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As U.S. and Iran agree to a temporary ceasefire, Israel launches ‘massacre’ in Lebanon, threatening entire deal

therealnews.com/as-u-s-and-iran-agree-to...

#news #left #vsn #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft […]

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The Iran Ceasefire Is a Stunning Defeat for Militarism ### The Iran war was such a fiasco that Donald Trump had no choice but to find a way out. Whether it sticks will partly depend on Democrats resisting the urge to irresponsibly goad him back into it. * * * Iranians react to the ceasefire announcement at Enqhelab Square in Tehran, April 8, 2026. (AFP via Getty Images) Despite having lasted only six weeks, Donald Trump’s war with Iran was somehow shaping up to be the worst foreign policy decision of a short twenty-first century full of them, a ballooning disaster on almost every level, for almost everyone involved, that we should all be thankful now has a chance to end. Whether it actually does, unfortunately, is up to a lot more than the fickle and easily distracted president. Trump’s announcement of a two-week ceasefire with Iran yesterday and coming negotiations for a permanent settlement of hostilities was a rare acknowledgement of reality by the president: that the unappealing option of cutting and running while failing to achieve any of the goals he originally set — in fact, making several of the problems the war was meant to solve much worse — is still by far the best option on a menu of garbage. This utterly pointless war has been so strategically and politically disastrous for both Trump’s presidency and the country that it effectively leaves him with no other reasonable choice. The fact that the president seemingly agreed to use Iran’s ten-point proposal, and not his own fifteen-point set of maximalist demands, as the basis for talks is a quiet acknowledgement of the war’s failure as a policy choice. As hard as this course of action might be for Trump to swallow, the alternatives are much worse. Extracting Iran’s uranium is a dangerous fantasy. If you need proof, look at what a debacle rescuing just one man from deep in the country became for US forces. As his hurricane of contradictory public statements about the Strait of Hormuz’s closure suggests, Trump can’t militarily reopen the strait, where ships can easily be threatened and harassed by the thousands of cheap drones Iran can make each month. Holding this card, Iran’s leaders refuse to capitulate in spite of the immense punishment Trump is inflicting on the country, and his options for escalating that punishment are all unpalatable. "While Iran holds the world economy hostage, Trump can only threaten to kill and destroy more. That tactic has reached the limit of its usefulness." Ground troops would be politically toxic and lead to skyrocketing US casualties at the best of times, let alone just as temperatures in the Persian Gulf are set to climb deeper into a hundred-plus degree territory. Ratcheting up the scale and violence of bombing, as Trump threatened to do yesterday, not only risks regional disaster that would likely leave Israel devastated (whose security Trump has repeatedly pointed to as justification for the war), but was widely and harshly condemned even by a chorus of right-wing voices who are usually his allies. While Iran holds the world economy hostage, Trump can only threaten to kill and destroy more. That tactic has reached the limit of its usefulness. All the while, the longer the war goes without Iranian surrender, the worse it gets for Trump and the United States. The US economy is already headed for major pain going into this year’s midterms, and weeks and months more of supply chain disruptions would send it entirely off a cliff, if it isn’t headed that way already. US munition stockpiles continue to be depleted at unsustainable rates, meaning the US military is reaching the limit of its ability to actually wage war, threatening a worse future embarrassment than voluntarily backing out. Public humiliations rack up by the day as extravagantly expensive military equipment and vehicles are very publicly destroyed or malfunction. Trump has, as a matter of practical necessity, been forced to choose the best of a set of bad options for himself, the painful choice that so many before him have preferred to set their presidencies on fire rather than take. That doesn’t mean peace is inevitable. There is the gaping distance between the positions of Iran’s leaders and the White House, a distance that will be difficult to bridge. But the biggest problem, as always, will be Israel. Israeli officials are apoplectic at the prospect of this deal and are already trying to sabotage it, refusing to end their genocidal war in Lebanon as required by Iran’s ten-point plan and actually carrying out their largest wave of bombings of the country this morning. Israel has the incentive and, unfortunately, the ability to torpedo any future peace, albeit an ability that rests entirely on the US president’s willingness to indulge them. The one saving grace is that there’s a chance this war may end up transforming Trump’s relationship to Israel and its prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. According to numerous reports, including a detailed _New York Times_ piece that dropped just hours before yesterday’s ceasefire announcement, Netanyahu and other top Israeli officials played a central role in convincing Trump this fiasco was a good idea, including by feeding him a host of fantastical assurances that soon proved embarrassingly wrong. Soon after, we watched Trump embarrass himself by regurgitating many of those Israeli claims in public, including the idea that it would be over quickly, that decapitating Iran’s leadership would lead to regime change, and that there would be a mass uprising from the Iranian people, none of which proved true. "The ceasefire is not really a victory for the forces of peace. Rather, it is a stunning defeat for militarism." The president should be furious that he was clearly misled, used, and humiliated by the Israelis. In a world that made sense, this would make it easy for him to bring the hammer down on Netanyahu and put an end to Israel’s constant warmongering on the US dime. But that would require a modicum of a backbone, which neither Trump nor his predecessor have shown much sign of in their dealings with Israel. In fact, at least according to an anonymous US official, last night when Trump had the opportunity to tell Netanyahu to back off Lebanon in a phone call, he declined to do so — a worrying omen, if it points to this same old cycle repeating again. The other wild card is Trump’s Democratic opposition, prominent members of which are being distinctly unhelpful as the world prays for this thing to really be over. First among them is Connecticut senator Chris Murphy, a prominent Democratic foreign policy voice who, virtually the moment a ceasefire was announced last night, flipped from screaming about how the war was spinning out of control and that Trump must urgently be removed from power to save lives, to ceaselessly assailing a peace deal with Iran and effectively baiting Trump into restarting hostilities — even apparently taking on Trump’s absurd, maximalist demand that Iran get rid of its conventional, nonnuclear missiles. This is the same poisonous role that prominent establishment Democrats like Murphy played in the lead-up to this mess, relentlessly goading Trump and charging he would be a coward unless he got more aggressive with Iran. Thankfully, this is not the case with all Democrats, some of whom, like Representative Yassamin Ansari, favor sense and reason. But the likes of Senator Murphy, working in tandem with the right-wing warmongers in Trump’s ear like Lindsey Graham and Mark Levin, have ample time and opportunity in the coming weeks to scuttle peace and plunge us all back into intolerable chaos, whether for the sake of run-of-the-mill political point-scoring or something more nefarious. As tempting as it is to say otherwise, the current ceasefire is not really a victory for the forces of peace. Rather, it is a stunning defeat for militarism and, more specifically, for a president drunk on military power and a misplaced faith that the United States can magically bomb his desires into existence. The paradox is that, to make any peace stick, we will all have to help him maintain the fiction that he won, bigly. * * *

