Politics
Trump represents the West’s decline in the face of Iran and China
It’s clear at this point, as Donald Trump flounders in his illegal war against Iran, that the US president drastically underestimated his Iranian opponents. How could that happen, given the advice he would have been receiving about Tehran’s capacity to target Gulf oil infrastructure, and close the Strait of Hormuz? There was also the satellite coverage and communications penetration of his opponents that should have informed better judgement by Washington’s war criminal-in-chief.
The answer is probably that Trump is such an Orientalist, Islamophobic, generally racist, white supremacist thug, it left him with no capacity to recognise the competence possessed by Tehran.
Trump’s vile bigoted tirades are legion at this point. He’s railed against “stupid” and “low IQ” Somalis, called Mexicans rapists and ranted about banning all Muslims from entering the United States. He sees a world divided into a civilised section, populated by white northern Europeans, and contrarily, dangerous “shithole countries”.
His comments about Iran’s leaders have been straight out of decades-old anti-Iranian propaganda perpetrated by Western media and politicians. It is one that characterises Tehran (and often Iranians more broadly) as backwards, fundamentally malevolent, and irrational.
Trump deploys classic bigoted Iranian tropes
The mass murderer who has slaughtered over 3,500 Iranians has said the Iranian government “just wanted to practice evil.” He declared he intended:
…to bring them [the Iranian people] back to the Stone Ages where they belong.
He called Ayatollah Ali Khamenei:
…one of the most evil people in history.
Trump has called his rivals in the Iranian government “crazy bastards“. Finally, and needless to say, it takes extreme racism to consider it appropriate to threaten that:
…a whole civilisation will die tonight, never to be brought back again.
This is all entirely in line with the prevailing message about Iran post-revolution that Western audiences have been bombarded with. Our media presents us with little more than so-called “Mad Mullahs” and crowds shouting “death to America”. Some in the West have internalised this narrative to the point where they refuse to believe a colourful coffee shop populated by uncovered young women could possibly be in Tehran.
US and Israeli politicians abuse these fictions as a means of gaining support for war crimes perpetrated against Iranians. This applies in particular to Tehran’s potential to acquire a nuclear bomb. The confections centre around an imagined lunatic state that will start launching off nukes left and right the second it has enough fissile material.
The implication is that they are so irrational they care nothing for their own survival, given the inevitable atomic retaliation that would follow. This too plays into Orientalist tropes about Muslims not valuing their own lives, or those of their families, thus permitting their wholesale slaughter. The US previously applied these same lies to Vietnamese people.
Far from being deranged, Iran has out-thought the US
The reality is that Iran has been a cautious, rational and defensive actor for decades. It has enriched uranium as a bargaining chip, but not gone after full-scale development of nuclear weapons. Tehran has assembled a vast arsenal of drones and ballistic missiles which it has used purely defensively. It has pursued a strategy of forward defence through proxies in Yemen, Lebanon, Iraq, Syria, and Palestine.
Much of the latter were shattered only because almost the entire world has permitted the Zionist entity to pursue genocidal violence against them for over 30 months. However, Iran’s fallback to missiles and Shaheds has proven effective and brought the US to the negotiating table.
Iran has achieved all this despite being under crippling US sanctions that have had a murderous effect on Iranians. Their deaths due to medicine shortages are among the 38 million killed by US coercive measures from 1971-2021. Despite this isolation, and being surrounded by hostile Gulf states hosting the US military, Iranians have at this point comprehensively outmanoeuvred the brutal world hegemony.
Iran has at least been aided in this period by China, another serially underestimated and maligned nation. Western media coverage of China’s impending economic collapse has been a running joke for a generation. China has constantly defied these naysayers to become the world’s industrial powerhouse.
It surpasses the US on numerous measures now, and will likely overtake it soon on life expectancy. Again, bigoted politicians disregard this, and deploy racist stereotypes of devious East Asians, who have only excelled through underhand means.
Iran is currently well on the way to having a network of high speed rail, with Chinese assistance. The US-Israeli contribution to that has been to bomb railway lines. There can be few better examples of two worlds moving in opposite directions than the main representative of a dysfunctional neoliberal order bombing something it cannot build at home. Like a petulant child kicking over the better sandcastle built by another kid, the US is now largely only capable of violence.
US and Britain represent a dying order with no capacity to learn
Yet Western ruling classes retain a remarkable lack of willingness to learn from what emerging nations do right. You’ve heard of Inglorious Basterds fighting to stop genocide – we have Incurious Bastards that commit genocide, while having little interest in what lessons could be taken from the likes of China’s state-led industrial policies. These have accounted for a huge percentage of poverty reduction worldwide.
