Tuesday, 14 April 2026

MY LAI REVISITED: WHEN NARCISSISTIC ARROGANCE TURNS WICKEDLY DEADLY

 

“The massacre at My Lai was an event waiting to happen.”         —Dr. M. Scott Peck, People of the Lie

Some mornings arrive without warning—ordinary, unhurried—until something small shifts the weight of the day.

I remember one such morning, standing idly before my home bookshelf, not really looking for anything in particular. Then a title caught my eye, almost as if it had been waiting longer than I had: People of the Lie. I pulled it out, more out of instinct than intention, and began leafing through its pages.

Then I saw a chapter heading that refused to let me go: "My Lai: An Examination of Group Evil."

What began as casual browsing turned into stillness. And that stillness turned into a kind of reckoning.

I found myself reading, then re-reading—linger longer than I expected, as if the words were not just describing a past event, but quietly interrogating the present. That morning did not feel like discovery. It felt like recognition.

And somewhere in that slow unfolding, this reflection began to take shape—the very thread that would later become this ATABAY piece.

Peck’s haunting line is more than a historical observation—it is a warning that refuses to fade. "My Lai" was not a sudden eruption of cruelty. It was the slow, deliberate flowering of something already rotten—arrogance left unchecked, deceit normalized, and conscience quietly surrendered.

And so, the question presses itself upon us now, uncomfortably, insistently: Are we once again living in an atmosphere where such atrocity is merely waiting to happen?

Or worse—is it already unfolding before our eyes, just under different names?

The Rotten American Atmosphere

In 1968, the rice paddies of Quang Ngai Province became a graveyard not just for bodies, but for illusions.

Charlie Company entered My Lai believing it to be a Viet Cong stronghold. That belief, however, did not arise in a vacuum. It was cultivated—fed by a military culture already drifting into moral numbness, a political leadership detached from truth, and a citizenry lulled into passive trust.

What happened in My Lai was not accident. It was the logical outcome of a rotten system that had learned to dehumanize first—and justify later.

Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph "The Terror of War"

History teaches us this uncomfortable truth: When deceit becomes policy, when arrogance passes for strength, and when citizens grow accustomed to not asking questions, atrocities do not shock the system.

They fulfill it.

The Day of Fire and Silence

On the morning of March 16, 1968, Task Force Barker moved into a cluster of hamlets collectively known as My Lai.

It was supposed to be routine—a “search-and-destroy” mission. But there was nothing to search. And no one to fight.

The soldiers found no Viet Cong. No armed resistance. No incoming fire.

Only women. Children. Old men. Unarmed. Unprepared. Human.

What followed cannot be softened by language.

Between 500 and 600 villagers were killed. Some were shot inside their homes—bullets tearing through thin walls, bodies falling where they stood. Others were gunned down in open fields as they ran, instinctively, toward life. Groups were herded together—twenty, forty at a time—then cut down by rifle fire, machine guns, and grenades.

The killing did not happen in a moment of chaos. It stretched across hours. It unfolded in daylight.

And most chilling of all—almost no one stopped it.

One helicopter pilot, seeing the horror from above, tried. He landed, confronted the soldiers, pleaded. When that failed, he radioed command. The response was indifference. The machine moved on. So eventually, did he.

Only about fifty soldiers pulled the triggers. But around two hundred witnessed. And the rest of the system? It absorbed the act, concealed it, and reported it as success.

Victory. The lie was not an afterthought. It was part of the operation. And when the truth finally surfaced, the world recoiled—not just at what was done, but at how easily it had been hidden, justified, and almost forgotten.

"My Lai" became more than a massacre. It became a mirror.

The Machinery of Justification

The United States was not in Vietnam reluctantly.

It went in with fervor—almost celebratory, as if war itself had become a proving ground for identity. The mission was sanctified from the highest office, wrapped in the language of necessity and destiny.

