Barry Gilheany ✍ It was the most audaciously illegal act ever in US foreign policy. 

In the dead of the night on 3rd January 2026, US forces captured or kidnapped (depending on one’s point of view) President Nicholas Maduro of Venezuela and his wife from their residence in Caracas and flew them to New York - where, in the theatre of performative power and humiliation that we have witnessed in human traffic in the opposite direction namely the deportation of supposedly illegal Latino immigrants and falsely branded criminals to El Salvador’s notorious supermax - to face charges of narcotics supply to the US. 

The overthrow of uncompliant governments in Latin America at the instigation of US agencies is, of course, hardly a rare event in a region where America has always presumed the right to do as it likes to uphold its strategic interests. But this was no half-baked attempt to overthrow a regime using native proxies like the Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961; no coup with a ready mean moustachioed military dictator like Pinochet; no long drawn out insurgency such as the Contra guerrilla campaign against the Sandinista regime in Nicaragua in the 1980s; no transformative blueprint for the reordering of an entire region by democratisation and free markets such as the Project for a New American Century which provided the intellectual ballast for the invasion of Iraq in 2003. No, it was the decapitation of the figure head while the regime continues its repression of the Venezuela population. In an inversion of the language of anti-war movements of the West, “it was all about oil” as Trump made abundantly clear while it was most certainly not about “democracy” which was the message delivered by Trump’s disavowal of any role in any future dispensation for Maria Corina Machado, the leading light of the democratic opposition and winner of the Noble Laureate which Trump so craves while he indicates his desire to cut a deal with the technocratic Vice President, Delcy Rodriguez to ensure US control of Venezuelan oil reserves. No colour revolutions on Trump’s watch.

And there will be no colour revolutions, televised or otherwise, because despite the apparent ideological chasm between Trump and the Chavismo regime that Maduro represented, both belong to the loose but interconnected conglomerate of authoritarian leaders that Anne Applebaum describes as Autocracy Inc. Unlike military regimes and ideological alliances from the past and contemporary hybrid or “illiberal” democracies like Hungary, Turkey or India, this group operates not like a bloc but rather like an agglomeration of companies, cemented not by ideology but instead by a ruthless, single-minded determination to keep their personal privilege and wealth.[1]

Applebaum lists the strongmen leaders of the following countries (at the time of writing): Russia, China, Iran, North Korea, Venezuela, Nicaragua, Angola, Myanmar, Cuba, Syria, Zimbabwe, Mali, Belarus, Sudan, Azerbaijan and maybe three dozen others who share a determination to deprive their citizens of any real influence or public voice, to repel any attempts at transparency or accountability, and to strike out at anyone, at home or abroad, who has the courage to challenge them. The leaders of Autocracy Inc also share a brutally pragmatic approach to wealth. They often maintain opulent residences and structure much of their collaboration as for-profit ventures. Their bonds with one another, and with their friends in the democratic world, are moulded not through ideals but through deals – deals designed to ameliorate the effects of sanctions, to exchange surveillance technology, to help one another get rich.[2] Although the name of the country that he leads is not listed in the above rogues gallery of autocracies, the modus operandi of their mutual collaboration also belong to the toolkit of President Donald Trump. His transactional view of the world, of personal and international relations and his brazen and signal approach towards self-enrichment puts the United States into that club.

Not a few of those autocracies on that list were initially birthed through popular revolutionary or national liberation struggles such as Cuba, Nicaragua, Angola and, most pertinently for this article, Venezuela. For as much as the events of January 3, 2026, are so emblematic of raw American power, they can also be seen as the long-term culmination of a revolution betrayed.