A ruling order raised on Thatcher’s formulation of TINA – There is No Alternative (to neoliberalism) – are incapable of imagining the self-loathing state they have constructed doing anything useful. Perhaps with some basis in the case of Britain, now successive governments have ensured endless cuts have hugely hollowed out the state’s own knowledge banks and capacity to act.
The obvious riposte to this would be to point out that Iran and China are autocracies, so whatever the economic or infrastructural gains made, they matter little without meaningful political freedoms. That would be a fair point, were it not the case that both living standards and political freedom are receding in the likes of Britain and the USA.
In the case of England and devolved nations, wages have been stagnant for over 15 years as basic services decline, in effect making the majority worse off. What used to be world class public services now barely function. You wait months for an appointment in underfunded health services, then miss it because the dysfunctional privatised postal service couldn’t tell you in time. Meanwhile, police throw people into the back of vans for holding up a sign, or posting an unauthorised tweet.
Britain isn’t a democracy
Britain is a nation with an unelected second chamber. There is an unelected head of state. It has an electoral system where people’s votes don’t count. It is a place where levels of inequality and a system of political donations makes thing closer to ‘one pound, one vote’, rather than ‘one person, one vote’. Work is a largely democracy free zone – people spend the best hours of the day, through the best years of their life in places where they are simply supposed to follow orders, with little opportunity for their own input.
Britain can therefore in no meaningful sense be described as a democracy. The same policies persist year on year, whether its Labour or Tories in power. Eric Li said of the United States:
In America, you can change the political parties but you can’t change policies.
In China, you can’t change the party but you can change policies.
The same applies to Britain. Another memorable Chinese formulation is the notion of the “Kill Line“. This is in reference to the huge number of US citizens who are at:
…the point where a single stroke of bad luck—a $3,000 ambulance ride or a sudden layoff—triggers a terminal collapse into homelessness.
The Kill Line: USA’s massive precariat
At its most horrifying, the Kill Line can be seen in US streets rammed with people struggling against substance abuse, openly injecting and dying in full view of an indifferent ruling class. This too is the inevitable consequence of a society in which democracy has been worn down to the nub. A place where the priorities of the rich leave the majority to suffer. A place where in effect, a tiny number of people dictate policy and the views of most Americans are ignored.
As for the case of so-called ‘Israel’, despite our media referring to it as the “only democracy in the Middle East“, it has never been any such thing. Founded on ethnic cleansing, it has always been an apartheid pseudo-state, getting worse post-1967 and now a rabidly genocidal, deeply ill society. Once upon a time even this abomination had a strong social-democratic character – at least for its Jewish population – but that too has been hollowed out, following the same pattern of its aforementioned Anglophone backers.
Britain, the US, and the Zionist entity have effectively de-developed themselves, and can now merely be content with de-developing the likes of Iran via endless 2000lb bombs. This is virtually the only thing the USA builds anymore.
The so-called democracies have allowed oligarchic parasites to feast on their body politic for so long, all that remains is a husk. It shuffles feebly on in a zombified form that wears its mangled democracy as a kind of hideous mask, concealing the vile reality beneath – that of a brutish creature lurching between authoritarianism at home and imperial violence abroad.
Hollow shells offer only violence
Their citizens are no longer likely to enjoy a good quality of life, though they still fare better than those underneath Western bombs. When the latter people flee their countries, they inevitably seek shelter in the same places from whence those missiles came. The compensation offered to the struggling ‘native’ population is that the newcomers will be treated even more poorly.
Is this sufficient? Is it enough to be shivering in a cramped, damp-filled home, teeth rotting in your skull, because you can’t afford the cost of fuel and there are no dentists anymore, as long as you know someone has it even worse than you? Can one be cheered by a union jack on a lamp post or when told by Nigel Farage that one has the correct amount of melanin in one’s skin? Is it sufficient to know that your country is falling apart, but you can still destroy someone else’s?
Probably not. The wreckage at home and the wreckage abroad may differ in form, but they are two sides of the same coin. Both are the result of a completely unrestrained capitalism allowing a handful of reckless fuckwits to accumulate the wealth and power to determine the fate of billions. Economic and democratic renewal are essential to end this malaise.
Our racist culture deters us from accepting we have something to learn from the likes of Iran or China. Their welcome rise should grant us the humility we desperately need to follow suit.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
ICJP writes to UNESCO over Ben-Gvir raid of Al-Aqsa
The International Centre of Justice for Palestinians has written to the director of world heritage at UNESCO. It’s to raise concerns over the recent raiding of Al-Aqsa Mosque in occupied East Jerusalem by Israeli settlers, alongside far-right Israeli minister and all-round nightmare Itamar Ben Gvir. This came at a time of rapidly increasing religious persecution of Palestinian Christians and Muslims in the occupied Palestinian territory by Israeli authorities.
