As you no doubt know, the big Brexit referendum is tomorrow. I have no basis to even hazard a guess as to how this will go, but I will note that in a relatively similar and relatively recent referendum, the 2014 Scottish Independence referendum, the remain/status quo option significantly (by 5% or more depending on … Continue reading Happy Brexit Eve
Author: DWD
Assad’s losses lead to Russian war crimes?
A series of rebel advances around Aleppo has set Bashar al-Assad's government back on its heels a bit, resulting in what appears to be a Russian air campaign against Aleppo using restricted incendiary weapons. Rebel forces are also closing in on Manbij, the last major Syria-Turkey border town still in ISIS's hands. At the same … Continue reading Assad’s losses lead to Russian war crimes?
Show your work
I know it's periodically fashionable to argue that liberals who are skeptical of the Bomb Bomb Assad plan are The Real Racists, but look: nobody is deriving pleasure from the suffering and death of hundreds of thousands of Syrians except maybe Bashar al-Assad himself (and even that I think is unfair; Assad would probably kill … Continue reading Show your work
Catching up: Egypt
I took a much-needed break from this blog back there in February and March, and while I'm back to regular posting these days, there are still some places I haven't fully caught up on to the point where I feel comfortable writing about them. So this series is going to continue until I've worked through … Continue reading Catching up: Egypt
Yemen: a glimmer of hope?
On Saturday, the Houthis and the Yemeni government agreed to exchange 194 prisoners in the still-hotly contested city of Taiz. That's not much weighed against the overall toll of the civil war, but it is the first positive sign to come out of the ongoing UN-sponsored ceasefire talks in Kuwait (apart from a downturn in … Continue reading Yemen: a glimmer of hope?
Aung San Suu Kyi’s Rohingya ethnic cleansing program continues apace
The latest step in Myanmar's campaign to erase the Rohingya people from the planet involves literally erasing them from the lexicon: Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi has told the UN special rapporteur on human rights that the government will avoid using the term “Rohingya” to describe a persecuted Muslim minority in the country’s north-west. … Continue reading Aung San Suu Kyi’s Rohingya ethnic cleansing program continues apace
Dumb and probably illegal to boot
People use the sentence "I am not a lawyer" so often that it has its own acronym, IANAL, for people who spend way too much time online. I myself am not a lawyer, which is not to say I don't realize that the law is important or that I don't understand legal issues (well, at … Continue reading Dumb and probably illegal to boot
Happy Refugee Day, now here are some more refugees
Today in the UN's World Refugee Day, and it's not one for celebrating: The number of refugees, asylum-seekers and internally displaced people around the world has topped 65 million, the United Nations High Commissioner on Refugees said Monday. As of December 2015, there were 65.3 million displaced people, according to a report from the refugee … Continue reading Happy Refugee Day, now here are some more refugees
Today in European history: the sack of Baltimore (1631)
We don't often talk about Irish history around here, but the travels of the Barbary corsairs (who are often treated as simply a Mediterranean phenomenon) can take you to some unexpected places, and I think it's fun to occasionally point how just how far their reach extended. In this case, it extended all the way … Continue reading Today in European history: the sack of Baltimore (1631)
Today in South Asian history: a monumental passing (1631)
I don't usually worry about historical births and deaths around here--for one thing, most of the people I would cover reckoned time according to the Islamic calendar, so noting when they were born and/or died according to our calendar would be somewhat ahistorical. But today I feel like making an exception. The Mughal Emperor Shah … Continue reading Today in South Asian history: a monumental passing (1631)