Does the unthinkable happen?

by BOAVENTURA DE SOUSA SANTOS

IMAGE/ by Codex Kingsborough/Wikimediacommons, in public domain

Modern history is replete with events so extraordinary, aberrant, revolting, and surprising that one feels like exclaiming: how is this possible!? Normally, this exclamation, as a generalized phenomenon, does not arise at the moment such events take place, but years or centuries later: how was this possible!? The astonishment is such that, often, what has happened exceeds not only the limits of what is possible, but also the limits of what is thinkable: how does the unthinkable happen or how has it happened?

When the great art historian E. H. Gomrich set out to write (in six weeks) the book A Little History of the World for Young Readers (Eine Kurze Weltgeschichte für junge Leser), published in Vienna in 1935, his aim was to teach history to young people. The book was a huge success and was subsequently updated several times. One of the leitmotifs of the narrative is precisely to show young people how things that seem beyond the realm of the possible, or even beyond the realm of the thinkable, often happen in history. And the strangest thing is that such events are only known many years later.

For example, during World War II, neither Gomrich (who had emigrated to England in 1936 and worked for the BBC) nor the vast majority of Germans or Europeans knew or could imagine the horror of the crimes being committed against the Jews (the Holocaust). There are many other examples. How could anyone imagine that devout Christians (whether Portuguese, Spanish, or Mayflower pilgrims) could have engaged in the horrific extermination of the indigenous peoples of the Americas between the 16th and 19th centuries? And who would have known what was happening at the time it was happening? Of course, there were very eloquent contemporary testimonies, such as that of Bartolomé de las Casas, but his voice was an exception and little heard. Who could have imagined, and how many Belgians knew, that the highly civilized King Leopold II organized the extermination of 50 to 75% of the population of the Congo in just over two decades (1885-1908)?

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Material interests

by DYLAN RILEY

The new Marxist culture that emerged in the United States from about 2010 has many merits. It is particularly concerned with empirical reality and focused on tactical and strategic questions. It displays thereby a healthy scepticism toward theory, especially toward anything that smacks of Hegel, Sartre, Lukács or the Frankfurt School. Its maîtres à penser (to the extent that it acknowledges them) are Wright, Przeworski and to a slightly lesser degree Burawoy. Kautsky lurks in the background as well. The basic outlook of this group is a kind of simplified rational choice or ‘analytic’ Marxism. In this worldview there are classes whose members have material interests deriving from their position in a system of property relations. The success or failure of left parties depends on the degree to which they appeal to working-class interests so defined. One syndrome that preoccupies the new Marxism is the tendency of centre-left parties to pursue something called identity politics instead.

A key question, however, is rarely asked: what does ‘material interest’ mean? On closer inspection the term takes on a peculiarly metaphysical and timeless quality. Interests are said to ‘derive’ from property relations, without any further specification. But this is an essentially unreal way of understanding them.

Marxism must not forget that ‘members’ of classes are people, and people live toward their future as they understand and imagine it. It is thus a fundamental error to base one’s politics on an appeal to a given status – a present state of social being – and the interests supposed to flow from that. For an anthropologically well-grounded politics entails the attempt to mobilize groups and classes around a project to realize a future that is possible for them under a given set of determinant historical circumstances. Interests are ‘material’ to the extent that they emerge from those objective circumstances; they are ‘interests’ to the degree that they are oriented toward a horizon. Marxism thus cannot be, in Labriola’s wonderful phrase, ‘una filosofia del ventre’ (a philosophy of the stomach).

This raises the question of how horizons are constructed. One crucial way is through a process the new Marxist materialist metaphysics says relatively little about: class struggle. Grasped materially and dialectically, classes do not have a priori interests about which they subsequently struggle. Rather, class struggle is fundamentally about which futures are, and are not, realizable in present conditions, and it is only in that prospective context that material interests acquire substantive meaning. It makes little sense to say that a serf in thirteenth-century England had an interest in socialism. However, it might have made sense to say that a steel mill worker in nineteenth-century Germany had an interest in socialism, because it was among the possible futures embedded in historical reality.

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China’s top military academy courts Egyptian, Arab elites

by NADIA HELMY

IMAGE/Wikipedia

The People’s Liberation Army National Defense University (PLA NDU) plays a pivotal role in “military education diplomacy” to attract Egyptian and Arab military elites.

