Tag: Rise Up Time social media

  • Unicorn Riot: ICE in Minnesota Days 72-77

    Unicorn Riot: ICE in Minnesota Days 72-77

    ICE OUT OF MINNESOTA

    ICE in Minnesota — Days 72-77: ICE Raids Continue After Politicians Declare Operation Over, Food Security Plummets as Economy Damaged

     Unicorn Riot /



    Wings of Change is entirely reader supported.
    Wings invites you to subscribe.
    To subscribe: 
    Join us on Wings of Change

    In this critical time hearing voices of truth is all the more important although censorship and attacks on truth-tellers are common. Support WingsofChange.me as we bring you important articles and journalism beyond the mainstream corporate media on the Wings of Change website and Rise Up Times on social media. Donate now to sustain Wings of Change.

    Access is always free, but if you would like to help:
    A donation of $25 or whatever you can donate will bring you articles and opinions from independent websites, writers, and journalists as well as a blog with the opinions and creative contributions by myself and others. 

    Join us on Wings of Change

    We still have much work to continue to do as many activists and organizations address current threats to our democracy and unjust actions against people of color and activists and make plans for the upcoming years. Wings of Change is a part of that work through education, information, and inspiration. Here in Minnesota we are particularly  targeted by the Trump regime with ICE immigrant law enforcement illegally arresting and deporting our neighbors who are mostly people of color. In spite of promises to withdraw ICE, the arrests continue. Other cities have been targeted as well, and they will try to target more.

    Sue Ann Martinson, Editor Wings of Change

    “We don’t have to engage in grand, heroic actions
    to participate in the process of change.
    Small acts, when multiplied by millions of people,
    can transform the world.”

    — Howard Zinn

  • ‘Colonial Apartheid Regime’: Jeremy Scahill on Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’ & Plans For Gaza

    ‘Colonial Apartheid Regime’: Jeremy Scahill on Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’ & Plans For Gaza

    So, the U.S. has plans to build a huge military base there for their international occupation force. The Israelis are in control of nearly 60% of Gaza in the east of the strip. They don’t seem to have any intent of leaving.

    World Economic Forum Annual Meeting” by World Economic ForumCC BY-NC-SA 4.0

    ‘Colonial Apartheid Regime’: Jeremy Scahill on Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’ & Plans For Gaza  

    By Democracy Now!ScheerPost / February 21, 2026

    Journalist Jeremy Scahill says the Trump administration’s vision for the Gaza Strip is of a continued “colonial apartheid regime” with Israel and U.S. interests controlling the lives of millions of Palestinians in perpetuity. “Palestinians are being told that they must completely surrender,” says Scahill. President Trump chaired the first meeting of his so-called Board of Peace this week, a body established for Gaza but whose remit has already expanded.

    Transcript

    This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

    AMY GOODMAN: I want to go back for a moment before we end to the so-called Board of Peace. President Trump speaking at it in Washington, D.C., on Thursday.

    PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: The war in Gaza is over. It’s over. There are little flames. Little flames. Hamas has been—I think they’re going to give up their weapons, which is what they promised. If they don’t, they will be harshly met. Very harshly met. They don’t want that.

    AMY GOODMAN: This was the inaugural meeting of the so-called Board of Peace, Trump’s new initiative to create an alternative to the United Nations. By the way, the Pope has refused to join it, talking about it as a threat to the United Nations. Trump vowed to provide $10 billion in U.S. funds to the board, even though Congress has not approved any such spending, and has named himself the group’s chair for life. Among Trump’s board key proposals is to turn Gaza into an upscale seaside resort with gleaming skyscrapers and entirely new cities. Your final comment on this?

    JEREMY SCAHILL: Let’s skip forward from all of the ridiculous pageantry of the scene at the Board of Peace and talk about what’s really happening here. Palestinians are being told that they must completely surrender not just Kalashnikovs and other weapons that they would use to defend themselves against Israeli occupation, but the very cause of Palestinian liberation or self-determination. What Palestinians in Gaza are being faced with is you either fully bend the knee and accept a colonial apartheid regime as your overseer, that you accept a new reality as dystopian plantation workers on Jared Kushner’s real estate project, or we’re going to kill you. That is what is being said here.

    So, the U.S. has plans to build a huge military base there for their international occupation force. The Israelis are in control of nearly 60% of Gaza in the east of the strip. They don’t seem to have any intent of leaving. You have a reeducation program that Israel’s foreign minister spoke of at this so-called Board of Peace meeting yesterday and said that it begins with disarmament and demilitarization and then deradicalization. So if you are a Palestinian family, what they’re saying to you is your children need to be raised to accept that Zionism is going to dominate their lives now, that colonial apartheid regime is going to dominate your lives now, and if you dare think otherwise we erase you from the earth.

    They still very well may try to mass-remove Palestinians but it does seem that the plan right now is to turn them into the plantation workers for Jared Kushner’s real estate plans moving forward, while you have Mahmoud Abbas and the Palestinian Authority rewriting the Palestinian constitution alongside France and other Western powers to try to ban any Palestinians that don’t accept the Oslo Accords, don’t accept Israeli colonialism, from ever running for office.

    So what they want to do is put in this Palestinian technocratic committee in Gaza and force them to essentially be like Mahmoud Abbas where you are the mayors of a large prison camp run by the United States and Israel, and the residents of this prison camp are just keeping the land until Israeli settlers can come in and take it over. That’s what this Board of Peace is entirely about.

    AMY GOODMAN: And Israel has just joined the Board of Peace. Jeremy Scahill, I want to thank you for being with us, co-founder of Drop Site News. We will link to your new piece ‘This is Not a Dress Rehearsal’: U.S. Engaged in Massive Military Buildup as Threat To Bomb Iran Grows.


    Democracy Now!

    Democracy Now! produces a daily, global, independent news hour hosted by award-winning journalists Amy Goodman and Juan González. Our reporting includes breaking daily news headlines and in-depth interviews with people on the front lines of the world’s most pressing issues. On Democracy Now!, you’ll hear a diversity of voices speaking for themselves, providing a unique and sometimes provocative perspective on global events.

    In one of the scariest moments in modern history, we’re doing our best at ScheerPost to pierce the fog of lies that conceal it but we need some help to pay our writers and staff. Please consider a tax-deductible donation.


    Wings of Change is entirely reader supported.
    Wings invites you to subscribe.
    To subscribe: Join us on Wings of Change

    In this critical time hearing voices of truth is all the more important although censorship and attacks on truth-tellers are common. Support WingsofChange.me as we bring you important articles and journalism beyond the mainstream corporate media on the Wings of Change website and Rise Up Times on social media. Donate now to sustain Wings of Change.

    Access is always free, but if you would like to help:
    A donation of $25 or whatever you can donate will bring you articles and opinions from independent websites, writers, and journalists as well as a blog with the opinions and creative contributions by myself and others

    Join us on Wings of Change

    We still have much work to continue to do as many activists and organizations address current threats to our democracy and unjust actions against people of color and activists and make plans for the upcoming years. Wings of Change is a part of that work through education, information, and inspiration. Here in Minnesota we are particularly  targeted by the Trump regime with ICE immigrant law enforcement illegally arresting and deporting our neighbors who are mostly people of color. In spite of promises to withdraw ICE, the arrests continue. Other cities have been targeted as well, and they will try to target more.

