‘Anyone Whose Beliefs Are Inconvenient Becomes a Terrorist’: 

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Article by Janine Jackson republished form FAIR under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.

CounterSpin interview with Seth Stern on criminalizing dissent

Janine Jackson interviewed Freedom of the Press Foundation’s Seth Stern about the criminalization of dissent for the July 26, 2026, episode of CounterSpin. This is a lightly edited transcript.

Janine Jackson: The official government press release is headlined “Leader of Antifa Cell Members in North Texas Sentenced to 100 Years in Prison for Terrorist Attack on ICE Facility.” That statement from the Office of Public Affairs states that

eight North Texas Antifa cell operatives were sentenced for their roles in rioting, using weapons and explosives, providing material support to terrorists, obstruction and the attempted murder of an Alvarado police officer at the Prairieland Detention Center on July 4, 2025.

If you aren’t questioning the Trump White House version of reality, in which vandals snuck into the Reflecting Pool with “very sharp knives and razors” because they hate freedom, you probably don’t care about the Prairieland case. But for all of the rest of us, this is a nightmare: historically, legally, morally.

What is happening here, and how do people who think a country with aspirations for democracy, with the understanding that that critically involves protest and multiple voices, how do we respond to what has just happened in the case of activists who participated in a protest at Prairieland ICE Detention Center—or didn’t—and are now facing lives in prison?

There was never a time to not pay attention, to not understand that an official enemy campaign was always going to come for anyone designated undesirable—laws, practices, long-held understandings be damned. But if ever there were a time of comfortable ignorance, it’s over.

Here to help us see what’s happening in this case, and how to move forward, is Seth Stern. He’s the chief of advocacy at the Freedom of the Press Foundation, and he joins us now by phone. Welcome to CounterSpin, Seth Stern.

Seth Stern: Good to be here.

Guardian: ‘It’s like they’re hunting’: US citizens and legal residents report increase in racial profiling by ICE

Guardian (1/22/26)

JJ: We can start with material facts about Prairieland. A group of people gathered outside an ICE detention center to protest the policy, the actions, of masked agents sweeping Black and brown people off the street and into camps, and then out of the country without due process, and to show audible support for those inside. And a man did shoot and wound a police officer.

But we know this case is not ultimately about a noise protest, or even the wounding of a police officer, because if it were that, the sentences would look different, and we wouldn’t be hearing things like “assault on democracy,” or “conspiracy to conceal documents.” Can you just set us up a little with why you are so concerned about this? Because injustice is old, but this feels new.

SS: It really does. What we’re seeing here is an attempt to criticize, not only an ideology, but a very loosely defined ideology. The administration’s theory is that because they attended the same protest as the shooter, and because they read some of the same literature as the shooter, might have shared political views with the shooter, you can from those facts alone infer a conspiracy, infer an organized—as the administration would call it—“terrorist attack.”

In reality, none of these people—including the shooter, in all likelihood—came to the protest with any intention of a police officer being shot. Certainly the other six defendants who were at the protest besides the shooter had no idea that was going to occur. There was no evidence, and no allegation, even, that anyone had planned a shooting.

When these people left their homes to go to a protest, they figured they would sleep in their own beds that night. At most, they might have contemplated the possibility of getting picked up for trespassing, or a noise disturbance, or the typical minor misdemeanors that people risk when they engage in protest activity. But there was no reason anyone would contemplate that they might be held criminally liable, their lives ruined, sentenced to decades behind bars, for merely attending a protest where someone else shot somebody.

The prosecutors and judge made very clear that their purpose was to send a message to people sharing a similar ideology. The prosecutor said, “This is not any normal ideology. This is an ideology that endorses political violence,” presumably referring to anarchism, or whatever shared belief system these people supposedly had.

FPF: Texas man sentenced to 30 years for transporting pamphlets

Freedom of the Press Foundation (6/23/26)

But almost everyone, in some circumstance or another, would endorse some form of political violence. Like, I’m the grandson of Holocaust survivors. I don’t really take issue with violence against Nazis. Does that mean that if I go to an anti-Nazi protest, and I have some anti-Nazi books, let’s say, on my bookshelf, that if someone else at the protest, who I’ve never met, commits an act of violence against a Nazi, that I’m then implicated in a conspiracy, and go to prison for decades based on what that person does? It sounds absurd, but it’s no more absurd than what happened at Prairieland.