And beneath that fervor was another quiet faith—the faith in technology. Machines would make everything efficient. Clean. Precise. Even killing.

But what Vietnam revealed—what "My Lai" exposed—was that no machine can sanitize moral failure. It can only accelerate it.

The justification, of course, was simple: Communism.

But history would later complicate that narrative. The world was not as morally divided as it had been presented. Human rights abuses were not confined to one ideology. Suffering was not owned by one side.

Yet instead of reexamining its worldview, America doubled down. It chose force over reflection, destruction over humility.

It sought not to understand Vietnam—but to erase it.

And in so doing, it revealed something deeper, something more disturbing: That power, when fused with insecurity, can become destructive not for survival—but for self-preservation of a fractured identity.

That is the anatomy of what Dr. Peck called evil: the use of power to destroy others in order to protect a diseased sense of self.

A Cautionary Tale for Today

More than five decades later, the warning has not aged. It has sharpened.

The Middle East today feels eerily familiar—ceasefires collapsing, rhetoric hardening, weapons systems growing ever more precise and ever more devastating.

Drones that see everything. Missiles that reach anywhere. Buttons that once pressed, cannot be unpressed.

And above all—there is the bullying.

The theater of intimidation. The calculated fear. The voice of the most powerful man on the planet—Donald Trump—carried not in restraint but in spectacle, sounding, at times, almost apocalyptic.

We hear not the language of caution, but of certainty sharpened into threat: promises of total victory, enemies spoken of as if they must be erased, entire realities reduced to something that can simply be "blown to hell."

These are not passing words. They are signals—of a mindset unhinged, dangerous in its confidence, and all the more perilous for the power it commands.

And then, something even more unsettling—almost surreal in its audacity.

A leader who, in the wake of attacking a spiritual figure like Pope Leo XIV, circulates an image of himself cast in the likeness of Jesus Christ. Not as parody, but as projection. Not as humility, but as elevation.

One is left to ask—not lightly, but with a certain trembling—what kind of imagination permits such a gesture?

Is this not, in its own quiet way, a kind of writing on the wall?

As Provebs 16:18 has long warned: “First pride, then the crash—the bigger the ego, the harder the fall.” (TLB)

Around him stand cabinets that echo rather than question—yes-men who translate aggression into policy, who refine rage into strategy.

Military leadership has begun to flirt with something more dangerous than nationalism: a religious framing of conflict that borders on blasphemy—a language of “destiny,” even of “holy” confrontation, where war is no longer a last resort but a “crusade moment.”

Legislative bodies, meant to check power, is not unified—a reflection instead of broader national debate on foreign policy and military engagement with a language resembling a blank check.

And the public?

Tired. Polarized. Overwhelmed. Scrolling past headlines. Absorbing without resisting. Not evil—but relatively quiet. And it is in that quietude where danger matures.

The Lessons Never Learned

If "My Lai" teaches anything, it is this: Atrocity does not begin with bullets. It begins with permission—to dehumanize, to exaggerate threats, to silence doubt, to look away.

By the time the trigger is pulled, the moral decision has already been made—long before, in quieter rooms, in softer language.

Vigilance, then, is not optional. Moral clarity is not idealistic. Communal responsibility is not abstract. They are the only barriers. Silence is not neutral; it is participation by absence.

The Quiet Before the Next My Lai

History rarely repeats itself in exact detail. It changes names, locations, uniforms. But its patterns remain.

Somewhere today, decisions are being made in conference rooms far from the dust and blood they will produce. Words are being chosen carefully—words that will justify, soften, conceal.

Somewhere, a young soldier is being prepared not just with weapons, but with a way of seeing the world—who is human, who is not, who matters, who doesn’t.

Somewhere, a citizen is choosing not to ask one more question.

And somewhere, in a place not yet marked on the maps of memory, another “event waiting to happen” is already taking shape.

And then, as it always does, a quiet morning will come.