President Hugo Chavez arrived in office in 1998 after a strident campaign for change in the Republic of Venezuela which had been established forty years earlier. Formerly a wealthy, stable democracy, Venezuela had, as is the typical developmental pattern in many oil states, become nepotistic and corrupt with bribery of politicians and kickbacks being given to their friends. With the fall in oil prices in the 1990s, the resultant anger created the conditions for the revolutionary ferment that brought Chavez, a lieutenant-colonel in the Venezuelan army who had led an abortive coup d’etat in 1992, to power in a democratic election in 1998 on a promise to create a more honest Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela. A year later, the new Venezuelan president held a meeting with an old comrade in struggle Jesus Urdenta, his chief of internal police. Urdenta brought to Chavez evidence of corrupt practices in the new, supposedly revolutionary government. He informed him that several top officials in the new government were padding invoices for government contracts, including the printing contract for Chavez’s new constitution. Urdenta urged Chavez to bring an end to such behaviour. After an initial silence, Chavez asked for Urdenta’s resignation and Venuezela’s Supreme Court quashed any investigation into corruption.[3]

So, Chavez made a choice, one which would prove in the long term to be fatal for the legitimacy of the revolution and the Bolivarian Republic. Had he sided with his old comrade and established an expectation of probity in the public sector, then it would have provided a solid ethical and democratic foundations for the undoubtedly popular social programmes that he did institute. But, in an attempt to keep himself in power in perpetuity, he made the calculation that corrupt officials would prove more malleable than clean ones and he was proved right to the long-term detriment of his revolution and his country.[4]

For in the years that followed, cronies of Chavez would support the president’s drive to eliminate any mode of accountability and transparency, both because doing so maintained their stay in power and protected them from scrutiny. Like other budding autocrats like Putin, Orban and Erdogan, Chavez gradually but steadily denuded democratic institutions in Venezuela of autonomy – the press, the courts, the civil service, various regulators, and ombudspersons – even while proclaiming his belief in democracy. His supporters went along with that too and, over time, the state began to act like a criminal enterprise.[5]

And what a gravy train grew for the officials who partook in the skimming off of the Bolivarian Republic’s resources. During the fourteen years Chavez held power, Venezuela took in nearly $800 billion in oil-export revenues, much of which did indeed finance the state welfare programmes which made Chavez such a poster boy for Western leftists like Jeremy Corbyn, erstwhile leader of the British Labour Party. But hundreds of billions of dollars from PDVSA, the state oil company, as well as other Venezuelan state companies, ended up in bank accounts around the world. In 2017. Investigators found that PDVSA officials had been hiding millions of stolen dollars at the Portuguese bank, Banco Espirito Santo. A 2021 investigation revealed that Swiss banks were hiding $10 billion on behalf of officials at Venezuelan state banks, electrical utilities, and other entities. In that same year, journalists uncovered a $2 billion Venezuelan oil company that had been processed through banks in the principality of Andorra.[6]

But graft pervaded the totality of Chavismo society with one of its most important agents being the industry of currency exchange manipulation, created by the state’s byzantine system of multiple currency prices. The beneficiaries of this “democratisation of kleptocracy” included students who gamed the allowance for cheap dollars meant for overseas studies either to profit from the artificial exchange rates abroad or by paying unscrupulous schools to produce paperwork suggesting that they had studied abroad which meant that cheap dollars could be swapped on the black market for many more Venezuelan bolivars than it had cost to buy them, creating for the student “a nice little earner” of a few thousands of dollars in profit. But there were far greater and more egregious players in on this scamocracy who exploited their connections to work out how to claim tens or hundreds of millions of dollars to import spare parts, medical supplies, telecoms equipment, chemicals, computers. If Venezuela needed to import anything, then someone would be generating the false paper trails and making discreet payoffs, just to unlock access to cheap currency. [7]

Behind the allure and bluster of Chavismo propaganda lay an economy and society so weakened by corruption and gross incompetence that it was peculiarly exposed to the effects of turbulence, internally and externally. The cash behemoth that was the oil industry was the first to suffer the shocks that undid the Bolivarian revolution. In 2002-3, Chavez detonated chaos in the industry by sacking 19,000 oil workers for going on strike and replaced experts with regime loyalists. Later, the decline of commodity prices and the imposition of sanctions on the PDVSA by the first Trump administration accelerated the collapse. Almost simultaneously, Venezuela began to experience critical scarcities of everything due to the currency exchange scams. Billions (or maybe tens of billions) of state funds had disappeared into the proverbial black hole, the country’s foreign currency had been siphoned into private offshore accounts, hyperinflation accelerated, and imported goods disappeared.[8]