Ben Gvir raiding Al-Aqsa again
This follows Israel’s increasing attempts to consolidate total sovereignty over Al-Aqsa, which is the third holiest site in Islam, and is emblematic of Israel’s primary aim of Judaisation of Muslim and Christian holy and heritage sites across the occupied Palestinian territory.
UNESCO’s role in safeguarding the protection of Palestinian cultural, historical, and religious heritage sites is of fundamental importance in the face of increasing Israeli attempts to erase Palestinian cultural heritage, which includes its continued weaponisation of archaeology to appropriate Palestinian land.
It is paramount that the UN strongly condemns the move by Ben-Gvir to consolidate Israeli control of Al-Aqsa, his unlawful raid of the compound, and for the UN and UNESCO to immediately take preventative measures that stop the Israeli authorities from deepening its persecution of Palestinian Muslims and Muslim holy sites across the occupied Palestinian territory.
In his capacity as minister for national security, Ben Gvir has also indicated his plans for Israeli authorities to oversee the admitting of up to 150 Israelis or Muslims at a time in the Al-Aqsa compound. This move would place Ben Gvir in effective control of the Mosque’s affairs, side-lining the Jerusalem Islamic Waqf, which holds recognised exclusive administrative authority, including control over access, and has done so for 839 years.
It is also profoundly concerning that Ben Gvir’s raid of Al-Aqsa Mosque was permitted at a time when the site remains unlawfully closed to Palestinian Muslims. The compound has now been inaccessible for over a month, including throughout the recent holy month of Ramadan, raising serious alarm. This development sets a dangerous precedent, further entrenching patterns of discrimination and exacerbating the risk of religious persecution against Palestinian Muslims.
Freedom of religion and belief
Ben Gvir has also pushed for the Knesset to introduce legislation to curtail the Muslim call to prayer. Meanwhile, on the recent Palm Sunday, the Archbishop of Jerusalem was denied access to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, the holiest site in Christianity.
The prolonged and deliberate restriction of access to Al-Aqsa Mosque by Israeli authorities constitutes a grave breach of Israel’s obligations under international law. Such measures amount to religious persecution of Palestinian Muslims and impose unlawful restrictions on fundamental rights, including freedom of movement, freedom of religion, and the right to practice one’s faith.
These rights are firmly protected under international legal frameworks, rendering continued encroachment upon Palestinian religious and cultural sites across the occupied Palestinian territory unlawful under international humanitarian law.
Israel’s actions regarding Al-Aqsa follow a similar pattern to those seen following the progressive Judaisation of the Ibrahimi Mosque in Hebron. In January 2026, Israel barred the mosque’s Palestinian directors and seized planning rights over part of the site, in contravention to longstanding arrangements.
Despite its administration by Palestinians and use as a mosque for more than 1,400 years, Israel has continually increased Jewish access to the site in its attempts to consolidate Israeli and Jewish sovereignty over it, increasingly so after the 1994 massacre of Palestinian Muslims at the mosque by a Jewish settler.
Órlaith Roe, ICJP public affairs and communications, said:
It is paramount that the UN adopts the findings of its own special rapporteurs and recognises the apartheid system that Israel perpetuates, including a system of religious apartheid that violates international law.
The safeguarding of Palestinian cultural, historical, and religious sites from Israeli appropriation and attacks is a duty the UN cannot afford to fail in upholding.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Southport attack inquiry stresses ‘fundamental failure’ of authorities
The Southport Inquiry has highlighted the “fundamental failure” of authorities to prevent the horrific 2024 murder of Bebe King, Elsie Dot Stancombe and Alice da Silva Aguiar.
Inquiry chairperson, Adrian Fulford, began the report, released on Monday, by describing the events of 29 July 2024 as “one of the darkest moments in recent national memory”.
The report concluded by saying that authorities could have prevented the murderer, Axel Rudakubana, referred to as “AR”, from eventually killing Bebe, six; Elsie, seven; and Alice, nine at Hart Space dance studio in Southport.
Blame was also attributed to his parents.
Wholly separately, therefore, from my view that the attack would not have occurred had AR’s parents reported what they knew in late July 2024, if appropriate arrangements and reasonable resources had been in place to address the risk that AR posed to others from December 2019 onwards, it is highly likely that the tragedy of 29 July 2024 would not have occurred.
Southport inquiry: Authorities knew about the risk, but failed to intervene
The report went on to detail the woefully inadequate actions of authorities, insisting that:
There was a fundamental failure by any organisation, or multi-agency arrangement, to take ownership of the risk that AR posed.
Despite authorities having sufficient information to warrant close attention, it added, there was a “pervasive failure to act on AR’s dangerousness”. This was “significantly troubling”, it asserted.