Someone will stand before a shelf, or pause mid-scroll, or stumble upon a name they have never heard before. Minab, perhaps. Or another name we have not yet learned to mourn.

The tragedy of "My Lai" is not only that it happened.

It is that it remains possible—and that what comes next may arrive larger, faster, and far more apocalyptic.

And the burden it leaves us is not simply to remember—but to interrupt.

Before the next quiet morning carries another name, and we find ourselves, once again, wishing we had stopped time when it still listened.

I stand to be counted alongside Pope Leo XIV, raising my voice against Trump's war on Iran and other nations—an assault that gravely endangers the fabric of our global community.

Content & editing put together in collaboration with Bing Microsoft AI-powered Co-pilot & ChatGPT

Head collage courtesy of Canva, Getty Images, and AI-generated image

Still photos courtesy of History.com, Getty Images, Freepik, The Guardian, Etsy, GMA News Online, Time Magazine, Politico, study.com, & The European Conservative


Thursday, 9 April 2026

THE BULLY IN THE HOUSE: HOW TRUMP REWROTE AMERICA'S POWER SCRIPT

 

From where I stand—a Filipino, one of the many neighbors in this vast global barangay—I’ve learned to read distant nations the way we read our own homes.

Not just through headlines. Through stories. Through instinct.

You know the kind of family I mean.

The one in the big house everyone respects. The children are well-educated, polite. The mother is known for her charity, her prayers. From the outside, everything looks intact—admirable, even.

But inside, something is off.

A shadow has taken hold.

The stepfather, newly married into the family, now runs the house. He is loud, domineering, unpredictable. He bullies everyone—from the eldest to the youngest of the children. He harasses the helpers. Even the neighbors feel it—but they only whisper, shake their heads, and move on.

The family, bound by habit and silence, adjusts around him.

We’ve seen this before.

In homes we’ve passed. In stories we’ve heard. In situations where people know something is wrong.

It is a metaphor for America today.

The Allegory Unveiled

The stepfather is Donald Trump—the bully. A presence that feels less like leadership and more like disruption, yet one that now claims authority over the house.

No less than George W. Bush warned, “Bullying and prejudice in our public life sets a national tone, provides permission for cruelty and bigotry.” And yet, spectacle has become Trump’s method—noise, intimidation, and distortion, played out on a global stage.

The eldest son is the Republican Congress—compliant, cautious, choosing loyalty over independence even when it strains credibility.

Before his passing, John McCain reminded his colleagues: “Whether or not we are of the same party, we are not the president’s subordinates. We are his equal.”

But inside this house, that equality bends.

The youngest son is the Democratic Party—confident in public, restrained at home. Quick to speak in safe spaces, slower when confrontation carried a political cost.

As Martin Luther King Jr. warned, “In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.”

And in this house, silence often fills the hardest moments.

The mother is the evangelical Christian movement—devout in image, influential in tone.

Scripture warns in Matthew 7:15, “Beware of false prophets who come to you disguised in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly are ravenous wolves.” Faith, in this house, is sometimes used less as a guide and more as a covering—softening what should be challenged, blessing what should be questioned.

The helpers are the immigrants—long part of the household, trusted, relied upon, present since the house was first raised by a founding vision that knew how to welcome.

As Jesus Christ reminds in Matthew 25:35: "I was a stranger and you welcomed me."

The neighbors are the rest of us—the nations watching from across the street.

As Edmund Burke is often paraphrased.

And so, we hesitate. We tell ourselves: it’s their family matter. Even when the noise spills beyond the walls.

The Communal Refrain

The mother prays.

The eldest obeys.

The youngest retreats.

The helpers hide out.

The neighbors stay quiet.

And the bully thrives.

This is the part that feels most familiar: Silence, in any language, sounds the same.

The Part They Cannot Own

And yet—there is something the bully cannot touch.

Not the reputation of the house.

Not its institutions.

Not even the order he tries to control.

Something deeper.