And I shouldn’t neglect to mention, one of the individuals who was convicted, and sentenced to 30 years, wasn’t even at the protest. He’s somebody who allegedly transported a box of pamphlets, because his wife was at the protest, and he believed, according to prosecutors, that the box of pamphlets might implicate his wife, might be used against her, so he was “concealing evidence.”

Evidence of what? This wasn’t a how-to manual. Yeah, obviously, if his wife had been the one to shoot the police officer—which she wasn’t; nobody alleges she was—and he had a how-to manual on where to get a gun, how to get into this protest and how to shoot a cop, that would be a whole different case. We wouldn’t be having this conversation.

But that’s not what was in the box. They were ‘zines. They said nothing about this protest, about the Prairieland Detention Facility, about shooting this police officer. They were written years ago; they’re political theory that’s available at bookstores nationwide.

So when they say that he concealed evidence by moving these ‘zines, evidence of what? It’s evidence of an ideology. It’s evidence of somebody’s reading habits. There should be no universe where that can be considered concealment of evidence, because it’s not probative of anything. You can’t introduce somebody’s reading habits, or their library, their bookshelf, as evidence of a specific crime in court.

And if you can, we’ve got a big problem, because people have hundreds of books; books can be interpreted any which way. I have plenty of books on my bookshelf that I’m sure someone could characterize as endorsing some form of violence or another. That doesn’t mean I agree with the books. I might; it depends. But that’s really a preposterous way to conduct criminal proceedings, is to thought-police people to this degree.

FAIR: Under Trump, Criticism Is Now Criminal

FAIR.org (10/3/25)

JJ: And yet here we are, because I think, for a lot of folks, it sounds just as weird as you’ve just laid out. First of all, it sounds like these rulings are not saying you can’t protest. They’re saying, “You can protest, just not against the administration. Just not with these particular ideas.” We all saw January 6, but if you don’t like it, then it’s going to be labeled terrorism.

And I guess I’d want to pull you out on that, because we can say what folks did was not illegal, but if you keep changing the law to make things illegal, then the ground is shifting under our feet. And so what’s happening there, from a legal perspective? Are we just creating new categories, and now you can say yesterday you weren’t violating the law, but today you are, and so now you go under the jail?

SS: Theoretically you can’t do that, because we’ve got a Constitution that trumps any executive order, or even statute. In this case, we’re talking about NSPM-7, and the Trump administration’s new counter-terrorism memorandum, which don’t change the law. They’re simply an expression of prosecutorial priorities, and they instruct prosecutors to go after Antifa, to go after far-left groups, people who they view as “anti-American,” whatever that means.

People with “extreme gender ideologies”; no idea what that one means. I’ve never heard of any sort of trans “supremacy” movement that wants to lock up cisgender people. So presumably they’re just talking about people who believe that trans people should have rights, and now they’re on the same plane as terrorists, as ISIS, according to this administration.

It’s all pretty absurd, but at the end of the day, we have a Constitution that prohibits people from being locked up for what they think, write or read, as long as they are not inciting imminent violence.

So hopefully the appellate courts will reverse these convictions, but the law is only as good as the people who enforce it. So if the judiciary isn’t up to the task, if the judiciary is compromised, and lawmakers are unwilling to step in—and, of course, at the end of the day, the president has pardon and clemency power, but we know who’s president, so that’s not something you can rely on—then the law is not as good as the paper it’s written on. So that’s the situation we’re in. And if the appellate courts don’t correct this egregious error that the trial courts have committed, we’ll be in a really scary place.

FAIR: ‘Charging Domestic Terrorism Is Intended to Make the Cost of Protesting Too High’

CounterSpin (5/26/23)

Remember, in Georgia, they tried something very similar with the Stop Cop City protesters, very similar situation. They indicted 61 people who were part of the Stop Cop City movement, because a few of those individuals had allegedly committed criminal acts: arson, vandalizing police cars, whatnot. There was no indication that all 61 of those people had anything to do with those isolated criminal acts, but they were looped into a RICO conspiracy, solely because they, again, read the same ‘zines, shared the same ideologies, were part of the same movement, had the same alleged belief system.