The People’s Liberation Army National Defense University (PLA NDU) plays a pivotal role in “military education diplomacy” to attract Egyptian and Arab military elites. This role has gained increasing momentum since the Gaza War (October 2023), as China seeks to present itself as a strategic security partner, either as an alternative or complement to Western powers. Cooperation between Egyptian military academies (including the Nasser Military Academy) and the “PLA NDU” has also grown through the exchange of delegations and expertise in the fields of strategy and national security. Faculty members and students are hosted in Beijing to exchange views on managing regional crises, particularly the Gaza War and the Palestinian issue. The “PLA NDU” offers several advanced programs specifically designed for foreign officers and their Egyptian counterparts of the rank of colonel and above, enabling it to build a strong network of relationships with the “future elite” in the Arab and Egyptian armies. Through these courses with Egypt and other countries, Chinese military academies seek to instill Chinese military soft power in Egypt and developing countries of the Global South in particular and to disseminate and promote Chinese military doctrine and Beijing’s vision of global security. This is evident in the “Chinese Position Paper,” which calls for comprehensive political solutions to conflicts such as the Gaza war, in line with Arab orientations.

  Here, the People’s Liberation Army National Defense University (PLAU) played a pivotal role in deepening strategic and academic military relations with Egypt and Arab countries, particularly in the post-Gaza War era. This was achieved through several avenues, most notably attracting Egyptian and Arab military elites (academic cooperation). One of the most recent forms of professional military and professional training between them is the PLAU’s organization of high-level seminars for commanders. For example, the university organized a seminar for senior military officers from China, Egypt, and other Arab countries (June-July 2024), entitled “Sino-Arab Security Cooperation: A Future-Oriented Approach,” aimed at deepening defense cooperation and promoting the building of a community with a shared future for mankind. Furthermore, the “PLAU” has been keen on organizing numerous international camps for military students and researchers from Egypt and other Arab countries. For instance, the university hosted military students from Egypt and other countries at an international camp in November 2025, which included training activities and academic and cultural exchanges.

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Head transplants

by F. S. AIJAZUDDIN

Sheikh Shakhbut bin Sultan Al Nahyan in 1961 IMAGE/Wikipedia

On transfer of Kingship

Heart transplants are a recent phenomenon. Stomach transplants have yet to be attempted. [Gluttons are counting the days.]  Head transplants, however, have been practiced for millennia, especially when the head is crowned.

For example, Alexander’s vast empire was large enough – stretching from Greece to the Indus – to satisfy the covetous ambitions of his many generals. After Alexander’s death, one of them – Ptolemy I Soter – ousted the earlier rulers of Egypt and founded the Ptolemaic dynasty which lasted 300 years.

The last Egyptian monarchy owes its propulsion to the British when, after relinquishing their mandate in 1922, they saw Fuad I installed as King of Egypt even though he was more Albanian, Circassian, and Turkish than Egyptian.

Similarly, modern Greece imported its monarchs, first in 1830 from Bavaria when the Great Powers (Great Britain, France and Russia) installed King Otto. After his deposition in 1862, George Prince of Denmark was invited, elected, and enthroned with Allied support.

In time, King George I’s grandson Philip married Princess Elizabeth. The night before their marriage in November 1947, Philip was granted British nationality and a Dukedom. (The satirical magazine Private Eye always referred to him irreverently as ‘Phil the Greek’). King Charles III therefore has Greek and Danish lineage from his father’s side and German, Danish and French blood from his mother’s side. The British Royal Family has more foreign blood than migrant dinghy dodgers.  

Perhaps the most blatant transplants of monarchs occurred in the Levant when the British and later the Americans sought to retain their control over the viscous sands of Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Jordan, and Iran.

King Faisal bin Saud refused to loosen the kingdom’s purse strings. He was disposed off when his U.S. educated nephew Prince Faisal bin Musaid assassinated him in March 1975.

Sheikh Shakhbut bin Sultan Al Nahyan, ruler of Abu Dhabi, thought he could ration his unstoppable wealth. The British decided otherwise. They engineered his removal in 1966 and replaced him with his younger brother Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan.  A diplomat once asked the British Foreign Office why it did not just take over the Gulf states. The reply given was: ‘Why should we, when we can rule the rulers?’  

In Iraq, the British midwifed a kingdom in the 1920s and supported  the short-lived Hashemite dynasty that lasted three generations – Faisal I, Ghazi I, and Faisal II. They could not prevent the uprising that overthrew and then murdered the young 23 year-old King Faisal II in July 1958. Unusually for an Arab ruler, Faisal had a talent for drawing and painting, honed perhaps during his education in Harrow Public School, England.