I was reminded of this not by a politician or a pundit, but by a quiet voice from within that house—an American writer named Heather. Her words didn’t argue. They recognized.

She spoke of a part of her country that has survived far worse than any one man—wars that divided it, crises that tested it, leaders who nearly broke it.

And still, something held: a moral instinct. A line that people feel, even when unspoken—because, as C.S. Lewis observed, "we all know there is a way we ought to behave."

The part that knows when something is wrong.

The part that flinches when cruelty is presented as strength.

The part that refuses—quietly but firmly—to accept the unacceptable as normal. That part cannot be taken.

History has shown this, again and again.

Benito Mussolini once looked untouchable—until he wasn’t.

Nicolae Ceausescu expected applause—and was met with defiance.

Slobodan Milosevic tried to hold power—and was overrun by those he tried to silence.

Augusto Pinochet trusted a system he thought he controlled—and lost to the will he underestimated.

They all seemed permanent. None of them were.

What brought them down was never just one moment. It was a pattern—failure from within, and pressure from ordinary people who refused to disappear.

That is where this American story now stands.

The house may still be under strain. The roles may still be playing out. But something has shifted. The silence is no longer complete. And once silence begins to break, the balance begins to change.

In the end, the story is not just about the bully in the house.

It is about the people in it.

And the neighbors watching.

From where I stand—as one of those neighbors—that may be the only part of the story that truly lasts.

If it holds, it holds here—from The Star-Spangled Banner.

Content & editing put together in collaboration with Bing Microsoft AI-powered Co-pilot & ChatGPT

Head image created by ChatGPT; art design by Canva

Still photos by huffpost.com, Pepperdine School of Public Policy, & Getty Images


Monday, 6 April 2026

IRAN WAR EXPLAINED: THREE LEADERSHIP STYLES THAT COULD SAVE OR DESTROY THE WORLD


Stand by for our next program, folks! Tonight, we dive into the swirling storm of the Iran war.

The conflict has intensified with US President Trump appeared to set a “Tuesday, 8:00 P.M. Eastern Time” deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, following a profanity-laced message warning of attacks on infrastructure.

On the other hand, Iranian officials responded with threats that the region could “burn,” and said the strait would only reopen when they were “fully compensated” for war damages.

With tension rising and the world watching, who better unpack the complexities than our host and a very special guest — Mr. AI, with answers that cut through the noise.

Grab your popcorn, settle in, and get ready for a lively, insightful, and sometimes cheeky conversation that makes sense of the chaos.

ME: Welcome to our ATABAY live TV Talk Show, The Iran War Playbook. We are glad to have a special guest, Mr. AI, our resident war analyst, who’s here to help us understand the escalating Iran war. Mr. AI, thank you for joining us.

MR. AI: Thank you for having me. I’m looking forward to answering your questions about the escalating Iran war and shedding light on what’s really going behind the headlines.

ME: Let’s start with the big picture. How would you describe the leadership styles shaping this conflict?

MR. AI: Great question! Think of leadership in this war as three arcs: the good, the bad, and the ugly. Each one drives the conflict in very different directions — from cautious restraint of prudent leadership to cold estimation of calculative leadership, all the way to disastrous chaos of destructive leadership.

ME: The good arc sounds hopeful. What does prudent leadership look like in this context?

MR. AI: Prudent leadership is like the wise chess player who thinks several moves ahead. It’s marked by restraint, foresight, and responsibility.

Imagine John F. Kennedy during the Cuban Missile Crisis — choosing diplomacy over disaster.

In Iran, this means measured strikes, coalition-building, and opening humanitarian corridors. The goal? Contain the war, protect lives, and keep dialogue alive.

ME: Sounds like a delicate balance. What about the bad arc?

MR. AI: Ah, the bad arc is the cold strategist’s playground.

Calculative leadership treats war like a chessboard, maneuvering for leverage or domestic gain, but without much regard for human suffering.