That case fell apart, as it should have, after putting all 60 of those people through a whole lot of headache and expense, but still, it ultimately fell apart. And it was easy to dismiss at the time as though, this is just some local prosecutor who had an awful idea and made a fool of himself. Now it’s the federal government doing it.

And you mentioned January 6. These sentences here were far more severe than any sentences against anyone involved in January 6. That issue was raised with the judge, who said, “Well, this case was charged differently. This case was charged as terrorism.” So essentially incentivizing prosecutors, going forward, if they want to get headline-grabbing sentences and make themselves look effective, to overcharge, to continue charging defendants as terrorism, despite the lack of any evidence of them being terrorists, being affiliated with a terrorist group or having any terrorist intentions. So we should expect to see more of this. Hopefully other trial judges will do their jobs, and not leave it up to the appellate courts to clean up the mess.

JJ: I think language is playing a role here. I have said repeatedly that when news media took “war on terror” out of quotes, we lost something. A brain wrinkle got smoothed, so now we can just say “terrorism.” “I don’t know actually what it is, but I know it’s the very worst thing in the world and I don’t need to ask any further questions.” And we’re now at that situation with Antifa; what the actual heck? Now Antifa is being legally identified as an organized thing? What is meaningful? What changes when you allow folks to say, “Hey, we made up a name for everybody who thinks a certain way, and now you’re a group and you’re conspiring terrorism?”

Guardian: FBI raids home of Washington Post reporter in ‘highly unusual and aggressive’ move

Guardian (1/14/26)

SS: I certainly agree, even before the Trump administration, the idea of terrorism had kind of lost its meaning, but I think one assumption that everybody, for the most part, had was that to be labeled a terrorist, you have to have engaged in or collaborated with others who engaged in violence, and that you had to have some foreknowledge of that violence. And to get to a point where people are being convicted of terrorism for merely going to a protest, where the prosecution didn’t even bother trying to prove that they had any intention to commit an act of violence, that they had any foreknowledge that one of them might pick up a gun and shoot at a cop, is really quite alarming, because terrorism becomes less of an action and more of an ideology that people like Donald Trump can define as synonymous with dissent. Anyone whose beliefs are inconvenient to him, or that interferes with his agenda, becomes a terrorist. “Anti-Trump” and “anti-American” become interchangeable in the views of the administration and judges, apparently, who are sympathetic to them.

So it’s quite scary to have this kind of power to abuse the word “terrorism,” particularly in a domestic context. In the international context, we’ve long had the problem of prosecutors and judges and politicians characterizing things as national security threats with no basis to do so, going back to the Pentagon Papers, where the truth about the Vietnam War was almost censored because the administration at the time called it a national security threat for the American people to know the truth. Fortunately, the judiciary back then rejected that.

Reporters are threatened with prosecution under, for example, the Espionage Act, because their reporting supposedly poses a national security threat when, in fact, it merely is inconvenient to those in power. We see that, for example, in the case involving Hannah Natanson, the Washington Post reporter whose home newsroom was raided. That’s long been an issue in the context of national security in matters of war, international issues.

But now you’ve got any local dissident, any activist, any person in any of the 50 states who opposes the president’s agenda, being treated the same way, being treated as a national security threat. The line between First Amendment–protected dissent and terrorism is just entirely blurred by this administration. And, again, the judges have the power to set it straight. Whether they will or not is to be determined.

FAIR: ‘There’s an Effort Around the Country to Curtail People’s Fundamental 1st Amendment Rights’

CounterSpin (7/14/17)

JJ: I will say I spoke with Mara Verheyden-Hilliard in 2017 about arrests after the first Trump inauguration, where police were saying, if you were somewhere near an act of property damage—I think it was a car being set on fire—if you were near it, it’s the same as you committing it. If you were wearing black, well, forget about it; you are obviously part of it.

At the time, a Washington Post poll was saying that one out of every three DC residents were saying they’d taken part in a protest against Trump since his first inauguration. And that was half of the district’s white residents, half of people making more than $100,000 a year and a fifth of respondents over the age of 65.

So what I want to say, and what I think you’re wanting to say also, is you’re not safe from this. The idea that you’re not going to do anything wrong is not going to protect you in this case. We’re seeing the straight-up criminalizing of resistance per se. And so I guess I’d ask you, what can we do? What can we be doing in the face of this?