His cousin King Hussein of Jordan (also educated at Harrow) suffered the twin trauma of seeing his grandfather King Abdullah murdered and having to succeed prematurely his mentally ill father King Talal. Again unusually for an Arab ruler, Hussein ruled continuously, for 47 years. Perhaps his British education inclined him towards taking an  English girl Toni Gardiner as his first wife.

His mother Queen Zeyn objected. She relented only when Hussein agreed that no child of that marriage could succeed to the Jordanian throne. His younger brother Hassan bin Talal was declared Crown Prince. He remained so for 34 years and would have been king. However, Hussein, on his deathbed, under pressure from the U.S., declared his son Abdullah from Ms Gardiner to be his successor. As short as his father, Abdullah now struts on the international stage by grace and favour of the White House.

The latest pawn in the hands of western powers is the self-styled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi. The dynasty to which he lays claim came into existence in 1925 when his grandfather Reza Khan (with British support) replaced the tottering Qajars.

It is almost half a century since his father Reza Shah fled Iran and sought refuge in the United States. Opposition even in the U.S. proved too strong, exacerbated by the capture of the U.S. embassy in Tehran by revolutionary guards. The last Shah – once hailed by President Jimmy Carter as ‘an island of stability’ – was forced to seek asylum in Egypt.

During the recent conflict between Iran and Israel, Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi betook himself post haste to Tel Aviv where he offered himself as a candidate for the Persian throne. (His father had been a covert ally of Israel. His secret police Savak had been trained by Israel’s Mossad.)  

Israel’s PM Netanyahu did not bite. He knew his Edmund Burke: ‘The difference between the real leader and the pretender is that the one sees into the future, while the other…acts upon expediency.’

The days of detachable monarchs have gone. America has replaced them with disposable allies.  

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US, China once had rare-earth aces in the hole but the US folded

by RAVI KANT

Now China has a kill switch for US defense and high-tech industry, and that explains Trump’s lust for Greenland and Canada

“The Middle East has oil,” Deng Xiaoping is reported to have remarked. “China has rare earths.”

Deng was visiting one of China’s biggest rare earths mines, in Baotou, Inner Mongolia, in 1992 when he made that observation about the vast deposit of critical minerals in his country. At that time, no one took his statement seriously – except the Chinese leadership and Chinese Communist Party. 

Beijing had shown its interest in the importance of rare earths as a strategic asset by including it in early Deng-era national planning documents (1981-1985) of its five-year plan.

Deng’s vision and American missteps combined to give China what is today a huge critical edge.

Mining and processing are the hard parts – not finding

The 17 critical metallic elements in the middle of the periodic table that are grouped under the term rare earth elements make up the invisible backbone of the modern technological world. Smartphones, electric vehicles, wind turbines, military drones and even sophisticated aerospace systems (F-35) and radar all depend on rare earth elements.

Rare earth minerals aren’t rare. They are called “rare” because they are highly unlikely to be found in pure form or in economically viable high concentrations in nature. 

These minerals are either dispersed or mixed with other minerals, making it challenging and costly to extract and refine them. The process is also not environmentally friendly. The difficulty is precisely what fuels their strategic importance.

Dirty work 

The Chinese didn’t decide to dominate the rare earth years ago. The US and others in the West decided to dump the “dirty work” and China became the one left doing it.

Until the 1980s, the United States was the world’s leading producer of rare earth minerals, but the Americans gradually shifted the production to China, enticed by lower environmental standards and lower labor costs.

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Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’ – who has joined, who has declined membership?

PALESTINE CHRONICLE

Trump’s Board of Peace is viewed by some as an attempt to circumvent the United Nations. IMAGE/Anadolu, Wikimedia Commons. Design: Palestine Chronicle

Permanent membership to the board reportedly carries a price tag of at least $1 billion with exemptions for states that make larger upfront financial contributions.

US President Donald Trump formally introduced his controversial “Board of Peace” at the World Economic Forum in Davos on Thursday, flanked by several world leaders who have agreed to join the initiative.

The initiative, which will purportedly oversee Gaza’s post-war reconstruction, has received backing from key Middle Eastern powers, including Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Qatar, as well as Türkiye, while traditional US allies such as European nations and Canada have either declined participation or remain hesitant to commit, according to the Anadolu news agency.

