DC Protesters Rename Trump EPA Environmental Pollution Agency

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Original article by Jessica Corbett republished from Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). 

Protesters renamed the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency the Environmental Pollution Agency at its Washington, D.C. headquarters on August 7, 2025. (Photo: Extinction Rebellion D.C.)

“The days of shackling America’s oil, gas, and coal companies are over,” said spokesperson Melinda McFossilShill.

A renaming ceremony for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency was held at its Washington, D.C. headquarters on Thursday to give the EPA a name that reflects its priorities under Administrator Lee Zeldin and Republican President Donald Trump.

On the heels of Zeldin’s visit to New England that spotlighted a push for the Constitution gas pipeline, a small group gathered outside the EPA building on Thursday to reintroduce it as the Environmental Pollution Agency and unveil its new logo.

“The days of shackling America’s oil, gas, and coal companies are over,” said Environmental Pollution Agency spokesperson Melinda McFossilShill. “The Trump administration stands for freedom, and that includes the freedom to pollute.”

McFossilShill is not a real representative of the agency, but rather a critic of what it’s become. Thursday’s “Make Pollution Great Again!” event was a protest, led by groups including Shut Down D.C. and the local arm of Extinction Rebellion.

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DNDqdA3x9Q5/

In addition to McFossilShill, protesters took on the personas of fossil fuel executives and backers, including Joe Gasfracker, vice president for corporate capture of government (a false name and position) at the (real) American Petroleum Institute.

“I want to extend my deepest gratitude to Administrator Zeldin and President Trump for finally ending the charade of so-called ‘environmental protection’ and making government work for our patriotic fossil fuel corporations again,” he said.

“There are hundreds of people dying in floods, thousands dying in hurricanes, and millions being sickened by particulate matter pollution, wildfire smoke, and extreme heat, but we must balance that against the billions of dollars in profit that our members make,” Gasfracker continued. “Billions are more than millions, so obviously our profits must take precedence.”

Another protester—dubbed Pete Pollution, executive director of Energy Villains for Increased Leakage (EVIL)—declared that “the American Dream has always been about the freedom to pour toxic chemicals into every community.”

“If we don’t pollute America’s environment, who will?” added Pollution. Other participants held signs that called for making rivers burn, causing more asthma, and destroying human health.

protesters held signs that called for making rivers burn, causing more asthma, and destroying human health

Protesters renamed the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency the Environmental Pollution Agency at its Washington, D.C. headquarters on August 7, 2025. (Photo: Extinction Rebellion D.C.)

During Trump’s second term, the EPA has faced intense criticism for a range of actions. Over the past month, the agency has put 144 employees on leave after they signed a letter criticizing the administration’s “harmful” policies, eliminated its scientific research arm in the “ultimate Friday night purge,” proposed reregistering a pesticide twice banned by federal courts, and moved to cancel $7 billion in solar grants for low- and middle-income households.

Perhaps most notably, the agency also unveiled a rule to rescind the 2009 “endangerment finding” that has enabled federal regulations aimed at the fossil fuel-driven climate emergency over the past 15 years.

Further, Trump last month signed a series of proclamations to provide what he called “regulatory relief” to over 100 coalchemical manufacturingiron ore processing, and sterile medical equipment facilities, with the White House claiming that rules imposed on them under former Democratic President Joe Biden’s EPA were “burdensome.”

At the time, John Walke, clean air director for the environmental group Natural Resources Defense Council, accused Trump of signing a “literal free pass for polluters,” and warned that “if your family lives downwind of these plants, this is going to mean more toxic chemicals in the air you breathe.”

Elected Democrats—who have minorities in both chambers of Congress—have joined climate, environmental, and public health advocates in calling out Trump and Zeldin for various moves.

Jay Inslee: Trump and Zeldin have turned EPA into ‘Environmental Pollution Agency’ by revoking essential climate rule www.msnbc.com/ali-velshi/w…

Ali Velshi (@velshi.com) 2025-08-04T15:51:45.752Z

On Thursday, U.S. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Environment and Public Works Committee Ranking Member Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) led a letter to Zeldin about his proposal to gut power plant pollution standards.