Agencies from social services to the police and Prevent, the Government’s strategy to stop people becoming terrorists or supporting terrorism, tried on numerous occasions to explain away AR’s highly concerning behaviour as a “mental health” issue.
This reflected a poor understanding of both ASD [Autism Spectrum Disorder] itself and a misunderstanding of the ability of mental health services to ‘treat’ or address it.
It should have already been clear for all agencies from 2019 that Rudakubana “posed a high risk of harm to others”.
In October 2019, he repeatedly carried a knife to his former school with the intention to inflict serious harm.
Then in December of that year, he took weapons with him to kill a pupil he perceived had previously bullied him, the report shared. Instead, another student was assaulted at random.
Fulford said December 2019 was a “watershed event”.
As the subsequent narrative will reveal, nothing occurred during the next five years to indicate that this level of danger had diminished. To the contrary, as time passed the authorities, with certain minor exceptions, had an
ever‑reducing understanding of AR’s preoccupations and intentions. Interaction between AR and the relevant organisations became, at best, something of a token.
The report also criticised the:
- Severe lack of attention authorities have paid to “online knife and machete marketing” and “inadequate…enforcement of the existing law”.
- “Lack of provision” at Lancashire County Council (LCC) “for violence fixated young people who have been excluded either for acting violently or for carrying knives to school”, and “the impact of combined underfunding and underperformance at LCC which saw no meaningful intervention in alternative education provision for AR for the final two years before the attack”.
- Long waiting times for expert diagnoses.
- The failure of Rudakubana’s parents to fully share information that could have sparked stronger action from authorities.
Fundamental change to fix broken systems

Elsie’s parents, the report noted, have called for “systemic changes in order to prevent similar tragedies” alongside the parents of other survivors of the attack.
They stress that the incident should not be viewed merely as an example of ‘knife crime’ but rather a failure by the authorities to prevent an individual who was intent on harming children from committing these crimes.
Southport councillor, Sean Halsall, added to this message. He told the Canary:
We need to make sure that everything that comes out of this inquiry is implemented properly and properly resourced, that things aren’t done half-heartedly, that it isn’t a sticking plaster but the fundamental change that makes sure we fix these broken systems.
A key reflection from the inquiry is “the amount of times that stage agencies failed the family and those little girls”, he added.
[These authorities] passed the parcel until the parcel exploded, and we’re here with the aftermath of three families who will be forever grieving the loss of their daughters.
Apart from building state agencies that properly support families and individuals in need of special attention, he also insisted on paying attention to how a young person can get hold of a dangerous weapon in the first place. He said:
For any teenager to be able to get hold of these things, it’s incredibly worrying and tells me that we are not going anywhere near far enough at regulating these companies that profiteer off of these sales, profiteer off of putting human lives at risk.
He added:
We can’t look past austerity and the damage to the social fabric that’s done with removing the youth centres and youth clubs and mental health support services for young people.
There are indeed many lessons to learn, as the inquiry has shown. To truly honour the memories of Bebe, Elsie, and Alice, we need to demand the government learns those lessons and acts on them quickly.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Trump deletes Jesus meme after backlash
As we reported on 13 April, Donald Trump posted a meme in which he was depicted as Jesus. Because this is what Christians consider a ‘sin’, the picture provoked backlash amongst his Christian followers. This led to the following:
It appears as if Trump has deleted his post portraying himself as Jesus after facing some backlash from his own supporters. pic.twitter.com/9ZpWXBgL9L
— Kaitlan Collins (@kaitlancollins) April 13, 2026
Instead of apologising, however, Trump has opted to insult everyone’s intelligence:
Trump just said he thought this image is supposed to be him as a “doctor.” pic.twitter.com/eECb5mTxO2
— Kyle Griffin (@kylegriffin1) April 13, 2026
Trump backlash
To be completely fair to Trump, he is very rich. Maybe when he goes to the hospital, he is treated by robed doctors with glowing gold hands. You’d certainly like to think that sort of wealth could buy you heaven on Earth; if not, what’s the point (besides rampant and un-Christ-like greed)?
To give you an idea of the backlash Trump received, this is how MAGA responded on Truth Social – his own personal social media site:
Trump’s followers on Truth Social are calling him the Antichrist after his post of an image depicting himself as Jesus pic.twitter.com/6qlxjxt7AJ
— Headquarters (@HQNewsNow) April 13, 2026
If you’ve never visited Truth Social, it’s worth knowing that it’s the most heavily advertised-to social media site there is. If you go to Trump’s profile page, you get three ads before you get to his first post:
You get two more ads immediately after his first post:
You then get another two ads after every subsequent post.
