Zoran Mamdani’s Silence on Ukraine Speaks Volumes
Mamdani’s refusal to address Ukraine isn’t neutrality—it’s a calculated silence that exposes the limits of his moral consistency.
21 articles
Mamdani’s refusal to address Ukraine isn’t neutrality—it’s a calculated silence that exposes the limits of his moral consistency.
America did not stumble into this moment of political violence by accident; it was led here by years of manufactured crises that traded real solutions for spectacle and left trust in ashes.
Russia will not break me, and I will carry the fight against its lies and brutality wherever I can.
Nightmares follow veterans home. We survive the war, but the aftermath—the trauma, the memories—stays with us every day.
In that interrogation room, I realized privacy isn’t a right anymore—it’s a permission slip the government can revoke at will.
Azov now recruits foreigners, offering one of Ukraine’s toughest but most professional paths in a brutal, high-risk war.
Between Hamas’s butchery, Israel’s grinding war, and a fog of propaganda that makes truth provisional, Gaza is where civilians are crushed while Washington looks away.
Friday’s Trump-Putin summit in Alaska isn’t a breakthrough—it’s Moscow running the same stalling play it’s used since 2014, buying time while pressing its summer offensive.
In Ukraine’s war, Elon Musk’s satellites shifted from lifeline to leverage, and that power—once a gift—became a weapon of his choosing.
We thought drone warfare would be the future—turns out, it was the present all along, and we just didn’t recognize the buzz of change until it hovered over the tree line, camera rolling.
She wasn’t a symbol, or a narrative, or a talking point—she was a dying girl in the mud, and I watched her last pixilated breath.
You don’t have to wear a swastika to be dangerous—and you don’t have to quote Dugin to be part of a war built on empire.