FAIR: Lemon Arrest Shows Being Near Protesters Can Make You an Enemy of the State

FAIR.org (1/30/26)

SS: That is important to remember, because it is easy for people to look at this and say: “Well, I am not an anarchist. I don’t read these zines. I don’t go to these kinds of protests. My protests are permitted. I’m not at risk.”

But I’ve mentioned Des Sanchez, who was convicted solely for transporting a box of zines. Think about the Don Lemon and Georgia Fort cases. They were arrested, of course, while covering a protest at a church in Minneapolis, against immigration enforcement there.

I don’t think anyone would characterize Don Lemon as a far-left anarchist type. You can like him or not like him, but that’s not something that he is. But the Trump administration sought a warrant that would have allowed it to gather from YouTube a list of subscribers to both Lemon and Fort’s YouTube channels.

Now, that warrant was fortunately rejected by a judge, but think about it. What possible evidence could a subscriber to Lemon and Fort’s YouTube channels have that would assist the Trump administration in prosecuting its frivolous case against those journalists? All they saw was what was publicly broadcast. The prosecution already has that. This is clearly an attempt by the Trump administration to gather information about who is in possession, who is accessing news, that it does not like.

So just as Des Sanchez was prosecuted for his box of zines, those who watch Don Lemon and Georgia Fort’s show may have faced danger or risk down the road. Why else would prosecutors want their information? It has nothing to do with their case.

So it’s certainly a mistake to believe that this is a problem that is limited to “Antifa,” or people on the political fringes. Stephen Miller has said the entire Democratic Party is a terrorist organization. Donald Trump has called the press “enemies of the people,” has called his critics “the enemy within.” He is not only talking about anarchists when he says that.

Freedom of the Press Foundation's Seth Stern

Seth Stern: “When there’s enough resistance, the administration will back down, or shift its priorities. People do have the power to do that.”

As far as what we can do, I would encourage people to make their voices heard. Of course, we’re not in a position where Congress is likely to act, and we don’t have control, directly, over what any judge does.

But we have platforms. We have local newspapers, we have social media, we have the ability to write letters to the editor, op-eds, posts, videos, create noise, create a chorus of dissent.

We’ve seen repeatedly, for example, with ICE in Minneapolis, that when there’s enough resistance, the administration will back down, or shift its priorities. People do have the power to do that. This isn’t a situation where there is some corporation that can be boycotted, where there is a direct lever to pull to stop the administration from criminalizing dissent. But if there is enough uproar, and if we make that uproar to some extent bipartisan, there can be sufficient pressure to, if not stop them, cause them to be a bit more cautious, and to dial it down.

We need to continue making noise about this, continue talking about it on radio shows, continue talking about it on social media and on newspaper pages. And we need to communicate clearly to people with different political ideologies that, hey, one day the shoe is going to be on the other foot. And once you give the government, once you give prosecutors the power to criminalize dissent in these ways, it’s a matter of time before the political tides turn, and that same power is used against you.

Whereas earlier in the Trump administration, I think there was this feeling of exuberance on the right, the feeling that this party is never going to end. We’re going to be in power forever. We’re not really worried about these sorts of hypotheticals, where it comes back to bite us one day.

Now I think there might be a little bit of recognition that this MAGA thing is not going to last forever, that the political tides might be turning, and people are a bit more concerned about how the abuses that they’re enabling, the powers that they’re granting the president, could one day be used against them. So I think it’s time to lean into that and send that message.

JJ: Absolutely. Let me just ask you, in case you have any final thoughts about what journalists or reporters—you know, it’s mixed. Independent reporters are bringing us the story. Elite reporters are doing something slightly different. Any thoughts about journalism, and the role it plays right now?

Handbasket: From Haymarket to Prairieland: How dissent has unleashed the long arm of the law

Handbasket (6/26/26)

SS: Yeah. Well, it’s an old story where independent journalists—who are not necessarily abiding by this myth that good journalism has to be in this passive, neutral voice, that is so objective it doesn’t acknowledge reality—are calling it like it is.

Whereas some corporate outlets, although they have covered the convictions, they’re covering these convictions the way that they covered, say, the Iraq War: One side says that these people were terrorists, and the defense attorney says that they weren’t. The prosecutor says they are. Here’s a quote from both sides. Done.