The Iran Ceasefire Is a Stunning Defeat for Militarism

https://jacobin.com/2026/04/us-iran-war-ceasefire/

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

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Alexander Kluge Fought and Won Against the Culture Industry ### The death of the filmmaker and Marxist theorist Alexander Kluge marks the loss of a voice that insisted the horrors of the last century were not confined to the past. They live on in the continued existence of imperialist wars. * * * The filmmaker, novelist, and Marxist theorist Alexander Kluge set out to show that art, freed from commercial constraints, could offer a vision of what a life without capitalist domination could look like. (Rudolf Dietrich / ullstein bild via Getty Images) When I found out that Alexander Kluge had died at age ninety-four on March 25, I picked up my copy of _Case Histories_ , his first short story collection. Kluge was a postwar polymath: an innovative filmmaker, television producer, Marxist theorist, lawyer, and a writer of provocative and political fiction. He wrote _Case Histories,_ so the story goes, in the cafeteria of a West Berlin film studio in 1959. His mentor, Theodor Adorno, had arranged for Kluge, at that time the Frankfurt School’s young lawyer, to help the exiled German director Fritz Lang make his return to filmmaking in his home country. Kluge found the experience of watching the great auteur wrangle with German movie executives depressing. Lang was, he felt, disrespected by producers who constantly overruled him. But the episode had some value for Kluge. It helped inspire a deep suspicion of the commercial aspects of cinema and pushed him to guard his artistic practice against submission to a system that turned a work of art into formula. How did the fiction he wrote in that West Berlin cafeteria protect itself from subordination to the commercial interests of the market? The narrator in _Case Histories_ follows German protagonists and the paths they took from 1933 through World War II in what would become Kluge’s trademark, sometimes grating, sometimes nauseating, almost cryptic fictive voice. This was a style that was impersonal yet morally concerned, a stickler for process, eager to juxtapose (sometimes comically), unafraid to plow forward against worries that the irony may be too heavy-handed. Read one Kluge short story, and it’s clear that he is hostile to the idea of a smooth reading experience _._ A representative example is the beginning of “Anita G.”: > The girl Anita G., crouching under the staircase, saw the boots when her grandparents were taken away. After the capitulation her parents returned from Theresienstadt, something no one would have believed possible, and founded factories in the vicinity of Leipzig. The girl attended school, looked forward to a normal life. Suddenly she became frightened and fled to the Western zones. Of course she committed thefts. The judge, who was seriously concerned about her, gave her four months. She only had to serve two, the rest she spent on probation in the care of a probation officer. This woman was overzealous in her duties — the girl fled to Wiesbaden. From Wiesbaden, where she found peace and quiet, to Karlsruhe, where she was pursued, to Fulda, where she was pursued, to Kassel, where she was not pursued, to Frankfurt. She was apprehended and (there being a warrant out for breach of probation) transferred to Hanover. She escaped to Mainz. > > Why does she constantly infringe on private property as she travels? So much of the writing here slows down the reader. Each new sentence requires reorientation from the past one. Phrases draw attention to themselves — why did she “of course” commit thefts? — and omissions in detail and characterization mean we’ll have to infer why Anita was “frightened” or how the probation officer was “overzealous.” There’s even a queasy lull near the end of the paragraph as the narrator becomes coolly occupied with a description of Anita’s exact movements, an awful doubling of her wartime experience of surveillance, which we are forced to imagine because of the breakneck concision of the first sentence. Then there’s the rather bathetic question to start the next paragraph. A question like this is pure Kluge. Soon others follow: “Why doesn’t she behave sensibly? Why doesn’t she stay with the man who is making a play for her? Why doesn’t she face facts? Doesn’t she want to?” There are some grim, obvious words one can say in answer. Kluge is surely making everyone, especially his early German readers, think about the Nazi terror and its reverberations. But because of the story’s gaps, a full accounting of any of these questions remains out of reach to the reader. Kluge soon used “Anita G.” as the basis for his first feature film, _Yesterday Girl_(1966). That film, with its unusual, conspicuous editing and frank discussion of sex and the Nazi regime’s involvement in the war, won Kluge the prestigious Silver Lion for best director at the Venice Film Festival. He gave an interview shortly before the film premiered in which he explained that his jarring cuts were intended to encourage the viewer’s imagination, an explanation which applied just as well to his attitude toward organizing sentences. Over the decades, Kluge’s stories would become shorter and less linear. A single one might seem like a ponderous cluster of associations, such as the story he wrote in reaction to the results of the 2016 US presidential election. In three short paragraphs, he covers Max Weber, elephant metabolism, generational trauma, patriarchy, the presidential debates, and the imagery of Nazi officialdom. Kluge wrote thousands of these stories, each in response to a single theme or event but stretching out far beyond it. Some of them are published in collections organized topically: _Kong’s Finest Hour_ reflects on animal life; _Cinema Stories_ the film industry; _Temple of the Scapegoat_ the opera; and _Russia Container_ turns to the history of Russia and Germany, particularly during the Cold War. In the late 1980s, Kluge generally put aside feature filmmaking and founded a television production company to develop avant-garde-leaning “non-program” programs for German television. The programs often consisted of interviews that he conducted. They were as you might expect, more ponderous, static, and unnervingly edited than regular television. In a 1989 interview with Gary Indiana, Kluge explained why reaching the public in this way was so important to him: > You only need one percent of alternative television, of calmness within the television set. If you have it, people will accept that this TV world isn’t the only one. One percent is enough to disturb the principle of programming. You have a little hit of non-program. A Kluge story can be a little hit of nonstory story, a whiff of what’s outside the world of mass-produced capitalist-dominated commercial culture. One collection of his writing, originally published in 1977 but most recently reissued as _Air Raid_ in a 2022 English translation, speaks presciently to the current world. _Air Raid_ is a series of vignettes of real and imagined incidents that occurred on April 8, 1945, the day Kluge, then thirteen, survived the Allied bombing that destroyed more than three-fourths of his hometown, Halberstadt. The civilian collateral of the Allied bombing campaign is often a cause of anxiety in Germany, where the historical memory of the evils of the Nazi regime dominates the country’s understanding of its past. This makes it an especially captivating theme for Kluge, notwithstanding his personal experience, which appears nowhere in these stories. In _Air Raid_ , he examines the suffering and destruction on the ground but also the dizzying bureaucracy of the Allied military decision-making structure that made it possible. Fifty years on, it’s hard not to see alarming parallels in photos of Gaza, Tehran, or Kharkiv, and the blithe embrace of aerial bombardment led by Donald Trump’s administration. “We don’t want to have to do more militarily than we have to, but I didn’t mean it flippantly when I said in the meantime we’ll negotiate with bombs,” US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said on March 31. Listening to the secretary of war, as he likes to be known, make this statement, I found myself thinking of an especially painful scene in _Air Raid_ where an Allied officer makes clear to a reporter that even if the largest cathedral in the town had been flying a white flag, the bombing still would’ve taken place. “But a large white flag is internationally recognized, as surrender,” argues the interviewer. “To an airplane?” answers the officer. Kluge’s sensory description of the bombings and their aftermath for those on the ground is stirring, though Katie Trumpener, in her review of the book, notes that he does not mention the hundreds of forced laborers who toiled making the Nazi planes that fought to push back the Allied offensive. These forced laborers would not have had access, like so many in Halberstadt, to a bomb shelter. Halberstadt’s Jewish community had been deported to camps three years earlier, and it’s mentioned only once in _Air Raid_. After the raid, a military doctor walks through the “old Jewish cemetery,” stepping carefully so as to avoid unexploded ordnance. Rereading this, I found myself asking, which gaps are intentional, and which are more worrying acts of omission? During a lull, a woman protecting her three children vows to organize others to prevent such horrors from happening in the future. The narrator immediately deadpans, “But the past was not over yet,” as another wave of bombs fell. Kluge’s stylistic program, by withholding conclusion or completion, whatever its risks, brings the past into the present. This story, and the hundreds of others he authored, add up to a body of work that thought through problems that are inherently unresolvable because they continue to be posed by the present. In a time of ongoing genocide and other escalating barbarisms, Kluge’s unanswered questions, posed by someone hostile to the constraints of commercial entertainment, deserve revisiting now more than ever. * * *