    Sue Ann Martinson, Editor Wings of Change

    “We don’t have to engage in grand, heroic actions
    to participate in the process of change.
    Small acts, when multiplied by millions of people,
    can transform the world.”

    — Howard Zinn


  • The U.S. Is “On the Cusp of a Police State”: Chris Hedges on Resistance Before It’s Too Late

    The U.S. Is “On the Cusp of a Police State”: Chris Hedges on Resistance Before It’s Too Late

    Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, author, and theologian Chris Hedges returns to Bad Faith to engage in a spirited debate about how to act now that liberal incrementalism has led to incremental fascism.

    Why does it feel like so much left discourse is explaining why we aren’t ready to act?: Insufficient union density, insufficient political consciousness, insufficient organization? Also, Hedges discusses his viral commentary on Epstein’s relationship with Noam Chomsky, why he’s not a Marxist, and more.

    Chris Hedges / Posted By Joshua Scheer / ScheerPost /
    February 18, 2026

    Joshua Scheer:

    In this wide‑ranging and deeply sobering conversation, journalist and author Chris Hedges speaks with Bad Faith’s Briahna Joy Gray and they lay out the accelerating collapse of democratic institutions in the United States and the rapid expansion of state repression — from Cop City to ICE raids to the bipartisan assault on protest itself. Drawing on decades spent reporting from war zones and revolutionary movements, Hedges warns that the U.S. is “on the cusp of becoming a police state,” and that the window for organized resistance is narrowing by the day.

    Joshua Scheer Commentary, continued:

    The discussion confronts the central dilemma facing anyone committed to justice in this moment: If waiting is counter-revolutionary and the state is escalating its violence, what does meaningful resistance look like now? Hedges argues that resistance is not a question of guaranteed victory but of moral obligation — standing with the vulnerable, the targeted, and the disappeared even when the cost is high. He details how the state’s harshest crackdowns — from terrorism charges against Cop City activists to the criminalization of filming ICE — reveal precisely what forms of dissent the ruling class fears most.

    At the same time, the conversation pushes back against fatalism. Millions have taken to the streets in recent years — for Palestine, against police violence, against authoritarianism — and that political energy, Hedges insists, must be organized, sharpened, and sustained. The question is not whether people have power, but whether they recognize it before the authoritarian machinery fully locks into place.

    This is a bracing, historically informed, and morally urgent analysis of where we stand — and what the moment demands.

    Highlights

    1. The State Shows You What It Fears

    “You can always tell what works by how the state responds.” Hedges explains why activists opposing Cop City were hit with terrorism and RICO charges — because their tactics were effective.

    2. Criminalizing Solidarity

    Hedges recounts how activists were charged with terrorism for raising bail money — a sign of how aggressively the state is moving to shut down dissent.

    3. The U.S. Is “On the Cusp of a Police State”

    Hedges warns that the infrastructure for authoritarian rule is already in place, and the shift could happen “very quickly.”

    4. ICE as the Tip of the Spear

    From Minneapolis to Princeton, Hedges describes ICE raids as a testing ground for broader domestic repression — and details local resistance efforts.

    5. The Myth of Powerlessness

    Briana pushes the conversation toward the political potential of mass mobilization:

    Black Lives Matter mobilized 20 million people — more than twice the 3% often cited as the threshold for revolutionary change.

    6. Resistance as Moral Imperative

    Hedges:

    “It doesn’t matter whether you win or lose. You must stand with the Palestinians. You must stand with your neighbors being ripped off the streets.”

    7. The Powell Memo to Palantir

    A historical through‑line from the corporate counterrevolution of the 1970s to today’s surveillance‑state architecture.

    8. Liberal Paralysis vs. Popular Power

    Hedges argues that Democratic Party leadership refuses to call for mass mobilization because they fear their own base more than authoritarianism.

    9. The Danger of Illusions

    Hedges cautions against “Pollyannaish” expectations that resistance will be easy — not to discourage action, but to prepare people for the long struggle ahead.

    10. “Make Their Lives Difficult”

    Hedges describes practical, local forms of resistance — from monitoring ICE to disrupting their operations — as essential groundwork for broader movements.


    In one of the scariest moments in modern history, we’re doing our best at ScheerPost to pierce the fog of lies that conceal it but we need some help to pay our writers and staff. Please consider a tax-deductible donation.



    Wings of Change is entirely reader supported.
    Wings invites you to subscribe.
    To subscribe: Join us on Wings of Change

    In this critical time hearing voices of truth is all the more important although censorship and attacks on truth-tellers are common. Support WingsofChange.me as we bring you important articles and journalism beyond the mainstream corporate media on the Wings of Change website and Rise Up Times on social media. Donate now to sustain Wings of Change.

    Access is always free, but if you would like to help:
    A donation of $25 or whatever you can donate will bring you articles and opinions from independent websites, writers, and journalists as well as a blog with the opinions and creative contributions by myself and others

    Join us on Wings of Change. We still have much work to continue to do as many activists and organizations address current threats to our democracy and unjust actions against people of color and activists and make plans for the upcoming years. Wings of Change is a part of that work through education, information, and inspiration. Here in Minnesota we are particularly  targeted by the Trump regime with ICE immigrant law enforcement illegally arresting and deporting our neighbors who are mostly people of color. In spite of promises to withdraw ICE, the arrests continue. Other cities have been targeted as well, and they will try to target more.

    Sue Ann Martinson, Editor Wings of Change

    “We don’t have to engage in grand, heroic actions
    to participate in the process of change.
    Small acts, when multiplied by millions of people,
    can transform the world.”

    — Howard Zinn

  • The Love We See in Minneapolis Isn’t Exceptional — It’s How We Survive Together

    The Love We See in Minneapolis Isn’t Exceptional — It’s How We Survive Together

    Acts of Service and Mutual Aid Sustain Minneapolis as It Remains Under Assault

    My partner, an immigrant from Brazil, shows love through acts of service. At first, I was confused. I had been raised to see romantic love, partner love, as centered on acts of adoration, big and intense actions designed to make me, the beloved, feel exceptional. My partner, who is romantic but not in that way, finds this focus on exceptional love confusing. She bonds with other immigrants on the strangeness of the adoration economy, sharing stories of childhoods where love was pragmatic, not gilded. My feminist self took an embarrassingly long time to feel the depth of love embedded in my partner doing my laundry or putting together a new shelf for my office. I grew up with the acts-of-service kind of love but my family didn’t describe it as love. It was about duty. And survival.
    I think about all of this, sitting in my Minneapolis home, reading essay after essay about the mutual aid and collective care that is everywhere on these streets. Some of the reporting is laced with the tinsel of adoration: Minneapolis is exceptional! Better than anyone! No one else is like this!!! I want to reach out and grab the authors by the pen and say, Hey, that isn’t what this is. Please don’t exceptionalize us. This is a steadiness of love as caring for your neighbor, love as meeting the material needs of someone nearby. There is nothing new or fancy or romantic about it. It’s just love. Junauda Petrus, poet laureate of Minneapolis, said it beautifully — and off-handedly — to me during a recent phone call:

    “What people are vibing off of right now is getting to know each other, spending time together. For a lot of folks, this isn’t how they were raised. Or they were raised like this and they forgot. They have forgotten how to meet each other, to just spend time with each other — not as people who agree on everything but as people who are just part of the same thing. In the [Twin] Cities, we’re building a technology of togetherness.”