“Climate change and toxic air pollution are serious issues,” dozens of Senate Democrats wrote to the EPA administrator. “We represent millions of constituents who risk poisoning from mercury and air toxics and who are facing the rising costs of the climate crisis.”

“Congress established the Clean Air Act to protect our constituents from these dangers. We urge EPA to follow its directive,” they added, urging Zeldin to withdraw two proposals on fossil fuel plant emissions.

In a Thursday statement, Schumer said that “the Trump administration is saying to hell with five decades worth of protection against deadly pollution and neurotoxins that has saved thousands of lives, made communities safer, and our economy stronger. Why? To appease Big Oil and fossil fuel billionaires.”

“The Trump administration’s obsession with gutting clean air protections and allowing more poison into the air is reckless, dangerous, and a clear reminder: Republicans care about their donors, not you,” he charged. “The EPA needs to stop ignoring the science and the facts and immediately reverse course and put the health and safety of Americans first.”

Original article by Jessica Corbett republished from Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). 

Donald Trump urges you to be a Climate Science denier like him. He says that he makes millions and millions for destroying the planet, Burn, Baby, Burn and Flood, Baby, Flood.
Donald Trump urges you to be a Climate Science denier like him. He says that he makes millions and millions for destroying the planet, Burn, Baby, Burn and Flood, Baby, Flood.
Continue ReadingDC Protesters Rename Trump EPA Environmental Pollution Agency

Oil and Gaslighting: How Trump and Corporations Manufacture Self-Serving ‘Pseudo-Realities’

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Original article by Adam M. Lowenstein republished from DeSmog

U.S. President Donald Trump and corporate image-crafter the World Economic Forum have perfected the tactic of creating “pseudo-realities” to help avoid accountability for damaging actions. Credit: World Economic Forum/Valeriano Di Domenico .

This week, the EU agreed to 15% tariffs with the United States, half of President Donald Trump’s threatened rate, before the August 1 deadline. With Mexico and Brazil trade deals on the horizon, Trump appears to have the world’s pocketbooks, supply chains, and eyeballs precisely where he wants them: in a state of uncertainty, and focused on him.

These days, few observers are surprised by Trump’s ever-evolving tariff threats. But back in April, when stock markets ricocheted after “Liberation Day,” chief executives and financial analysts were startled that Trump had followed through.

“We didn’t believe him,” a Wall Street executive told the Financial Times. “We assumed that someone in the administration that had an economic background would tell him that global tariffs were a bad idea.” Trump seemed surprised by the executives’ surprise: “I said this would exactly be the way it is,” he noted, correctly.

But perhaps CEOs can be forgiven for assuming that the self-proclaimed “Tariff Man” was bluffing. Perhaps it’s understandable that some of the world’s most powerful and highly compensated executives, including fossil fuel leaders, filed Trump’s campaign pledges — “tariffs are the greatest thing ever invented,” he declared last fall — in the category of “things politicians say.”

After all, making high-profile promises on which they have no intention of following through — promises that are based largely on what they want people to think is true, or simply what is convenient to say in the moment — is how corporations operate every day.

Indeed, with the help of well-paid public relations firms, prestigious consultants, and elite conveners like the World Economic Forum, executives and their organizations construct what might be considered “pseudo-realities”: alternative portrayals of the world that serve a company’s interests but have little bearing on how the company actually makes money. 

In the digital age, in fact, operating in the space between word and deed, between image and action, between theater and reality, has become the modus operandi of the corporate world, especially fossil fuel companies.

The Big Oil Autocratic Playbook

Big Oil has honed this playbook to near perfection. For decades,  the industry has enlisted PR agencies to construct elaborate narratives so polished and pervasive that they’ve managed to stave off meaningful climate action while painting the oil and gas giants as working toward — in what might be a first in the history of modern capitalism — its own obsolescence.

Take Saudi Arabia’s state-backed oil giant Aramco, which is one of the most profitable companies in the world. As DeSmog’s TJ Jordan has pointed out, the company’s relentless advertising constructs a narrative of responsibility and green innovation. Aramco frames its advanced fuels and F1 motorsport sponsorship as a credible pathway to decarbonization — part of a broader Saudi push for a clean energy transition.