Alexander Kluge Fought and Won Against the Culture Industry

jacobin.com/2026/04/kluge-short-stor...

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

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Exactly #Left

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Melanie Phillips: The Unholy Alliance - Why the Left Loves Jihad
Melanie Phillips: The Unholy Alliance - Why the Left Loves Jihad YouTube video by MCC Brussels

The Unholy Alliance - Why the #Left Loves #Jihad.

The West is not just under attack;

it is actively aiding its own executioners.

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The Useful Idiots of the Left
The Useful Idiots of the Left YouTube video by Sam Harris

The #Useful #Idiots of the #Left.

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Amazon Will Be This Century’s Biggest Labor Battle With its vast logistics empire deploying robotics, surveillance, and AI to block worker power at every turn, Amazon now sits atop the throne of American capitalism. Organizing it will define the future of the labor movement.

Amazon Will Be This Century’s Biggest Labor Battle

jacobin.com/2026/04/amazon-labor-mov...

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

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The Iraq War Presaged Donald Trump’s War on Iran A small group of hawks convinced George W. Bush to launch a war in the Middle East, despite his campaign-trail rhetoric and against the advice of top US military and intelligence officials. The parallels with Donald Trump’s war on Iran are striking.

The Iraq War Presaged Donald Trump’s War on Iran

https://jacobin.com/2026/04/iraq-iran-war-bush-trump/

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

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Through Meta Glasses, Darkly How do we solve a problem like the commodification of mass wearable surveillance? Social norms and market pressure are a start, but above all, we need a political response like regulation.

Through Meta Glasses, Darkly

jacobin.com/2026/04/meta-ai-glasses-...

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

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Why Young Europeans are Shifting Left
Why Young Europeans are Shifting Left YouTube video by TLDR News EU

Why are so many young Europeans ditching the old centre-left? Rising rents, insecure work, migration triangulation, and weak politics in Gaza made mainstream parties look hollow. So, younger voters are looking further left.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=UCPW...

#Europe #YouthVote #Left

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Nail in the head.

The world now needs:
Trump arrested,
Netanyahu arrested,
Putin arrested,
and all sent to
The Hague.
The world will not recover from the disasters these men have inflicted,
until we see justice.
Only the rising #Left political parties
will do what is necessary, it's
#TimeforChange

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#CultPsychology #Narcissism #Gaslighting #Sociopathy #Absolutism #trump #maga #trumptrain #donaldtrump #narcissism #trumpmemes #authoritarian #trumpforprison #liberal #left #gaslight #lefty

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#trump #maga #trumptrain #donaldtrump #narcissism #trumpmemes #authoritarian #trumpforprison #liberal #left #gaslight #lefty

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Sven Beckert’s History of Capitalism Is Too Light on Theory Sven Beckert’s Capitalism: A Global History ranges impressively over time and space, from medieval Yemen to modern-day Cambodia. But we need a clearer political economy of capitalism to make sense of the material that he provides us with.

Sven Beckert’s History of Capitalism Is Too Light on Theory

jacobin.com/2026/04/sven-beckert-cap...