It’s good they’re covering it, but in a way, they’re sanewashing it by reporting it that way, by not giving any sense of how unusual this is, how unprecedented and how absurd. And I’m not saying that they should editorialize, if that is not the style of journalism they do. There’s room for all different styles of journalism. But you don’t lose neutrality by providing some historical context.

So if you’re not going to come out and say in your own voice that this is alarming and preposterous, you can provide historical context. You can talk about how dissent has been treated in the past, how unusual these charges are. Compare it to, as I saw one, as you said, independent outlet do, compare it to the Haymarket cases, compare it to past abuses, McCarthyism, so on. Give readers that context. Don’t just get a quote from both sides and call it a day. This is a bigger story than that.

JJ: All right. Well, we have lots more to talk about, but we’ll end it now for now. We’ve been speaking with Seth Stern from the Freedom of the Press Foundation. Thank you so much, Seth Stern, for joining us this week on CounterSpin.

SS: Anytime.

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Article by Janine Jackson republished form FAIR under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.

Donald Fuhrump says that Amerikkka doesn't bother with crimes or charges anymore, not being 100% Amerikkkan and opposing his real estate intentions is enough.
Donald Fuhrump says that Amerikkka doesn’t bother with crimes or charges anymore, not being 100% Amerikkkan and opposing his real estate intentions is enough.
Elon Musk urges you to be a Fascist like him, says that you can ignore facts and reality then.
Elon Musk urges you to be a Fascist like him, says that you can ignore facts and reality then.
Continue Reading‘Anyone Whose Beliefs Are Inconvenient Becomes a Terrorist’: 

I’m not really supposed to know …

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Image of the original Fascists Mussolini and Hitler.
The original Fascists Mussolini and Hitler salute the UK’s Fascist Labour government

That my Android phone secretly reboots at 1.50am. I say secretly because it doesn’t ask for it’s password and does it every day at 1.50a.m. when I’m supposed to be asleep and not notice.

That it also provides location data to the local police. It provides elevation as well as ground location. Think that it’s AI, I try to confuse it sometimes.

That police cars sound an alarm when I get close to them. It’s an alarm to tell them that I’m nearby.

That digital devices act strangely around me e.g. other peoples’ phones refuse to ring because they’re recording the conversation instead. Many digital devices behave strangely – POS tills, etc. It’s almost as if there’s fuzzy logic probing them and very often disabling them.

Anyway the point of this is that it has to be authorised by Fascist Labour Party Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood who wants a panopticon to know how often and indeed where you shit and who is attending to your private parts.

But it actually goes far beyond watching & the New Labour Fascist Fascists interfere in my attempts to make friends and meet people. I think that is a basic human right that the New Labour Fascist Fascists are interfering with in addition to their strange, overwhelming interest in when and where I poo.

And of course, I’m a Democratice Socialist opposed to the Fascist, Genocidal New Labour government engaging in the democratic process as people are entitled to.

GCHQ as civil servants should be politically impartial and not engage in activities that support a particular political party or perspective. I am clearly promoting opposition to the Labour Party and that should be permitted and even protected in a democratic society. I particularly object to state agents interfering in my private affairs.

ed: 40 second delay to BBC radio stations. I’m uncertain what that’s supposed to achieve. Is it that everything is routed via Langley, Virginia? ed:ed: The Langley comment is not meant seriously.

ed:ed:ed: I consider that it’s a deliberate attempt to isolate me which I regard as being particularly evil. I intend to respond better to defend myself.

24/6/26 3.55pm Prevent sending photos. There’s paranoia here that there might be hidden messages in the photos when the reality is that they’re photos of kittens, the Severn Bridge, bicycles – stuff people send photos of. It’s strange since they’re controlling the phone so see that there is no post-processing so it’s real paranoia about time and date stamp, etc to people I hardly know.

28/6/26 8.40am There was a nasty tacky ink on the entrance to my block of flats when I returned early this morning. OIt had been wiped away by the time I had cleaned my hand. I’ve been switching my phone off, why should I help them harass me, interfere in my life? I regard the ink as harassment, there is no need to use a nasty highly-visible ink. Someone is taking the piss.