That argument omits a key piece of reality: not just that the kingdom is a major fossil fuel producer, but that it has stated its commitment to this extractive business model for years to come. (McCannPublicis, and Hill+Knowlton, which is now part of Burson, are among the PR firms that have worked for Aramco.)

Or consider DeSmog’s deeply researched investigation into how Edelman, one of the world’s largest PR firms, polished the image of the United Arab Emirates, creating an alternate reality that convinced the public and heads of state that it was a leader on climate action, obscuring its oil-producing legacy.

The PR campaign helped propel oil baron Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber to the top levels of climate diplomacy as host of COP28, the UN’s annual climate gathering, even as the UAE was pumping more and more oil — a case study in manifesting an effective pseudo-reality.

Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber addresses a news conference in Dubai, December 4, 2023. Credit: Just Stop Oil YouTube Channel.

Meanwhile, this July, barely a year after Edelman won an “eight-figure” contract with Shell, one of the world’s leading oil and gas producers, the agency signed an agreement to manage PR for the upcoming COP30 climate conference in Brazil.

The goal of campaigns like these does not appear to be to convince everyone, everywhere, forever. Instead, like an authoritarian propagandist (or an aspiring one), these efforts seek to flood society’s information channels with alternate visions of how the world might be.

As long-serving autocrats have discovered, the resultant mixture of true belief, skepticism, and confusion creates doubt that the truth — in this case, about the severity of climate change, and the complicity of those responsible for it — can ever really be known. Such doubt helps prevent the emergence of public consensus and stalls momentum for accountability and change.

A Performative Ally

In pursuit of these efforts, fossil fuel companies have found an ally in an organization that is ostensibly committed to tackling the climate crisis and transitioning the world to clean energy.

Indeed, few organizations demonstrate the performative nature of corporate image-crafting as transparently as the World Economic Forum (WEF), the nonprofit that hosts the annual gathering of corporate and political elites of the same name in Davos, Switzerland, each January.

“The big issues in the world, like climate change, cannot be solved by governments alone,” said WEF’s founder and former CEO Klaus Schwab in 2019. “We need new technologies, so business has a role to play. Civil society has a big role to play. We are all stakeholders in our global future. And the World Economic Forum acts as a kind of catalyst for this process.”

(Earlier this year, Schwab resigned from the WEF following allegations that included misappropriating funds and creating a toxic work environment rife with racial discrimination and sexual harassment.)

WEF CEO Klaus Schwab speaks at the group’s 2018 annual meeting. Credit: World Economic Forum/Remy Steinegger

The WEF is decidedly inaccessible to the public: Membership can cost companies more than $650,000 a year, with individual attendees paying upwards of $30,000 for top-tier access to the four-day Davos conference. But it is nevertheless a performance for the public. WEF elites want to be seen and think of themselves as “using their powers for good,” as one of my former bosses in the corporate world used to say.

To that end, the organization publishes a steady stream of content, including reports, white papers, articles, podcasts, YouTube videos, and social media posts. Most of this corporate “thought leadership” shares two distinct but related goals: to position the organization that publishes it as an expert in a problem being discussed (such as climate change), and to portray the company — and “business” more generally — as critical to addressing that problem.

The WEF did not respond to an emailed request for comment.

For instance, in a January 2023 paper published with the consulting firm (and WEF “strategic partner”) PwC, the WEF outlined a “business case” for corporations to pursue climate adaptation strategies. One recommendation: “Capitalize on opportunities” created by the climate crisis. “These adaptation efforts will generate demand for products and services and open new markets,” the report noted.

The language in these publications is typically grandiose. “The future of our planet depends on it,” its foreword concluded, referring to the corporations taking action — of which authoring a report is presumably one part.

The business models of, say, a consulting firm like McKinsey & Co. that is determined, in the words of its boss, to continue “[doing] business with greenhouse-gas emitters,” or of a global nonprofit like the WEF, which brought in more than $500 million in revenue last year, much of it from extractive corporations and oil-reliant governments, do not include concrete actions that would make fossil fuel production less lucrative. (McKinsey, ChevronAramcoBP, and Rio Tinto are among WEF’s other “strategic partners.”)

