MMR and MMRV Vaccines Linked to 2,657% More U.S. Deaths Than Measles Infection Since 1995

We found an alarming number of deaths among infants and toddlers shortly after MMR/MMRV vaccination in VAERS — often involving SIDS, seizures, and cardiac arrest.

For decades, Americans have been told that measles represents a grave and ongoing threat — and that MMR vaccination is one of the safest and most effective interventions in modern medicine. Pharma-captured mass media and public health agencies have centered almost exclusively on the minimal dangers of measles infection and ignored grieving parents whose children were injured or even killed by the shots. No proper attention has been paid to signals emerging within the federal government’s own vaccine safety database.

Now, our new McCullough Foundation study titled “Deaths Following MMR and MMRV Vaccination in the United States,” authored by Kirstin Cosgrove, Breanne Craven, Claire Rogers, John A. Catanzaro, Albert Benevides, M. Nathaniel Mead, Mila Radetich, Peter A. McCullough, and Nicolas Hulscher (myself), takes a comprehensive look at reported fatal outcomes following MMR and MMRV vaccination in the United States, doing the work that our public health agencies should have done many years ago.

After analyzing VAERS data through August 29, 2025, we identified a serious mortality safety signal following MMR/MMRV vaccination in the United States.What we observed was not a diffuse or randomly scattered pattern across age groups and time intervals. Instead, we found an alarming number of deaths among infants and toddlers within days of receiving MMR/MMRV vaccines, sharply clustered in the routine first-dose window.

Most fatalities appeared to involve acute deterioration following vaccination, with manifestations including fever, seizures, and cardiac arrest at home, frequently culminating in classification as Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS). A small proportion survived hospitalization but were unable to be resuscitated.

Perhaps most striking is the broader context. Since 1995, there have been 193 U.S. MMR/MMRV vaccine-associated death reports with identifiable dates, compared to 7 measles infection–associated deaths recorded in the United States during the same period. That represents a 2,657% higher count of reported vaccine-associated deaths than measles deaths in the modern era.

Here’s a full breakdown of our findings:

Total MMR/MMRV Death Reports Identified in VAERS

Using the MedAlerts interface to query VAERS from inception through August 29, 2025, we identified:

  • 536 total global reports of death following MMR or MMRV vaccination
  • 299 reports explicitly attributed to the United States (focus of this study)

VAERS is widely recognized to be substantially underreported. A federally funded investigation led by Lazarus et al. found that fewer than 1% of vaccine adverse events may be reported to national surveillance systems. In other words, VAERS captures only a small fraction of total adverse outcomes.

Measles Vaccinations Vs. Measles Infection

Since 1995:

  • 193 U.S. MMR/MMRV death reports with identifiable dates
  • 7 measles infection–associated deaths in the United States (CDC surveillance)

This represents a 2,657% higher count of reported vaccine-associated deaths compared to measles deaths over the same period.

This is absolutely absurd. A vaccine should NEVER be deadlier than the disease.

Mortality Concentrated in the First-Dose Age Window

Among the 299 U.S. reports:

  • 182 deaths (60.9%) occurred in children under age 2
  • 156 deaths (52.2%) occurred between 1.0–1.5 years of age

That 1.0–1.5 year age band corresponds precisely to the routine 12–15 month first MMR dose.

Rather than a gradual distribution across childhood, we observed a sharp concentration during the narrow developmental window when the first dose is typically administered. The age clustering was pronounced and non-uniform.

Most Deaths Occurred Within Two Weeks

Time-to-death analysis demonstrated a strongly front-loaded distribution:

  • 120 deaths (40.1%) occurred within 7 days
  • 158 deaths (52.8%) occurred within 14 days

Among first-week deaths with available age data, 68.6% occurred in children 1.0–1.5 years old, reinforcing the synchronization between age peak and immediate post-vaccination timing.

The highest concentration of deaths occurred in the immediate days following vaccination — not months or years later.

Majority Occurred During Multi-Vaccine Visits

We also examined concomitant vaccine exposure:

  • 74.6% of deaths followed visits involving MMR/MMRV plus one or more additional vaccines
  • 25.4% followed MMR/MMRV alone

Recurring Clinical Presentations

Clinical features preceding death showed recurring patterns:

  • 24% SIDS or sudden unexplained death
  • 15% fever
  • 12% seizures
  • 8% cardiac arrest
  • 7% respiratory distress
  • 3% encephalitis

Notably, 68% of SIDS cases occurred in the 1.0–1.5 year age group, mirroring the first-dose window.

Additionally:

  • 23.7% involved emergency department visits
  • 25.4% involved hospital admissions

Many cases involved documented acute clinical deterioration prior to death.

Taken together, these findings cannot be brushed aside as coincidence or statistical noise. The clustering across age, timing, vaccination context, and recurring clinical presentations forms a coherent and internally consistent signal of death within the federal reporting system itself.

As our study concluded:

We identified a serious mortality safety signal following MMR/MMRV vaccination in the United States. A substantial number of reported deaths were documented, with patterns demonstrating pronounced alignment across age, temporality, routine-dose timing, concomitant vaccine exposure, and recurring clinical presentations—including fever, seizures, SIDS, and cardiac arrest.