    In writing this piece, I thought about what would help people in my communities to feel seen and what might help those living elsewhere to have clear examples of what we are doing here. I called a range of beloveds, all of them doing so much, and some of them unable to leave their homes and benefiting from the care being spread around, and asked them this: Would me interviewing you for an essay be nourishing or would it feel like another thing you have to cross off your list? And some people said, “Ouch, not this week,” or “No, we are being targeted too much and it feels scary,” or “I love you, Susan, but god, I am tired.” And they said things like, “If you need it, I will make it happen,” and I got to say back to them, “No, beloved, it’s ok. I got you. You got me. That’s how it works.”

    Acts of Service and Mutual Aid Sustain Minneapolis as It Remains Under Assault

    Not everything happening in Minneapolis is new. All of this care builds on the relationships already in place. My friend Hannah (who is using a pseudonym to protect her mutual aid network) said that even before “Operation Metro Surge,” some parents were already taking turns bringing children to school and having conversations with teachers and school staff about school safety.

    “In October, when things started to get scary, we — the parents at our kid’s school — set up a Google Voice number and email and got the school admin to informally connect us with parents who needed help with rides for their children and groceries,” Hannah said. “It started small and then it grew. Now there are 88 families, or 106 students — a fifth of the school population — that we are supporting. About 40 of those kids, the ones still attending school in person, get rides to and from school from 30 different drivers made up of parents and neighbors and grandparents…. We have patrols who watch drop-in time, end of day pick-up, recess, and special events, and they call an alert when ICE is spotted nearby, which happens too often.”

    And the community isn’t just coming together around school and student safety.

    “We have set up grocery and food shelf deliveries. We have someone helping with Delegation of Parental Authority forms for just in case a parent is kidnapped and their child is left behind. We also have a lawyer who can file habeas petitions. There are seniors at a nearby assisted living facility who do the laundry for those sheltering in their homes,” Hannah said. “There are rent funds and funds for bills that sometimes include paying for bonds and legal fees. We have a doctor who can do medical house calls and we are connected with a group of vets who can help people with their pets.”

    Violet (who is using a pseudonym to protect herself) is a nurse who mostly works with prenatal and postnatal patients through a community clinic. She said that the old lines that defined professionalism have shifted dramatically: “I had never called people from my personal cell phone before. I had never been to their houses. I’m not supposed to work outside of the clinic.” She is part of the vast network of health care workers finding ways to shift their systems so that institutional care is more accessible, and showing up outside of that institutional care to make sure patients have what they need.

    “My adult daughter has been helping, packaging up food and driving with me for deliveries. This means she sees patient names and addresses — all of the things we aren’t supposed to do,” Violet said.

    “I know there’s professional risk here, but every person I know cares more about making sure that we are doing this in a way that keeps our neighbors safe. That is why we are here. Every other risk just seems so inconsequential.”

    I talked with another dear one about the relationship between patrols and neighborhood care, how they are overlapping circles that each inform the other. Jamie Schwesnedl from Moon Palace Books talks about how these acts of service are woven together in a lot of families. In his case, he explained that he takes on rapid response and patrol duties while his partner delivers groceries and other supplies that have been delivered to Moon Palace, a neighborhood site for supply drop-off.

    And still, he reflects, the lines between rapid response and mutual aid are blurrier than you would think:

    “My partner is able to receive deliveries like groceries and diapers at the bookstore and then be available for people who come to do pick-up, checking their names against the spreadsheets and ensuring that everyone is who they say they are. Our front counter has become a free zone for whistles, signs, and flyers, and people coming to get groceries to deliver also pick up whistles. When I am on patrol, I drop things off between places, change light bulbs, or carry boxes, or plunge toilets, or pick up things people have dropped off to bring to a patrol meeting or some other form of neighborhood organizing. I don’t deliver anything for those sheltering in place during this time, but there are deliveries needed to support the people on patrol who are facing down ICE. Any time I leave home, I have an eyewash water bottle for pepper spray, bullhorns, and snacks and hand warmers.”

    “Different families,” he said, “split up acts of service in different ways and everyone is careful to protect those targeted by ICE.”

    This Love Isn’t Exceptional — It’s Just Love

    It is a dangerous idea that any one person has to carry everything on their shoulders. We take turns. A teacher of mine once said to me: Never underestimate who might be willing to show up when things are tough. Who we are in moments of crisis and struggle is not always the same as who we are in easier times.

    And people around us are not always who we think they are. Ojibwe writer Marcie Rendon told me the story of one of her neighbors, a person who flies the American flag and has red, white, and blue bunting on their house all year round. Somewhat reclusive, everyone assumed that this older white man was a right-leaning person, but really, she said, he’s just someone from rural Minnesota who loves his country, loves the flag, and hates what is happening. He came to one of the block meetings and people were surprised. Now he is just one of the many showing up in the neighborhood.

    Everyone I interviewed for this piece, and the six people who said “no,” and the 15 people whose names I wrote down but then didn’t reach out to because I ran out of time, is beloved to me. Intimate and known. And there are so many more — people I will never meet and who are more than two degrees removed from the hundreds I do know and they are protecting their communities as well.

    When I look away from my to-do lists and Signal threads and worries about those I know and those I don’t, when I take a moment to exhale, I keep seeing this beautiful web being woven in Minnesota: not with new materials but with wisdom that was already here. When I stop, I can feel this net with my hands, this connection when I am on patrol and we pass that group of three on the corner of Cedar and Lake, this connection as I see someone who I know pull boxes of baby formula out of their trunk, look left and right, and then head over to a drop-off point.

    This is not romantic love, not some kind of exceptionalism that wants to put everything in bright lights and roses. No, we are all the same people as we were last year. Some folks need to be the main character of every story, white saviorism is real, Black beloveds have to watch as those who did not show up in these kinds of numbers when George Floyd was murdered show up now, and each of these little pods of neighbors organizing legal aid and groceries do not always have access to their best selves. We are real people in real time, and these are acts of service and they are a form of love, but it is not exceptional love. It is just love.

    I remember this very old fishing net someone showed me years ago, guiding my fingers to feel where the net had been repaired over and over again, like scars in the fibers that strengthen rather than break. ICE is sharp like knives, nicking and sometimes shoving and tearing through this connected set of scars and fresh material. There are wounds, this is violence, and some of you are being stopped on the road because of how you are perceived and I am not being stopped and none of this is ever okay… and still, I feel the pull and tug of a net that is larger than anything I have experienced before. Is there anyone in these cities not showing up in some way? I can’t remember the last time I heard anyone with words other than: How can I help?