‘Organized Lying’

A revealing example of how companies use thought leadership to spin pseudo-realities into existence comes from a PR firm with close ties to Schwab and the WEF.

The late 2010s and early 2020s marked a short-lived era in which executives decided that their workers, customers, and other “stakeholders” — such as politicians and regulators — wanted to hear that businesses were solving global challenges like climate change, inequality, and racism. This self-serving notion was called “stakeholder capitalism,” which also became the title of a 2021 book by Klaus Schwab.

Edelman, one of the largest PR firms in the world, helped drive this corporate reimagining. “CEOs expected to lead on change” was among the findings of the agency’s 2019 “trust barometer,” a survey it releases in Davos every January.

The following year, company CEO Richard Edelman highlighted the “stunning” finding that employees “expect their employer’s CEO to speak up on one or more issues.” In 2021, Richard Edelman proclaimed that “the events of this past year reinforced business’ responsibility to lead on societal issues.” Citing the trust survey, the CEO wrote in a 2023 blog post titled “Companies Must Not Stay Silent,” that, “Business leaders must not only speak out on incidents of injustice and the pressing issues of the day, but they must take action.”

PR firm CEO Richard Edelman writes an annual trust survey that a researcher said “consistently paints the picture that best served the interests” of Edeman and its clients. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

In a 2024 paper, Lee Edwards, a professor of strategic communications and public engagement at the London School of Economics, looked closely at the surveys Edelman published between 2018 and 2022. She studied not only their findings and conclusions, but the entire package — the headlines, the imagery, the tone, the formatting, the branding.

Edwards found that Edelman consistently painted the picture that best served the interests of the firm and its clients: that public trust in governments, nonprofit organizations, and the media was collapsing — meaning, in turn, that businesses had an obligation to step into the breach.

In a nod to Hannah Arendt, the late philosopher and scholar of totalitarianism, Edwards described the trust barometer as an example of “organized lying,” which “reconstitutes … reality on the basis of whatever the organization deems necessary to achieve their goals.” Corporate thought leadership “might be based on deception,” Edwards argued, “but the appearance of truth is what matters most for its value in the production of trust.”

In short, you do not need to convey what is true. You only need convince people to believe that something is true, a tactic that Trump and his Maga movement specialize in.

Corporate Trust Narratives as Alternative Realities

Edwards concluded that “the production of trust narratives by the public relations industry is not a commentary on a pre-existing reality, but a construction of an alternative reality, that in many ways obscures — intentionally or otherwise — many inconvenient but factual truths about the role of business in society.”

Because these alternative realities are driven by what is most useful for companies to portray as the truth at a given moment in time, their conclusions can shift quickly. The rhetorical emergence of stakeholder capitalism was promptly followed by a right-wing backlash that saw furious pundits and political parties in the United States and elsewhere, especially the MAGA movement and its emulators around the world, gain momentum — and sometimes win elections — in part by decrying what they called “woke capitalism.”

Professor Lee Edwards describes Edelman’s trust barometer as an example of “organized lying.” Credit: LSE Department of Media and Communications

In turn, as the cheery narrative that companies would use market forces to fight injustice and solve climate change began to incur reputational and political risks from the right, companies did not hesitate to pivot to a different message — one that, in many ways, appeared incompatible with what they had been touting widely only months before.

“My advice to all of you for your companies is stay out of politics,” Richard Edelman told the WEF in January 2024, less than a year after advising that “this is not the time for CEOs and the companies they lead to remain silent or stand down.”

One organization that appeared to follow Edelman’s change of heart was the WEF itself. In 2024, Semafor reported that Richard Edelman was among the executives counseling the WEF to shift its politics rightward to avoid alienating conservative politicians and governments reliant on oil and gas extraction.