People without dollars faced hunger and malnutrition if not outright starvation. The Catholic Charity Caritas estimated in 2019 that 78 percent of Venezuelans ate less than they used to, and 41 percent went whole days without eating. Doctors in Venezuelan hospitals faced pressure not to list malnutrition as either a cause of illness or death.[9] Even the most basic commodities disappeared from shelves including, most excruciatingly embarrassing (if such emotions could be held by such uber-kleptocrats) toilet paper.

The death knell for the Bolivarian revolution turned kleptocracy with a faux left tinge should have been sounded by the death of Chavez in 2013 and his replacement by the uncharismatic party functionary Nicholas Maduro. Venezuelans knew the truth of the hollowed-out revolution and the regime it brought to power; corruption seeped from its pores. The accession of Maduro to power ushered in a series of popular, Arab Spring demonstrations across the country and it seemed that the days of the regime were well and truly numbered. However, as Anne Applebaum describes, this was the moment that the regime called in favours from Autocracy Inc.

As well as the common ur garden means of revenue raising by rogue regimes such as drug trafficking, illegal mining, kidnapping, extortion and gasoline smuggling, the Maduro regime was able to find friends and trading partners among other sanctioned states and companies happy to engage in corruption. Russian companies such as Rosneft, Gazprom, Lukoil and TNK-BP (a joint Russian-British venture, at their own behest or at the request of the state, filled the gaps left by departing European, North American and South American firms frightened by the instability and risk, to put money into Venezuelan oil, agriculture and even manufacturing. In addition to subsidised grain exports replacing those previously from Canada and the US and gasoline (the only gasoline available in Venezuela), Moscow supplied Caracas with some $4 billion of arms and armaments, including 100,000 Kalashnikovs, 24 fighter jets, and 50 helicopters to be used in the recurring bouts of repression that characterised the Maduro regime. Complementing such lethal cargo, China has sold surveillance technology, crowd-control equipment, and riot gear to the Maduro government, along with water cannons, tear-gas guns and enormous moveable walls that could block people from joining crowds – all tools that helped prevent the opposition from winning power. China had also been a generous benefactor in the way in which it replaced international institutions wary of lending to Venezuela by providing $30 billion in loans before it cottoned onto the reality that these loans would never be paid back and that an incredibly expensive, Chinese-backed high-speed railway meant to cross Venezuela’s lightly populated southern plains would never be completed due to Venezuelan contractors absconding with the money.[10]

A shared anti-American worldview links Cuba and Venezuela and in return for subsidised Venezuelan oil, Cuba provided soldiers, police officers, security and intelligence experts as sell as sports coaches, doctors, and nurses. A shared feeling of ‘disrespect’ from the democratic world lies behind the personal links between Maduro and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey. Venezuela exports gold to Turkey and receives food in exchange. But the biggest Autocracy Inc relationship that Venezuela has cultivated and developed is with Iran. They relate to each other on the basis of shared anti-American grievance and interest in clandestine petroleum sales. Iranians bought Venezuelan gold and sent food and gasoline in return. Iranians are believed to be advising Venezuela on repressive tactic against dissidents. They helped Venezuela build a drone factory with mixed success and have helped with the repair of Venezuelan oil refineries. In return, the Venezuelans may have helped launder money for the Iranian proxy militia and are believed to have provided passports for Hezbollah and Iranian officials as well.[11]

By tapping into this axis of convenience/corruption/illiberalism (add any suitable adjective) conceptualised by Applebaum as Autocracy Inc, the Maduro regime was able to shamelessly steal elections, bloodily suppress street protests and imprison thousands of political opponents and presumably continue to feather the nests of its entourage of placemen and apparatchiks. 