    There is a net and it has always been here, it is always here. This is not exceptional. There is nothing new here. All that is happening in Minnesota is that some of the confusion is fading and what is visible is the link and weave and stumble and steady between us. May we keep repairing it as it frays, from those outside and from the rising tension we hold within, and may this net grow with wisdom and may bodies tired of holding themselves up alone someday feel like they can relax into the steady certainty of something much bigger than the size of their skin.

    This love is not exceptional. It is the acts-of-service kind of love. The kind of love that says to your neighbor: Let us take care of each other. I am going to remember you. It’s the kind of love that says: This, this is how we survive. Together.

    Susan Raffo is a writer and bodyworker living in Mni sóta Makoce, Minneapolis. You can find out about her work at www.susanraffo.com.


    Wings of Change is entirely reader supported.
    Wings invites you to subscribe.
    To subscribe: Join us on Wings of Change

    In this critical time hearing voices of truth is all the more important although censorship and attacks on truth-tellers are common. Support WingsofChange.me as we bring you important articles and journalism beyond the mainstream corporate media on the Wings of Change website and Rise Up Times on social media. Donate now to sustain Wings of Change.

    Access is always free, but if you would like to help:
    A donation of $25 or whatever you can donate will bring you articles and opinions from independent websites, writers, and journalists as well as a blog with the opinions and creative contributions by myself and others

    Join us on Wings of Change. We still have much work to continue to do as many activists and organizations address current threats to our democracy and unjust actions against people of color and activists and make plans for the upcoming years. Wings of Change is a part of that work through education, information, and inspiration. Here in Minnesota we are particularly  targeted by the Trump regime with ICE immigrant law enforcement illegally arresting and deporting our neighbors who are mostly people of color. In spite of promises to withdraw ICE, the arrests continue. Other cities have been targeted as well, and they will try to target more.

    Sue Ann Martinson, Editor Wings of Change

    “We don’t have to engage in grand, heroic actions
    to participate in the process of change.
    Small acts, when multiplied by millions of people,
    can transform the world.”

    — Howard Zinn

  • Glenn Greenwald: Palantir EXPOSED, The New Deep State

    Glenn Greenwald: Palantir EXPOSED, The New Deep State

    An authoritarian president consolidates executive power by weakening democratic checks and balances, often suppressing opposition, attacking independent media, and using state institutions for personal or political agendas. Such leaders prioritize centralized control, frequently challenging constitutional norms and, in competitive systems, eroding democratic processes from within.

    Editor’s Note: These videos are from last year, but explain how the Trump administration has set about creating a database with centralized detailed information on all Americans so they can control it. The history of the idea of total control by some proponents, including some Congressional members, goes back to Trump’s first presidency, and even further, as Greenwald discusses.

    Databases regarding immigration already exist and are being used. They don’t even hide their attempts to centralize data anymore by hiding behind slippery words. In Minnesota they have said they will remove all the ICE Gestapo in Minnesota if Gov. Walz and state officials turn over the whole state’s voter rolls, Trump might be calling it “making a deal” but I call it extortion.* Gov. Walz refused of course. So although as a panacea they have removed 700 ICE enforcers from Minnesota, we still have a minimum of 2000 in the state.

    It’s similar to extortion of the colleges and universities by threatening to withdraw federal funds unless their administrations ordered attacks on and punished students who were protesting the genocide in Palestine.

    Most recently:

    President Donald Trump’s reported effort to hold a giant infrastructure project hostage unless he gets to rename Washington-Dulles International Airport and New York’s Penn Station after himself has halted construction effected the jobs of thousands of construction workers.

    A federal judge ordered the Trump administration to unblock the funding while the various lawsuits over the project continue.

    *Extortion. Definition:

    Using threats, intimidation, or coercion (including violence, property damage, or business harm) to force someone to give money, property, or perform an act. (Google AI)

    Palantir EXPOSED: The New Deep State

    The TRUTH About Palantir CEO Alex Karp

    RELATED

    Palantir C.E.O. Alex Karp Defends Aiding Trump’s
    Immigration Policies



    Wings of Change is entirely reader supported.
    Wings invites you to subscribe.
    Join us on Wings of Change

    In this critical time hearing voices of truth is all the more important although censorship and attacks on truth-tellers are common. Support WingsofChange.me as we bring you important articles and journalism beyond the mainstream corporate media on the Wings of Change website and Rise Up Times on social media.

     Join us on Wings of Change. We still have much work to continue to do as many activists and organizations address current threats to our democracy and unjust actions against people of color and activists and make plans for the upcoming years. Wings of Change is pleased and excited to be a part of that work through education, information, and inspiration. Here in Minnesota we are particularly  targeted by the Trump regime with ICE immigrant law enforcement illegally arresting and deporting our neighbors who are people of color. 

    Access is always free, but if you would like to help:
    A donation of $25 or whatever you can donate will bring you articles and opinions from independent websites, writers, and journalists as well as a blog with the opinions and creative contributions by myself and others

    Sue Ann Martinson, Editor Wings of Change

    “We don’t have to engage in grand, heroic actions
    to participate in the process of change.
    Small acts, when multiplied by millions of people,
    can transform the world.”

    — Howard Zinn

  • 11 climate secrets environmental experts aren’t supposed to share, according to former insiders

    11 climate secrets environmental experts aren’t supposed to share, according to former insiders

    11 climate secrets environmental experts aren’t supposed to share, according to former insiders

    By Jeff Blaumberg / Climate Compass / February 2, 2026

    Carbon Offsets Are a Convenient Fiction

    Carbon Offsets Are a Convenient Fiction (Image Credits: Flickr)© Flickr

    Let’s be real here. Carbon offsets have essentially failed after 25 years of operation, according to research from Oxford and Pennsylvania universities.

    The problem is systemic. Only 6% of the total carbon offsets produced by 18 forest protection projects across five tropical countries are actually valid, based on analysis by forest economics researchers.

    The reality is far messier. A nine-month investigation into Verra, the leading certifier of voluntary carbon offsets, found that up to 90 percent of its rainforest offsets were worthless.

    Previous research has shown how offset programs routinely overestimate their climate impact, in many cases by as much as a factor of ten or more.

    Methane Emissions Are Wildly Underreported

    Methane Emissions Are Wildly Underreported (Image Credits: Wikimedia)

    Global estimates of total energy-related methane emissions are about 80% higher than the total reported by countries to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. That’s not a small discrepancy.

    Satellite technology is finally exposing what industry insiders have long suspected. Satellites were able to detect a sharp increase in very large methane leaks in oil and gas facilities in 2024.

    Climate Models Can’t Actually Predict Regional Climate Changes

    Climate Models Can’t Actually Predict Regional Climate Changes (Image Credits: Wikimedia)© Wikimedia

    Climate models correctly simulate global temperature trends, but often underestimate the strength of regional climate fluctuations, especially over the course of decades to centuries. This is a sobering admission from climate scientists themselves.

    Even the modelmakers acknowledge that many next-generation climate models have a glaring problem: predicting a future that gets too hot too fast. Researchers are still unable to accurately model cloud systems, which is a fundamental piece of understanding how our climate will actually behave.