The Board of Peace is part of a 20-point plan proposed by Trump and later adopted by the UN Security Council in November 2025. The initiative was originally conceived to oversee the ceasefire and reconstruction of Gaza. However, draft versions of the charter reveal that its objective extends beyond Gaza, granting the body authority to intervene in global conflicts, with Trump retaining decisive control over membership and final approvals.

Permanent membership to the board reportedly carries a price tag of at least $1 billion, with exemptions for states that make larger upfront financial contributions.

Invitation Accepted

Several countries have accepted the invitation to join the board, with their representatives attending Thursday’s ceremony in Davos.

The Guardian publishes a cartoon on Donald Trump and his ‘board of peace’ pic.twitter.com/2MFU9GSeDS

— Quds News Network (@QudsNen) January 22, 2026

These include: Türkiye, Egypt, Jordan, Indonesia, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Morocco,  Bahrain, Argentina, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Vietnam, Albania, Bulgaria, Paraguay, Uzbekistan, and Mongolia.

Confirmation Pending

Several countries have confirmed receiving invitations but have yet to announce their final decisions.

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday said Moscow is “ready” to allocate $1 billion to US President Donald Trump’s Board of Peace, adding that he would discuss the use of frozen Russian assets during a meeting with US envoys in Moscow later in the day.

LIVE: Speaking at the official signing of his Gaza “Board of Peace,” Donald Trump marveled that he didn’t dislike a single leader on stage, calling every member “a friend of mine” and saying, “I actually like this entire group.”

The moment landed awkwardly as most European… https://t.co/v6ha1UzS5J pic.twitter.com/54iVpjUgqH

— Drop Site (@DropSiteNews) January 22, 2026

China confirmed receipt of an invitation without stating whether it would participate, while Germany acknowledged the invitation and said it is under consideration.

India and Brazil said decisions would follow internal consultations, while the Vatican confirmed that Pope Leo XIV received an invitation.

Canada’s Invitation Withdrawn

Canada, meanwhile, has taken a cautious approach, with Prime Minister Mark Carney yet to announce a final decision on joining. Later, Trump said that he is withdrawing an invitation for Canada to join the “Board of Peace.” This follows sharp exchanges between the two leaders.

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Trumpverse

by B. R. GOWANI

IMAGE/Public Domain

In the 1990s, I met a person in the Bay Area whom I knew from back home. A successful businessman, he showed me his business card and pointed with an emphasis at the word “President” on the card.

He then asked me to help him in setting up an NGO which would fight for the rights of children in South Asia working for multinational companies for just a pittance.

I declined for two reasons: I had no knowledge of how to set up an NGO and the person wanted to make money out of that project.

I would have easily overcome the first hurdle through conducting research and getting in touch with some people I knew who were associated with NGOs but for the second reason I didn’t pursue the matter.

The gist of the above story is that there are people who feel good when they see their names on top of the hierarchy while enabling them to mint money through that powerful position.

Our Dear Leader Donald John Trump is one of those leaders who loves to be on top with his name embossed on every monument and what not.

As a humble subject of His Global Emperor, I hereby recommend that every country, ocean, galaxy, star, airport, center, and so on should bear our Dear Leader’s name.

Here are some examples:

Trumpverse
Trumpgalaxies
Trumpstars
Trumpsun
Trumplanets
Trumpearth
Trumoon
Trumoceans,
Trumountains
Trumpnited States
Trumuseums
Trumaccounts
TrumStations
Trumairports

Trumpezuela
Trumpada
Trumpeenland
Trumpvarsha
Trumpirates
Trumpkistan
Trumpenya

B. R. Gowani can be reached at brgowani@hotmail.com

Homo stultus: The case for renaming ourselves

by MARTINA MONEKE

IMAGE/ by John Von Wicht/Wikimedia Commons, in public domain

The name Homo sapiens—Latin for “wise man”—has always carried an air of self-congratulation. Carl Linnaeus, the father of modern taxonomy, coined the term in 1758, confident that his species stood apart by virtue of intelligence and reason. But what if wisdom, properly defined as the capacity to act with foresight and moral restraint, has proven not to be humanity’s defining trait but its greatest delusion? In an era of mass extinction, climate collapse, and ecological disintegration—each driven by our own actions—perhaps it is time to set the record straight.

The species that burns its own home for temporary comfort, poisons its water for profit, and annihilates the other inhabitants of its shared planet for convenience should no longer be known as Homo sapiens. The more fitting name is Homo stultus—“foolish man.”