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

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_This story originally appeared in Common Dreams on_ _April 07, 2026_ _._ _It is shared here under a Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0) license._ Just hours ahead of his self-imposed deadline for a deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, US President Donald Trump threatened on Tuesday to permanently wipe out the “whole civilization” of Iran—remarks seen as a straightforward expression of genocidal intent. “A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform. “I don’t want that to happen, but it probably will. However, now that we have Complete and Total Regime Change, where different, smarter, and less radicalized minds prevail, maybe something revolutionarily wonderful can happen, WHO KNOWS? We will find out tonight, one of the most important moments in the long and complex history of the World.” Brian Finucane, senior adviser to the US Program at the International Crisis Group, responded to Trump’s threat by pointing to 18 US Code § 1091, which prohibits American nationals from committing genocide within the United States and abroad. Dylan Williams, vice president for government affairs at the US-based Center for International Policy, wrote that “this meets the threshold for intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national group as set forth in 18 US Code § 1091 prohibiting the crime of genocide.” “If any Iranians are killed pursuant to this threat,” Williams added, “President Trump will be guilty of genocide, as will those assisting him.” **GET FEARLESS, AD-FREE, UNCOMPROMISING REAL NEWS IN YOUR INBOX** Sign up One expert, former Human Rights Watch executive director Kenneth Roth, noted that Trump’s genocidal threat is itself unlawful. “Trump is openly threatening collective punishment, targeting not the Iranian military but the Iranian people,” Roth told NBC News, pointing to the Fourth Geneva Convention. “Attacking civilians is a war crime. So is making threats with the aim of terrorizing the civilian population.” > “Soldiers must refuse unlawful orders. Members of Congress must call for impeachment and removal.” Trump published his comments as the US unleashed a wave of attacks on Kharg Island, Iran’s key oil export hub. The US and Israel also reportedly targeted bridges across Iran overnight as part of a broader assault that has killed thousands of people since late February. The US president set a deadline of 8 pm ET for Iran to reach a deal that fully reopens the Strait of Hormuz. Trump has threatened to order the obliteration of Iranian bridges and energy infrastructure if there’s no agreement by his arbitrary deadline. Adil Haque, a professor of law at Rutgers University, wrote Tuesday that the international community must intervene immediately to prevent Trump from launching a catastrophic and criminal assault on a country of more than 90 million people. “Soldiers must refuse unlawful orders,” Haque added. “Members of Congress must call for impeachment and removal. Every American who loves their country must speak out. Enough is enough.” ### _Related_ Republish This Story Republish our articles for free, online or in print, under a Creative Commons license. Close window ## Republish this article This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. We encourage republication of our original content. Please copy the HTML code in the textbox below, preserving the attribution and link to the article's original location, and only make minor cosmetic edits to the content on your site. # Trump issues openly genocidal threat to wipe out ‘whole civilization’ of Iran by Jake Johnson, The Real News Network April 7, 2026 <h1>Trump issues openly genocidal threat to wipe out ‘whole civilization’ of Iran</h1> <p class="byline">by Jake Johnson, The Real News Network <br />April 7, 2026</p> <div class="wp-block-media-text is-stacked-on-mobile" style="grid-template-columns:33% auto"> <figure class="wp-block-media-text__media"><img src="https://therealnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/cd_stacked_white_600.png" alt="Common Dreams Logo" class="wp-image-268291 size-full" /></figure> <div class="wp-block-media-text__content"> <p><em>This story originally appeared in Common Dreams on </em><a href="https://www.commondreams.org/news/trump-genocidal-threat-iran" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"><em>April 07, 2026</em></a><em>.</em> <em>It is shared here under a Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0) license.</em></p> </p></div> </div> <p class="has-drop-cap">Just hours ahead of his self-imposed deadline for a deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, US President <a href="https://www.commondreams.org/tag/donald-trump" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Donald Trump</a> threatened on Tuesday to permanently wipe out the “whole civilization” of Iran—remarks seen as a straightforward expression of genocidal intent.</p> <p>“A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again,” Trump <a href="https://truthsocial.com/@realDonaldTrump/posts/116363336033995961" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">wrote</a> on his Truth Social platform. “I don’t want that to happen, but it probably will. However, now that we have Complete and Total Regime Change, where different, smarter, and less radicalized minds prevail, maybe something revolutionarily wonderful can happen, WHO KNOWS? We will find out tonight, one of the most important moments in the long and complex history of the World.”</p> <p>Brian Finucane, senior adviser to the US Program at the International Crisis Group, <a href="https://bsky.app/profile/bcfinucane.bsky.social/post/3mivsa5ypy22q" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">responded</a> to Trump’s threat by pointing to <a href="https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/1091" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">18 US Code § 1091</a>, which prohibits American nationals from committing <a href="https://www.commondreams.org/tag/genocide" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">genocide</a> within the <a href="https://www.commondreams.org/tag/united-states" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">United States</a> and abroad.</p> <p>Dylan Williams, vice president for government affairs at the US-based Center for International Policy, <a href="https://x.com/dylanotes/status/2041497617717190908" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">wrote</a> that “this meets the threshold for intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national group as set forth in 18 US Code § 1091 prohibiting the crime of genocide.”</p> <p>“If any Iranians are killed pursuant to this threat,” Williams added, “President Trump will be guilty of genocide, as will those assisting him.”</p> <p>One expert, former <a href="https://www.commondreams.org/tag/human-rights" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Human Rights</a> Watch executive director Kenneth Roth, noted that Trump’s genocidal threat is itself unlawful.</p> <p>“Trump is openly threatening collective punishment, targeting not the Iranian military but the Iranian people,” Roth told NBC News, pointing to the Fourth Geneva Convention. “Attacking civilians is a war crime. So is making threats with the aim of terrorizing the civilian population.”</p> <blockquote class="wp-block-quote"> <p>“Soldiers must refuse unlawful orders. Members of Congress must call for <a href="https://www.commondreams.org/tag/impeachment" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">impeachment</a> and removal.”</p> </blockquote> <p>Trump published his comments as the US unleashed a wave of attacks on Kharg Island, Iran’s key <a href="https://www.commondreams.org/tag/oil">oil</a> export hub. The US and Israel also reportedly targeted bridges across Iran overnight as part of a broader assault that has <a href="https://www.en-hrana.org/day-38-of-u-s-and-israeli-attacks-on-iran-highest-rate-of-strikes-in-the-past-ten-days/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">killed thousands</a> of people since late February.</p> <p>The US president set a deadline of 8 pm ET for Iran to reach a deal that fully reopens the Strait of Hormuz. Trump has threatened to order the obliteration of Iranian bridges and energy <a href="https://www.commondreams.org/tag/infrastructure" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">infrastructure</a> if there’s no agreement by his arbitrary deadline.</p> <p>Adil Haque, a professor of law at Rutgers University, <a href="https://x.com/AdHaque110/status/2041493703701783022" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">wrote</a> Tuesday that the international community must intervene immediately to prevent Trump from launching a catastrophic and criminal assault on a country of more than 90 million people.</p> <p>“Soldiers must refuse unlawful orders,” Haque added. “Members of Congress must call for impeachment and removal. Every American who loves their country must speak out. Enough is enough.”</p></p> <p>This <a target="_blank" href="https://therealnews.com/trump-genocidal-threat-civilization-of-iran">article</a> first appeared on <a target="_blank" href="https://therealnews.com">The Real News Network</a> and is republished here under a <a target="_blank" href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License</a>.<img src="https://i0.wp.com/therealnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/cropped-TRNN-2021-logomark-square.png?resize=150%2C150&amp;ssl=1" style="width:1em;height:1em;margin-left:10px;"></p> <img id="republication-tracker-tool-source" src="https://therealnews.com/?republication-pixel=true&post=342561&amp;ga4=G-7LYS8R7V51" style="width:1px;height:1px;"><script> PARSELY = { autotrack: false, onload: function() { PARSELY.beacon.trackPageView({ url: "https://therealnews.com/trump-genocidal-threat-civilization-of-iran", urlref: window.location.href }); } } </script> <script id="parsely-cfg" src="//cdn.parsely.com/keys/therealnews.com/p.js"></script> Copy to Clipboard 1

Trump issues openly genocidal threat to wipe out ‘whole civilization’ of Iran

therealnews.com/trump-genocidal-threat-c...

#news #left #vsn #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft #SupportIndependentMedia

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Melanie Phillips: The Unholy Alliance - Why the Left Loves Jihad
Melanie Phillips: The Unholy Alliance - Why the Left Loves Jihad YouTube video by MCC Brussels

The Unholy Alliance - Why the #Left Loves #Jihad.

The West is not just under attack;
it is actively aiding its own executioners.
About civilisational "death wish" that treats #Israel as the #problem &
#enemies of the #West as the #victims.