    Top Climate Scientists Are Skeptical About Meeting
    Paris Agreement Goals

    Top Climate Scientists Are Skeptical About Meeting Paris Agreement Goals (Image Credits: Unsplash)

    A survey of 211 IPCC authors found that most are skeptical that warming will be limited to the Paris targets of well below 2 degrees Celsius. Think about that for a moment.

    The very experts writing the reports that guide international climate policy don’t believe the goals are achievable. 5-degree threshold that was supposed to be our safety line.

    5 degree Celsius warming threshold, a target scientists say is necessary for keeping some of the worst climate impacts at bay.

    Most Plastic Recycling Never Actually Happens

    Most Plastic Recycling Never Actually Happens (Image Credits: Unsplash)

    On average, only about 5 to 6 percent of plastic in the United States is recycled. That bears repeating.

    All those bottles you carefully sorted? Nearly all of them ended up somewhere other than being recycled into new products.

    The oil industry knew all along that recycling the world’s plastic was nearly impossible, but spent decades promoting it through advertising, according to NPR investigations and California state allegations. Recycling increases the toxicity of plastic, as there are hundreds of additional toxic chemicals, including pesticides and pharmaceuticals, in recycled plastic.

    Forest Carbon Sinks Are Beginning to Fail

    Forest Carbon Sinks Are Beginning to Fail (Image Credits: Wikimedia)

    Global land carbon sinks are showing signs of stress as the planet continues to warm, according to recent climate science insights. Forests absorbed far less carbon than usual in 2023 and 2024, a worrying sign for their ability to curb climate change.

    The feedback loop nobody wants to talk about has already started. Biodiversity loss and climate change reinforce each other in a destabilizing loop.

    When forests can’t absorb carbon as effectively, warming accelerates, which further damages forests, which reduces carbon absorption even more.

    The 2023 Temperature Spike Surprised Everyone

    The 2023 Temperature Spike Surprised Everyone (Image Credits: Pixabay)

    Evidence on the drivers behind recent global temperature jumps suggests a possible acceleration of global warming, according to the 2025 climate science report. The director of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies wrote that the 2023 temperature anomaly has come out of the blue, revealing an unprecedented knowledge gap.

    Consecutive record-breaking monthly temperatures continued well into 2024 for both surface air and sea surface. There’s something happening that our models didn’t predict, and frankly, that’s terrifying.

    Aerosol Cleanup Has Been Accelerating Warming

    Aerosol Cleanup Has Been Accelerating Warming (Image Credits: Pixabay)

    Aerosol emissions and atmospheric loadings have been declining globally, especially in the past two decades, and this is influencing observed climate change via pathways distinct from greenhouse gases. Here’s what they don’t advertise: cleaning up air pollution has a hidden cost.

    As countries reduced pollution to improve air quality, we inadvertently removed part of the planet’s sunshade. This isn’t to say air pollution was good – it killed millions through respiratory diseases – but the climate consequences of removing it were rarely discussed publicly.

    Groundwater Is Disappearing Faster Than Expected

    Groundwater Is Disappearing Faster Than Expected (Image Credits: Unsplash)

    Climate change is accelerating groundwater depletion, increasing risks to agriculture and urban settlements. Rising temperatures are lowering groundwater levels, vital in many regions for agriculture.

    This is the silent crisis lurking beneath the more visible climate disasters.

    Roughly about two billion people depend on groundwater for their primary water source.

    The combination of increased pumping for agriculture and reduced recharge from changing precipitation patterns creates a perfect storm.

    Climate-Driven Disease Is Already Spreading

    Climate-Driven Disease Is Already Spreading (Image Credits: Pixabay)

    Climate change is fueling the spread of mosquito-borne diseases such as dengue fever, as higher temperatures expand the insect’s habitat and create better conditions for mosquitoes.

    This isn’t some distant future scenario.

    It’s happening right now. The findings are a stark reminder that no one is immune to the impacts of climate change – its consequences are global, interconnected, and already at our doorstep.

    Many Climate Solutions Have Hidden Environmental Costs

    Many Climate Solutions Have Hidden Environmental Costs (Image Credits: Flickr)

    Despite efforts to implement safeguards, carbon offset projects continue to face documented cases of weak accountability, risking the perpetuation of neocolonial patterns of appropriation. The uncomfortable truth is that many climate solutions benefit wealthy countries and corporations while extracting resources and labor from vulnerable communities.

    The push for critical minerals to build renewable energy infrastructure creates similar problems. Mining lithium, cobalt, and rare earth elements devastates local ecosystems and communities, often in countries with weak environmental regulations.

    What becomes clear from these revelations is that the climate crisis is far more complex than public messaging suggests. The gap between what experts know privately and what gets communicated publicly has grown dangerously wide.

    We’ve built our response on systems that don’t work as advertised, predictions that keep proving inadequate, and solutions that sometimes create new problems. That doesn’t mean we should give up – quite the opposite.

    It means we need radical honesty about what’s actually happening and what needs to change if we’re serious about addressing this crisis before it’s too late.

    Want more stories like this? Follow us and never miss out!



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    Wings invites you to subscribe.
    Join us on Wings of Change

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     Join us on Wings of Change. It’s only the beginning as we still have much work to continue to do as many activists and organizations address current threats to our democracy and unjust actions against people of color and activists and make plans for the upcoming years. Wings of Change is pleased and excited to be a part of that work through education, information, and inspiration. Here in Minnesota we are particularly  targeted by the Trump regime with ICE immigrant law enforcement illegally arresting and deporting our neighbors who are people of color. 

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    “We don’t have to engage in grand, heroic actions
    to participate in the process of change.
    Small acts, when multiplied by millions of people,
    can transform the world.”

    — Howard Zinn

  • Minnesota Anthem: The Rise of the North

    Minnesota Anthem: The Rise of the North

    “The fist is the same size
    as the heart,
    the raised heart.”

    We are the North Star blazing in the cold, from every tear we force a flame . . .They try to break us with iron and lies, but truth glows brighter in open skies . . .

    “Minnesota Anthem” by a friend to our community from Stockholm, Sweden

    Editor’s Note: Just watch. One of the best I have seen.

    From Marc Skjervem

    The response to the Minnesota Anthem video has been incredibly meaningful — thank you. This project was created to inspire, empower, and reflect what many people in Minnesota are feeling. I’m glad to see that has been the impact thus far!

    Several people asked how to stream or download just the song for rallies, marches, events, or personal listening. I’ve uploaded it to a music-sharing platform so it’s easier to access and share. If this resonates with you, please continue spreading the video and the song. My hope is that it helps keep people motivated, connected, and inspired. Stream/download the song: https://www.soundbubble.org/mnmarcs1/track…

    The song, Minnesota Anthem was created by a friend from Stockholm, Sweden who was concerned about what was happening in my home of Minneapolis. He created it using AI and the website: www.suno.com. I created the video that provided a visual for the song. The images are from recent events during the ICE occupation.

    AI Disclaimer: This song was created using artificial intelligence. The goal was to quickly offer a piece of music that could help people express what’s happening in Minnesota and feel inspired to take action. There is no intent to profit or seek attention. I strongly encourage musicians and songwriters to create and share their own authentic music — and I’d be glad to amplify it. My hope is that this project serves as a bridge that inspires creativity, connection, and positive change.