The ending of Maduro’s term in office by a much more powerful kleptocrat and authoritarian populist who, like Maduro’s predecessor, can speak to his constituency in familiar language, will most likely change nothing on the ground. In many ways, it was an easy win for Trump as his European allies, especially the UK, feels hamstrung in its response due to their perceived need to keep him on board in the defence of Ukraine. Despite all his bluster, it is almost impossible to see him repeating his “success” with, for example, the despotism of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

References

[1] Anne Applebaum (2024), Autocracy Inc. The Dictators Who Want to Run The World. London: Allen Lane p.2

[2] Ibid, p.3

[3] Ibid, pp.43-44

[4] Ibid, pp.44-45

[5] Ibid, p.45

[6] Ibid, pp.45-46

[7] Ibid, pp.46-47

[8] Ibid, pp.48-49
 
[9] Ibid, p.49

[10] Ibid, pp.50-51

[11] Ibid, pp.51-53

Barry Gilheany is a freelance writer, qualified counsellor and aspirant artist resident in Colchester where he took his PhD at the University of Essex. He is also a lifelong Leeds United supporter.

The Day That Changed Everything Yet Nothing 🪶 Trump Captures Maduro But Business As Usual In Venezuela With Regime Unchanged

Lynx By Ten To The Power Of One Thousand Nine Eight Hundred And Forty Nine

 

A Morning Thought @ 3026

Anthony McIntyre  ☠ Each week we gather here in an act of solidarity with the Palestinians of Gaza who for over the past two years have been subjected to a genocidal onslaught. 

Given the very focused Israeli strategy of infanticide, which has resulted in a disproportionately high number of children making up the civilian death toll, we have frequently expressed our horror at the wilful extinguishing of young life. No vigil passes where the fate of children in Gaza fails to get mentioned. Children leaving the only world they will ever have known - some too young to be even cognizant of their surroundings - have taken up a large portion of our psychological world. 

On the particular Saturday, the second West Street vigil of 2026, I would like to shift our gaze away from destruction, desolation, death. Rather than focus on children that have involuntarily left the world, I would like to draw attention to a child that has just come into the world. The new arrival is the son of our esteemed colleague Stephani Kirwan and her partner Ryan Brennan. 

For Drogheda Stands With Palestine, Stephanie, over the past two years, has been a driving force behind what we do. Inspirational, selfless, she has often delivered motivational speeches at these vigils. Often she would be accompanied by her daughter. On at least one occasion, her partner Ryan - fresh from having scored a wonder free kick the previous evening at Athlone during Drogheda United's magnificent and successful cup run - stood on the periphery of the vigil caring for the child while Stephanie spoke with passion and anger.

As a visitor to the Occupied Territories, Stephanie can speak with first hand knowledge of what conditions are like for those forced to live under the jackboot of Israeli occupation. Outside of these weekly vigils she has immersed herself in campaign work which on occasion has taken the form of fundraisers in McHugh's at which she has communicated to her audience the dire need for more people to become involved in opposing the genocide.  

A matter of weeks ago, heavily pregnant, she arrived at my house after which I accompanied her as she went about aid work, on this occasion for a project not associated with Gaza. A truly wonderful human being who, despite now being a mother of two, will continue to reach out to others including the mothers and children in Gaza. For we Drogheda United fans - a few of us here are season ticket holders - Ryan Brenna, as Drogs captain . . . well, he is a great guy too!

Hearty congratulations to both Stephanie and Ryan and a warm welcome to their son, a companion for their daughter to fuss over. 

Follow on Twitter @AnthonyMcIntyre.

A New Arrival

Irish Independent Written by Grace Boland.

As a politician, I hear constant reports of the hurt that nameless hatred can inflict.

Freedom without responsibility is not freedom at all. Yet that is what the online world has become, a space where harm hides behind anonymity and accountability is optional. We would never accept this in our streets, our schools or our workplaces. So why do we tolerate it online?

The online world is not a paral­lel universe. It shapes our relationships, our children’s lives, our politics and our democracy. Yet it remains the only place where we still seriously argue that rules are an attack on freedom, rather than a basic condition of safety.