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headlines-world.com

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Workers at Cocktail Bar Attaboy Are Unionizing Staff at famed New York cocktail bar Attaboy are forming an independent union in a notoriously hard-to-organize industry.

Workers at Cocktail Bar Attaboy Are Unionizing

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Congressional Democrats Are Out of Step With Their Base Right-leaning caucuses now hold a majority among Democrats in the House of Representatives. The dominance of centrist economic policy in the congressional party puts it increasingly out of step with Democratic voters.

Congressional Democrats Are Out of Step With Their Base

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‘It could go nuclear’: Canadian journalist reports from Iran as Trump deadline approaches

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Wordle - A Wordle Alternative Guess the hidden word in 6 tries. A new puzzle is available each day.

#LeftWordle 1,753 6/6 ( #Left #Wordle )

⬛⬛🟨⬛⬛
⬛🟩🟩⬛⬛
⬛🟩🟩⬛🟩
⬛🟩🟩⬛🟩
⬛🟩🟩🟩🟩
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“WHEW” (Didn’t the original Wordle say “phew?”)

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Trump&#8217;s Goal Is to Suppress Votes, Not Prevent Election Fraud ### Donald Trump says the SAVE Act is about stopping noncitizens from voting. But the real target is the millions of working-class citizens who don't have an updated passport or paper birth certificate sitting in a drawer. * * * The Republican Party seems to have decided that the 2026 and 2028 elections will be easier for them if a lot fewer Americans vote. (Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images) Donald Trump has a very simple explanation for why his political enemies object to his proposed election law, the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act (otherwise known as the “SAVE America Act” or just the “SAVE Act”). He laid it out in his State of the Union address earlier this year. > One reason, because they want to cheat. There’s only one reason. They make up all excuses. They say it’s racist. They come up with things. You almost say, ‘What imagination they have.’ They want to cheat. According to Trump, “cheating” (by which he primarily means noncitizens voting) is currently “rampant.” The SAVE Act would save us from this problem by requiring everyone who registers to vote to prove they’re a citizen by producing documentation, such as a passport or birth certificate. While the law has several other controversial provisions, the president and his allies routinely express astonishment that anyone anywhere could have a problem with this central requirement. But in truth, anyone who wants as many _citizens_ as possible to exercise their right to vote should have a problem with this law. All available evidence shows that noncitizens showing up to vote is vanishingly rare. For example, the Heritage Foundation — a right-wing, pro-Trump think tank that promotes “mass deportations” and advocates laws like the SAVE Act allegedly designed to crack down on noncitizen voting — did a study of available records that shows only one hundred cases of noncitizens voting in the entire country between 1982 and 2025. To put that number in perspective, 144 million people voted in the 2024 election. One hundred cases in forty-three years is a microscopic number. Meanwhile, though, quite a few of those 154 million voting citizens might have been deterred by the SAVE Act. According to an estimate from the Brennan Center, about 21.3 million voting-age American citizens lack ready access to proof-of-citizenship documents. Millions more married women do have that documentation but haven’t updated it to reflect their married names. People lose passports, misplace birth certificates, let documents expire and never get around to renewing them — all kinds of mundane scenarios that would leave them ineligible to register. Of course, with a little planning, someone without these documents could procure them in time to register for the next election. But even at the most conservative estimate, millions fewer _would_. Right now, many Americans register to vote because someone has set up a table to register voters at a school, shopping complex, church, farmer’s market, or downtown on a busy day. The SAVE Act would render these efforts to increase democratic participation almost completely pointless, given how few of us routinely carry around a passport or a birth certificate every day while we work, shop, or drop our kids off at school. Nor is the problem restricted to voters who don’t take the initiative to register. Just about all of us, at one time or another, have had the experience of trying to do something, running into bureaucratic obstacles, and not getting around to trying again for months, if at all. Millions of people will no doubt begin the process of voter registration, get tied up, and drop it. A basic principle of economics is that every time you raise the cost (in money, in time, or in irritation) of doing something, a predictable consequence will be that fewer people will do it. Think about the public health rationale for raising taxes on cigarettes, for example. No one thinks there’s some huge population of smokers who can afford to spend exactly $10 on a pack of Marlboro Reds and won’t be able to scrape together $11. It’s that they think that the _more_ you need to trade off (in this case, financially) to do something, the less likely you are to do it, and that even mild increases can have that effect. Making people renew their passports, order a paper birth certificate, or change their documents to reflect their married name before they can exercise the most basic rights of citizens in a democratic republic means fewer of them will do so. In particular, the people most likely to be successfully deterred by adding bureaucratic hoops they have to go through in order to vote are poor and working-class Americans who work long hours and stress about paying their bills. If you’re already juggling two jobs and a long commute, renewing your passport or ordering a birth certificate before you can register to vote is the kind of thing that gets lost in the shuffle. You just don’t have as much downtime between tasks as a comfortable middle-class person. And that’s exactly the point of the law. Republicans _want_ people in the demographics they’re (rationally) worried are turning against them to be discouraged by the hassle of registering to vote. Trump and his allies know that their program of slashing health care benefits, rolling back civil liberties, busting unions, and pouring $2.1 billion a day into the war in Iran is deeply unpopular. Rather than risk the wrath of the electorate they’d otherwise face in this fall’s midterms, Trump and the Republicans would rather engineer a smaller and more prosperous pool of voters — and sell it as an anti-fraud policy. They’re so much safer that way. * * *