Our folly is not merely in error, but in pattern. Every major technological triumph has been followed by an ecological tragedy. The Industrial Revolution, heralded as the dawn of modernity, unleashed the carbon age that now suffocates our atmosphere. The Green Revolution, celebrated for ending hunger, saturated the planet’s soil and water with synthetic poisons. The Digital Revolution, promising connection and enlightenment, has given rise to surveillance capitalism and vast amounts of e-waste. We create miracles, but cannot master moderation.

Unlike the natural systems we disrupt, our civilization is not circular but linear: it extracts, exploits, exhausts, and discards. We treat the Earth as if it were a warehouse of infinite inventory, not a living organism with its own limits. The philosopher Hans Jonas warned in The Imperative of Responsibility (1979) that technological power had outpaced ethical maturity. He advocated for a moral framework that considers the long-term consequences of human actions on the planet’s future. Yet, four decades later, the counsel went unheeded. We continue to act as if tomorrow were someone else’s problem.

Wisdom implies learning from mistakes. But Homo stultus repeats them on a greater scale. Despite decades of scientific consensus on climate change, greenhouse gas emissions hit record highs in 2023. Despite global agreements to protect biodiversity, deforestation and species loss are accelerating. We congratulate ourselves on electric cars while expanding highways. We cheer reforestation projects while razing old-growth forests for palm oil and soy. We recycle plastic bottles, knowing that only a tiny fraction will be reborn.

Our ignorance is willful. It is not that we do not know, but that we prefer not to know. In the words of philosopher Günther Anders, humanity suffers from “apocalyptic blindness”—a refusal to comprehend the full extent of our destructive power. We are like Icarus, wings aflame, marveling at our altitude while plummeting toward the sea.

The root of our folly lies in the myth of human exceptionalism—the belief that we stand apart from and above the natural world. This myth is the theological residue of a species that once believed itself made in the image of a god. It gave rise to the notion of dominion: that Earth and all its creatures exist for our use. The Bible’s command to “subdue the Earth” became the philosophical foundation of extractive capitalism and colonial conquest.

But biology tells another story. We are not lords of creation, but products of evolution—kin to the chimpanzee, cousins to the coral, participants in the web of life we now unravel. As the primatologist Christine Webb argues in her 2025 book The Arrogant Ape, the supposed chasm between human and animal intelligence is “systematically rigged in our favor.” For centuries, researchers compared privileged, well-fed human subjects to captive animals deprived of social and environmental richness, using the results to claim our superiority. We design experiments that confirm what we wish to believe: that we are singular, elevated, unique. It is not proof of wisdom, but evidence of vanity.

Even this vanity is learned. Webb notes that children naturally assume agency and feeling in animals until they are “trained out of it.” Anthropocentrism, in other words, is a kind of education—a cultural conditioning that replaces empathy with hierarchy. We begin life sensing kinship and end up defending dominion. Homo stultus’ estrangement from the living world is not instinct but indoctrination, a symptom of modernity’s arrogance.

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$50 on war in Iran: How geopolitical bets have surged on Polymarket, in five charts

by HAZEL GANDHI

IMAGE/iStock/Rest of World

Online traders are betting millions on war, airstrikes, and political unrest.

Want to bet on whether the U.S. will attack Iran? An increasing number of people are using Polymarket and similar online prediction markets to gamble on war and other geopolitical events. The payoffs can be thousands, even millions.

These platforms have grown in popularity since the 2024 U.S. presidential elections, which drew significant interest from geopolitical gamblers. Although most online bets are still placed on sports, Polymarket, Kalshi, and other prediction markets have wagers available for a wide range of subjects — from the Oscars to Spotify charts and the potential for another U.S. government shutdown. Polymarket was valued at $8 billion in October, making its 27-year-old CEO, Shayne Coplan, a billionaire. Eighty-seven percent of accounts on the platform incur losses, according to market researcher LayerHub.

At a time of escalating geopolitical tensions, bets have swirled around U.S military action in Venezuela and Greenland, and potential Israeli strikes in Iran. Polymarket’s team creates betting events, while also inviting suggestions on Discord and X. In January, users created 191 new geopolitical events on Polymarket, a 260% increase compared to the same month last year.

Iran

Traders have put down large sums of money on potential U.S. and Israeli intervention in Iran, including one market whose volume has ballooned to $155 million as of February 2. The odds of a U.S. strike on Iran have dropped from 65% to 33% since President Donald Trump began hinting at ongoing negotiations with Iran on January 31.

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