Much commentary on proposed online safety legislation misses this fundamental point. The objective is not to silence people or to strip citizens of their right to express unpopular views. The objective is to make the digital “public square” safer, fairer and more accountable.

Critics frame the debate as a choice between anonymity and freedom. That is a false choice. We accept limits on behaviour in every other sphere of life without calling it censorship. We have defamation law, public order law and child protection law, not because we want to control speech, but because unregulated behaviour causes real harm.

Continue @ Indo.

Tackling Anonymous Online Abuse Isn’t Censorship 🪶 It’s Common Sense

Dr John Coulter ✍ Whether or not the Ulster Unionist Party holds a leadership contest or coronation at the end of the month, the central issue remains - in what direction is Unionism going?

Whoever becomes leader and deputy leader at the Emergency General Meeting in late January in a Belfast hotel, their primary vision must be to establish Co-operative Unionism in time for the May 2027 Stormont and council elections.

No matter if the new UUP leadership decides on a liberal or traditional ideology for the party, a strategy on the number of candidates and transfers between parties must be the primary concern in its ‘in box’.

Vote splitting, non-transferring and voter apathy in traditionally pro-Union constituencies have seen seats lost to the pan nationalist front of Sinn Fein, the SDLP and Alliance.

If brutal examples were needed, Unionism only needs to examine the results of the last Westminster poll in Lagan Valley, a supposedly rock solid pro-Union seat since its creation in 1983. Because of a three-way split between the DUP, UUP and TUV in the General Election, the seat fell to Alliance.

During the last Stormont showdown, because of poor transferring among pro-Union parties, veteran DUP MLA Mervyn Storey lost out to Alliance in North Antrim.

Indeed, in many normally pro-Union District Electoral Areas (DEAs) across Northern Ireland, voter turnout is starting to dip well below 60 per cent as an increasing number of ‘stay at home’ Unionists lose faith in the ballot box.

Gone are the days when Unionist MPs could boast of a 30,000 plus vote majority in General Elections. Put bluntly, Unionism has allowed the pan nationalist front a free gift at the ballot box. In recent years, too, many in the pro-Union community have been voting Alliance as a protest against the mixed-messaging among the Unionist parties.

However, a clear message must be sent out to moderate Unionism from the UUP’s EGM on 31st January - Alliance is no longer the soft-u Unionist party it was under Oliver Napier, David Cook or John Alderdice.

Alliance 2026 is an integral part of the pan nationalist front and has now become a soft-r republican party, occupying the electoral ground once held by the now defunct Irish Independence Party of the Seventies, which was once fronted by Protestant ex-British Army officer John Turnley before his murder by the UDA in 1980.

If Unionism as an ideology is to regain the upper hand electorally at Assembly, local government and Westminster levels, all the pro-Union parties will have to work together publicly so that Unionist voters can see that co-operation is a practical reality, and not empty rhetoric.

The blame game as to who split Unionism will have to be laid to rest. The bitterness of not voting for other pro-Union parties will have to be set aside and Unionists will have to vote all the way down the ballot paper for every pro-Union candidate on the ticket.

Likewise, the various pro-Union parties will have to realistically analyse how many candidates can be elected according to the pro-Union quotas available, and equally importantly, which pro-Union parties are best placed to either take or hold seats in the Assembly and council in May 2027.

It has been done in the past. For example, in February 1974, operating under the banner of the United Ulster Unionist Council, known as the Treble UC or Unionist Coalition, pro-Union parties scooped up 11 of the 12 Westminster General Election seats.

At that time, the Treble UC represented three main Unionist parties - DUP, UUP and Vanguard. Voter turnout in many constituencies was well over 60 per cent, and over 70 per cent in some seats.

The new UUP leadership will have to create an ethos of Co-operative Unionism, whereby agreed party candidates will have to be stood to ensure increased voter confidence among the pro-Union electorate, and especially the winning of seats at all levels.