Reported deaths were predominantly concentrated in children under 2 years of age, and the majority occurred within the first 14 days following vaccination. The synchronization of age-specific clustering with immediate post-vaccination timing reflects a non-random pattern of mortality. This concern is further amplified by the stark contrast between reported vaccine-associated deaths and the exceedingly rare number of measles infection–associated deaths in the modern era.

The magnitude, concentration, and temporal proximity of these reports demand rigorous, transparent, and fully independent evaluation. Future research should prioritize active surveillance cohort studies, detailed autopsies with virologic testing, and record-linked datasets capable of assessing background mortality and determining causal relationships.

[…]

Via https://www.globalresearch.ca/mmr-mmrv-vaccines-more-us-deaths-measles-infection/5916326

Taliban Joins Axis of Resistance

The Taliban is once again making headlines when they recently declared that they will back Iran if, or when the US and Israel launch an attack on the country.

According to a recent report,

Zabihullah Mujahid, the chief spokesman for the Taliban‑led government in Afghanistan, has said that Afghans are prepared to “cooperate and show sympathy” with the people of Iran if the United States launches a military attack” continued, “Speaking in an interview with the Pashto service of Radio Iran, Mujahid stated that if Tehran requests assistance in the event of a U.S. attack, Afghanistan’s people are ready —within their capacity — to offer cooperation and solidarity.”

Mujahid mentioned Iran’s victory in the 12-day war against the US-Israel attacks back in June saying that Tehran “was victorious in the 12‑day war” and would prevail again because it “has the capability, is in the right, and has the right to defend itself.”

The Jerusalem Post reported that

“In January 2025, the Taliban’s Foreign Minister, Mawlawi Amir KhanMuttaqi, hosted a delegation in Kabul led by Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi to discuss multiple issues, including water resources, Afghan migrants, and security of the shared borders.”

Araghchi met with high-level officials of the Taliban-led government including Mohammad Hassan Akhund to most likely, increase cooperation between Afghanistan and Iran.

It was reported by The Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) in the Long War Journal section, which is a Zionist-based think-tank in Washington, D.C. that on June 13thTaliban spokesman Mujahid had released a statement declaring that

“The Taliban has condemned Israeli strikes on Iranian soil, including the elimination of nuclear personnel, denouncing the attacks as “actions that flagrantly violate the core tenets of international law.”

Mujahid also had criticized Israel and its war on the Gaza Strip,

“These actions unfold at a time when the oppressed people of Palestine, particularly in Gaza, endure relentless and devastating assaults, with the occupying regime persisting in these activities in defiance ofhumanitarian and international norms.”

The Taliban Has Experience in Defeating US Forces

The 911 false-Flag terror attack was eventually blamed on Osama Bin Laden and the US created Al-Qaeda network. So on October 7th, 2001, the Bush regime authorized the US military and their allies to invade Afghanistan to dismantle the Taliban under Operation Enduring Freedom which was supported by the majority of the US population who was in shock after the attacks on the World Trade Center in NYC and the Pentagon. The US and its allies including the UK, Canada and Australia began with a major air campaign attacking cities in Afghanistan including Kabul, Kandahar and Jalalabad with various military aircraft including F- 14’s, F-18s, B-1s, B-2s and B-52 bombers. All sorts of bombs and cruise missiles were also used by the US and British Navies. Special operation forces from the US and UK were also on the ground during the operation.

However, the ‘Graveyard of Empires’ added the US empire to its list as the Taliban regained its power after the US withdrew its military on August 15, 2021. The US government spent more than $2.3 trillion on the war with over 2,400 U.S. military deaths and more than 20,000 injured. Under the Trump regime, the US military left behind billions of dollars of military equipment (which the Taliban now owns) in a botched attempt to exit Afghanistan.

The Trump regime has indirectly inspired the Taliban to take-up arms along with Yemen, Lebanon (Hezbollah) and Iraqi resistance groups if they decide to attack Iran. World War III is now a reality that will change the geopolitics of the world as Trump is getting close to making a rash decision to attack Iran. The question is, what is the Trump regime willing to do to remain a hegemonic power in the Middle East and beyond when the growing resistance is prepared to fight until the end? Will Washington decide to use a nuclear weapon on the Middle East if they realize that they are about to lose the war?

[…]

Via https://www.globalresearch.ca/taliban-joins-axis-resistance/5916556

Was Climate Change The Greatest Financial Scandal In History?

Zero Hedge

Environmental scholar Bjorn Lomborg recently calculated that across the globe, governments have spent at least $16 trillion feeding the climate change industrial complex.

And for what?

Arguably, not a single life has been or will be saved by this shameful and colossal misallocation of human resources.

The war on safe and abundant fossil fuels has cost countless lives in poor countries and made those countries poorer by blocking affordable energy.

Since the global warming crusade started some 30 years ago, the temperature of the planet has not been altered by one-tenth of a degree—as even the alarmists will admit.

In other words, $16 trillion has been spent—a lot of people got very, very rich off the government largesse—but there is not a penny of measurable payoff.

But it’s much worse than that.

In economics there is a concept called opportunity cost: What could we have done with $16 trillion to make the world better off?

