Britain, Israel and the Habit of Alignment: Strategy, Law, and the Politics of Loyalty

There are moments in foreign policy when a country looks less like a sovereign actor and more like a reflex. The United Kingdomโ€™s posture toward the war in Gaza and the widening confrontation between Israel and Iran has raised precisely that question: is this strategy, inertia, or something closer to muscle memory? The UK is …

The Art of the Deal, Reloaded: When Negotiation Comes with Cruise Missiles by Lawson Akhigbe

There is negotiation as taught in law school โ€” offer, counter-offer, consideration, good faith. And then there is negotiation as practiced by Donald Trump โ€” open with an airstrike, tweet in all caps, and call it leverage. Welcome to 2020s diplomacy, where the pre-action protocol reads less like the Vienna Convention and more like a …

Why Doesnโ€™t Trump Pay a Political Price for His Racism? Immigration isnโ€™t breaking our society. We are. By Adam Serwer

Julia Demaree Nikhinson / AP During a White House meeting on Tuesday, surrounded by his Cabinet, President Donald Trump referred to Somali immigrants as โ€œgarbageโ€ and said, โ€œWe donโ€™t want them in our country.โ€ No one in Trumpโ€™s Cabinet stood up to this expression of gutter racism, although Vice President J. D. Vance enthusiastically banged …

Deuteronomy 8:3

Where would you go on a shopping spree? โ€œMan shall not live by bread aloneโ€ this is a biblical injunction and bread includes shopping sprees. I will go shopping but not on a spree. The local market and corner shop not just for bread but interactions with others.

All Animals Are Equal (Especially the Ones with Private Jets) by Lawson Akhigbe

In 1945, George Orwell published Animal Farm as a warning about the Soviet Union. It was meant to be a neat little allegory about authoritarian creep, revolutionary betrayal, and how pigs with good PR can convince you that up is down and hay is steak. Fast forward to 2026 and weโ€™re not reading Animal Farm …