“The Gulf monarchies, whose oil money flows down the [Davos] Promenade and helps underwrite the forum, have also grown weary of criticism of fossil fuels and signaled to the forum that, ‘we can do this elsewhere,’” Semafor wrote. A few months later, in April 2024, WEF hosted a “special meeting” in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, where a panel about “an equitable energy transition” featured the Saudi energy minister, the CEO of Occidental Petroleum, and the CEO of ExxonMobil.

In an emailed statement, an Edelman spokesperson said: “The guardrails on speaking out have changed because public expectations of business have evolved. The broad permission once granted to business leaders to speak freely has become more selective, requiring careful consideration of when and where to engage. Our recent data shows that there are specific instances where people expect business leaders to engage on a societal issue such as when the issue harms their employees, customers, or communities.”

Boorstin’s ‘Pseudo-events’

In her 2024 book Invisible Rulers: The People Who Turn Lies Into Reality, Georgetown University professor Renée DiResta discusses what the late historian Daniel J. Boorstin called “pseudo-events”: events manufactured specifically for the purpose of generating media coverage. Like a news conference that announces the formation of a task force that will produce a non-binding report, pseudo-events have no significance in and of themselves; they exist to create the illusion of significance.

Once a pseudo-event has been hallucinated into existence — such as an announcement in a news release or, these days, a mention in an Instagram influencer’s story — its significance cascades outward as more news outlets and social media influencers and online scrollers report on it and cite it and share it. This “narrative laundering,” as DiResta calls it, helps transform a pseudo-event into reality — or, at least, pseudo-reality.

“Once a pseudo-event has been hallucinated into existence —
such as an announcement in a news release or, these days,
a mention in an Instagram influencer’s story — its significance
cascades outward as more news outlets and social media
influencers and online scrollers report on it and cite it and share it.”

The WEF and its corporate members are master crafters of pseudo-events. Indeed, the gatherings of the WEF high in the Swiss Alps, or at June’s “Summer Davos” in Tianjin, China, are themselves pseudo-events. 

They attract legions of wealthy and powerful people, alongside their PR teams and journalists. From behind closed doors emerge plenty of headlines and pledges, endless content and commitments — but no new laws, no binding emissions reductions, no new taxes to help pay for the climate adaptation that “the future of our planet depends on.” And, crucially, their high-profile pronouncements and publications can say whatever they deem most helpful for them to say in that moment.

Out of nothing emerges a pseudo-reality that portrays corporations as they wish to be seen. And in this alternate reality, the real world — in which companies operate as they always have, capitalizing on the sociopathic imperatives of capitalism — is mostly irrelevant.

Trump, Tariffs, and Pseudo-Realities

Of course, what validated, to some extent, the disbelief of the executives and Wall Street analysts on “Liberation Day” is the fact that Trump is a serial fabricator. Over the past decade, no one has been more successful than this president of the United States in spinning up and cashing in on pseudo-realities largely untethered from what he is actually doing.

Shamelessly promising whatever is convenient in the moment, with no intention of following through; profiting off the manipulation of supporters while condescending to them; acquiring power by constructing an alternative narrative of how the world is; performing that pseudo-reality into existence by repeating it over and over again: This is the Trump playbook. But it is also the corporate playbook.

Many say that President Trume aquired power by constructing an alternative narrative of how the world really is. Credit: Public Domain

Despite their initial shock, companies quickly found that there was value in the tariff narrative. Reports are already documenting executives explaining how the expectation of tariff-driven price increases provided an ideal cover for increasing prices — even on products not impacted by tariffs.

In April, asked on CNBC whether corporations were “raising their prices…just because they can,” one oil executive responded, “Exactly. Yes. … It gives them room to move prices up,” as The Lever’s Luke Goldstein noted.

Whether price-gouging under the cover of tariffs, or offering tired-but-effective national security justifications for doubling down on fossil fuels, predicting something and then using your prediction to justify what you already wanted and/or planned to do is a key two-step in what LSE’s Edwards called “organized lying.”

Only in an alternative reality could the PR and influence industry, whose business model includes laundering the reputations of autocrats and creating astroturf front groups to generate the illusion of broad public support, be seen as an authority on public trust. Yet it seems not to matter whether the pseudo-realities they manufacture are genuinely believable — only that they are just believable enough to serve a purpose.