What if the $16 trillion had been spent on clean water for poor countries?

Preventing avoidable deaths from diseases like malaria?

Building schools in African villages to end illiteracy?

Bringing reliable and affordable electric power to the more than 1 billion people who still lack access? Curing cancer?

Many millions of lives could have been saved.

We could have lifted millions more out of poverty.

The benefits of speeding up the race for the cure for cancer could have added tens of millions of additional years of life at an economic value in the tens of trillions of dollars.

Instead, we effectively poured $16 trillion down the drain.

For this reason, it is important that we identify the green “climate change” derangement syndrome as perhaps the most inhumane political movement in history.

The one sliver of good news is that it appears the climate change neuroses have finally started to subside. We’ve reached peak global warming craziness in the U.S., for sure, and even Europe seems to have turned its back on its economically masochistic net zero fossil fuels obsession.

Donald Trump is wisely and rapidly dismantling the climate change industrial complex.

Of all his pro-growth economic policies, there may be none with a higher longtime payoff than his recent order to repeal the mother of all costly regulations: the anti-fossil fuels “endangerment rule” taxing carbon dioxide emissions. The cost of that regulation had been estimated to exceed $1 trillion over time.

We can’t recapture the $16 trillion wasted on a false crisis. Sunk costs are, alas, sunk.

But we can stop the madness of actually believing that politicians who can’t even pay off the balance on their credit cards can somehow change the world’s temperature.

[…]

Via https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/was-climate-change-greatest-financial-scandal-history

Third US citizen killed by feds revealed

Third US citizen killed by feds revealed

 

RT

Ruben Ray Martinez was shot during a traffic stop in Texas last year, according to newly released documents

Newly released documents show that a US immigration agent shot and killed an American citizen in Texas in 2025, marking the third known death linked to immigration enforcement operations, multiple media outlets have reported.

The incident happened months before the shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents in Minneapolis in January during President Donald Trump’s sweeping immigration crackdown. The killings ignited a renewed wave of outrage against the effort.

Ruben Ray Martinez, 23, was killed by a federal agent in South Padre Island in March 2025, multiple news outlets wrote on Friday, citing internal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) documents recently released by the nonprofit watchdog American Oversight. ICE agents were reportedly carrying out immigration enforcement operations in conjunction with local police.

Martinez was shot after he “intentionally ran over a Homeland Security Investigation special agent” during a traffic stop, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said in a statement cited by multiple outlets.

At the time, local media reported the incident as an officer-involved shooting, but the involvement of federal agents was not revealed until after the internal report was released earlier this week.

Democratic Texas Congressman Joaquin Castro has accused ICE of burying the incident.

“I am calling for a full investigation into this shooting, including why there was an 8-month cover up,” he wrote on X on Saturday.

Martinez’s death would mark the earliest of the three known killings of US citizens linked to Trump’s nationwide immigration crackdown since the start early in his second term.

Last month’s killings of Good and Pretti caused public outrage, prompting border czar Tom Homan to downsize the force of federal agents deployed in Minneapolis.

Speaking to NBC news earlier in February, Trump acknowledged that his administration could have used a “little bit of a softer touch,” but insisted that the immigration crackdown is targeting “really hard criminals.”

Around half of the 1.6 million illegal immigrants with final deportation orders are convicted criminals, acting ICE Director Todd Lyons said last week.

Nevertheless, public support for the crackdown has declined, according to a recent Ipsos poll conducted for the Washington Post and ABC News and published on Friday. Around 58% of Americans feel that the deportations are “going too far,” while 62% oppose the aggressive tactics employed by ICE, it found.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/632871-third-us-citizen-killed-by-feds/

How the Epstein Files Are Rewriting Our Reality

Jeffrey Epstein Files: After Phase 1, Will There Be Phase 2 And 3? What ...

The Epstein files do not represent a scandal to be managed. They represent a structural revelation: that the post-World War II liberal international order, with its claims to moral authority and universal justice, has completely collapsed under the weight of its own contradictions. What remains is raw power, operating without ideological justification, without institutional accountability, without even the pretense of equal justice.
— Dr. Zarqa Parvez

I hope everyone understands the we are in the midst of the most significant political event since the assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963. In fact, the release of the Epstein files is even more significant. The 1963 coup was a consolidation and intensification of a system of power that goes back centuries (at least). The Epstein files are its undoing.

I say that in the spirit of prophecy, not prediction. Predictions relegate us to the role of passive observers of likelihoods; prophecies come true only if we make them true. A prophecy comes true only if we recognize the possibility it illuminates, and participate in its fulfillment.

The material in the Epstein Files so severely violates the stories that scaffold our society that there is no way to accept it and keep those stories intact.

Yet there is no way to reject it either. The material is too public, too accessible, too horrifying, and too credible. The dark reality the files portray has escaped its exile to the hinterlands of “conspiracy” to run amok in the general public mind. It is like a herd of feral pigs that have burst through a hole in the manor walls and are now rampaging through the gardens, uprooting the shrubbery, tearing down the trellises, defecating on the croquet lawns, and wallowing in the flowerbeds.

