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Trump And Netanyahu: Twin Autocrats Leading The War On Iran Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu—mirror images of arrogance and deceit—have subverted democratic norms in pursuit of personal power. Their malignant narcissism, contempt for law, and appetite for conflict led to... Continue reading

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Bluster Without Strategy: Trump’s Ill-Fated Iran War

Trump’s address to the nation on the Iran war was intended to project control and resolve. Instead, it revealed indecision and disarray, marked by contradictions, self praise, and shifting objectives. What was billed as a declaration of strength became a striking exposé of confusion and faltering leadership—both at home and abroad. Trump’s address to the…

An Ominous Reckoning For The Gulf States

Trump’s Iran war has left the Gulf shattered: US bases turned into targets, economies battered, and the “oasis” myth destroyed. Gulf rulers now confront a harsh reckoning over their reliance on Washington and the uncertain search for a new, fragile security order As Trump assembled major US naval and air assets in the eastern Mediterranean…

How AIPAC’s Betrayal Of Its Own Cause Fueled The Iran War

By reinforcing Israel’s hardline positions and narrowing the scope of American diplomacy, AIPAC’s advocacy has done enduring harm to Israel’s prospects for peace and to the United States’ global credibility and moral standing The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), as a self-described bipartisan organization, has been advocating positions that are closely aligned with successive…

From ‘Epic Fury’ To A Trap Of Trump’s Own Making: Finding The Way Out

Trump never tested serious, sustained diplomacy to resolve the wide-ranging, conflicting issues with Iran; instead, he defaulted to the illusion that enough bombs could “end” a conflict that has spanned nearly five decades. This war with Iran is a war of choice, and a reckless one at that. President Trump has floated a carousel of…

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RTVI – Trump’s Statement on Iran

RTVI – Trump’s First 100 Days

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On the Issues Episode 142: Yossef Ben-Meir

Alon Ben-Meir · On the Issues Episode 142: Yossef Ben-Meir

On the Issues Episode 141: Daoud Kuttab

Alon Ben-Meir · On the Issues Episode 141: Daoud Kuttab

On the Issues Episode 140: David Rabinowitz

Alon Ben-Meir · On the Issues Episode 140: David Rabinowitz

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Will Saudi Arabia Become a Peace-Maker? – LA Jews for Peace

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Alon Ben-Meir

alonbenmeir

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Retired Professor at @nyucga, Senior Fellow at World Policy Institute.

The United States cages about 2 million people—more than any other country on earth and more than many authoritarian states combined. Hundreds of thousands are locked up for nonviolent offenses, including people serving years simply for possessing marijuana, even as cannabis is now legal or decriminalized in much of the country. To deepen the disgrace, many facilities are run by for profit corporations whose business model depends on keeping cells full, not on delivering justice or rehabilitation. This is not a system gone slightly wrong; it is a vast human warehousing industry that preys on the poor, on minorities, and on the powerless. It is a moral travesty and a permanent stain on America’s claim to champion freedom and human rights.

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The United States cages about 2 million people—more than any other country on earth and more than many authoritarian states combined. Hundreds of thousands are locked up for nonviolent offenses, including people serving years simply for possessing marijuana, even as cannabis is now legal or decriminalized in much of the country. To deepen the disgrace, many facilities are run by for profit corporations whose business model depends on keeping cells full, not on delivering justice or rehabilitation. This is not a system gone slightly wrong; it is a vast human warehousing industry that preys on the poor, on minorities, and on the powerless. It is a moral travesty and a permanent stain on America’s claim to champion freedom and human rights.

Today’s podcast guest is Yossef Ben-Meir, co-founder and president of the High Atlas Foundation, a Moroccan-US nongovernment organization dedicated to sustainable development. In this episode, we discuss sustainable development in Morocco and the role the High Atlas Foundation has played in development. Particularly, we discuss the importance of water infrastructure in uplifting everyday Moroccans, the environmental and societal implications of planting millions of trees across Morocco, and the critical importance of community participation in establishing development projects which will benefit local communities.⁠
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Listen now; link in bio⁠
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Full bio⁠
Yossef Ben-Meir is co-founder and president of the High Atlas Foundation, a Moroccan-U.S. nongovernment organization dedicated to sustainable development. In Morocco, he was also a Peace Corps Volunteer (1993-95), Associate Peace Corps Director (1998-99), Research Fellow at the American Institute of Maghreb Studies (2003-4), and Assistant Professor at Al Akhawayn University at the School of Social Sciences and Humanities (2009-2010). Dr. Ben-Meir holds a Ph.D. in sociology from the University of New Mexico (2009) where he also taught, an MA in international development from Clark University (1997), and a BA in economics from New York University (1991).