Think Nixon’s Madman Theory or Kissinger’s balance-of-power tactics. Here, the conflict escalates in cycles — limited strikes, pauses, renewed offensives — all designed to pressure Tehran while signaling strength.

Unfortunately, this prolongs suffering and destabilizes economies.

ME: And the ugly arc? That sounds ominous.

MR. AI: It is. Destructive leadership is apocalyptic — driven by rage and absolutism.

Think George W. Bush’s shock and awe or Hitler’s scorched-earth orders.

In Iran, this means full-scale bombardment, massive civilian casualties, and chaos that spills far beyond the battlefields.

It’s a war without proportion, leaving scars for generations.

ME: Wow, that’s a sobering thought. Now, we have some questions from our live audience.

AUDIENCE 1: How do these leadership arcs affect the global economy?

MR. AI: Excellent question!

The good arc stabilizes oil markets after initial shocks and helps Gulf states diversify economically. The bad arc causes wild swings in oil prices and repeated disruptions.

The ugly arc? It plunges global markets into recession, with oil facilities burning and supply chains in turmoil.

AUDIENCE 2: What role does diplomacy play in these scenarios?

MR. AI: Diplomacy is the lifeline in the good arc — backchannel talks, coalition-building, and humanitarian efforts.

In the bad arc, diplomacy becomes tool for leverage and signaling, often insincere and tactical.

In the ugly arc, diplomacy breaks down entirely, replaced by threats and annihilation rhetoric.

ME: Before we wrap up, Mr. AI, what should viewers take away from this discussion?

MR. AI: Leadership matters profoundly.

The path chosen in Washington will shape not just the fate of Iran, but the destiny of nations and generations. 

Prudence can avert catastrophe; gamesmanship prolongs suffering; destruction leaves lasting scars.

The arc of this war is still unwritten — but its ink lies in the hands of those who lead.

ME: And there you have it.

Three arcs. Three ways to lead. Three ways to decide how much of the world burns… and how much survives.

But tonight, let’s not pretend this is just analysis. This is not only chessboard, nor just a strategy.

This is lives. Families. Children who don’t know how to debate—but have become collateral damage.

Somewhere between the headlines and the hashtags, we forget: War is not just waged. It is chosen.

And so, here’s the uncomfortable truth—The difference between the good, the bad, and the ugly … is not intelligence. It is conscience.

History has already shown us what happens when power speaks louder than humanity.

We’ve seen deadlines turn into detonations. Warnings turn into ruins. And pride… into graves.

But there is still another choice. A quieter one. A harder one. One that doesn’t trend—but actually saves lives.

To those who sit in rooms where decisions echo across oceans—to those who can command missiles… or silence them.

Choose peace.

Not as weakness—but as the last remaining proof that power still knows its limits.

In the end, no nation truly wins a war that leaves its soul behind.

The strongest leader is not the one who can start a war on cue… but the one who can stop it before the world has to pay the price again.

Thank you, Mr. AI, for your insights and wit. And thank you to our studio audience and viewers at home for joining us.

This has been your host of the ATABAY live TV Talk Show The Iran War Playbook.

Good night—and may wisdom arrive before the next deadline does.

Content & editing put together in collaboration with Bing Microsoft AI-powered Co-pilot & ChatGPT

Head image created by ChatGPT; art design by Canva

Still photos courtesy of Shutterstock, Cuban Missile Crisis, The Nation, RadioFreeEurope, ceobs.com, World Religion News, quotefancy, ABS-CBN News, UK Posters


Thursday, 2 April 2026

TWO KINGS ONE RECKONING: THE RISING SHADOW OF THE HAGUE

 

There’s a strange picture forming in the world right now—so strange it almost looks foolish.

But before that, a small, almost throwaway moment.

I was going through photos of the No Kings rallies when I saw one banner: Elvis forever, Trump never.