Unionism will have to again find the Treble UC Spirit of ’74 strategically if it is to avoid continuing to play second fiddle electorally to the pan nationalist front.

And especially at Northern Ireland Assembly level, Unionism will have to undo the disaster of 20 years ago and the St Andrews Agreement when the top post of First Minister was changed from the largest designation (as under the 1998 Good Friday Agreement) to the largest party.

The mentality of putting party before Province must be confined to the dustbin of history. Unionism must use this year to lobby the British Government to restore ‘largest designation’ to the Stormont First Minister’s role.

The mouthpiece of the Provisional IRA, its political wing Sinn Fein, holds the First Minister’s post as under the St Andrews Agreement, the republican movement is the largest party at Stormont. Indeed, Sinn Fein has eaten so much electorally into the moderate Catholic vote that it has also eclipsed the SDLP as the largest party at council level.

Unionism cannot afford a knee jerk reaction to Sinn Fein being the top dog at the Assembly by calling for Stormont to be scrapped. If devolution falls once more, it will not be replaced by Direct Rule from Westminster, but by Joint Authority between the Dail and the House of Commons.

By 1st February, the UUP will have a new leadership in place. Whatever fancy label they wish to place on their ideology is irrelevant. It will have to be a policy of Co-operative Unionism among all the pro-Union parties that will decide the future direction of Unionism, and ultimately the future role of the UUP.

 
Follow Dr John Coulter on Twitter @JohnAHCoulter
John is a Director for Belfast’s Christian radio station, Sunshine 1049 FM. 

Pathways And Policies, Not Personalities, Will Revive UUP

Lynx By Ten To The Power Of One Thousand Nine Eight Hundred And Forty Eight

 

A Morning Thought @ 3025

Anthony McIntyre đź”–The Scandinoir of Jussi Adler Olsen seems to have taken an upward turn prompted by the success of the gripping Scottish Department Q drama. 


The Mercy plot was simply transported to Scotland where it was acted out impressively by Matthew Goode, Alexej Manvelov and crew.

Revenge is said to be a dish best served cold. Settling scores in the 1980s for transgressions that took place in the 1950s is ample time for the heat to seep out of the revenge dish. Denmark, 1987, and Nete Hermansen is on a mission, although not from god but against those who believed they had the right to exercise godlike powers over others. The victim of abuse decades earlier, she hatched her plan with ruthless precision. Betrayed by so many and ultimately abandoned by her husband for the effects of abuse over which she had no control, the blood from the bodies of one or two people would not be enough to slake Nete's thirst for revenge.

One of the abusers in her sights was Curt Wad, a skilled surgeon who used his expertise to sterilise women and girls who did not live up to his morality police expectations. His contempt for women did not extend to his wife. Here, he was the devoted husband attending to her every need as she slowly succumbs to terminal illness. A moraliser rather than a moralist, in his late eighties, Wad is a true believer heavily involved in a far right wing political movement, the type of which we see increasingly goosestepping its way through European towns and cities. Wad is no Justin Barrett, a figure of ridicule. His Purity Party is serious about its ideology, happy to leave the prancing around in Nazi uniform bit to knaves. For Wad:

It was all a matter of genes, and people with slanting eyes or brown skin had no part in the idealized narrative of flaxen-haired girls and boys with strong muscular frames. Tamils, Pakistanis, Turks, Afghans, Vietnamese, all had to be stopped in the manner of any other invasive impurity. Effectively and without hesitation.

A major site for abuse was a women's home on an island off the coast of Denmark. The Sprogø institution which bore more than a passing resemblance to the Mother and baby homes or industrial schools of Ireland so grossly mismanaged by Septic Sisters and Christian Buggerers.

When the case of a missing brothel owner lands on the cold case desk of Carl Mørck in Department Q, the Copenhagen detective can think of better things to do than solve a missing person case from 1987. His mind changes when it is brought to his attention that the same week that the madam disappeared a number of others had done likewise. Not easily shoved into the coincidence folder, it sets even flu blocked noses twitching. Sprogø is the scene of the crime. In influenza stricken Denmark, Department Q has to clear its nasal passages to get on the Sprogo scent, leading back to a sickness infinitely worse than what is causing Danish sniffles. 