Continue ReadingI’m not really supposed to know …

Class war by other means: the Milburn review and the neoliberal assault on disabled youth

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https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/class-war-other-means-milburn-review-and-neoliberal-assault-disabled-youth

 VICTIM BLAMING: Former health secretary Alan Milburn speaks to the media on the publication of the interim Milburn Report into Young People and Work, at West Library Youth Employment Hub, north London

The Milburn review presents itself as a plan to help young people into work, but Dr DYLAN MURPHY argues it is laying the groundwork for a harsher benefits regime

THE publication of the interim report of the Milburn review into young people and work represents a sinister milestone in the ongoing neoliberal assault on the British welfare state.

Framed as a “discovery phase” to address the rising numbers of young people who are not in education, employment, or training (Neet), the report is a highly ideological document. It does not seek to understand or alleviate the profound, systemic barriers that keep sick and disabled young people out of the labor market. Instead, it serves as the vanguard for a punitive campaign of benefit cuts, increased conditionality, and state-sponsored coercion.

As a disabled person who has first-hand experience of the relentless hostility of the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) towards disabled people claiming benefits, I find the contents of this report both terrifying and entirely predictable.

Rather than addressing the catastrophic collapse of the National Health Service, the sparsity of youth mental health services, or the structural refusal of employers to accommodate disabled workers, Alan Milburn has chosen to blame the victims. The report is a masterclass in political distraction, designed to prepare the public for a brutal tightening of the screws on some of the most vulnerable members of our society.

Redefining PIP: disability support as labour market discipline

One of the most alarming aspects of the Milburn review is its aggressive attempt to redefine the purpose of the personal independence payment (PIP). Since its inception as the replacement for the disability living allowance (DLA), PIP has been understood as a non-means-tested benefit designed to help disabled people meet the extra costs of living with a long-term health condition or disability.

It was never intended as an out-of-work benefit; it is paid regardless of employment status, because disabled people face additional costs whether they work or not.

Yet, Milburn laments this design as a systemic failure. He complains bitterly:
“At no point in a young person’s application or journey on PIP are they asked about, or supported to, work. This is not an accident of delivery. It is how PIP is designed.”

By framing the lack of work-focus in PIP as a “design flaw,” Milburn is paving the way for the benefit to be subjected to conditionality. If the state begins to demand “work-focused” outcomes as a condition for receiving PIP, it will destroy the benefit’s role as a financial safety net, leaving millions of disabled youth in poverty.

The concept of PIP as an “investment” for which there must be a “return” is a recurring theme throughout the report. Milburn complains that the state spends £8 billion a year on PIP and universal credit (UC) for young people, yet “for that investment, claimants are getting worse outcomes.”

This is the barbaric language of venture capitalism applied to human survival. To demand a financial “return” on the money spent to keep disabled people alive is the height of neoliberal depravity.

Original, long article continues at https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/class-war-other-means-milburn-review-and-neoliberal-assault-disabled-youth

Keir Starmer says that the Labour Party under his leadership is intensely relaxed about assaulting those least able to defend themselves - the very poorest and most vulnerable.
Keir Starmer says that the Labour Party under his leadership is intensely relaxed about assaulting those least able to defend themselves – the very poorest and most vulnerable.
Continue ReadingClass war by other means: the Milburn review and the neoliberal assault on disabled youth

We are all going to die, you f*cking idiots

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https://rogerhallam.com/our-grandchildren-will-starve

Good News: Our Grandchildren Will Starve, Not Our Children

The most extreme climate scenarios are off, according to scientists in the conservative IPCC. However, the Godfather of Climate Science says otherwise.

Good news from The Times: our grandchildren will starve to death rather than our children. The new worst case is just 3.5C. Phew.

Adam Vaughan, Most Apocalyptic Climate Scenario Thrown Out by Experts, The Times, 11 May 2026.

Firstly, let’s remember what a 3.5C world actually means.

  1. Mass food system collapse, particularly in the Global South.
  2. Vast areas of Africa, South and West Asia will become uninhabitable within the lifetimes of people already born. Translation: billions will die from impending poverty and disaster.

That is what this headline is supposedly reassuring us of.

Secondly, this report is not telling the truth about the science because it is based on outdated models. Even Trump jumped on it to advance his end-times fascist agenda.

To understand why both Trump and the Times are deeply wrong about where we are heading, let’s turn to the godfather of climate science, James Hansen, and look at one of his latest papers on climate sensitivity.

