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When Allies Start Hedging: Europe’s Quiet Shift Away from U.S. Dependence

 Europe is no longer treating the United States as a certainty. It is treating it as a variable. I see the shift in policy, not rhetoric. European leaders still speak the language of alliance, but their decisions show caution. The relationship has not broken. It has thinned. The numbers tell the story. The U.S. Inflation Reduction Act, passed in 2022, allocated roughly $369 billion in subsidies for clean energy and manufacturing. European officials warned that these incentives were pulling industry out of Europe. The European Commission responded with its own Green Deal Industrial Plan to retain investment. This was not coordination. It was competition inside an alliance. Energy exposed the deeper imbalance. After the Ukraine war began, Europe cut Russian gas imports sharply. According to the International Energy Agency, U.S. liquefied natural gas became Europe’s largest external supply source in 2023. Prices surged. European industry absorbed the shock. Washington gained leverage....

God’s Aseity and Biblical Revelation: Faith Without Human Authority

  The idea of God’s aseity and biblical revelation forces a hard conclusion. If God is truly self-existent and independent, then human reason is not the final authority on truth. That challenges modern thinking more than most believers admit. Aseity vs Human-Centered Thinking Aseity means God depends on nothing. Not time. Not matter. Not human belief. Yet modern discourse often flips this. It treats human consciousness as the judge of truth. Religion becomes acceptable only when it fits human logic. That is a quiet shift, but a decisive one. The theological position in this piece pushes back. It argues that: God is primary, not human perception Human understanding is limited and derivative Truth flows from God to humans, not the other way around This is not just theology. It is a rejection of intellectual control over the divine. Revelation, Not Discovery The second claim is even sharper. Humans do not “find” God through reason alone. God reveals Himself. That revelation happens th...

America’s Media Is Losing Its Grip on the Israel Narrative

  The U.S. media narrative on Israel is falling out of step with its own audience. The cost is not just credibility at home. It is influence abroad. An editorial illustration capturing the growing gap between U.S. media framing and shifting public perception on Israel and the Middle East conflict For decades, American coverage of Israel followed a stable pattern. Israel sat at the center of the frame. Security concerns led. Political consensus in Washington set the tone. Newsrooms absorbed that structure and reproduced it, often without friction. That alignment is weakening. Recent polling from Pew Research Center indicates a clear generational divide. Younger Americans express significantly more criticism of Israeli military actions than older cohorts. Independent voters are also less inclined to support unconditional U.S. backing. The shift is not marginal. It is structural. Coverage has not kept pace. Mainstream reporting still leans on familiar language and sourcing. Offi...

The Petrodollar Isn’t Collapsing. It’s Being Hedged

 War with Iran is not ending dollar dominance. It is quietly weakening its exclusivity. The Iran conflict is not breaking the dollar system. It is exposing its limits. The Dollar vs BRICS shift is often framed as a revolt. That is the wrong lens. What we are seeing is a hedge. States are not abandoning the dollar. They are preparing for a world where access to it is no longer guaranteed. That distinction matters more than the headlines. The Petrodollar Still Dominates. For Now Start with facts. The U.S. dollar still accounts for roughly 58% of global reserves , according to the International Monetary Fund Most global oil trade continues to be priced in dollars U.S. financial markets remain the deepest and most liquid in the world This is not a collapsing system. It is a system under pressure. Sanctions Changed the Rules of the Game The turning point was not BRICS. It was sanctions. When Russian reserves were frozen and Iran was cut off from global payment systems, somethi...

Israel–Palestine competing narratives

  Two flags, one land, and a deep historical divide. The conflict reflects overlapping histories of survival and displacement. One conflict, two truths. And a debate shaped less by facts than by which history we choose to recognise. The Israel–Palestine competing narratives do not clash over dates or documents. They clash over memory. One side begins with persecution in Europe and ends with survival. The other begins with displacement and continues with loss. Both claims draw from real history. Yet public arguments often present only one. Jewish migration to the region did not start in a vacuum. Violence in Eastern Europe, especially in the Pale of Settlement, pushed many toward Zionism as a response to insecurity. By the early twentieth century, tens of thousands of Jews had settled in Ottoman and later British-controlled Palestine. Between 1882 and 1914 alone, roughly 60,000 Jewish immigrants arrived in successive waves, known as Aliyahs. Land acquisition followed legal channels ...

Wars Don’t End at the Front. They End at the Ballot Box.

  Election cycle impact on war decisions is rarely stated plainly. It should be. Wars that look sustainable on paper often meet their limit at home. Not in a battlefield report. In a voter’s mood. When fuel prices rise, when inflation bites, when deployments stretch, political timelines begin to matter as much as military ones. That shift is subtle. Then it becomes decisive. The Pattern That Keeps Repeating Recent history offers a consistent sequence. The Vietnam War did not end because one side ran out of weapons. It ended when domestic opposition made continuation politically untenable. The Iraq War saw support erode as costs mounted and timelines extended. The War in Afghanistan concluded after years of public fatigue and shifting political priorities. In each case, the battlefield mattered. The ballot box decided. This is not an anomaly. It is a structural feature of democratic systems. The Economic Trigger: Prices That Voters Notice Voters do not track force posture or logisti...

Airports Are Getting Harder to Navigate. Seniors Are Paying the Price

Air travel in 2026 demands speed, awareness, and digital readiness—leaving many older passengers exposed to new risks.   Air travel risks for seniors are rising in 2026, and the shift is not accidental. Airports did not become harder overnight. The system changed, quietly, and older travelers are now absorbing the cost. A missed flight here. A stolen phone there. A wrong car at pickup. It looks like individual mistakes. It is not. Air travel now runs on tighter margins and faster turnover. Airlines close boarding doors up to 20 minutes before departure , even when passengers are still in the terminal. The Transportation Security Administration screens more than 2.5 million passengers daily , yet staffing and lane structures have not kept pace with demand. Something else changed. PreCheck lanes, once predictable, are now merged at some airports. Wait times that used to be under 10 minutes can stretch past 30. That gap matters. Fraud patterns shifted too. According to the Federal ...