They cannot be contained. The taint of corruption leaves no institution untouched. Not academia. Not the media. Not the FBI or the intelligence services. Not Congress. Not global NGOs. Not the justice system. Not the transnational corporations and banks. Not the Trump administration (it will fall) nor any of its predecessors. The entire elite establishment is implicated in Epstein’s depravity—some through direct association with him, and the rest by letting it happen and then covering it up.

The situation is much like that of an abusive family. It appears normal from the outside, but it carries a dark secret, a hell behind its closed doors. Everyone in the family knows what’s going on, at least half-consciously, but no one speaks of it. It cannot be spoken because it is unspeakable. To speak it would be to destroy the story of the family. It would violate agreed-upon reality. Some pretend not to know. Some know and do not speak.

That has been true of our media, law enforcement, and most of those within or adjacent to the circles of power. Many did not speak because they believed—with good reason—they would be dismissed as crazy, or silenced even more drastically. It is the very definition of insanity to deny what everyone agrees is real. So it is in a family, and so it is in the larger human family.

In neither case, though, is any healing, any real change, possible unless the secrets come to light. No new reality can be built while the old one still stands. That is where authentic hope lies, in the voicing of the unspeakable. What the Epstein files reveal in the elite echelons of society is not confined there. It is rife throughout, in any situation where the operation of power is hidden from view.

What is disintegrating now is much bigger than institutions and systems. It is their fundamental legitimacy, the credibility of those authorities who tell us what is real and what is not, what is possible and what is not, what is crazy and what is sane. The collapse goes deeper still: normalcy itself is disintegrating, the basic mythology that defines what normal even is, and the mythology of modernity, of progress, of a society that has risen above medieval barbarism toward enlightened values and democratic ethics—the mythology of “the West.” All of these are crashing down. It is as if reality itself were breaking.

Thus we are entering what I call “the space between stories.” The old story that told us who and what to trust, that narrated past and future, that told us how to conduct ourselves as responsible members of society, that defined what is real and who we are, is collapsing. “I don’t know what’s real anymore” is the hallmark of this space between.

A new and true story may arise from the wreckage of the old, but that will take time, and we must be available to receive it. Right now we are vulnerable to hasty substitutes for the collapsing old story that offer temporary relief from the bewilderment and vertigo of the space between. These substitutes beguile us with tidy explanations of what is happening, a new story-of-the-world to replace the old, but n fact they are the old, in disguise. If we allow them to seduce us, humanity will endure another cycle of horror. We must resist ready explanations until more of the unspeakable has been spoken.

[…]

If, on the other hand, we pass this initiatory threshold, we will enter a new era of civilization. For one thing, the same elites who raped and tortured children also presided over a global system of war, genocide, and exploitation whose victims are no less pitiable. Is it really so different, to sacrifice a child in a Satanic ritual to further one’s personal power, as it is to sacrifice whole populations for geopolitical power? Both are outcroppings of the same mindset, the same dehumanization and instrumentalization of human beings. The lies that shroud each draw on a common source: the legitimacy of the elites, their institutions, and the story-of-the-world that elevates them. When one crumbles, so will the other.

Secondly and more importantly, waiting just outside of the carefully-guarded borders of official reality is knowledge that can revitalize humanity and all life on earth. The same breach in the wall through which the feral pigs of pedophilia, human trafficking, rape, murder, satanic ritual, and financial and political corruption are invading public awareness will also allow more welcome exiles to enter. What will this world become when we bring in all that has been suppressed? Circular economy money systems. Mind-body technologies. UAP technologies. Psychedelic therapies. Indigenous practices of ritual, dream, sound, story, and ceremony. Over-unity energy devices? What happens when “alternative” healing modalities come into their own? Regenerative agriculture? Bioremediation of waste? Ecosystem healing? And social technologies too, of inquiry and listening, conflict resolution, compassionate dialog. And what happens when we fully countenance the reality of extraterrestrial civilizations, of telepathy and ESP, of the continuity of consciousness after death? We will be able to create together the more beautiful world our hearts have always known is possible.

I’m quite tired of holding knowledge of all of the above against the assault of “impractical,” “Impossible,” “delusional,” “fake,” “fraud,” and “debunked.” From personal experience and decades of study I know they are real, yet we have lived in a reality-story-agreement field in which they are not. That is starting to change.

It’s not only that the guardians of official reality suppressed research and even eliminated researchers who challenged the interests of the energy industry, the medical industry, the chemical industry, and so forth. They also enforced the paradigms in which such technologies were impossible. They dictated not only what was real, but what could be real. Some of this suppression was conscious and deliberate, but much was unconscious, instinctive, driven by mythic and archetypal forces. When we understand this we can avoid one of the most dangerous traps that would shunt us back into a new iteration of the old story. The trap is to confuse symptom and cause; in this case, to believe that evil individuals are the cause of humanity’s present degradation and suffering. They are not. They too are symptoms.