In May 2025, Hansen published a paper on Earth’s albedo (the reflectivity of solar radiation bounced back into space). Over the past 25 years of precise satellite data, Earth’s albedo has declined by 0.5%, leading to an increase of 1.7 watts per square metre of absorbed solar energy. Hansen describes this as a BFD (Big Fucking Deal), and he is right. That single number, in forcing terms, is equivalent to an additional 138 parts per million of CO2.

Clouds reflect sunlight back into space. Fewer clouds, or thinner clouds, means more solar energy reaches the surface and stays there. As the planet warms, evidence now shows that cloud cover is decreasing and, crucially, that this decrease is itself a response to warming. In other words, warming reduces clouds, which in turn cause more warming, which further reduces clouds. This is what climate scientists mean by a feedback loop, and this one is a fucking big one.

And a big cloud feedback means the planet is far more sensitive to CO2 than the IPCC’s standard figures suggest. The IPCC’s best estimate for climate sensitivity — the amount of warming you get from a doubling of atmospheric CO2 — is 3°C. Hansen’s three independent lines of evidence (of which the albedo data is one), all point to 4.5°C. The difference between 3°C and 4.5°C is the difference between devastation and extinction.

The corporate media has barely engaged with this work, and when it has, it has often cast doubt on its truth. At the end of the climate sensitivity paper, Hansen notes:

“Criticisms of the Acceleration paper in the media did not address the physics in our three assessments of climate sensitivity. Instead, criticisms were largely ad hoc opinions, even ad hominem attacks. How can science reporting have descended to this level? Climate science is now so complex, with many sub-disciplines, that the media must rely on opinions of climate experts. Although there are thousands of capable scientists in these disciplines, the media have come to depend on a handful of scientists, a clique of climate scientists who are willing, or even eager, to be the voice of the climate science community. But are they representative of the total community, of capable scientists who focus on climate science?”


The Problem of Fragmented Science

A key problem of scientific understanding is that it requires slicing reality into manageable chunks. Take “the doubling of CO2.” The slice aids understanding but paradoxically kills it too. Attending to the part deflects attention from the whole. Space. Time. The full arc of what’s coming.

So when Hansen and colleagues write that climate sensitivity for doubled CO2 is 4.5°C, and that sensitivity as low as 3°C is excluded with greater than 99 percent confidence — they stop there. Slice completed. No return to the whole. No wonder the media shrugs. So what.

Here’s the whole.

  1. Doubling CO2 means going from 280ppm to 560ppm. We’re at 420ppm now. At current trajectory — roughly 40ppm additional per decade — we hit 560ppm around 2055. That’s 4.5°C by roughly 2060. Not 2100. 2060. Hansen also shows Earth’s albedo has already darkened by 0.5%, an extra 1.7 W/m² of absorbed solar energy. The system is already running hotter than the models admit.
  2. Time doesn’t stop at 2060. At those temperatures, natural feedbacks (clouds, ice, permafrost) accelerate. There is no equilibrium, only continuation.
  3. Above 5°C, effective human extinction is locked in. We are on that path.
  4. Facts alone don’t move humans. Emotion does. We are human, after all. So the headline that would actually communicate the whole truth? “We are all going to die, you fucking idiots.”

In my recent paper with the 4 Billion Dead team, we examine what an All Systems Approach could look like to counter this fragmented thinking.

See the full original article at https://rogerhallam.com/our-grandchildren-will-starve

Continue ReadingWe are all going to die, you f*cking idiots

Hegseth Ripped for ‘Racist Rant’ Against Migrants at D-Day Event

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Article by Jessica Corbett republished form Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). 

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth (second from the podium) attended a D-Day anniversary event at Normandy American Cemetery in Colleville-sur-Mer, France on June 6, 2026. (Photo by Pete Hegseth/X)

“Apparently our nitwit secretary of war(drobe) thinks a D-Day commemoration is an appropriate time to push his far-right ideology in Europe,” said US Sen. Tim Kaine.

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth came under fire from critics around the world this weekend after he turned his speech at a Saturday event marking the D-Day anniversary into a “racist rant” against migrants.

On June 6, 1944, Allied forces stormed the beaches of Normandy in France, which was occupied by Nazi Germany’s troops. Thousands were killed, but it is now widely seen as the beginning of the end of World War II. More than eight decades later, Hegseth traveled to the Normandy American Cemetery in Colleville-sur-Mer for the second straight year.