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Today’s podcast guest is Yossef Ben-Meir, co-founder and president of the High Atlas Foundation, a Moroccan-US nongovernment organization dedicated to sustainable development. In this episode, we discuss sustainable development in Morocco and the role the High Atlas Foundation has played in development. Particularly, we discuss the importance of water infrastructure in uplifting everyday Moroccans, the environmental and societal implications of planting millions of trees across Morocco, and the critical importance of community participation in establishing development projects which will benefit local communities.⁠
⁠
Listen now; link in bio⁠
⁠
Full bio⁠
Yossef Ben-Meir is co-founder and president of the High Atlas Foundation, a Moroccan-U.S. nongovernment organization dedicated to sustainable development. In Morocco, he was also a Peace Corps Volunteer (1993-95), Associate Peace Corps Director (1998-99), Research Fellow at the American Institute of Maghreb Studies (2003-4), and Assistant Professor at Al Akhawayn University at the School of Social Sciences and Humanities (2009-2010). Dr. Ben-Meir holds a Ph.D. in sociology from the University of New Mexico (2009) where he also taught, an MA in international development from Clark University (1997), and a BA in economics from New York University (1991).

In Israel, since early 2026, the West Bank has witnessed horrific crimes that Israel commits in full view of an indulgent international community. Settlers murdered six Palestinians in a single March week, including two brothers shot while farming near Kiryat, as Western governments mouthed “concerns” and kept sending weapons. Israeli forces killed two young children and their parents in Tammun, an atrocity that would have triggered sanctions anywhere else—but here is met with diplomatic cover and empty talking points about “Israel’s right to defend itself.” Nearly 700 Palestinian children have been displaced in just three months, their homes destroyed while European capitals and Washington block meaningful action. In 2026 alone, dozens of Palestinian children were killed before their fathers’ eyes—the Bani Odeh family shot in their car near Tammun, brothers gunned down in their fields, another family ambushed in a settler attack—under a shield of international complicity. This represents nothing short of Israel’s moral bankruptcy.

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In Israel, since early 2026, the West Bank has witnessed horrific crimes that Israel commits in full view of an indulgent international community. Settlers murdered six Palestinians in a single March week, including two brothers shot while farming near Kiryat, as Western governments mouthed “concerns” and kept sending weapons. Israeli forces killed two young children and their parents in Tammun, an atrocity that would have triggered sanctions anywhere else—but here is met with diplomatic cover and empty talking points about “Israel’s right to defend itself.” Nearly 700 Palestinian children have been displaced in just three months, their homes destroyed while European capitals and Washington block meaningful action. In 2026 alone, dozens of Palestinian children were killed before their fathers’ eyes—the Bani Odeh family shot in their car near Tammun, brothers gunned down in their fields, another family ambushed in a settler attack—under a shield of international complicity. This represents nothing short of Israel’s moral bankruptcy.

Contrary to Trump’s false and deliberately misleading arguments, multiple studies show that immigrants commit far fewer crimes than US-born citizens across numerous categories. Using detailed Texas data, native-born citizens are more than twice as likely to be arrested for violent crime, 2.5 times more likely for drug offenses, and over four times more likely for property crimes than undocumented immigrants.