Trump’s Goal Is to Suppress Votes, Not Prevent Election Fraud

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_This article was originally published byTruthout on April 06, 2026. It is shared here under a __Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) license._ When Elon Musk’s “Department of Government Efficiency” (DOGE) was running roughshod over the Social Security Administration (SSA) last year, experts warned it could spell disaster for disabled, ill, and aging Americans who depend on its programs. A March 2026 report by the Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund (DREDF) and the American Association of People with Disabilities (AAPD) offers insights into just how dire the situation has become. “It seems that applications are taking longer and being denied more often and running into more errors in the process,” Matthew Borus, a professor at Binghamton University and one of the report’s authors, told _Truthout._ The new report is based on interviews with more than 50 benefits specialists working at dozens of organizations nationwide that, together, assist about 8,000 claimants each year in obtaining and maintaining Supplemental Security Income (SSI) or Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI). Those programs provide financial assistance to about 13.5 million older Americans and those with disabilities. The programs have long been criticized for their inadequacy and steep barriers to access. Now, things are getting worse. “It just feels like you’re banging your head against the wall,” Brenna, who is using a pseudonym for fear of retaliation against her organization or clients, told _Truthout_. Brenna works as an attorney at a medical-legal partnership in Washington, D.C., an organization comparable to those interviewed for the DREDF and AAPD report. She helps vulnerable patients apply for SSI/SSDI. > “It seems that applications are taking longer and being denied more often and running into more errors in the process.” “It becomes difficult to trust even what advice you can give patients because you hardly know what to expect [yourself] because sometimes what the Social Security Administration says is, in fact, what happens, and often, it’s not,” Brenna told _Truthout._ Contradictions and a lack of accountability were among the common issues identified in the DREDF and AAPD report. Others include challenges with a new phone system, inconsistent and confusing field office policies, longer processing times, more denials and errors, and an increased number of overpayments and payment center issues. These problems are likely the result of a series of changes to SSA’s customer service processes that began soon after Donald Trump returned to the White House on a mission to gut the federal workforce and slash spending on social services. The Social Security Administration lost about 7,500 employees, or 13 percent of its workforce, from January 2025 to January 2026, according to data from the Office of Personnel Management. Customer service positions were hit especially hard, with a loss of over 3,000 staff tasked with assisting visitors to field offices and callers to the administration’s national 800 number, according to a Center on Budget and Policy Priorities report. That same report found that leadership shifted thousands of the remaining workers into customer service positions to plug gaps, but this means that many now responsible for customer support have little to no experience in their roles. Changes have also come to the phone system. Brenna told _Truthout_ she now often waits upwards of an hour on hold before reaching an agent, and once connected, the call often drops after only a couple of minutes. Borus said in his interviews with benefits specialists that many reported their calls were often rerouted between field offices, making it difficult to resolve case-specific issues. > “It just feels like you’re banging your head against the wall.” Penny, an Illinois resident who has been struggling to access SSDI since applying in 2023 and is using only her first name to protect her identity, told _Truthout_ that not only has the phone system changed, but so has the demeanor of the agents. “It’s aggressive from the minute you pick up the phone,” she said. “It’s like they’re trying to get rid of you, and it’s hard to fight through all of that to try to get an answer.” Problems with the phone system are particularly damaging because, under a Biden-era policy that went into effect in January 2025, applicants are encouraged to call and schedule appointments rather than dropping in and taking a number at their local field office. Some offices have tried to enforce a blanket no-walk-ins policy, according to the DREDF and AAPD report. **GET FEARLESS, AD-FREE, UNCOMPROMISING REAL NEWS IN YOUR INBOX** Sign up Many of those local offices may shutter altogether. While it is unclear how many may have already been lost or are slated to close, advocates warn that a November 2025 report by the administration that it intends to cut visits to field offices in half this year points to closures. The _Associated Press_ reported last year that 47 field offices would be closing, based on an analysis of a DOGE document. But the SSA later refuted that report. Regional offices have also been hit, with plans to reduce the long-standing structure of 10 regional offices down to only four. There has also been a push for applicants to handle their cases entirely online. Borus told _Truthout_ that it “goes with the DOGE-brained push toward ‘Let’s just automate everything and do it online and then maybe we won’t actually need staff.’” But an online-only application process is unrealistic for many eligible for SSI/SSDI. As one interviewee put it in the DREDF and AAPD report, that process is inaccessible to “people who aren’t computer savvy, who use a smartphone instead of a computer, [or] who don’t have reliable internet access” including both “someone who’s in their 20s, but unhoused” and “someone who’s in their 70s and having issues with memory loss.” The push for online processing has also caused frustrations for Penny. “Once Trump came in, I saw way more notifications through my Social Security [online account] that are completely unrelated to Social Security in any way,” she told _Truthout_. Sometimes, she said, she receives a push notification urging her to log into her account for an update, only to find “an advertisement about something the government has recently done, like ‘We just signed the whatever executive order.’” > Staff at local field offices have sometimes wrongly told immigrant citizens that the administration cannot accept their U.S. passports as valid identification. Some eligible populations face particularly steep barriers to accessing SSI/SSDI. For example, Brenna told _Truthout_ that following staffing shakeups, Social Security staff seem to lack the training needed to support immigrant claimants or claimants of color who are either citizens or eligible under a noncitizen exception. “We have had several times when patients who have one of those [eligible] immigration statuses, like asylum, for example, are calling and hearing from Social Security, ‘Oh, only U.S. citizens can apply for SSI; immigrants aren’t eligible,’” Brenna told _Truthout_. “That’s a misstatement, but if you don’t have an advocate, what’s to encourage you to push back or ask further questions?” Brenna also told _Truthout_ that staff at local field offices have sometimes wrongly told immigrant citizens that the administration cannot accept their U.S. passports as valid identification and demanded to see their birth certificates. Those who are unable to navigate this more difficult process, or face long waits or denials, can fall into desperate circumstances. “These are folks who are already in severe need,” Borus told _Truthout_. “These are not people with a cushion who can just sit around and wait.” One benefits specialist interviewed for the DREDF and AAPD report said that at least 50 percent of their clients are unhoused by the time their organization intervenes, and another 25 percent lose their homes while the organization is working with them. Penny told _Truthout_ she would herself be unhoused if not for her mother, who also depends on SSDI but owns a small property in rural Illinois. However, the women can no longer afford the costs of property taxes, utilities, groceries, and other necessities on just one income. “This is supposed to be my mom’s retirement farm, and we’re going to have to sell it and move,” Penny told _Truthout_. “If I was just getting disability payments these past three years, we could stay. But with no pillow for that interim, we are going to lose a farm. It’s not a nice farm or a big farm, but it’s ours.” Brenna told _Truthout_ that, for her patients who are facing terminal diagnoses, receiving SSI/SSDI can make “the difference of living the final part of their life with dignity and choice and making choices about how they want to spend their time that aren’t purely driven by worrying about whether they have money to pay rent or purchase food.” Those are choices that are now likely being denied to a growing number of Americans, as the Trump administration paints SSI/SSDI — programs built to support some of the nation’s most vulnerable people — as sources of alleged fraud. The administration’s claims about Social Security fraud have been repeatedly debunked. “It’s like I’m even more of a problem for trying to ask for the stuff that’s supposed to be there [for me],” Penny told _Truthout_. “It’s like I’m in the water next to the boat, and they’re like, ‘Oh, you want a fucking inner tube? Here, let me throw you a form you have to send back in two days, or we’ll disregard your entire request.’” ### _Related_ Republish This Story Republish our articles for free, online or in print, under a Creative Commons license. Close window ## Republish this article This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. We encourage republication of our original content. Please copy the HTML code in the textbox below, preserving the attribution and link to the article's original location, and only make minor cosmetic edits to the content on your site. # DOGE attacks on Social Security have left millions in the lurch by Marianne Dhenin, The Real News Network April 7, 2026 <h1>DOGE attacks on Social Security have left millions in the lurch</h1> <p class="byline">by Marianne Dhenin, The Real News Network <br />April 7, 2026</p> <div class="wp-block-media-text is-stacked-on-mobile" style="grid-template-columns:33% auto"> <figure class="wp-block-media-text__media"><img src="https://therealnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/truthout-logo.jpeg" alt="" class="wp-image-277549 size-full" /></figure> <div class="wp-block-media-text__content"> <p><em>This article was originally published by <a href="https://truthout.org/articles/doge-attacks-on-social-security-have-left-millions-in-the-lurch/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Truthout</a> on April 06, 2026. It is shared here under a <em> </em><a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)</a> license.</em></p> </p></div> </div> <p class="has-drop-cap">When Elon Musk’s “Department of Government Efficiency” (DOGE) was <a href="https://truthout.org/articles/trump-and-musk-are-trying-to-dismantle-social-security-from-the-inside/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">running roughshod</a> over the Social Security Administration (SSA) last year, experts warned it could spell disaster for disabled, ill, and aging Americans who depend on its programs. <a href="https://dredf.org/ssa-barriers-2025/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">A March 2026 report</a> by the <a href="https://dredf.org/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund</a> (DREDF) and the <a href="https://www.aapd.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">American Association of People with Disabilities</a> (AAPD) offers insights into just how dire the situation has become.</p> <p>“It seems that applications are taking longer and being denied more often and running into more errors in the process,” Matthew Borus, a professor at Binghamton University and one of the report’s authors, told <em>Truthout.