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“Sadly, today, different European beaches are stormed by different dangerous ideologies,” President Donald Trump’s Pentagon chief said at the cemetery. “Beaches in Spain, in Italy, in Greece, and Bulgaria—boats and men arrive. When will European capitals do something about that invasion? Or is it too late? I pray not, and I believe not.”

Critics quickly decried Hegseth’s comments as “straight-up white nationalist talk,” “utterly disgusting,” “despicable,” and “a disgrace to the memory of the men and women who gave their lives to win World War II.”

US Army veteran and progressive advocate Mike Lavigne denounced Hegseth as “a disgrace to his office and to the nation.”

Sharing a report about Hegseth’s remarks on social media, Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) wrote, “Apparently our nitwit secretary of war(drobe) thinks a D-Day commemoration is an appropriate time to push his far-right ideology in Europe.”

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) said: “Thousands of American heroes died on D-Day to defend freedom and defeat fascism. Pete Hegseth should honor and respect their memory. Not politicize their ultimate sacrifice. May God Bless the Greatest Generation on D-Day and every day.”

After the speech, Hegseth “conspicuously skipped [the] afternoon’s main international ceremony marking the anniversary of the Allied landings,” France 24 reported. “His presence was not missed by some residents of the village hosting the ceremony, Langrune-sur-Mer, who said the US official was not welcome there.”

As the news network detailed:

“He has very warlike views and it seems to us that this man does not share our democratic values,” Sylvie Lamy Thepaut, a member of the municipal association Langrune en commun, told BFM TV.

A message on the association’s website called for Hegseth’s visit to be canceled on the grounds that the Pentagon chief “espouses values contrary to democracyhuman rights and peace” and had made “numerous anti-European remarks,” “warlike statements,” and “American supremacist pronouncements.”

“The honor of Langrune, that of France, and the memory of the young Allied soldiers—American, British, Canadian—who died on our beaches in the name of democracy would dictate canceling this individual’s visit,” the statement concluded.

Hegseth’s comments notably came a just day after US Vice President JD Vance claimed on social media that Henry Nowak—an 18-year-old student fatally stabbed in the United Kingdom last year by a fellow Brit who has since been sentenced to life in prison—would still be alive “if the last few generations of European elites had stood their ground against the politics of self-hatred and the mass invasion of migrants, many of whom despise the West and the people who love it.”

“Each time a life like his is lost, the proper response—the only response—is righteous anger,” Vance added. “One of the most important things the Trump administration has proven to the world is that stopping the flow of mass migration and defending national sovereignty is a matter of political will and leadership. Anything else is an excuse.”

In response, a spokesperson for UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said that “in recent days we have seen people trying to interfere in our democracy and seeking to stir up division on our streets. The Nowak family are grieving after Henry’s horrific murder. They have said they don’t want his death to be used to create further division, hatred, or tension. We should be respecting their wishes. Our politics should bring people together even in the most terrible of circumstances. That is who we are as a country.”

The recent remarks from Vance and Hegseth align with the Trump administration’s official National Security Strategy, which was released in December and is full of rhetoric often used by white nationalists. The document accuses the European Union of enacting “migration policies that are transforming the continent and creating strife,” claims that “should present trends continue, the continent will be unrecognizable in 20 years or less,” and stresses that US policy is to help “Europe to remain European, to regain its civilizational self-confidence, and to abandon its failed focus on regulatory suffocation.”

Earlier this week, the 27-nation EU moved forward with an overhaul of its migration policy, which has led some human rights advocates to draw comparisons to Trump’s use of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to crack down on people in the United States.

“Across the Atlantic, we see the violence and fear created by ICE’s brutal immigration enforcement,” Silvia Carter, a spokesperson for the Brussels-based Platform for International Cooperation on Undocumented Migrants, told The Associated Press. “Europe should be learning from the harms of that model, not building its own version of it.”

Already, many migrants die while trying to reach Europe. The International Organization for Migration announced in February that at least 7,667 people died or went missing on migration routes worldwide last year—including at least 2,185 who died or went missing in the Mediterranean Sea, and another 1,214 on the Western Africa/Atlantic route toward the Canary Islands—but “the real toll is likely higher.”

Article by Jessica Corbett republished form Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). 

Continue ReadingHegseth Ripped for ‘Racist Rant’ Against Migrants at D-Day Event