Praxagora [she/her]
A really somber “Tankie Therapy” episode from The East is a Podcast on the fall of Syria. I was personally waiting for the crew to give their views because they know how important revolutionary optimism is for how we as leftists should think about the world, but they also keep it grounded in material reality. The way they manage to resist slipping into either forms of delusional optimistic idealism or some doom-and-gloom self-flagellation, especially in completely uncertain times like this, and are able to give a broad and pragmatic perspective is something I really admire.
That post US election narrative, where all these shitty mainstream media talking heads threw trans people under the bus by claiming the Democrats lost because they were “too progressive” and pandered to “woke LGBT,” is really letting all these companies go fully mask off and openly embrace it. Got the same thing last month with HBO/WB going "TERF islander has the right to express her personal views" when just a year ago with that Hogswart’s Legacy game, the same company was still promising that Rowling had no involvement.
I mean, fuck me, I shouldn’t have expected anything else really and it’s ultimately unsurprising how artificial all this corporate America LGBT “solidarity” is turning out to be, but, genuinely, it’s so unnerving how synchronized these collective mask off moments always end up being. Same exact hivemind media-in-lockstep shit they do in foreign policy like with disavowing Palestinians after Oct 7 and now supporting Syrian Al-Qaeda. Turns out, all they were waiting for is for something to “normalize it” and that’s exactly what this whole “we lost the popular vote because we weren’t parading around that war criminal spawn Liz Cheney enough” spin from the DNC ratfuckers has done.
Bummer plot twist, could do with a bit more originality, same ole’ “The Swerve” storyline from the writers once again ngl but phew. Every time a new headline dropped, his basedness went up like 10 notches, and I felt like I was starting to question my sexuality again. But now that he might be a reactionary goober, balance has been restored to the world. The hero flew a little too close to the chud sun, but the idea’s still there for me to hyperfixate on—and honestly, ideas can be so gay.
Unsurprising, especially given what’s been alleged about Nigeria’s current President:
The CIA, FBI, and DEA jointly filed a statement opposing the release of unredacted files on Tinubu’s background, again citing national security concerns. According to the filing, disclosing these details could endanger U.S. interests abroad.
Court documents from a Chicago case claim that in the early 1990s, Tinubu was linked to bank accounts allegedly used to launder money for a heroin ring in Chicago. Records from 1993 reveal that Tinubu, then a prominent figure in Lagos, agreed to forfeit assets to U.S. authorities in a plea bargain, sidestepping a potential trial on drug trafficking and money laundering charges.
Nigerian journalist David Hundeyin, a vocal advocate for transparency on the issue, posted on X (formerly Twitter) that the CIA, FBI, and DEA had recently submitted a memorandum opposing the release of Tinubu’s records. Intelligence officials argued that revealing such connections could “compromise U.S. national security” and referenced Tinubu’s possible status as a CIA asset.
Amid public demands for transparency, the DEA echoed the CIA’s stance, maintaining that citizens are not entitled to unrestricted access to intelligence files. “We oppose the full, unredacted release of the DEA’s Bola Tinubu heroin trafficking investigation records because… they do not have a right to know what their president is up to,” the DEA stated.
I only know about this from a Nigerian IRL friend and it’s pretty wild: there’s no public record of either his age, birth name nor what he did for the first 20 years of his life. Hundeyin has a substack going over his investigation. Incidentally, he also recently wrote a piece about his persecution by the US State Department. It’s a great read, a touching piece on what shaped his journalistic career and informative writing on the immense corruption and malignant US foreign influence in Nigeria. He calls Blinken a “supreme wanker” and ends by saying that “if there is an afterlife, all I would like is to go one-on-one with Anthony Blinken.” Relatable.
Fuck. I hope all comrades with family or friends in Syria have their loved ones stay safe. I was about to post another Syria essay but seeing this sudden outcome where the Syrian people that lived formerly under the Damascus government will now have to contend with a new regime that at “best” will likely resemble something like the 2021 Taliban and at worst will return to their 2015 ISIS roots leaves me numb. I’ll just leave this quote from the Abrams book as a prediction from 2021 that now seems chillingly prescient and also something I hope will, by any means possible, not come to pass:
A subjugated and jihadist dominated Syria, much like Afghanistan which had seen its government toppled twenty years earlier using many of the same methods, would serve as an effective hub for jihadist operations abroad – whether into Iraq to keep check on Iranian influence, into southern Lebanon targeting Hezbollah, or against Iran itself. Projection of jihadist power further afield, including against western China, Russia and Central Asian states, was also a significant possibility, should terror groups such as IS and Al Qaeda be able to operate freely from Syrian territory. It was estimated that 9,000 fighters from Russia and Central Asia alone had joined jihadist groups in Syria and Iraq, while an estimated 5000 from China’s Uighur Turkic minority had also joined the frontlines in Syria alone. The potential value of turning Syria into a wellpositioned hub of operations against others which resisted Western hegemonic ambitions, much as Afghanistan had been, provided a fifth major incentive for the Western Bloc to undertake operations against the Syrian government.
Thank you! There’s a ton of writing and I found it hard to parse through it all! I know some Syrian refugees IRL but I try not to talk interrogate them about politics so all of my “insights” are just from reading what others wrote. I think Abrams’ book covers much of the political points on Syria fairly well and from a clear anti-imperialist position too. I checked out the “Clarity Press” publisher’s site and their web UI is pretty janky but much of their books seem to be fairly solidly on the anti-imperialist side of things.
Edit! Also I forgot to say, for anyone else who feels overwhelmed by the recent events in West Asia, I found the latest episode of “The East is a Podcast” by Sina Rahmani with Adnan Husain to be both informative and also providing some sorely needed revolutionary optimism. Edit again: Here’s a link for their video stream: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HuoJJm0uLTY