editor’s ridiculous question. While he pushed back on the meaning of ‘right to exist’, he interpreted an answer of ‘no’ to mean a call for the settler-colony’s destruction. He said he didn’t want that, as he had no desire for people to die. Not much more can be expected of a former Fox News host, even one with anti-Zionist tendencies.
Ultimately it will be for people of conscience and integrity on the left to decisively shift the Overton window on so-called ‘Israel’, to the point where its peaceful dissolution, achieved by constant external pressure, becomes the accepted mainstream wisdom.
‘Israel’ has no right to exist, but the people of the world do. Their fate may depend on ending the settler-colony’s continued malign presence at the earliest opportunity.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Trump makes fuzzy claims about Iran “peace talks”
US president Donald Trump has been waffling about peace talks amid his stalling war on Iran. Meanwhile, Iranian officials have flatly denied that any discussions have taken place. One official even said that Iran was busy carrying out “complete and remorseful punishment” of its enemies.
The US and Israel attacked Iran on 28 February in an unprovoked, unlawful strike. Omani officials revealed at the time that Iran had been offering unprecedented concessions during negotiations. The Pentagon has since stated there was no imminent threat from Iran. And the UN’s atomic watchdog, the IAEA, has said there is no evidence that Iran was developing a nuclear weapon.
In one interview posted on 23 March, Trump claimed that talks were already taking place:
NOW – Trump on Iran: “We’ve had very strong talks… they very much want to make a deal.” pic.twitter.com/zgZSQ1TXyy
— Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) March 23, 2026
When challenged on this claim, Trump said Iran needed better PR:
Well, they’re gonna have to get themselves better public relations people. We’ve had very strong talks. Mr Witkoff and Kushner had them. They went perfectly.
Q: Iran’s foreign ministry says you’re not telling the truth when it comes to productive conversations to end the war
TRUMP: Well, they’re gonna have to get themselves better public relations people. We’ve had very strong talks. Mr Witkoff and Kushner had them. They went… pic.twitter.com/LrCq8tCM6c
— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) March 23, 2026
It was even claimed the US Republican leader had postponed further strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure due to these alleged talks.
Breaking news: Donald Trump has postponed his threatened attacks on Iranian energy infrastructure following ‘good and productive’ talks with Iran. https://t.co/3N8P9BbwjJ pic.twitter.com/QhBCfKeV26
— Financial Times (@FT) March 23, 2026
There was some evidence that energy markets had bounced back as a result of Trump’s comments:
Brent Crude prices fell 12% after President Trump announced constructive talks between US and Iran and postponed planned strikes on Iranian power plants pic.twitter.com/0GopBm6oSz
— Reuters (@Reuters) March 23, 2026
Al Jazeera reported:
The US president adds that the two sides have had “major points of agreement” during the talks he claims US officials have held with Iran.
Trump’s full interview on the supposed talks can be accessed here.
Iran denies talks
Yet Iran has completely rejected and contradicted Trump’s claims. Axios cited a source which said no negotiations had occurred:
🚨 BREAKING: Iran speaker named in Axios report says “no negotiations” taking place with U.S. in fresh posts
Iran’s parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf – identified in Axios reporting as a key figure in alleged backchannel talks – said moments ago on X that “no… https://t.co/ILywe6Amb9
— Drop Site (@DropSiteNews) March 23, 2026
And Iranian parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf appears to be in no mood to negotiate:
No negotiations have been held with the US, and fake news is used to manipulate the financial and oil markets and escape the quagmire in which the US and Israel are trapped.
One unnamed Iranian source told Al Jazeera that:
Trump “backed down” after being warned that Iran would target power plants across the Gulf and in Israel.
The report added that Trump had said talks with Iran were underway despite the source denying any such communication.
The outlet added that:
The claims could not be independently verified, and there has been no immediate comment from Iranian officials.
Trump threatened to hit Iranian energy infrastructure on 22 March:
If Iran doesn’t FULLY OPEN, WITHOUT THREAT, the Strait of Hormuz, within 48 HOURS from this exact point in time, the United States of America will hit and obliterate their various POWER PLANTS, STARTING WITH THE BIGGEST ONE FIRST.
As is often the case, Trump’s abrupt shift from belligerence to unverified claims of progress in talks is difficult to decode. What is clear, however, is that the US war effort is stalling. The war is deeply unpopular domestically, and has, in effect, transformed Iran into an oil superpower—tightening its grip over one of the world’s most critical oil choke points.
Worse yet, America’s flagship aircraft carrier, the USS Ford, has limped to Crete for repairs after a serious fire. Meanwhile, US rivals like China are watching to see how they can turn this latest US blunder to their advantage.
Trump is known for believing he can shape reality through bullying, dealmaking, and cajoling. For now, that belief appears to have hit an Iran-shaped brick wall.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Trump's Iran Rambles
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Politics
Billionaire Marc Andreessen rejects deep thinking
Billionaire Marc Andreessen has claimed that “introspection” is of little value and only goes back 400 years. He also said he engages in “zero” or “as little as possible” deep thinking, noting that:
I find that people who dwell on the past, get stuck the past.
Ever heard of philosophy?
Andreessen, a Silicon Valley Venture Capitalist, made the comments on the Founders podcast:
Billionaire Marc Andreessen says he has “zero” introspection, and that the idea itself is a modern invention. pic.twitter.com/6bgxdxvfmt
— More Perfect Union (@MorePerfectUS) March 16, 2026
Andreessen claims:
If you go back 400 years ago, it would never have occurred to anybody to be introspective… Great men of history didn’t sit around doing this stuff at any prior point right?
He must be trolling, right? Even before Ancient Greece, highly influential philosophy in Persia (modern-day Iran) dates back to 1700–1800 BCE. Zarathustra, as well as Hammurabi’s Code (c. 1754 BCE), introduced revolutionary ethical concepts that later Western philosophers like Immanuel Kant built upon through Deontology (acting as if everyone followed your example). Then there’s the opposing theory: Utilitarianism (the greatest good for the greatest number).
No wonder Andreessen has ‘zero’ introspection. He clearly thinks little of established ethical frameworks. The billionaire probably finds it convenient not to reflect on his actions, as he now simply takes stakes in businesses and lets the money roll in. Meanwhile, 90 percent of Americans own just around 10 percent of the stocks.
Philosophy was the original subject, before Plato taught Aristotle in around 400-300 BCE. Aristotle then categorised study into different subjects. This was the literal foundation of Western academic thought and educational systems.
Introspection: high value
Introspection is highly important, but it must be coupled with study. Otherwise you are just going over ideas that prior thinkers have dedicated their lives to.
It’s obvious why billionaires want to promote mindless consumerism. The thing is, will people continue to dumb themselves down?
Featured image via X/Twitter
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