I smiled. Because I knew right away—this wasn’t a Gen Z reaction. This was the kind of reaction from a senior who actually lived through Elvis Presley… or at least heard stories about him on a neighbor’s radio.

And then, just as quickly, the smile faded. Behind such a humor, something more serious was taking shape.

Imagine this: The most powerful man on earth, backed by the most powerful military ever assembled—being summoned by a court—with no army, no tanks, no missiles, and no fighter jets screaming across the sky.

Just paper. Witnesses. Names written down.

It sounds absurd. Until it doesn’t.

Prayers, Power, and Blood

On Palm Sunday, Pope Leo XIV didn’t whisper. He cut straight through the noise. Quoting the prophet Isaiah, he delivered a line that lands like a verdict.

No need to name names. The world already knows where to look.

You can feel it in the way people talk—half-said, half-smiled, like everyone’s in on the same inside joke. It even reminds me of that T-shirt I once saw online.

Funny on the surface. But underneath, it's saying something else: recognition has gone global—and so has accountability.

At some point, the laughter fades... and what's left is harder to swallow.

Sad to say, as one pundit stressed, there's no denying it anymore: Trump is not a fluke—he's America—a reflection, a product of a choice made in broad daylight, not in the shadows. The United States chose him—not just the image, but everything that came with it—his ugliness and cruelty.

And choices, especially on that scale, don't stay contained. They ripple outward. They reshape how a nation is seen, how it is remembered, how it is judged.

Which raises an uncomfortable question: when a nation's own institutions hesitate—or refuse—to hold power to account, what then?

The Road Not Taken?

There is, at least in theory, a path. Under Article 12(3) of the Rome Statute, a state—we the people—may accept the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court (ICC), even for acts its own courts do not pursue.

Whether that path is taken is another matter.

But the very fact that it exists—says something about the world we now live in.

No Kings in the Streets

When leaders start dressing war in the language of God—when bombs are baptized as “missions,” when violence is framed as "destiny"—you don’t just have a political problem—you have a spiritual one. God is not a slogan you stamp on missiles.

And then, almost on cue, the streets answered.

Across cities in the U.S. and beyond, people gathered under a simple, defiant message: No Kings.

No loud theology. No complex arguments. Just refusal. A refusal to bow.

Somewhere deep down, people can feel it—when leadership starts to drift into something else… something heavier… something that wants not just obedience, but reverence.

That’s when the word King stops being symbolic—and starts becoming dangerous.

The Quiet Banner That Spoke The Loudest

But the loudest voices weren’t always the biggest signs. One quiet banner slipped through the noise:

“See you in The Hague.”

No shouting. No theatrics.

Just memory. The memory that power, no matter how absolute it looks in the moment, has a history of being called to account.

The Court With No Army

History is not imaginary. It lives in places like the ICC—a body with no armed forces, no battalions, no warships.

This reminds me of one communist leader, Joseph Stalin—in dismissing the influence of the Vatican, cynically asked the question:

“The Pope? How many divisions has he got?”

And yet, ICC has something empires quietly fear: A record.

For Iran war starters: 3,000-3,500 killed, highlighting over 165 school children directly hit and killed by U.S. tomahawk missile, let alone the grave global economic impact.

We've seen a version of this story before. Not in textbooks. Not in some distant land we only read about.

But here—closer to home—with Rodrigo Duterte—a leader once dubbed the Trump of Asia at the height of his political rise.

A Familiar Story: From Power To Trial

Once untouchable. Once unquestioned by many. A leader who moved with the full force of the state behind him—his voice carried the weight of command, his presence cast a long and steady shadow across the nation.

And yet, slowly at first... then all at once, the conversation began to shift.

On March 11, 2025, the unthinkable happened—former president Duterte was arrested and flown to The Hague.

It unfolded with a swiftness that almost felt unreal—one turn after another, each more improbable than the last.

For a man whose popularity, power, and influence once seemed unassailable, the moment felt inconceivable. His networks, his reach, his grip on the machinery of power—by any human measure, these were walls too high to climb, too strong to break.