The reason we’re pointing this out is so you understand that the people who post there are willing to ignore a lot to demonstrate their love for Trump.
Now, these same people think Trump is the anti-Christ.
Which, to be fair, he very well may be.
Trump also lost the support of Knights Templar International – a global movement of divorced religious supremacists:
🚨BREAKING The Knights Templar Order and its ruling Council demand that this offensive and blasphemous image be removed forthwith !
We supported President Trump in 2016 and 2024 (NY Times attributed our support in 2016 to be part of his victory)
However we are deeply offended… pic.twitter.com/l4Ql0MFYXF— Knights Templar International (@KnightsTempOrg) April 13, 2026
People have pointed out that Trump’s supporters are funny when it comes to what they will or won’t tolerate:
— 679 Enthusiast (@marionumber4) April 14, 2026
“Only the fake news”
This is how Trump excused his deadly sin:
Reporter: Did you post that picture of yourself depicted as Jesus Christ?
Trump: It wasn’t a depiction. I did post it and I thought it was me as a doctor. And had to do with red cross as a red cross worker, which we support and only the fake news could come up with that one. pic.twitter.com/7Y1u86GjkP
— Acyn (@Acyn) April 13, 2026
When asked if posted a picture of himself as Jesus, Trump said:
I thought it was me as a doctor, and had to do with Red Cross – as a Red Cross worker there, which we support. And only the fake news could come up with that one. …
I just heard about it, and I said, how did they come up with that?
It’s supposed to be me as a doctor making people better, and I do make people better. I make people a lot better.
As an example, the 11,000, I understand your husband’s going through treatment.
The woman he asked responded “yes, sir”, with Trump continuing:
He’s going through some very serious cancer treatment, so this goes a long way.
Okay, so is it better that he thinks he’s responsible for medical treatments?
Because he quite obviously isn’t a doctor.
In fact, Trump is shaping up to be the worst thing for US healthcare since Covid, as we reported in September 2025:
Trump’s ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’… has made “deep cuts to Medicaid and Medicare” among other areas. It’s expected these cuts will lead to the closure of many rural hospitals (300 were already at “immediate risk” of closure in July this year).
People are mocking Trump’s excuses, anyway:
— devon sawa (@DevonESawa) April 14, 2026
IS THERE A DOCTOR ON BOARD? pic.twitter.com/kYSpcVlEDC
— Britton Taylor (@brittontaylor) April 13, 2026
Secular Talk’s Kyle Kulinski, meanwhile, offered a more honest version of the original meme:
— Secular Talk ([email protected]) (@KyleKulinski) April 14, 2026
One nation under Trump
Trump’s war with Pope Leo has also continued, with JD Vance speaking out on behalf of his boss:
JD Vance advises the Vatican to stay out of US politics pic.twitter.com/s2SJTntivP
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) April 13, 2026
As he literally just depicted himself as Christ for political purposes, Trump isn’t best placed to ask religious figures to stay out of politics.
Featured image via Fox News
Politics
The Sun is losing money fast
According to London Centric’s Jim Waterson, the Sun is in dire straits:
The Sun’s accounts are out and I haven’t seen anyone report on them so…*Pre-tax loss of £31m*Revenue down from £296m to £273m (Sub now in the same ballpark as the Guardian)*Phone hacking costs (now into its third decade) of £36.6m*Big fall in audience but still claim to be UK’s number one brand
— Jim Waterson (@jim.londoncentric.media) 2026-04-14T05:37:11.975Z
Of course, none of this means the rag is at risk of shutting down. As we all know, the Sun doesn’t exist to publish news or even make money; it exists to bully politicians into listening to owner Rupert Murdoch.
The Sun is a propaganda paper
Over on X/Twitter, the popular Flying Rodent account asked the following:
It’s been a long time since the Sun made a profit, which raises questions like “what is the paper’s actual purpose, if it isn’t for making money”.
As Waterson noted, the Sun has incurred phone hacking costs of £36.6m. This substantial figure makes it abundantly clear that something is not right in media land. Despite this, political scrutiny on the matter has dried up.
As we reported in November 2025:
The Sun newspaper has yet again agreed to pay through the nose because of its past reporting. In this instance, they’ve apologised to Christopher Jefferies and paid him “substantial damages”.
Despite this happening fairly frequently, Keir Starmer has abandoned completing the Leveson 2 inquiry into press standards. It would be pretty awkward if he didn’t, of course, given the fact that he occasionally writes for the Sun now.
Starmer began his Labour leadership campaign with a promise to never speak to the Sun. He would betray that promise as soon as he could, jumping into bed with the Sun at the first available opportunity.