    “The fist is the same size as the heart, the raised heart.”

    A quotation from poet and writer Susu Jeffrey. The image is by Jennifer Munt.



    Wings of Change is entirely reader supported.
    Wings invites you to subscribe.
    Join us on Wings of Change

    In this critical time hearing voices of truth is all the more important although censorship and attacks on truth-tellers are common. Support WingsofChange.me as we bring you important articles and journalism beyond the mainstream corporate media on the Wings of Change website and Rise Up Times on social media

    Please join me on Wings of Change. It’s only the beginning as we still have so much work to continue to do as many activists and organizations address current threats to our democracy and unjust actions against people of color and activists and make plans for the upcoming years. Wings of Change is pleased and excited to be a part of that work through education, information, and inspiration.

    Access is always free, but if you would like to help:
    A donation of $25 or whatever you can donate will bring you articles and opinions from independent websites, writers, and journalists as well as a blog with the opinions and creative contributions by myself and others

    Sue Ann Martinson, Editor Wings of Change

    “We don’t have to engage in grand, heroic actions to participate in the process of change.
    Small acts, when multiplied by millions of people,
    can transform the world.”

    — Howard Zinn

  • Eight wars settled and Chinese windfarms: factchecking Trump’s Davos claims, by Joseph Gedeon

    Eight wars settled and Chinese windfarms: factchecking Trump’s Davos claims, by Joseph Gedeon

    Donald Trump’s address at the World Economic Forum in Davos featured a parade of dubious claims about everything from peace deals to windfarms. Several assertions ranged from exaggerated to provably false.

     

    Donald Trump at the World Economic Forum in Davos on Wednesday. Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP

    The president’s address in Switzerland featured a range of dubious assertions, from exaggerated to false.

    By Joseph Gedeon / The Guardian / January 21, 2026

    Wings Editorial Note: Because what is happening in Minnesota since this article was originally published it is a week old. The comments on Greenland and NATO, for example, are out of date because of recent developments. Nonetheless, this article illustrates how Trump lies and manipulates the truth and is well worth reading.  

    Here’s what Trump got wrong.


    ‘I’ve now been working on this war for one year, during which time I settled eight other wars.’

    Trump did not go into detail on which wars he was talking about, but he has repeated the claim enough times in his first year back in office that we can assess those we believe he was describing. His administration played a role in brokering ceasefires between Israel and Iran, India and Pakistan, and Armenia and Azerbaijan, though these were incremental agreements, and some leaders dispute the extent of his involvement. He did secure the Israel-Hamas ceasefire and hostage deal, but it involves multiple stages and remains incomplete – with hundreds in Gaza reported killed since the first phase took effect in October.

    The temporary peace deal between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo fell apart, with fighting killing hundreds of civilians since it was signed in June. Cambodia and Thailand are still trading accusations over broken ceasefires and border clashes. The Egypt-Ethiopia dispute is about a dam on the Nile – a diplomatic problem, but not a shooting war. As for Kosovo and Serbia, it’s unclear what brewing conflict Trump believes he prevented.


    ‘We’re leading the world in AI by a lot. We’re leading China by a lot.’

    Key figures in the AI industry have assessed the race differently. Nvidia’s chief executive, Jensen Huang, said in September that China was “nanoseconds” behind the US. The White House AI czar, David Sacks, estimated in June that Chinese models lag by “three to six months”.

    Chinese companies such as DeepSeek have released cheaper models that rival America’s best, despite restrictions on advanced chips. Trump himself called DeepSeek a “wake-up call” for US tech companies.


    ‘China makes almost all of the windmills, and yet I haven’t been able to find any windfarms in China. Did you ever think of that? It’s a good way of looking. You know, they’re smart. China is very smart. They make them. They sell them for a fortune. They sell them to the stupid people that buy them, but they don’t use them themselves.’

    This claim is incorrect. China has more wind capacity than any other country and twice as much capacity under construction as the rest of the world combined.

    China’s wind generation in 2024 equaled 40% of global wind generation, according to the thinktank Ember Energy. The country is building 180 gigawatts of solar projects and 159 gigawatts of wind projects, which together amount to nearly two-thirds of the renewable capacity coming online worldwide, according to Global Energy Monitor. Rather than avoiding wind power domestically, China is the world’s largest generator of wind energy.


    ‘We’re there for Nato 100%. I’m not sure if they’d be there for us.’

    Nato allies have already demonstrated their willingness to support the US, suffering significant casualties in Afghanistan and Iraq over the past two decades.

    In Afghanistan, according to the independent nonprofit tracker icasualties.org, Nato allies sustained 1,144 deaths out of 3,609 total coalition fatalities between 2001 and 2021. The UK lost 455 service members, Canada lost 158, France lost 86, Germany lost 54 and Denmark lost 43. In Iraq, coalition partners sustained 324 deaths out of 4,910 total fatalities, with the UK suffering 182 casualties. These were substantial commitments to American-led military operations.


    ‘They called me Daddy.’

    Nato secretary general Mark Rutte did indeed call Trump “Daddy” at a summit last June. It happened after Trump compared Israel and Iran to “two kids in a schoolyard” fighting, with Rutte quipping that “Daddy has to sometimes use strong language”.

    Trump’s use of the plural “they called me” suggests a pattern of Nato leaders breathlessly addressing him this way, which is for now unsupported. Unless, of course, world leaders are calling him Daddy in soon-to-be-leaked private text messages.


    ‘After the war, we gave Greenland back to Denmark. How stupid were we to do that? But we did it. But we gave it back. But how ungrateful are they now?’

    The US never owned Greenland. In 1916, the secretary of state, Robert Lansing, declared the US “will not object to the Danish government extending their political and economic interests to the whole of Greenland” as part of a deal in which Denmark sold the US Virgin Islands. That’s not ownership.

    When Norway tried to claim part of Greenland in 1931, the international court ruled for Denmark in 1933, citing an 1814 treaty showing Denmark retained Greenland when it ceded Norway to Sweden. US-Denmark agreements in 1941 and 1951 allowing American military bases explicitly stated these were “without prejudice to the sovereignty of the Kingdom of Denmark”. At no point did the United States possess sovereignty over Greenland that it could then return to Denmark.


    ‘If we were able to cut out 50% of the fraud … we would have a balanced budget without having to talk about even growth.’

    The math doesn’t work. The highest estimate of US fraud losses is $521bn, according to the Government Accountability Office. Even eliminating all of it – which would be unprecedented – would cover less than a third of the 2025 deficit of about $1.7tn.

    Cutting fraud in half, as Trump proposed, would yield roughly $260bn if the highest estimate is the target. That’s less than one-sixth of the deficit, leaving the government more than $1.5tn short of balanced.


    Dharna Noor contributed reporting



    Wings of Change is entirely reader supported.
    Wings invites you to subscribe.
    Join us on Wings of Change

    In this critical time hearing voices of truth is all the more important although censorship and attacks on truth-tellers are common. Support WingsofChange.me as we bring you important articles and journalism beyond the mainstream corporate media on the Wings of Change website and Rise Up Times on social media

    Please join me on Wings of Change. It’s only the beginning as we still have so much work to continue to do as many activists and organizations address current threats to our democracy and unjust actions against people of color and activists and make plans for the upcoming years. Wings of Change is pleased and excited to be a part of that work through education, information, and inspiration.

