Hitler felt that Jews should be destroyed. Whites in South Africa felt that apartheid was right, that blacks shouldn’t be allowed to use white bathrooms or white restaurants or go to white businesses or live in white neighborhoods. Feelings cannot determine what is right.
If There Is No God: The Battle Over Who Defines Good and Evil
Does the government create wealth?
People are often told that only the private sector creates wealth and that government simply wastes taxpayers' money.
That claim is everywhere in modern political debate. It underpins austerity. It justifies privatisation. And it shapes how people think about the economy.
But it is wrong.
In this video, I explain what wealth really is and how it is actually created. Wealth is not just private profit. It includes infrastructure, education, health, security, and social stability.
Historically, public enterprise built much of modern Britain. Local government created the systems that allowed private enterprise to function: sewers, electricity networks, public transport, housing, and water systems.
I also explain the money myth that underpins many of these arguments. In a modern monetary economy, government spending creates money first, and taxation later helps manage inflation. Public spending can therefore increase national wealth rather than destroy it.
The real issue is not public versus private. The real issue is whether economic activity meets social need and maintains the capitalon which our society depends.
If we want a better economy, we need to rebuild public enterprise and reject the myth that only private companies create wealth
Defence begins at home
Politicians talk endlessly about defence spending, weapons, and armies. But the first line of defence in any country is not military hardware. It is the stability of the society itself.
Do people feel secure?
Do they trust their institutions?
Do they believe government works for them?
When living standards fall, housing becomes unaffordable, and public services collapse, a country becomes divided and fragile. And a fragile society cannot defend itself.
Disinformation on U.S.-Iran war takes over the internet
Mashable: “Before the dust had settled on the ruins of the Shajareh Tayyebeh school — a casualty of the recent U.S.-Israel military strikes against Iran, and one which resulted in the deaths of up to 168 adults and children — people were already engagement-farming online. Clips of digital flight simulators were passed off as real-time ops footage, while out-of-context images of battleships and old videos of aerial missile attacks were repurposed to sell users a tale of Iranian dominance. AI-edited content proliferated. According to experts, the posts had accumulated hundreds of millions of views in just a handful of days…”
Trump administration says it can’t process tariff refunds because of computer problems
CNBC: “U.S. Customs and Border Protectiontold a U.S. Court of International Trade judge on Friday that it is not currently able to comply with his order to begin refunding about $166 billion collected in reciprocal tariffs imposed last year by President Donald Trump. CBP, in a court filing, cited its existing technology, processes and manpower requirements as the reasons it could not immediately comply with the conditions of Judge Richard Eaton’s order on the so-called IEEPA tariffs. The Supreme Court recently ruled those duties are illegal. But CBP also suggested in the new filing that it could begin issuing refunds by late April after revamping its technology. Brandon Lord, executive director of the trade programs directorate at CBP’s Office of Trade, in the filing said that as of Wednesday, more than 330,000 importers have made a total of over 53 million entries “in which they have deposited or paid duties imposed pursuant to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.” Trump had invoked that act to slap reciprocal tariffs in various amounts on imported products from most of the world’s countries, without authorization from Congress…”
Jeffrey Epstein liked to run in powerful circles.
The trove of emails and documents released by the Justice Department in January show Epstein maintained connections to a wide swath of famous people — from Elon Musk and Bill Gates to Bill Clinton and Donald Trump.
But Epstein’s own inner circle — unlike his social and professional ones — was kept small and relatively anonymous, while they facilitated his day-to-day operations as a mysteriously wealthy financier.
Inside Jeffrey Epstein’s inner circle — the aides, lawyers and confidantes who ran his world