He did this despite how unpopular the tabloid has always been with Labour members. Now, Labour have found themselves having to draft national MPs to canvass for London councils in the local elections because so many of their activists have moved on:
So hardly any volunteers left in Labour, they’re having to press gang MPs to save their council seats in London. This has been a long time coming. https://t.co/mfF8POIjec
— Cllr Alastair Binnie-Lubbock 💚🌍 🍉 (he/they) (@alastairis) April 10, 2026
The point we’re making is that it was never in Starmer’s political interests to ally himself with the Sun. Presumably, he felt like he would suffer more damage if he spurned the Murdoch rag. This ended up proving false, but it still demonstrates how well trained our politicians have become by the Sun.
Turning the page
We’re now in a moment where the British press aren’t just failing financially. The Greens have overtaken Labour in the polls, and leader Zack Polanski has shown you can stand up to the tabloids without suffering political consequences. If anything, it seems that pushing back against the billionaire-owned media is viewed as a selling point.
That future: Lower bills. Tax billionaires. End Rip off Britain.
Who’s in? pic.twitter.com/O7WnMH45Rn
— Zack Polanski (@ZackPolanski) April 14, 2026
In other words, Murdoch may be happy to lose money now, but that situation won’t last forever.
Featured image via Hudson Institute (Wikimedia)
Politics
Climate crisis threatens sports revenue
Climate change is no longer just an environmental challenge far removed from the stadiums; it has become a direct threat to one of the world’s largest industries.
A recent report published by Reuters reveals that the global sports economy, valued at approximately $2.3 trillion annually, is facing risks that could derail its growth trajectory in the coming years.
The report paints a clear picture of a sector accustomed to rapid growth, with projections indicating its value will reach $3.7 trillion by 2030 and $8.8 trillion by 2050. However, these ambitious figures are now clashing with the volatile reality of climate change, which threatens to transform growth into losses.
$500 billion at risk
According to the data, extreme weather events, from heat waves to floods and snow shortages, could lead to losses exceeding $500 billion by 2030, resulting from the disruption of tournaments, declining attendance, and disruptions to broadcasting and sponsorship revenues.
The impact extends beyond direct losses, reaching supply chains and the sports equipment industry, highlighting the vulnerability of the sports economy to any climate disruption.
The report reveals that the economic power of sports lies not only in professional competitions but in a broader system. This system is spearheaded by sports tourism, valued at $672 billion, followed by merchandise and equipment at $612 billion, and professional sports at $140 billion.
Ironically, the fastest-growing sector, sports tourism, is also the most vulnerable to climate change. It is projected to account for approximately 60% of revenue growth until 2030, placing it squarely in danger.
Outdoor sports
The industry relies heavily on outdoor sports, which constitute more than 90% of television broadcasting revenue and around 76% of sponsorship revenue.
This dependence means that any climate disruption, even a temporary one, can trigger a cascade of losses that severely impacts the core of revenue.
From local losses to a global threat: The figures paint a clearer picture of the crisis, with estimates suggesting that bad weather costs community sport in Britain alone around $433 million annually.
Globally, losses could reach 14% of revenue by 2030, potentially reaching $1.6 trillion by 2050.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Union Berlin coach faces inevitable sexism
German coach Marie-Louise Eta quickly found herself embroiled in controversy just hours after being appointed head coach of Union Berlin, becoming the first woman to lead a team in Europe’s top five leagues. She was subjected to a barrage of sexist and abusive comments on social media.
The German club was quick to respond, issuing a firm statement on its official accounts, affirming that “the Union family stands behind its coach,” in a clear message rejecting any questioning of Etta’s competence based on her gender. The club emphasized that the criteria for employment within the team remain performance and technical ability, not background or gender.
Union Berlin head off ‘blatant sexism’
The criticism was particularly striking, with some users questioning the players’ ability to accept instructions from a female coach, while other comments went so far as to mock the idea of male coaches losing to her. The club described this as “blatant sexism,” emphasizing its complete rejection of such rhetoric.
Eta, who rose through the ranks at Union Berlin, possesses a wealth of experience, having previously managed the under-19 team and served as an assistant coach for the first team. This strengthens the management’s confidence in her ability to lead the team through this current phase.
The new coach’s first test will be against Wolfsburg in the Bundesliga, a match with implications far exceeding the three points. It presents Eta with a dual challenge: doing her job on the field and effectively silencing the criticisms circulating off the pitch.
Eta will take over temporarily until the end of the season, as Union Berlin strives to secure its Bundesliga status. The team currently occupies a mid-table position, relatively clear of the relegation zone. She will then transition to managing the women’s team, as per the pre-established plan.