    Access is always free, but if you would like to help:
    A donation of $25 or whatever you can donate will bring you articles and opinions from independent websites, writers, and journalists as well as a blog with the opinions and creative contributions by myself and others

    Sue Ann Martinson, Editor Wings of Change

    “We don’t have to engage in grand, heroic actions to participate in the process of change. Small acts, when multiplied by millions of people, can transform the world.”
    — Howard Zinn

  • DN!: Oxfam Warns of Rising Authoritarianism & Billionaire Boom

    DN!: Oxfam Warns of Rising Authoritarianism & Billionaire Boom

    World hits record number of billionaires

    Oxfam Warns of Rising Authoritarianism & Billionaire Boom

    An interview with Amitabh Behar, executive director of Oxfam International.

    Democracy Now!  January 21, 2026

    RELATED

    Resisting the Rule of the Rich: Protecting Freedom from Billionaire Power”

    Transcript

    This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

    AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman.

    We turn now to Davos, Switzerland, the site of the World Economic Forum. Traditionally, the WEF is a gathering of the global elite. But this year, it’s turned into an emergency summit over President Trump’s threats to seize Greenland, a semiautonomous territory of Denmark. Over the weekend, Trump threatened to impose tariffs on eight European allies that oppose his push to take over Greenland. On Tuesday, Trump posted a fake photograph showing Greenland, Canada and Venezuela as part of the United States.

    Speaking in Davos, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney warned of a “rupture in the world order.”

    PRIME MINISTER MARK CARNEY: We knew the story of the international rules-based order was partially false, that the strongest would exempt themselves when convenient, that trade rules were enforced asymmetrically. And we knew that international law applied with varying rigor depending on the identity of the accused or the victim. This fiction was useful. And American hegemony, in particular, helped provide public goods, open sea lanes, a stable financial system, collective security and support for frameworks for resolving disputes. So we placed the sign in the window, we participated in the rituals, and we largely avoided calling out the gaps between rhetoric and reality.

    This bargain no longer works. Let me be direct. We are in the midst of a rupture, not a transition. Over the past two decades, a series of crises in finance, health, energy and geopolitics have laid bare the risks of extreme global integration. But more recently, great powers have begun using economic integration as weapons, tariffs as leverage, financial infrastructure as coercion, supply chains as vulnerabilities to be exploited. You cannot live within the lie of mutual benefit through integration, when integration becomes the source of your subordination.

    AMY GOODMAN: That was Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney speaking Tuesday in Davos at the World Economic Forum. President Trump is addressing the World Economic Forum today.

    Hundreds protested in Davos ahead President Trump’s visit to the WEF, an annual gathering of global business elites. Here are some of their voices.

    SARAH MULLER: I think it’s really — it’s really bad, especially what he just did with Venezuela. Like, he literally started a war. And now Switzerland lets him in, and also the WEF just accepts him. Yeah, I think that’s unacceptable.

    CARMEN JUNGE: So, we are here because it’s a meeting, the WEF is a meeting. Since 1971, it exists. And it proposes that the world becomes better, that everyone has a better life, if those people are meeting. But it’s just a meeting of rich people, of politics and so on.

    MASSA KONE: [translated] If Trump declares, “I am here for the United States,” and he comes to Davos, then he will bring the United States the slightest usefulness that Davos has for the world. And so it is scary.

    AMY GOODMAN: We’re joined now in Davos by Oxfam International’s executive director, Amitabh Behar. Oxfam has just released a new report titled “Resisting the Rule of the Rich: Protecting Freedom from Billionaire Power.”

    We’ll talk about that in a moment, but first, if you could talk about what’s happening on the ground right now, the World Economic Forum, a gathering of the global elite, but now an emergency summit to deal with President Trump threatening to seize Greenland? Can you talk about the significance of this, Amitabh Behar?

    AMITABH BEHAR: Thank you. Thank you for inviting me. I must say that the sound is extremely poor.

    But at the moment, in fact, now there’s a massive queue for attending the Trump session. And you can hear, actually, protest sounds from outside. So this is really the moment where everybody is gathering. There’s, I would say, massive nervousness. The people that I’m talking to, they’re extremely concerned about what is the speech going to do. So, that’s really what’s happening at the moment.

    AMY GOODMAN: Can you respond, from your perspective as head of Oxfam International, to what it means to turn this into an emergency summit, with President Trump threatening to militarily invade Greenland, when you look, for example, in the context of what you deal with at Oxfam International, the world’s — the global inequality of the world, the amount of money just going into the military to protect Greenland and for the attack, and where else it could go?

    AMITABH BEHAR: So, if I’m hearing the question right, absolutely, I think this is really a critical question, that we, as Oxfam, work on human rights, on humanitarian support. And at this juncture, the entire multilateral structure seems not just fragile, it’s broken. And at this juncture, we need to understand why is this happening.

    So, the very specifics, because I have not heard what’s happened in the last few hours — the very specifics are very relevant, but, essentially, this is a reflection of the rule of the rich. As our report highlights, we are looking at billionaires actually sitting at $18.3 trillion. And last year, they added $2.5 trillion to their kitty, which was — which is enough to eradicate poverty 26 times over. But really, what we are also saying is that this money needs to be seen in the context where 50% of the global people live in poverty. One in four, quarter of the global population, actually sleeps hungry.

    But I think the real point that we want to underscore is that these billionaires are now not happy being rich and richer. They really want now political power. And they’ve started buying votes, media houses, political parties and governments. So, at this moment, billionaires are 4,000 times more likely to hold political office than an average citizen. So, that’s the reality. And what we are seeing is that, essentially, we are moving away from democracies to oligarchies. So, this emergency of inequality is leading to oligarchies, and what we are seeing in the world is a reflection of that.

    AMY GOODMAN: I wanted to summarize more what’s coming out of this stunning report of Oxfam International. You’ve pointed out the collective wealth of billionaires last year surged by two-and-a-half trillion dollars, almost equivalent to the total wealth held by the bottom half of humanity, 4.1 billion people; the number of billionaires topping 3,000 last year for the first time, while the richest, Elon Musk, becomes the first ever to surpass half a trillion dollars. The two-and-a-half trillion-dollar rise in billionaires’ wealth would be enough to eradicate extreme poverty 26 times over. And U.S. billionaire wealth now stands at $7.935 trillion, more than one-third of all billionaire wealth globally, and the U.S. is home to more billionaires than any other country. Finally, Oxfam reporting highly unequal countries are seven times more likely to experience the erosion of the rule of law and the undermining of elections. Do you say that we are seeing that in the United States today? And overall, talk about what this means, inequality leading to authoritarianism.

    AMITABH BEHAR: So, it’s very clear that the billionaires are not happy being rich. And we are seeing how they are actually rigging the economic system, rigging the political system to gain more power. Just let’s look at the media. Fifty percent of the global media is owned by these billionaires. Nine out of the 10 biggest social media platforms are, again, owned by the same billionaires. And eight of the 10 biggest AI initiatives are, again, owned by the same billionaires. So, what you’re seeing is they have enormous power of shaping narratives, of ensuring how politics is going to be run.