And that purpose is often as simple as preventing the coherence of an alternative narrative, like the fact that corporate profiteering, which rose during the COVID crisis, is exacerbating tariff consequences for consumers. Or that the fossil fuel industry is (still) exploiting public anxieties to preserve its lucrative business model as long as possible, as Amy Westervelt discussed recently for Drilled.

Were narratives like these to cohere, they might generate broad public enthusiasm for new taxes or regulations or consumer protections or unions or even popular movements. As long as a pseudo-reality prevents the truth from cohering, it serves its purpose.

In Invisible Rulers, DiResta notes a consequence of living in a world of pseudo-realities, one in which it becomes difficult for ordinary people to be certain about what is true and what is not (which is also a defining characteristic of authoritarian propaganda states).

“People are simply overwhelmed,” DiResta writes. “The world feels unimaginably complex, and millions believe that they are being manipulated — they’re just not sure by whom and to what end.”

Those millions are often correct.

Donald Trump urges you to be a Climate Science denier like him. He says that he makes millions and millions for destroying the planet, Burn, Baby, Burn and Flood, Baby, Flood.
Donald Trump urges you to be a Climate Science denier like him. He says that he makes millions and millions for destroying the planet, Burn, Baby, Burn and Flood, Baby, Flood.
Neo-Fascist Climate Science Denier Donald Trump says Burn, Baby, Burn.
Neo-Fascist Climate Science Denier Donald Trump says Burn, Baby, Burn.
Continue ReadingOil and Gaslighting: How Trump and Corporations Manufacture Self-Serving ‘Pseudo-Realities’

Starvation as strategy: Netanyahu’s war crimes and America’s shame

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Palestinians gather at an aid distribution point near the Zikim border crossing in a desperate attempt to receive limited flour supplies in Gaza City, Gaza, on July 29, 2025. [Ali Jadallah – Anadolu Agency]

by Jasim Al-Azzawi

Moral outrage and political tsunami

The pièce de résistance in the political tsunami that swept across parliaments, streets of world capitals, and podiums, culminating in a cascade of recognitions for Palestine, was Israel’s starvation campaign. A deliberate deprivation that tore through the veil of diplomatic neutrality. When images of emaciated children and hollow-eyed families flooded the world’s screens, the silence shattered. From Madrid to Brasília, from Pretoria to Dublin, governments that once tiptoed around the issue found their voices. Chile, Spain, Norway—each stepped forward, not out of political convenience, but because the moral cost of inaction had become unbearable. The campaign was not just a humanitarian crisis—it was the moral rupture that forced the world to choose: complicity or conscience.

This rupture was not born in isolation. It followed months of mounting evidence, from UN agencies and human rights organizations, that Israel’s siege on Gaza had crossed every red line of international law. The deliberate targeting of food supplies, the obstruction of humanitarian aid, and the weaponization of starvation are not just morally abhorrent—they are prosecutable war crimes under the Rome Statute. And yet, the United States, long seen as the indispensable power in global diplomacy, chose silence. Worse—it chose endorsement.

The US endorsement of Israel’s starvation siege on Gaza is not just a policy misstep—it is a grotesque moral betrayal that will haunt the nation’s soul and forever brand President Trump’s legacy with shame. To support the deliberate starvation of children is to stand on the wrong side of humanity. The harrowing images of skeletal Palestinian toddlers conjure the darkest chapters of history—ghastly reminders of Jewish children in Nazi death camps. That such horrors are now mirrored with American complicity is a stain that no amount of spin or silence can erase. This is not hyperbole—it is history repeating itself in grotesque imitation. The very nation that once vowed “never again” now finds itself employing the same tactics it once condemned. And the man at the center of this moral collapse is Benjamin Netanyahu.

Netanyahu, drunk on his cunning, believes he can outmaneuver justice, stretching the Gaza war like a smokescreen to dodge the noose tightening around him at home. In his desperate bid for survival, he’s not just burying Gaza in rubble and grief; he’s dragging America’s reputation through blood-soaked mud, staining it with shame and criminal complicity. Every day this war drags on is another day the US is tethered to a man who treats human suffering as a political chess piece.