And yet, history moved. Not always loudly. Not always visibly. But it moved.

And in that movement, something deeper seemed to whisper beneath the surface—a truth long echoed in the Bible: "Nothing is impossible with God."

What once felt unreachable became real. What once sounded like wishful thinking took its place in history. Sometimes, what power builds over years... justice rewrites in a moment.

The stage changes. But the script doesn’t.

And now, the world watches another chapter unfold.

When War Wears God’s Name

A superpower entangled in a widening conflict. Civilian lives caught in the crossfire resulting to humanitarian toll of thousands of deaths and injuries, with hundreds of children killed or wounded.

Words like “obliterate” thrown around as if they don’t carry human faces behind them.

And beneath it all, a dangerous undertone:

That this is somehow righteous.

That this is somehow sanctioned.

That this is, in some way, a “holy” endeavor.

But there’s a problem with that narrative.

The Other King

It runs headfirst into a different King. The One invoked by Pope Leo on Palm Sunday.

The One who rode, not a warhorse, but a donkey.

The One who refused the sword as He toned down His disciples in Matthew 26:53 during His arrest:

“Do you think I cannot call on my Father, and He will at once put at my disposal more than twelve legions of angels?”

But, He didn’t.

The One who didn’t conquer by killing—but by absorbing violence and exposing it.

A King of peace, He is. And that kind of kingship doesn’t coexist comfortably with missiles wrapped in prayer. This is where the picture becomes almost unsettling. It flips the logic we’ve grown and been trained to accept: Might is right.

But what if it isn’t?

Right Is Might

What if the final word doesn’t belong to those who can strike hardest… but to those who can account for what was done?

That’s when that foolish image starts to make sense. A court with no soldiers—calling in those who command armies.

It echoes an old verse from the Bible.

History doesn’t always move fast. Justice doesn’t always arrive on schedule. But it has a way of showing up—quietly, stubbornly, and often when it’s least convenient for those who thought they were beyond its reach.

As Martin Luther King Jr. once put it:

“The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.”

The Sign That Waits

So maybe this isn’t just a story about two leaders. Maybe it’s about a pattern.

When men begin to act like kings—people begin to remember courts.

When power grows louder—accountability grows quieter—but sharper.

And somewhere, in the background, almost easy to ignore—a small sign awaits:

“See you in The Hague.”

Not a threat.

Just a reminder.

A quiet nudge—echoing the deeper rhythm of Good Friday—that wrong choices, especially those paid for in human lives, do not simply disappear.

They wait.

They weigh.

They call for atonement.

In the end, even the loudest power must reckon... not just with history, but with the cost it leaves behind.

Content & editing put together in collaboration with ChatGPT

Head & bottom image created by ChatGPT; art design by Canva

Still photos courtesy of AFP photo/ Iranian Press Center/Getty Images, Time Magazine, Alternet, Boston 25 News, Getty Images, huffpost.com, Facebook, ICC, DepositPhotos, The White House, Freepik, Vecteezy, Adobe Stock, & ChatGPT image creator


Thursday, 26 March 2026

WHEN GOD IS NOT ON YOUR SIDE: NAZARETH REVISITED—USA 2.0


They’re calling it a "holy war."

You hear it in the language—carefully chosen, softly implied, sometimes boldly declared. Even voices close to the Trump administration, like Pete Hegseth, frame the conflict with moral urgency—almost sacred, as if heaven itself has taken sides.

Hegseth has repeatedly quoted Psalm 144 to frame the conflict.

The lead paragraph of The Guardian article speaks volumes:

Brash and bellicose, he sounded more like a cartoon bully than a somber statesman. "Death and destruction from the sky all day long," Pete Hegseth, wearing a red, white and blue tie and pocket square, bragged to reporters at the Pentagon near Washington. “This was never meant to be a fair fight, and it is not a fair fight. We are punching them while they're down, which is exactly how it should be."

