30 Nonviolent Things Russia Could Have Done and 30 Nonviolent Things Ukraine Could Do
The war-or-nothing disease has a firm grip. People literally can’t imagine anything else — people on both sides of the same war.
The war-or-nothing disease has a firm grip. People literally can’t imagine anything else — people on both sides of the same war.
The war in Ukraine is both a wake up call about the folly of war and rare opportunity to move toward a more peaceful world.
We hold in our hands vast power to both create and destroy, the likes of which have never been seen in history.
Western commentators who rush to condemn Putin’s nuclear madness would do well to remember Western nuclear madness of the past, argues Milan Rai.
In 2019, the RAND Corporation tentacle of the U.S. Military Industrial Congressional “Intelligence” Media Academic “Think” Tank Complex published a report claiming to have “conducted a qualitative assessment of ‘cost-imposing options’ that could unbalance and overextend Russia.”
The defenders of Ukraine are bravely resisting Russian aggression, shaming the rest of the world and the UN Security Council for its failure to protect them.
A romanticized belief in violence renders people irrational to the point of hurting ourselves, over and over again.
Throughout history, people facing occupation have tapped into the power of nonviolent struggle to thwart their invaders.
We demand true discussion, dialogue, diplomacy on steroids instead of war-mongering to save the lives of the innocent civilians that are at stake around the world.