This is how hunger looks. A quiet moment from daily survival in Gaza.
Surviving on canned food
No fresh food available
This is daily life in Gaza
seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from France
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Argentina
seen from Japan

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from South Korea

seen from United States
seen from Argentina

seen from Germany
This is how hunger looks. A quiet moment from daily survival in Gaza.
Surviving on canned food
No fresh food available
This is daily life in Gaza
Truths about the Wars
War Without Exit Plan
The loudest sound in this war is not missiles, but confusion. After crossing red lines like they were chalk on a playground, Donald Trump now faces a battlefield where victory has no clear definition. The first strike didn’t just hit targets; it erased leadership. And here lies the strategic paradox: when you remove the people who can sign peace, who exactly do you defeat?
History had rules. Even at the peak of power games, top leaders were rarely eliminated because wars eventually need conversations, not just calculations. But this time, the script was torn mid-scene. What replaced it? A vacuum filled with anger, younger commanders, and a deep thirst for revenge. Diplomacy didn’t collapse; it was quietly buried under precision strikes.
Now the irony writes itself. The stated goal was stability, yet the outcome looks like a region stitched together by rage. Military experts whisper uncomfortable math: occupying Iran is not a campaign; it’s a logistical fantasy. And negotiations? With whom?
A nation united by grief rarely picks up the phone. So the real question is no longer about how the war started.
It's straightforward: if you eliminate the negotiators, who signs the peace?
Shall We Remember What War Is?
What is war?
In the human psyche
it is the fatal flaw,
a perversion of the human mind,
using our greatest brains to create
outrageous threats to all mankind.
War is
the profoundest disrespect
for the sanctity
of human life,
the ultimate in racism,
the collapse of morality.
War is
the ultimate in criminality,
the ultimate obscenity,
the ultimate crime against humanity.
So shall we honour war?
and shall we now praise troubled men?
Or shall we remember what war is
and give true meaning
to "Never again"?
David Roberts