</em></p> <p>The new report is based on interviews with more than 50 benefits specialists working at dozens of organizations nationwide that, together, assist about 8,000 claimants each year in obtaining and maintaining Supplemental Security Income (SSI) or Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI). Those programs provide financial assistance to <a href="https://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/quickfacts/stat_snapshot/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">about 13.5 million</a> <a href="https://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/statcomps/di_asr/2024/sect01.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">older Americans and those with disabilities</a>.</p> <p>The programs have long been criticized for <a href="https://justiceinaging.org/supplemental-security-income-ssi-faq/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">their inadequacy</a> and steep barriers to access. Now, things are getting worse. “It just feels like you’re banging your head against the wall,” Brenna, who is using a pseudonym for fear of retaliation against her organization or clients, told <em>Truthout</em>.</p> <p>Brenna works as an attorney at a medical-legal partnership in Washington, D.C., an organization comparable to those interviewed for the DREDF and AAPD report. She helps vulnerable patients apply for SSI/SSDI.</p> <figure class="wp-block-pullquote alignright"> <blockquote> <p>“It seems that applications are taking longer and being denied more often and running into more errors in the process.”</p> </blockquote> </figure> <p>“It becomes difficult to trust even what advice you can give patients because you hardly know what to expect [yourself] because sometimes what the Social Security Administration says is, in fact, what happens, and often, it’s not,” Brenna told <em>Truthout.</em></p> <p>Contradictions and a lack of accountability were among the common issues identified in the DREDF and AAPD report. Others include challenges with a new phone system, inconsistent and confusing field office policies, longer processing times, more denials and errors, and an increased number of overpayments and payment center issues.</p> <p>These problems are likely the result of a series of changes to SSA’s customer service processes that began soon after Donald Trump returned to the White House on a mission to gut the federal workforce and slash spending on social services.</p> <p>The Social Security Administration lost about 7,500 employees, or 13 percent of its workforce, from January 2025 to January 2026, <a href="https://www.cbpp.org/research/social-security/trump-administration-personnel-policies-harming-social-security-customer" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">according to data</a> from the Office of Personnel Management. Customer service positions were hit especially hard, with a loss of over 3,000 staff tasked with assisting visitors to field offices and callers to the administration’s national 800 number, according to a Center on Budget and Policy Priorities <a href="https://www.cbpp.org/research/social-security/trump-administration-personnel-policies-harming-social-security-customer" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">report</a>. That same report found that leadership shifted thousands of the remaining workers into customer service positions to plug gaps, but this means that many now responsible for customer support have little to no experience in their roles.</p> <p>Changes have also come to the phone system. Brenna told <em>Truthout</em> she now often waits upwards of an hour on hold before reaching an agent, and once connected, the call often drops after only a couple of minutes. Borus said in his interviews with benefits specialists that many reported their calls were often rerouted between field offices, making it difficult to resolve case-specific issues.</p> <figure class="wp-block-pullquote alignleft has-text-align-right"> <blockquote> <p>“It just feels like you’re banging your head against the wall.”</p> </blockquote> </figure> <p>Penny, an Illinois resident who has been struggling to access SSDI since applying in 2023 and is using only her first name to protect her identity, told <em>Truthout</em> that not only has the phone system changed, but so has the demeanor of the agents. “It’s aggressive from the minute you pick up the phone,” she said. “It’s like they’re trying to get rid of you, and it’s hard to fight through all of that to try to get an answer.”</p> <p>Problems with the phone system are particularly damaging because, under a <a href="https://www.ssa.gov/news/en/advocates/2024-11-13.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Biden-era policy</a> that went into effect in January 2025, applicants are encouraged to call and schedule appointments rather than dropping in and taking a number at their local field office. Some offices have tried to enforce a blanket no-walk-ins policy, according to the DREDF and AAPD report.</p> <p>Many of those local offices may shutter altogether. While it is unclear how many may have already been lost or are slated to close, advocates warn that a <a href="https://apnews.com/article/social-security-trump-administration-retirement-a94ced488f2e052a5d9df39021701195" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">November 2025 report</a> by the administration that it intends to cut visits to field offices in half this year points to closures. The <em>Associated Press</em> <a href="https://apnews.com/article/social-security-offices-closures-doge-trump-b2b1a5b2ba4fb968abc3379bf90715ff" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">reported last year</a> that 47 field offices would be closing, based on an analysis of a DOGE document. But the SSA <a href="https://www.ssa.gov/news/en/advocates/2025-03-27-a.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">later refuted that report</a>. Regional offices have also been hit, <a href="https://www.ssa.gov/news/en/press/releases/2025-02-28.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">with plans to reduce</a> the long-standing structure of 10 regional offices down to only four.</p> <p>There has also been a push for applicants to handle their cases entirely online. Borus told <em>Truthout</em> that it “goes with the DOGE-brained push toward ‘Let’s just automate everything and do it online and then maybe we won’t actually need staff.’”</p> <p>But an online-only application process is unrealistic for many eligible for SSI/SSDI. As one interviewee put it in the DREDF and AAPD report, that process is inaccessible to “people who aren’t computer savvy, who use a smartphone instead of a computer, [or] who don’t have reliable internet access” including both “someone who’s in their 20s, but unhoused” and “someone who’s in their 70s and having issues with memory loss.”</p> <p>The push for online processing has also caused frustrations for Penny. “Once Trump came in, I saw way more notifications through my Social Security [online account] that are completely unrelated to Social Security in any way,” she told <em>Truthout</em>. Sometimes, she said, she receives a push notification urging her to log into her account for an update, only to find “an advertisement about something the government has recently done, like ‘We just signed the whatever executive order.’”</p> <figure class="wp-block-pullquote alignright"> <blockquote> <p>Staff at local field offices have sometimes wrongly told immigrant citizens that the administration cannot accept their U.S. passports as valid identification.</p> </blockquote> </figure> <p>Some eligible populations face particularly steep barriers to accessing SSI/SSDI. For example, Brenna told <em>Truthout</em> that following staffing shakeups, Social Security staff seem to lack the training needed to support immigrant claimants or claimants of color who are either citizens or eligible under a noncitizen exception.</p> <p>“We have had several times when patients who have one of those [eligible] immigration statuses, like asylum, for example, are calling and hearing from Social Security, ‘Oh, only U.S. citizens can apply for SSI; immigrants aren’t eligible,’” Brenna told <em>Truthout</em>. “That’s a misstatement, but if you don’t have an advocate, what’s to encourage you to push back or ask further questions?”</p> <p>Brenna also told <em>Truthout</em> that staff at local field offices have sometimes wrongly told immigrant citizens that the administration cannot accept their U.S. passports as valid identification and demanded to see their birth certificates.</p> <p>Those who are unable to navigate this more difficult process, or face long waits or denials, can <a href="https://truthout.org/articles/escalating-anti-homeless-policies-fall-hardest-on-disabled-people-in-the-us/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">fall into desperate circumstances</a>. “These are folks who are already in severe need,” Borus told <em>Truthout</em>. “These are not people with a cushion who can just sit around and wait.”</p> <p>One benefits specialist interviewed for the DREDF and AAPD report said that at least 50 percent of their clients are unhoused by the time their organization intervenes, and another 25 percent lose their homes while the organization is working with them.</p> <p>Penny told <em>Truthout</em> she would herself be unhoused if not for her mother, who also depends on SSDI but owns a small property in rural Illinois. However, the women can no longer afford the costs of property taxes, utilities, groceries, and other necessities on just one income.</p> <p>“This is supposed to be my mom’s retirement farm, and we’re going to have to sell it and move,” Penny told <em>Truthout</em>. “If I was just getting disability payments these past three years, we could stay. But with no pillow for that interim, we are going to lose a farm. It’s not a nice farm or a big farm, but it’s ours.”</p> <p>Brenna told <em>Truthout</em> that, for her patients who are facing terminal diagnoses, receiving SSI/SSDI can make “the difference of living the final part of their life with dignity and choice and making choices about how they want to spend their time that aren’t purely driven by worrying about whether they have money to pay rent or purchase food.”</p> <p>Those are choices that are now likely being denied to a growing number of Americans, as the Trump administration paints SSI/SSDI — programs built to support some of the nation’s most vulnerable people — as <a href="https://www.whitehouse.gov/releases/2025/08/president-trump-delivers-on-social-security-promise-stronger-faster-and-more-secure-for-all-americans/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">sources of alleged fraud</a>. The <a href="https://youtu.be/rh-dqBlkjMc?si=DpM1xVN5msupNHS6" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">administration’s claims</a> about Social Security fraud have been <a href="https://www.warren.senate.gov/newsroom/press-releases/fact-check-social-security-war-room-debunks-trump-admins-latest-social-security-lies-and-misleading-statements" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">repeatedly debunked</a>.</p> <p>“It’s like I’m even more of a problem for trying to ask for the stuff that’s supposed to be there [for me],” Penny told <em>Truthout</em>. “It’s like I’m in the water next to the boat, and they’re like, ‘Oh, you want a fucking inner tube? Here, let me throw you a form you have to send back in two days, or we’ll disregard your entire request.’”</p> <p>This <a target="_blank" href="https://therealnews.com/doge-attacks-on-social-security-have-left-millions-in-the-lurch">article</a> first appeared on <a target="_blank" href="https://therealnews.com">The Real News Network</a> and is republished here under a <a target="_blank" href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License</a>.<img src="https://i0.wp.com/therealnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/cropped-TRNN-2021-logomark-square.png?resize=150%2C150&amp;ssl=1" style="width:1em;height:1em;margin-left:10px;"></p> <img id="republication-tracker-tool-source" src="https://therealnews.com/?republication-pixel=true&post=342535&amp;ga4=G-7LYS8R7V51" style="width:1px;height:1px;"><script> PARSELY = { autotrack: false, onload: function() { PARSELY.beacon.trackPageView({ url: "https://therealnews.com/doge-attacks-on-social-security-have-left-millions-in-the-lurch", urlref: window.location.href }); } } </script> <script id="parsely-cfg" src="//cdn.parsely.com/keys/therealnews.com/p.js"></script> Copy to Clipboard 1