The affair, which began with a historic appointment, has quickly transformed into a true test of European football’s capacity to embrace change, amidst persistent discrimination and institutional efforts to establish clear boundaries: competence first.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
A city united to resist Britain First – hundreds to protest against far right
Hundreds of anti-fascists will assemble at 11.30am on Saturday 18 April, in Manchester’s Piccadilly Gardens. They’ll be aiming to resist the presence of fascist group Britain First, which is coming to the city for a second ‘March for Remigration’.
Britain First is a fascist group looking to ‘remigrate’ people of colour and cut our already-failing state infrastructure by 50%. Their activities include harassing and intimidating asylum seekers at local hotels, attempting to force entry into the buildings, and organising transphobic protests in the town centre.
Resist Britain First brings Manchester activists together
In February, a coalition of community and left-wing groups from Manchester united under the banner ‘Resist Britain First’. This counter-protest brought in over 1,000 demonstrators, severely disrupting the Britain First march. It led the co-leader of Britain First, Paul Golding, to say he’d ‘never seen anything like it’.
This event, however, saw attendees of Britain First’s march take part in several racist attacks on members of the public, clearly proving that their platform is one of racism and violence. Nothing makes this clearer than the words of Britain First’s co-leader Ashlea Simon, who said in 2020: “English people can’t be black, English blood is white.”
The February mobilisation also raised serious concerns about the conduct of Greater Manchester Police. Officers ignored a young woman who raised concerns about fascist protesters threatening sexual violence. Anti-fascist protesters were also subjected to serious police violence, with at least three requiring A&E treatment, including one protester whose head was split open by a baton.
A spokesperson for Resist Britain First said:
Britain First’s march in February showed that Britain First are not the party of concerned ‘patriots’ they claim to be, but violent racists.
Their attendees engaged in multiple violent hate crimes, attacking non-white people they came across unprovoked and showing the nasty street presence of Britain First’s hatred.
Resist Britain First came together to show that Manchester will not allow the ongoing spread of fascism and hatred to continue on our streets. As long as fascists try to march here, the people of Manchester will rise up and oppose them to make it clear that they have no place in our city.
Celebrating that Manchester is a city united against fascism, the Resist Britain First coalition is calling for everyone who opposes racism, fascism and the rise of hatred to gather in Piccadilly Gardens at 11.30am on Saturday 18 April.
Resist Britain First includes:
- Salford Anti-Fascists.
- Manchester Feminist Coalition.
- No Borders Manchester.
- Young Struggle Manchester.
- Red Roots Collective.
- RS21 Manchester.
- Northern Police Monitoring Project.
- Anti-Fascist Action Manchester.
- Manchester Trans Liberation Assembly.
- South Asian Liberation Movement.
- Migrant Justice Manchester.
Fenna, from the Resist Britain First coalition, says:
As the child of a migrant, I am proud to live in a multiracial, working-class, and radical city like Manchester. We showed the fascists that they weren’t welcome in February, and we’ll show them again. Let’s all Resist Britain First.
Jai, from the Resist Britain First coalition, says:
The fascists like to pretend they represent us, but they don’t. I’m working class and proud to be part of the whole working class: that means people of all races and ethnicities. This April, we’ll show fascists Britain First exactly how class unity is the best defence against their racism and fascism.
Featured image via Resist Britain First
Politics
World Cup is money making enterprise
The 2026 FIFA World Cup represents an unprecedented economic milestone in the history of global tournaments, with total revenues expected to exceed $80 billion. This is driven by the expansion of the tournament to 48 teams and the accompanying surge in fan engagement and investment.
According to joint reports issued by FIFA and the World Trade Organization, the tournament is expected to attract approximately 6.5 million visitors to 16 cities across the United States, Canada, and Mexico, with direct spending approaching $13.9 billion.
This spending will contribute an estimated $40.9 billion to global GDP, in addition to creating more than 824,000 full-time jobs in the tourism, transportation, retail, and service sectors.
The tournament kicks off on June 11 at the Azteca Stadium, with 104 matches scheduled – a historic first that reflects the scale of FIFA’s expansion.
US World Cup is money-making enterprise
Despite the shared nature of the event, the United States is projected to capture the largest share of the economic benefits, with an expected output of $17.2 billion, in addition to $3.4 billion in tax revenue and the creation of approximately 185,000 jobs.
Los Angeles stands out as one of the biggest beneficiaries, expected to generate $594 million from hosting eight games, surpassing the figures from Super Bowl 2022.
Meanwhile, the New York-New Jersey area will host the final on July 19.
High costs for fans
On the other hand, the tournament presents increasing financial challenges for fans, given the rising costs of travel, accommodation, and tickets. The average daily expenditure for an international visitor is estimated at $416, with an average stay of 12 days.
In Los Angeles, hotel prices are expected to jump by up to 90%, reaching approximately $480 per night, compared to normal rates.