The old story, the Story of Separation, narrates human progress as an ascent toward greater and greater control—over nature, the body, society, the genes, the brain, biology, matter. Control is the solution to every problem. Find the culprit. Find the pathogen. Find the cause, preferably the single cause, of a problem, and then you know how to solve it. Spray those bugs, kill those weeds, quarantine the contagious, eliminate the pathogen, lock up the criminals, bomb the enemy into oblivion. Problem solved. This is the habit that allows the public to be so easily manipulated into fighting against itself—just define two sides and tell each that the cause of their problems is the other. Shall we unite and turn that same habit against the manipulators themselves? Better that than incinerate our energy in civil warfare. But it is still the same habit, the same reflex. It never asks, What are the conditions that breed weeds and pests, criminals and enemies? Leaving those conditions unchanged, it leads to endless war, always a new superbug, a new crop of criminals or terrorists. So also will it ensure someday, and probably sooner than we think, a new crop of elite monsters.

[…]

Via https://charleseisenstein.substack.com/p/reality-is-breaking

Why the Right of Palestinian Return is Still the Issue

Last week, Israel “reopened” the Rafah crossing. Twelve Palestinians were allowed to return home. Twelve people who chose to return to Gaza, despite knowing they might be killed again, because they would rather die on their land than live as strangers in countries that will never be home. This followed a “master plan” for Gaza submitted by Israel and the United States for Gaza which both rejected Palestinian input and omitted widespread Palestinian return as an option. And then news broke that Omar Shakir from Human Rights Watch resigned after a report his team produced on the Palestinian Right of Return was killed by his own organization.

At a time when return is most critical to Palestinian survival, the world is working to make it seem impossible and punishing those who would advocate for it. Every “peace plan” offers Palestinians everything except the one thing that matters: the right to go home. All these recent stories show us that the question of Palestinian return to their land continues to be a question of whether Palestinians are allowed to exist as a people at all.

The right of return is the right of Palestinians who were expelled or forced to flee their homes in 1948 and after to return to those homes, to reclaim their property, and to live there in dignity. It is an individual and collective right recognized under international law that does not expire over time, through political negotiation, or with changes in sovereignty.

But the right of return is more than an obscure legal right. The right of return is inseparable from our identity as Palestinians and is necessary for our right to determine our future.

Where I live in Michigan, there is a child from Gaza who is receiving treatment for a prosthetic leg through HEAL Palestine. When I spoke to him, he told me all of his entire extended family who had been martyred during the genocide, except for one brother. But he still wants to go back to Gaza, to rebuild, and to one day die where his family died.

Why would anyone choose this? Why would someone who lost everything return to a place that has seemingly lost everything, too? Why does this specific land matter so much that people would rather die there than live safely somewhere else?

For Palestinians, land is not a passive setting for life. It is the fabric of Palestinian existence itself, woven into identity, memory, and continuity across generations. I haven’t been home in many years, but I still remember the way the sun feels on my skin there. How the warmth somehow feels warmer. How the scent of olive trees and yansoon makes every corner store and outside market feel like home. To be Palestinian is to carry your name and your country in your blood, as Mahmoud Darwish wrote, it is to “suffer from incurable malady: Hope.”

The Palestinians in Gaza, who have survived two years of genocidal bombardment, still wake up every morning Palestinian. Still teach their children Arabic. Still tell them stories about villages their great-grandparents loved. The Palestinians in the West Bank plant olive trees, knowing they may never harvest them, because planting is an act of faith in the future. They rebuild homes that get demolished because they have no other choice. They have children because raising Palestinian children is a revolution in itself to those who claim there is no such thing as Palestinians.

When the Nakba started in 1948, over 750,000 Palestinians were expelled, over 50% of the total Palestinian population at the time. Over 400 villages were destroyed, and over 70% of Historic Palestine was stolen. As Rabea Eghbariah argues, the Nakba is a daily violence that encompasses the displacement, occupation, apartheid, and genocide, concurrently and simultaneously.

The Nakba fragmented the Palestinian people demographically, severed them from territorial integrity, and destroyed the social infrastructure necessary for collective governance. Families were scattered across refugee camps in Lebanon, Jordan, and Syria. Communities were broken apart, with some ending up in the West Bank, some in Gaza, some in what became Israel, and some fleeing to the diaspora. This fragmentation made it so that Palestinian self-determination would be impossible, as we could not govern as a unified people.

.The refugee camp was supposed to be temporary, but it became permanent. The Oslo Accords were supposed to lead to statehood. They delivered 30 years of expanding settlements and deepening apartheid. Every framework offered to Palestinians has demanded that we accept less than what was stolen. Every negotiation has started from the premise that 1948 is the past, that what happened then is too far gone to correct, that Palestinians should accept what exists now, and move forward. But you cannot have Palestinian self-determination without addressing the Nakba, because the Nakba is ongoing.

You cannot have Palestinian self-determination without the right of return.

Palestinian self-determination cannot exist without return because there is no Palestinian people separable from Palestine. Palestinian identity is inseparable from this specific land: from Jaffa’s oranges and Haifa’s sea, from the olive groves of Jenin and the hills of Jerusalem. To say Palestinians can have self-determination somewhere else is to say Palestinians can cease to be Palestinian and become something else entirely.

Self-determination is defined under international law as the right of peoples to freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social, and cultural development. But for Palestinians, this cannot happen in exile. Our economic development was tied to agriculture, with specific crops and seasons on specific land. Our social development was structured around village life and extended family networks rooted in place. Our cultural development emerged from the landscape itself, our poetry about olive trees, our cuisine built from what the land provided, and our entire way of being in the world was shaped by the geography we came from.