The seasoned follower will slide easily into the narrative of Department Q, by now familiar with the trio at its centre, Morck, Assad, and Rose. With the latter two more layers are peeled away giving the reader more insight into what drives them, even distracts them.

The best is left to the end with a superb WTF dish served up at a feast of the macabre. 

Jussi Adler Olsen, 2014, The Purity Of Vengeance. Publisher: Dutton. ISBN-13: ‎978-0142181317

Follow on Twitter @AnthonyMcIntyre.

The Purity Of Vengeance

Nobel Peace Prize Recommended by Christy Walsh.

It is not possible to revoke a Nobel Peace Prize. Neither Alfred Nobel’s will nor the Statutes of the Nobel Foundation mention any such possibility.

According to the Statutes of the Nobel Foundation, § 10, “No appeals may be made against the decision of a prize-awarding body with regard to the award of a prize”.

None of the prize awarding committees in Stockholm and Oslo has ever considered to revoke a prize once awarded.

As a matter of principle, the Norwegian Nobel Committee will not comment upon what the Peace Prize Laureates may say and do after they have been awarded the prize. The Committee’s mandate is restricted to evaluate the work and efforts of the nominated candidates up to the moment it is decided who shall be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for a given year.

A Nobel Prize can neither be revoked, shared, nor transferred to others. Once the announcement has been made, the decision stands for all time.

This does not prevent the Committee from following the future endeavours of laureates closely, even though it expresses neither its concerns nor its acclamation.

Is It Possible To Revoke A Nobel Peace Prize?

National Secular SocietyCurrent arrangements on non-therapeutic circumcision are "a catastrophic failure of child safeguarding", says NSS.

Following the death of a six-month-old boy, the National Secular Society has again called on the Government to protect children from non-therapeutic male circumcision (NTMC).

Mohamed Abdisamad died in February 2023 from an "Invasive Streptococcus pyogenes infection following male circumcision".

The assistant coroner in the case, Dr Anton van Dellen, sent a prevention of future deaths report to the Department of Health and Social Care last month.

The report notes the complete lack of regulation of NTMC and states: "In my opinion action should be taken to prevent future deaths and I believe you have the power to take such action."

It echoes concerns repeatedly raised by the National Secular Society, which campaigns to protect all children from medically unnecessary genital cutting.

There is no legal requirement for circumcisers to be medically trained or even to have "proven expertise".

Previous calls by NSS to protect boys ignored

In a letter to the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care Wes Streeting today, the NSS again called for Government action to protect boys.

Continue @ NSS.

NSS Calls For Government Action After Latest Circumcision Death

Right Wing Watch đź‘€Written by Kyle Mantyla.


One day after President Donald Trump announced that the U.S. military had captured Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro, MAGA cultist and self-proclaimed "prophet" Hank Kunneman used his Sunday service to announce that God was thrilled by the Trump administration's actions.

Kunneman, a far-right conspiracy theorist who has steadfastly refused to admit that his multiple prophecies that Trump would win the 2020 election were wrong, took to the stage on Sunday to deliver what he claimed was a message from God praising Trump for seizing control of Venezuela's oil.

"They say you have seized Venezuela for the oil," Kunneman proclaimed, purporting to speak on behalf of God. "Yes, this is true."

"The enemy has sought and was seeking to bring war and to bring conflict through Venezuela and to control the oil of the Earth," Kunneman thundered. 

But the spiritual oil and the natural oil does not belong to the forces of darkness or to those who thought that they could bring a One World Order. This is my reset and the oil of the natural and the oil of the spirit is mine, says the Lord.

 

Continue @ Right Wing Watch.

MAGA Cultist Hank Kunneman Claims God Praised Capture Of Nicolás Maduro

Lynx By Ten To The Power Of One Thousand Nine Eight Hundred And Forty Seven