DOGE attacks on Social Security have left millions in the lurch

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Movements Need the Critical Thinking That AI Destroys Struggles against oppression start with people critically reflecting on their experiences. What happens to such struggles when we outsource our thinking to AI and replace human interlocutors with sycophantic chatbots?

Movements Need the Critical Thinking That AI Destroys

jacobin.com/2026/04/ai-critical-thin...

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Is There a Way Out From Trump’s Iran Ultimatum? Panicked, Donald Trump has threatened to destroy Iran’s energy infrastructure by 8 p.m. today unless concessions are made. But Iran’s position is stronger than the president is willing to admit.

Is There a Way Out From Trump’s Iran Ultimatum?

jacobin.com/2026/04/iran-war-ultimat...

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Trump’s $1.5 Trillion for War Comes From Americans’ Pockets Donald Trump is proposing to increase the defense budget by nearly half to wage war on Iran. How does he want to pay for it? Cut nearly everything that might help average Americans, from food, housing, and education programs to health care and childcare.

Trump’s $1.5 Trillion for War Comes From Americans’ Pockets

jacobin.com/2026/04/trump-war-budget...

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Wordle - A Wordle Alternative Guess the hidden word in 6 tries. A new puzzle is available each day.

#LeftWordle 1,752 3/6 ( #Left #Wordle )

🟨⬛⬛⬛⬛
⬛🟨⬛⬛🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

“Impressive” lucky guess 🍀

https://left-wordle.com/

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When Rank-and-File Unionists Took On the Mob In the 1970s and ’80s, rank-and-file workers often took great risks to attack a culture of corruption in the labor movement — including Mafia-controlled union locals.

When Rank-and-File Unionists Took On the Mob

jacobin.com/2026/04/union-mafia-corr...

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"The #Left Party Must Break with a Long Tradition of #Anti-Zionism".

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