The claim that Palestinians can exercise self-determination in a truncated state on 22% of historic Palestine, or in refugee camps, or in diaspora, is a claim that Palestinians can be severed from what makes us Palestinian.

For Palestinians, Return is self-determination. It is the claim that we remain a people tied to that specific territory, that our exile doesn’t expire. Almost eight decades of displacement have fragmented us demographically, but it has not destroyed the fundamental truth that we belong to that land and it belongs to us.

This is why the right of return remains the ultimate test for supporting Palestinians. Return requires acknowledging that Israel is a settler colony built on ethnic cleansing. That the “only democracy in the Middle East” is actually an apartheid state. That is what happened in 1948 is the foundational crime that structures everything that has happened since.

Supporting return means accepting that stealing land does not become legal just because you hold it long enough and kill enough of its people. It means accepting that indigenous peoples have claims to their land that survive occupation, that persist through genocide, that cannot be extinguished by time or violence. And peace requires justice, and justice requires return, and return requires admitting that the entire Zionist project was built on a crime that must be corrected.

Israel claims return is impossible. But in Rwanda, the “inalienable right” of Tutsi refugees to return after 34 years in exile was recognized, even though their return would shift the country’s ethnic balance. Bosnia made refugee return a central part of its peace agreement, stating that “all refugees and displaced persons have the right freely to return to their homes of origin.” Cyprus has upheld Greek Cypriot return claims for 50 years despite Turkish occupation. Kosovo included in its 2008 constitution a provision recognizing the right of all citizens who lived there before 1998 to return, regardless of current citizenship or political loyalties.

These precedents prove return is possible. Return is only impossible if you insist on maintaining the crime that created displacement in the first place.

Over 70,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza, averaging 91 deaths per day for 24 months. Independent estimates show the death toll reaching 680,000, primarily women and children. 70% of all structures in Gaza have been destroyed or damaged, including 92% of housing. Every single university has been bombed. 95% of schools have been damaged or destroyed. Almost 1,600 healthcare workers have been murdered. Over 1,000 Palestinians seeking aid have been shot and killed by Israeli forces.

We will return to this. To cities reduced to rubble. To fields poisoned by white phosphorus. To water systems destroyed. To hospitals bombed. We will return to graves we must dig up to rebury properly. Palestinians will return to the absence of everyone they loved who didn’t survive. Palestinians will return to land that has been soaked in our blood for 78 years.

And we will rebuild. Because that is what Palestinians do. We refuse to disappear, and we will return because we never left. But we will not return as grateful refugees begging for shelter in our own homeland. We will return as a people who survived genocide, who resisted ethnic cleansing, who refused to be erased. We will return with our dignity intact and our rights uncompromised, because anything less perpetuates the colonial logic that created this catastrophe.

[…]

Via https://www.globalresearch.ca/palestinian-right-return-issue/5916423

Epstein estate to pay $35 million to settle sex abuse claims

Epstein estate to pay $35 million to settle sex abuse claims

RT

The estate of the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein has agreed to pay up to $35 million to settle a class-action lawsuit, according to a court filing from Thursday.

The suit accused two of the financier’s advisers of aiding and abetting his sex trafficking of young women and teenage girls.

The lawsuit was initially filed in 2024 against Darren Indyke and Richard Kahn, both of whom served for years as Epstein’s personal lawyer and accountant, respectively.

Boies Schiller Flexner, the law firm representing Epstein’s alleged victims, announced the settlement in a filing in a federal court in Manhattan. Under the terms of the proposed settlement, Epstein’s estate would also be joined as a defendant in the case.

The settlement, reached with Indyke and Kahn, aims to “finally, and forever” resolve claims from victims who say they were “sexually assaulted or abused or trafficked by Jeffrey Epstein between January 1, 1995, and through August 10, 2019,” the date of his death in prison.

Indyke and Kahn, who have not been accused of abusing women or witnessing any such abuse, have denied all liability to Epstein’s victims and agreed to the settlement terms without admitting wrongdoing.

“Because they did nothing wrong, the co-executors were prepared to fight the claims against them through to trial, but agreed to mediate and settle this lawsuit in order to achieve finality as to any potential claims against the Epstein Estate,” NBC quoted their lawyer Daniel H. Weiner as saying.

The proposed agreement, which requires approval from a federal judge in New York to become final, provides for a total payout of $35 million to the group – estimated by their attorney to include at least 40 eligible women – or $25 million if fewer than 40 qualify.

The payout follows a prior distribution of $121 million to 136 claimants through the Epstein Victims Compensation Program, as well as a subsequent $48 million settlement covering 59 victims.

The release of the Epstein files has sparked a wave of resignations worldwide. The fallout hit hardest in the UK, where three senior officials in Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s government stepped down and King Charles’s brother Andrew lost his titles.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/632817-epstein-lawsuit-settlement/

Supreme Court strikes down Trump’s tariffs

The U.S. Supreme Court building is seen.