    And it doesn’t stop here. They’re able to twist policies. We have seen what happened when we saw Trump, a billionaire president, coming in, initially backed by the richest man in the world for many months, with some billionaires sitting in his Cabinet. The first big thing they do is to slash taxes for the super rich. So, this is the story of how economic policies get twisted.

    But let’s juxtapose this. I’ve already talked about hunger. I’ve already talked about poverty. But when you actually see slashing of taxes — and this is not just a phenomena in the U.S., it’s happening globally — on the other hand, you don’t have enough resources to invest in basic services like education and health. So, what we are seeing is governments are making a massive mistake. They are making a choice of further supporting these billionaires in their accumulation of wealth, in their accumulation of political power, in their capture of state power. On the other hand, as in let’s take the continent Africa, if you combined the debt reservicing that’s happening from all the countries there, it’s one-and-a-half times more than the combined budget of education, health, social security. And we all know, through research, through experience, that education, health, social security, daycare are the primary drivers of an equal society.

    So, I think it’s really important for us to understand that when World Economic Forum says that we’re going through a polycrisis, it’s not really a polycrisis. It’s not a crisis, a climate crisis independent of the hunger crisis and independent of the inequality crisis. These are all one crisis of the economic system we have created, with multiple manifestations of it.

    AMY GOODMAN: In the last minutes we have, you single out the media, and you talk about the importance of the media being free to cover inequality. And you also talk about accountability for the political empowerment of ordinary citizens, including stronger protections for people’s freedoms of association, assembly and expression. The media can be used to further autocracy or to challenge it. Talk about what you have found and how people, overall, everyday people, the vast majority of people in the world, can be protected.

    AMITABH BEHAR: Yeah. I think it’s really important for us to recognize that when you have economic poverty, it leads to hunger, but when you have political poverty, it leads to anger. And that is what we are seeing across the world. Just last year, we have seen 144 protests, large mass protests by people in more than 60 countries. And that’s happening at scale. The anger of common, ordinary people against this rigged economic system is spilling onto the streets, when they see that you have a trillionaire in the making; on the other hand, people are not able to get bread on their table. There is real anger coming around every, every street.

    I come from India. So, just in South Asia, if you look at countries around me, in the last two years, we have seen a change of regime happening, first in Sri Lanka because of people’s protests, then in Bangladesh because of the students’ protests, then in Nepal because of the Gen Z protests. So, these protests are really what gives us hope. But let’s not forget, the states, instead of supporting the aspirations of common and ordinary people for an equal and just future, they’re actually cracking down on protest and repressing protest. And that’s translating in dramatic erosion of civil and political rights, dramatic erosion against voices of dissent. So, that’s really at the moment what we are seeing. But I work with social movements across the globe. I can clearly see that people are rising. And at the moment, because the media is so controlled by these billionaires, we do not get to hear about the anger. And I think the global leadership is making a massive mistake by not listening to the real voices of the people. And these voices are going to come together, and they will work towards a just and equal future.

    AMY GOODMAN: I want to thank you very much, Amitabh Behar, for joining us. You’re speaking to us as President Trump has taken the stage at the World Economic Forum, and we’ll report on what he says tomorrow. Amitabh Behar is Oxfam International executive director, joining us from Davos, Switzerland, from this World Economic Forum, WEF. And we’ll link to Oxfam’s new report, titled “Resisting the Rule of the Rich: Protecting Freedom from Billionaire Power.”

    Next up, we hear from New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani and Senator Bernie Sanders on the picket line of the largest nurses’ strike in New York history. And we’ll speak with a striking nurse who’s a lead organizer with their union. Stay with us.

    The original content of this program is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. Please attribute legal copies of this work to democracynow.org. Some of the work(s) that this program incorporates, however, may be separately licensed. For further information or additional permissions, contact us.


    Wings of Change is entirely reader supported.
    Wings invites you to subscribe.
    Join us on Wings of Change

    In this critical time hearing voices of truth is all the more important although censorship and attacks on truth-tellers are common. Support WingsofChange.me as we bring you important articles and journalism beyond the mainstream corporate media on the Wings of Change website and Rise Up Times on social media

    Please join me on Wings of Change. It’s only the beginning as we still have so much work to continue to do as many activists and organizations address current threats to our democracy and unjust actions against people of color and activists and make plans for the upcoming years. Wings of Change is pleased and excited to be a part of that work through education, information, and inspiration.

    Access is always free, but if you would like to help:
    A donation of $25 or whatever you can donate will bring you articles and opinions from independent websites, writers, and journalists as well as a blog with the opinions and creative contributions by myself and others

    Sue Ann Martinson, Editor Wings of Change

    “We don’t have to engage in grand, heroic actions to participate in the process of change. Small acts, when multiplied by millions of people, can transform the world.”
    — Howard Zinn


  • MEN WANTED, by Susu Jeffrey

    MEN WANTED, by Susu Jeffrey

    MEN WANTED

    IF YOU ARE DISSATISFIED WITH YOUR CAREER CONSIDER JOINING AN ELITE PATRIOTIC UNIT

    MILITARY OR POLICE EXPERIENCE ADVENTAGEOUS

    FIREARMS EXPERIENCE DESIREABLE

    MUST BE PHYSICALLY FIT

    APPLICANT MUST BE ABLE TO OBEY SPOKEN ENGLISH ORDERS

    IMMIGRANTS & PERSONS OF COLOR DISCOURAGED

    ONLINE JOB TRAINING

    GENEROUS PAY — UP TO $50,000
    SIGN-UP BONUS

    HEALTH & SURVIVOR BENEFITS

    UNIFORMS FURNISHED

    WILLINGNESS TO JUMP ON A VEHICLE & SHOOT
    THE DRIVER

    EXCITING OPPORTUNITIES INCLUDING TRAVEL

    CHANCES FOR CAREER ADVANCEMENT

    APPLY TO THUMPER CORP, 1600 PENN AVE  20500


    Image by CALO News



    Wings of Change is entirely reader supported.
    Wings invites you to subscribe.
    Join us on Wings of Change

    In this critical time hearing voices of truth is all the more important although censorship and attacks on truth-tellers are common. Support WingsofChange.me as we bring you important articles and journalism beyond the mainstream corporate media on the Wings of Change website and Rise Up Times on social media

    Please join me on Wings of Change. It’s only the beginning as we still have so much work to continue to do as many activists and organizations address current threats to our democracy and unjust actions against people of color and activists and make plans for the upcoming years. Wings of Change is pleased and excited to be a part of that work through education, information, and inspiration.

    Access is always free, but if you would like to help:
    A donation of $25 or whatever you can donate will bring you articles and opinions from independent websites, writers, and journalists as well as a blog with the opinions and creative contributions by myself and others

    Sue Ann Martinson, Editor Wings of Change

    “We don’t have to engage in grand, heroic actions to participate in the process of change. Small acts, when multiplied by millions of people, can transform the world.”                     — Howard Zinn