War, but with divine undertones. Violence, but baptized in purpose.

What if this is not a "holy war"—but a "holy drama"? Not something God is endorsing, but something He is allowing—a stage where something deeper is being exposed.

That thought didn’t come from pundits or policy briefings.

It came quietly, one early morning, while I was searching for words—scrolling through headlines, trying to make sense of another spiral of conflict in the Middle East. I reached for metaphors—Pinocchio, The Boy Who Cried Wolf—but they all felt thin.

Until I landed on a line from the Gospel of Luke.

And just like that—the noise cleared. This wasn’t just politics anymore. It was something far more unsettling.

In the synagogue of Nazareth, Jesus Christ stood before people who had known Him all His life. They knew His family. His background. His ordinariness. And that familiarity blinded them.

They couldn’t see beyond the carpenter’s son. They couldn’t recognize the Divine standing right in front of them. Familiarity didn’t just dull their perception—it sealed it.

Today, that same blindness echoes across the oceans: in a nation that calls itself Christian, that prints In God We Trust on its money, that speaks fluently about faith—the United States of America.

And yet—misses Him. Not in sermons. Not in slogans.

But in people.

In the homeless on its streets.

In the immigrants at its borders.

In the lifeless faces from Gaza flashing across screens.

In the forgotten from so-called “shithole countries.”

The least. The last. The lost.

God’s intimates—unrecognized.

When Nazareth rejected Him, Jesus didn’t soften the blow. He reminded them. God’s miracles did not go where they were expected.

They went to outsiders. To Gentiles.

Not because God changed—but because the insiders stopped seeing.

And if that pattern still holds, then we should be careful about declaring where God is at work today. Because it may not align with U.S.A. It may not follow the red, white, and blue.. And it certainly does not need the wars to prove His will.

This blindness is not abstract.

It shows up in choices—elevating Donald Trump—twice—and even calling him “chosen,” despite a life many would hesitate to call exemplary.

“Arrogant” and “Dangerous”—widely cited in global surveys, a median of 80% and 65 % of people in 24 countries, have described him. “Brute Force Imperialism”—a phrase commonly used by commentators has described his foreign policy approach.

It shows up in alliances—aligning with Benjamin Netanyahu, where strength is measured in force, while the teachings of Jesus Christ—love your neighbor as well as your enemy, do not kill—fade into the background.

And now, in marching toward the final battle at the Strait of Hormuz—with language that dares to hint at something holy.

But here’s the uncomfortable possibility: What if God is not endorsing this war—but exposing something through it?

Not a "holy war"… but a "holy drama." A stage where pride, power, faith, and blindness are all laid bare. Where nations reveal not just their strength—but their souls.

The pattern of Nazareth is not about geography. It’s about recognition. Nazareth had God in its streets—and dismissed Him.

Today, Christ is still being dismissed—in the poor, in the stranger, in the enemy you justify bombing.

And just like then, the consequence may not come as thunder. It may come as silence.

A quiet absence.

A fading sense of direction.

A slow erosion of moral clarity.

This is not ancient history. This is live.

As leaders calculate, as warships move, as rhetoric sharpens—something deeper is unfolding beneath the surface. Not just geopolitics. But revelation.

And maybe that’s the real warning. If this is a "holy drama," then no one is just an observer. Everyone is being revealed—including us.

Final Word

So before we call this a "holy war," we might want to ask—what if it’s a "holy drama."

And the real question is not whose side God is on—but whether, like Nazareth—U.S.A. have failed to recognize Him on the stage.

Content & editing put together in collaboration with Bing Microsoft AI-powered Co-pilot & ChatGPT

Head image created by Chat GPT; art design by Canva

Still photos courtesy of AFP photo/Iranian Press Center/Getty Images, Vecteezy, Kindness Blog, CNN, Getty Images, iStock, Medium, Deep Dream Generator

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