The U.S. Supreme Court building is seen in Washington, on Feb. 20, 2026. | Francis Chung/POLITICO

The 6-3 decision is a rare instance of the conservative-led court reining in Trump’s expansive use of executive power. Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Amy Coney Barrett and Neil Gorsuch joined the court’s three liberals in the majority.

“The President asserts the extraordinary power to unilaterally impose tariffs of unlimited amount, duration, and scope. In light of the breadth, history, and constitutional context of that asserted authority, he must identify clear congressional authorization to exercise it,” Roberts wrote, declaring that the 1977 law Trump cited to justify the import duties “falls short” of the Congressional approval that would be needed.

The ruling wipes out the 10 percent tariff Trump imposed last April on nearly every country in the world, as well as specific, higher tariffs on some of the top U.S. trading partners, including Canada, Mexico, China, the European Union, Japan and South Korea.

Trump bristled with anger over the high court’s decision, denouncing it as a profound betrayal of the U.S., while also insisting it would be of little practical consequence because his administration will reimplement similar or larger tariffs using other authorities.

“The Supreme Court’s ruling on tariffs is deeply disappointing, and I’m ashamed of certain members of the court — absolutely ashamed — for not having the courage to do what’s right for our country,” Trump said at a White House press conference hours after the ruling came down.

Trump called the justices in the majority “unpatriotic and disloyal to our Constitution.” And he repeatedly suggested that those justices had acted to satisfy “foreign interests,” although he provided no evidence to support the claim.

While Trump had predicted cataclysmic harm to the U.S. economy if the existing tariffs were ruled illegal, he changed course Friday and argued that the decision could be a net positive because the court had upheld his right to use other legal mechanisms to impose tariffs. He did acknowledge that the alternatives will be “a little bit more complicated” than the sweeping powers the court rejected Friday.

The White House had signaled before the court defeat that it would attempt to use other statutes to keep similar duties in place.

“We’ve been thinking about this plan for five years or longer,” U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer told POLITICO in December. “You can be sure that when we came to the president the beginning of the term, we had a lot of different options”

“My message is tariffs are going to be a part of the policy landscape going forward,” Greer said.

But Trump has repeatedly said that a loss in the tariff case at the Supreme Court would be a “disaster” for the United States, even though critics of his restrictive import tax scheme argue the country prospered for decades with low tariffs.

It undercuts his ability to impose tariffs on a whim to address geopolitical conflict — like a threat to impose tariffs on countries that do business with Iran — and to threaten tariffs as he tries to gain a better negotiating position — like his tariff threats in an attempt to acquire Greenland. Businesses had decried those “national security” tariff threats for fueling economic uncertainty, but the administration said they were necessary for achieving its policy goals.

While Roberts’ ruling was emphatic, the court’s majority was not entirely unified in its rationale.

The six justices who voted to strike down the tariffs agreed that the law Trump cited, the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, could not properly be read to authorize tariffs at all. Roberts, Gorsuch and Barrett also invoked a legal theory called the major questions doctrine to conclude that, due to the broad economic impact of tariffs, Congress would need to be particularly clear before shifting its trade-related powers to the president.

The chief justice, Gorsuch and Barrett also rejected arguments from Trump and the dissenting justices that the court should defer to Trump because of the role tariffs play in foreign relations.

“Whatever may be said of other powers that implicate foreign affairs, we would not expect Congress to relinquish its tariff power through vague language, or without careful limits,” Roberts wrote.

In a visit to Georgia Wednesday, Trump touted a steel business he said had been able to boost production because of his widespread use of tariffs, questioned why the Supreme Court would rule against him and needled the justices for taking months to resolve the issue.

The federal government could now be forced to issue billions of dollars in refunds to companies that paid the tariffs the high court ruled illegal. Many companies have already sued to protect their refund claims in the event the court struck down the Trump tariffs.

The majority opinion made no mention of the battle over refunds, but Justice Brett Kavanaugh predicted some chaos in his dissent.

“The United States may be required to refund billions of dollars to importers who paid the IEEPA tariffs, even though some importers may have already passed on costs to consumers or others,” Kavanaugh wrote, joined by Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito. “The refund process is likely to be a ‘mess,’” he added, quoting an exchange the justices had on the issue during oral argument in November.

Kavanaugh said “context and common sense” supported the conclusion that IEEPA “clearly authorized” the president to impose tariffs, even though that word doesn’t appear in the statute.

The ruling also raises questions about the future of trade deals that the Trump administration has struck with the European Union, Japan, South Korea and other trading partners to reduce the tariffs he targeted at their exports to the United States.

[…]

Via https://www.politico.com/news/2026/02/20/trump-tariffs-supreme-court-ruling-00790687

MAHA Moms Turn Against Trump After Stunning Betrayal

President Donald Trump aired grievances and bragged about his peace deals during the inaugural meeting of his so-called
Murat Gok/Anadolu via Getty Images
Laura Esposito

Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s supporters are furious after he sided with his boss over the movement that helped put him in power.

The Make America Healthy Again movement erupted in anger after President Donald Trump, 79, issued an executive order Wednesday night promoting the use of glyphosate, a widely used weedkiller. MAHA supporters have long argued that the chemical is dangerous and have backed thousands of lawsuits involving Roundup, an herbicide originally manufactured by Monsanto.