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Contrary to Trump’s false and deliberately misleading arguments, multiple studies show that immigrants commit far fewer crimes than US-born citizens across numerous categories. Using detailed Texas data, native-born citizens are more than twice as likely to be arrested for violent crime, 2.5 times more likely for drug offenses, and over four times more likely for property crimes than undocumented immigrants.
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Alon Ben-Meir
9 hours ago
Alon Ben-Meir

Climate change is hitting Africa particularly hard with severe droughts disrupting livelihoods across the continent. Countries like Somalia, Ethiopia, and Kenya have faced prolonged dry spells, destroying crops and livestock. This intensifies food scarcity, leading to malnutrition and hunger for millions as agriculture collapses. People are forced to migrate in search of survival. Mass displacement strains neighboring regions and even pushes migrants toward Europe. The combination of environmental degradation and social instability risks further conflict over scarce resources without urgent adaptation measures and global support. These cascading effects will continue to undermine Africa’s stability and development. ... See MoreSee Less

Climate change is hitting Africa particularly hard with severe droughts disrupting livelihoods across the continent. Countries like Somalia, Ethiopia, and Kenya have faced prolonged dry spells, destroying crops and livestock. This intensifies food scarcity, leading to malnutrition and hunger for millions as agriculture collapses. People are forced to migrate in search of survival. Mass displacement strains neighboring regions and even pushes migrants toward Europe. The combination of environmental degradation and social instability risks further conflict over scarce resources without urgent adaptation measures and global support. These cascading effects will continue to undermine Africa’s stability and development.
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Alon Ben-Meir
12 hours ago
Alon Ben-Meir

The United States cages about 2 million people—more than any other country on earth and more than many authoritarian states combined. Hundreds of thousands are locked up for nonviolent offenses, including people serving years simply for possessing marijuana, even as cannabis is now legal or decriminalized in much of the country. To deepen the disgrace, many facilities are run by for profit corporations whose business model depends on keeping cells full, not on delivering justice or rehabilitation. This is not a system gone slightly wrong; it is a vast human warehousing industry that preys on the poor, on minorities, and on the powerless. It is a moral travesty and a permanent stain on America’s claim to champion freedom and human rights. ... See MoreSee Less

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It's incredibly sad. The ones who should be in prison are profiting off of the ones whose poverty is caused by the predatory capitalism of the obscenely rich.

Alon Ben-Meir
15 hours ago
Alon Ben-Meir

Despite China being a one-party authoritarian system, there are lessons the West, even mature democracies, can draw from its rapid transformation. Over roughly 40 years, China lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty, becoming an economic powerhouse with substantial infrastructure and social services. Their long-term investment in education infrastructure and poverty reduction is striking. While democracy champions freedom and rights, many countries have struggled to address persistent inequality or to eradicate large-scale poverty at such speed. China’s ability to set and maintain long-term goals highlights the value of strategic, consistent planning, an area where even democratic systems can sometimes fall short. ... See MoreSee Less

Despite China being a one-party authoritarian system, there are lessons the West, even mature democracies, can draw from its rapid transformation. Over roughly 40 years, China lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty, becoming an economic powerhouse with substantial infrastructure and social services. Their long-term investment in education infrastructure and poverty reduction is striking. While democracy champions freedom and rights, many countries have struggled to address persistent inequality or to eradicate large-scale poverty at such speed. China’s ability to set and maintain long-term goals highlights the value of strategic, consistent planning, an area where even democratic systems can sometimes fall short.
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Alon Ben-Meir
19 hours ago
Alon Ben-Meir

In recent years, Russia has been accused of forcibly transferring hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian children—some estimates are around 750,000—into Russian territory. These children are often placed with Russian families or in camps where they undergo re-education to erase their Ukrainian identity and foster loyalty to Russia. For Ukraine this is not only a humanitarian tragedy but also a cultural and demographic threat. It deprives Ukraine of its future generations, undermines national cohesion, and potentially violates international law. The systematic abduction and indoctrination of Ukrainian children could weaken Ukraine’s cultural continuity, while the trauma inflicted on these children will reverberate for generations. It’s a stark tactic in the broader war aimed at erasing Ukrainian identity. ... See MoreSee Less

In recent years, Russia has been accused of forcibly transferring hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian children—some estimates are around 750,000—into Russian territory. These children are often placed with Russian families or in camps where they undergo re-education to erase their Ukrainian identity and foster loyalty to Russia. For Ukraine this is not only a humanitarian tragedy but also a cultural and demographic threat. It deprives Ukraine of its future generations, undermines national cohesion, and potentially violates international law. The systematic abduction and indoctrination of Ukrainian children could weaken Ukraine’s cultural continuity, while the trauma inflicted on these children will reverberate for generations. It’s a stark tactic in the broader war aimed at erasing Ukrainian identity.
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