READ: ‘Unimaginable’ hunger: US doctor in Gaza reports children starving to death due to Israeli blockade

Like a modern-day Macbeth, Netanyahu clings to power with bloodied hands, convinced that his mastery of manipulation can outwit fate. He drags the Gaza war endlessly, not for strategy but for survival, hoping the fog of war will obscure the reckoning awaiting him at home, the noose tightening with every indictment and protest. In doing so, he mirrors the tyrants of history who believed brutality could buy them time—Milosevic in the Balkans, Pinochet in Chile—men who misinterpreted carnage for control. And as he orchestrates this siege, he pulls the United States into the mire, staining its legacy with complicity, shame, and the kind of moral failure that history never forgets. Gaza burns, and with it, the illusion that this war is anything but a desperate man’s gambit.

What makes this moment especially perilous is the semi-silence of American institutions. What would it take for the growing dissent within the US Congress, the media, and civil society to reach a critical mass that convinces President Trump to pressure Netanyahu into ending the conflict in Gaza? Where is the moral clarity that once defined American leadership? The answer lies in a toxic blend of political inertia and strategic delusion—a belief that supporting Israel, no matter the cost is a geopolitical imperative. But this calculus is crumbling. The world is watching, and the moral ledger is being written in real time.

Trump, Netanyahu, the donor class, and the GHF death trap   

President Trump must awaken to the peril of Netanyahu’s war of deception. This is not a statesman’s struggle—it is the desperate theater of a man cornered by scandal, clinging to power through destruction. If Trump continues to tether himself to Netanyahu’s intrigue, he risks allowing Netanyahu to drag him into a moral and political abyss from which there may be no return. History is merciless to those who stand beside tyrants in their final acts. The bloodshed in Gaza is not just a humanitarian catastrophe—it is a trap. And unless Trump distances himself now, he will find his legacy shackled to a war that was never his, but whose shame will be his to bear.

Why does President Trump allow Netanyahu to run circles around him, dragging his reputation through blood and betrayal? The answer is simple: money and influence. The Zionist lobby and donor class that bankrolled Trump’s rise now demand unwavering loyalty to Israel, even as his MAGA base grows disillusioned. “My people are starting to hate Israel,” Trump reportedly warned a prominent Jewish donor. Yet the financial leash remains tight, and Trump’s silence is bought at the cost of his legacy. The Gaza Humanitarian Fund (GHF), a private aid contractor with no prior experience in humanitarian relief, has become a grotesque symbol of failure and cruelty. Designed as an alternative to UN agencies, its distribution sites have turned into death traps. Over 1,400 Palestinians have been killed while seeking food, shot by Israeli soldiers working alongside GHF contractors. Retired U.S. Green Beret Anthony Aguilar, who served as a subcontractor, testified: “What I witnessed were war crimes—indiscriminate violence against starving civilians.” 

OPINION: Israel at a crossroads: Warnings from within on war crimes and the cost of denial

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.

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Continue ReadingStarvation as strategy: Netanyahu’s war crimes and America’s shame

US gave $3M in Gaza food aid, contradicting Trump’s $60M claim: Report

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Palestinians struggling with hunger in the Gaza Strip, under Israeli attacks and blockade, arrive at the aid distribution point near the Zikim Crossing in Gaza to access the limited supplies of flour, on August 2, 2025. [Khames Alrefi – Anadolu Agency]

US President Donald Trump has repeatedly claimed the US provided $60 million in food aid to Gaza, but The Washington Post in a report published Saturday said only $3 million has been disbursed so far, Anadolu reports.

Citing State Department officials, the report said $30 million had been allocated from the US International Disaster Assistance fund to support food aid in Gaza through the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a controversial US- and Israeli-backed aid group. Of that total, just 10% – around $3 million – has been delivered.

Critics have described GHF aid sites in Gaza as “death traps,” with the UN reporting that Israeli forces have killed over 1,300 Palestinians seeking food at its distribution points since late May. As Gaza teeters on the brink of famine under the ongoing Israeli blockade, its Health Ministry said Saturday that the total death toll from hunger has risen to 169, including 93 children, since Oct. 7, 2023.