Health Secretary Kennedy previously argued that Monsanto knew glyphosate caused cancer—and helped secure a $289 million jury verdict against the company in 2018, according to the New York Times.

“The herbicide Glyphosate is one of the likely culprits in America’s chronic disease epidemic. Much more widely used here than in Europe,” Kennedy wrote on X in June 2024, while he was campaigning for president.

“Shockingly, much of our exposure comes from its use as a desiccant on wheat, not as an herbicide,” he continued. “From there it goes straight into our bodies. My USDA will ban that practice.”

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. himself has vowed to ban Glyphosate. / Screenshot/X
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. himself has vowed to ban Glyphosate. / Screenshot/X

Despite those strong words, Kennedy, 72, was notably compliant following the president’s order.

“Donald Trump’s executive order puts America first where it matters most—our defense readiness and our food supply,” Kennedy said in a statement to the Times on Wednesday night.

Kennedy’s switch-up was, understandably, a blow to his supporters.

“I can’t envision a bigger middle finger to every MAHA mom than this,” Ken Cook, a MAHA advocate and co-founder of Environmental Working Group, told the Times.

One X user, who identified herself as Susan, said Trump’s order was their breaking point with the president.

“MAHA was a big part of the reason I voted for Trump,” Susan wrote Thursday morning. “I have to say, ‘Promises made, promises BROKEN’. Also no amount of ‘It’s the economy, stupid” will win back my support.”

An X post decrying Trump's executive order and the
An X post decrying Trump’s executive order and the

Vani Hari, a health advocate and MAHA supporter, told the Times the order was “a direct assault on MAHA” and “a gift to pesticide and chemical industry lobbies at the expense of human health.”

“MAHA voters were promised health reform, not chemical entrenchment,” Hari said.

Another so-called MAHA mom said Trump had failed to deliver on his promises.

Trump's executive order stirred the anger of MAHA's mothers. / Screenshot/X / Screenshot/X
Trump’s executive order stirred the anger of MAHA’s mothers. / Screenshot/X / Screenshot/X

“MAHA Moms helped him get in. We wanted RFK Jr., that is the opposite of wanting glyphosate protected, the opposite of protecting pedophiles, the opposite of sons and daughters going to war unwarranted. He is hemorrhaging supporters,” wrote X user Nicole Mendes.

Trump’s order comes just days after Bayer, which acquired Monsanto in 2018, proposed a $7.25 billion settlement to resolve lawsuits alleging its weedkiller caused cancer, CNBC reported.

In his executive order, Trump wrote that phosphorus is “critical to national defense and security.”

“Our Nation’s inadequate elemental phosphorus production, which must sustain both defense manufacturing and our significant agricultural needs, and the threat of increased domestic scarcity leave us vulnerable to hostile foreign actors and pose an imminent threat to military readiness,” he said.

The Daily Beast has reached out to the Department of Health and Human Services for comment.

[…]

Via https://ca.news.yahoo.com/trump-order-seeks-protect-weedkiller-203215502.html

Astronomy in the Islamic Golden Age

Al-Tusi

Episode 12 – Astronomy in the Islamic Golden Age

Islamic Golden Age (2017)

By Eamon Gearon

Film Review

Gearon begins this lecture by distinguishing between astronomy and astrology, both considered serious sciences prior to thee Middle Ages. Astronomy is a branch of natural sciences that arose independently in Greece, Babylonia, Persia and Norseland, relying entirely on natural observation. By the seventh century AD, all four cultures had identified (without a telescope) seven planets: Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, Saturn, Earth and the moon). In contrast astrology, which arose around 2,000 BC in Mesopotamia, was a science employing star charts to predict the future and choose auspicious dates for significant events. Both benefited from the Islamic conquest of Persia (633-651), the primary source of both astronomical and astrological discoveries in the Muslim world.

He then profiles the accomplishments of three Islamic astronomers:

  • The mathematician al-Khwarizmi 759-850 AD (see The Arab Invention of Algebra and Algorithms) –  After becoming court astrologer for the caliph, translated astronomical tables from Hindu and performed additional observations and calculations to detail the exact positions of the sun, moon and various stars and planets.
  • Al-Haytham 965-1040 AD (see The House of Wisdom and Al-Haytham’s Book of Optics) – although better known for his work in optics, 25 of the 200 books he published concerned astronomy. One of the first to attack Ptolomy’s second century AD earth-centric model of the universe and lay ground work for Copernicus’s 15th century heliocentric model of the solar system.
  • Al-Tusi 1201-1275 AD – born of a Shia Muslim family in northern Iran and traveled widely to study the Koran, mathematics and philosophy under various scholars. Translated Euclid, Archimedes and Ptolemy and published more than 160 books. Identified Milky Way cloudy patches as star constellations 300 years prior to invention of telescope. Observed that planets speed up and slow down in their orbits and challenged both Ptolemy’s views on both an earth-centric universe and the circular orbits of planets (Kepler subsequently confirmed mathematically they were elliptical). Oversaw construction of three observatories following 1258 Mongol takeover in Baghdad, Maragheh (Iran) and Damascus.

https://www.kanopy.com/en/pukeariki/watch/video/5756987/5757011