The “dynamic pricing” system adopted by FIFA also contributes to raising ticket prices according to demand. Tickets for group stage matches start at around $700, while premium tickets for the final exceeded $10,000 during the final stages of sales.
While the 2026 World Cup represents a massive economic leap for the host countries, it also raises questions about the ability of fans to keep up with the escalating costs, which could reshape fan attendance at one of the world’s biggest sporting events.
In this context, FIFA President Gianni Infantino affirmed that this edition “will be the biggest in the tournament’s history, not only in terms of sporting impact, but also in terms of global economic impact,” noting that the World Cup represents “a real engine for growth, job creation, and strengthening interconnectedness between economies.”
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Italy hold out distant hope of World Cup place
Amidst escalating discussions about the readiness of the teams participating in the 2026 World Cup, the Italy national football team has once again become a focus of media analysis. This isn’t due to any direct sporting developments, but rather to hypothetical scenarios related to potential changes outside the traditional sporting context.
According to some media analyses, one of the proposed scenarios involves the possibility of Iran’s participation being affected by the escalating geopolitical tensions between Iran, the United States, and Israel. This factor is being viewed from the perspective of “organizational possibility,” not as an official decision issued by any party so far.
Italy holding out hope
From an organizational standpoint, FIFA has several mechanisms in place to deal with exceptional circumstances that may arise before the start of major tournaments, particularly regarding the withdrawal or inability of a team to participate after the list of qualified teams has been finalized. This theoretically opens the door to alternative options for filling any vacant spots.
An analytical reading of these scenarios indicates that the available options typically revolve around three main paths: maintaining continental balance by selecting a replacement team from the same continent; resorting to the FIFA rankings to select the highest-ranked team among those not qualified; or adopting an exceptional solution such as a playoff or a decisive match held before the tournament begins if time is short.
Within this context, Italy’s name emerges as one of the teams that might be discussed theoretically, given its high international ranking, footballing history, and technical and marketing weight. However, this proposal is not based on any official decision or announcement from FIFA so far, but rather on a potential scenario for dealing with a possible gap in the list of participants.
Continental representation
Conversely, FIFA’s priority in such cases seems to be maintaining balanced continental representation, which might lead to the option of replacing a team from the same continent in the event of any withdrawal. Here, the UAE’s national team is a prominent candidate, before considering more complex solutions related to rankings or organizing playoff matches.
The idea of an “emergency playoff” before the tournament begins is raised in some analytical discussions as an exceptional solution to the time constraints, but it remains a complex option from an organizational and logistical standpoint, especially for a tournament the size of the World Cup and its associated marketing arrangements, global broadcasting, and meticulous scheduling.
Therefore, Italy’s return to the World Cup remains, for now, within the realm of theoretical assumptions linked to uncertain possibilities. The only certainty is that the list of participating teams in the 2026 World Cup remains as it was based on the official qualifiers, without any announced changes to date.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Athletes making the most money revealed
A report by Sportico reveals a radical shift in the income structure of top athletes throughout history. On-field earnings are no longer the sole determining factor in wealth creation, as income from outside competitions now exceeds 70% in many cases, driven by sponsorship deals, licensing agreements, and investments.
According to the ranking, which is based on adjusted total earnings for inflation, along with precise estimates including salaries, prize money, and commercial revenue, basketball legend Michael Jordan tops the list with a total of €3.011 billion, ahead of golf star Tiger Woods. Cristiano Ronaldo, captain of Saudi Arabia’s Al-Nassr, comes in third.
This ranking not only reflects athletic excellence but also reveals the exceptional ability of some stars to transform their careers into sustainable business ventures.
Off-the-field revenue: the new centre of gravity
The report confirms that the majority of athletes’ wealth now comes from outside of competition, as the sports industry expands and transforms into a massive entertainment and investment sector.
This shift isn’t limited to retired athletes; it’s also evident among stars still at the peak of their careers, such as Lionel Messi and LeBron James.
Despite the significant increase in player salaries and contracts in the modern era, a number of sports legends have maintained their prominent positions thanks to long-term investments and extensive commercial partnerships.
In terms of distribution, golf and football have the most prominent presence in the top ten.
Highest Earning Players of All Time (according to Sportico):
1. Michael Jordan – €3.011 billion
2. Tiger Woods – €2.503 billion
3. Cristiano Ronaldo – €2.190 billion
4. LeBron James – €1.764 billion
5. Lionel Messi – €1.729 billion
6. Arnold Palmer – €1.607 billion
7. Jack Nicklaus – €1.590 billion
8. David Beckham – €1.460 billion
9. Roger Federer – €1.455 billion
10. Floyd Mayweather – €1.364 billion
Featured image via the Canary
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