READ: Trump’s special envoy to enter Gaza on Friday to inspect food distribution sites: White House

According to the WaPo report, State Department spokesperson confirmed that $30 million had been allocated from the department’s International Disaster Assistance fund but declined to address Trump’s comments, which he made during public appearances over the past week.

“We gave $60 million a couple of weeks ago,” Trump told reporters at the White House on Thursday. “Nobody said anything about it. Nobody said thank you.”

The newspaper also cited a report on internal briefings by US Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff’s aides to congressional committees, saying Israel had agreed to match $30 million from the US. The Israeli government has not confirmed this, and the State Department declined to comment.

Witkoff visited an aid center in southern Gaza on Friday operated by the GHF. He said the aim was to give President Donald Trump “a clear understanding of the humanitarian situation and help craft a plan to deliver food and medical aid to the people of Gaza.”

READ: Gaza government says most of 36 aid trucks looted amid security chaos

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Orcas discuss Genocide-supporting and complicit Zionists. Donald Trump, Keith Starmer, David Lammy, Rachel Reeves, Angela Rayner are called evil genocide-complicit and supporting cnuts.
Orcas discuss Genocide-supporting and complicit Zionists. Donald Trump, Keith Starmer, David Lammy, Rachel Reeves, Angela Rayner are called evil genocide-complicit and supporting cnuts.
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FBI Officials Redacted References to Trump From Epstein Files: Report

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Original article by Brad Reed republished from Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). 

American financier Jeffrey Epstein (left) and then-real estate developer Donald Trump posed together at the Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida in 1997.
 (Photo: Davidoff Studios/Getty Images)

The names of other high-profile figures were also redacted, according to Bloomberg.

Bloomberg reported on Friday that FBI officials earlier this year redacted the name of U.S. President Donald Trump from the agency’s files on late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Three unnamed sources confirmed to Bloomberg that the FBI had redacted the names of Trump and other prominent public figures even before the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) announced last month that “no further disclosure” of the Epstein files “would be appropriate or warranted.”

Bloomberg’s sources explained that “Trump’s name, along with other high-profile individuals, was blacked out because he was a private citizen when the federal investigation of Epstein was launched in 2006.”

The reviewers applied two Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) exemptions to justify their redactions, according to the report: One that “protects individuals against ‘a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy'” and another that protects against disclosures that “could reasonably be expected to constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.”

Bloomberg noted that there is nothing particularly exceptional about this because these standards have long been employed by the FBI when it comes to redacting FOIA requests, even when it comes to high-profile public figures such as Trump.

The revelations about Trump’s name being redacted from the files came on the same day The New York Times reported that Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s longtime accomplice who is serving a 20-year sentence on sex-trafficking charges, was transferred from a federal prison in Florida to a minimum-security women’s prison in Texas.

The DOJ’s decision to not release the Epstein files ignited a firestorm last month that the president has struggled to contain. At times Trump, who was friends with Epstein for several years, has even chastised his own voters for continuing to ask questions about the files, while at the same time insisting that he had nothing to do with Epstein’s sex trafficking ring that involved the sexual abuse of multiple underage girls.

Original article by Brad Reed republished from Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). 

Donald Trump and his paedophile friend Jeffrey Epstein.
Donald Trump and his paedophile friend Jeffrey Epstein.
Donald Trump and his paedophile friend Jeffrey Epstein.
Donald Trump and his paedophile friend Jeffrey Epstein.
Donald Trump, his paedophile friend Jeffrey Epstein and Trump's daughter.
Donald Trump, his paedophile friend Jeffrey Epstein and Trump’s daughter.
Donald Trump picture with one of his wives, Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell.
Donald Trump picture with one of his wives, Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell.
Donald Trump with his paedophile friend Jeffrey Epstein's associate Ghislane Maxwell.
Donald Trump with his paedophile friend Jeffrey Epstein’s associate Ghislane Maxwell.

Continue ReadingFBI Officials Redacted References to Trump From Epstein Files: Report