Essay
Europe’s Amnesia: How the West Remembers What It Wants, and Forgets What It Must
Europe has mastered the art of remembrance — just not for everyone. Across cities like Berlin, Paris, and Amsterdam, you’ll find meticulously maintained Holocaust memorials, plaques marking Nazi crimes, and museums dedicated to "Never Again." And rightly so. The horrors of fascism deserve eternal remembrance.
By David Thusi9 months ago in Critique
Signed and Resigned
I just need enough to be solvent, but that may be hard without rescinding this letter and sacrificing my sanity To those reading my resignation while casually pushing policies that are supposed to impact our work culture, but they never do, I hope you find this letter. I seriously hope that after finding this letter you read it too.
By Narghiza Ergashova9 months ago in Critique
Do you call Sex Love?
I've heard many poets and musicians refer to sex as love. I've heard many doctors and scientists call sex other words such as coitus, mating, sperm donations, copulation, intercourse, and some others. Do you call love sex? Or are you like me? I call sex sex, and love love. If you are like me and prefer to keep a term simple and comprehendable, then you may be interested in my list of vices that fall under the sexual conversation. The reason people like me do not call sex "love" is because of our experience in the six sexual vices which include: Danger, Jealousy, Disgust, Guilt, and Remorse. I will attempt to describe these vices with examples of horrible living circumstances that are quite painful to an individual so that the poets and musicians who wish to comprehend why some of us do not like calling love sex feel this way.
By Shanon Angermeyer Norman9 months ago in Critique
The Invention of Whiteness: How Race Was Manufactured to Divide and Rule
When we talk about race, it often feels like we’re speaking about something ancient and immutable. But the truth is more unsettling: race, especially the category of “whiteness,” is a modern invention — designed not by biology, but by power.
By David Thusi9 months ago in Critique
Buried Brilliance: How Global Knowledge Was Erased to Elevate the West
When we’re taught the origins of science, mathematics, and philosophy, the names sound familiar — Aristotle, Newton, Galileo, Descartes. European. Male. Genius. But what if I told you that this “lineage of brilliance” is not just incomplete — it’s a deliberate fiction?
By David Thusi9 months ago in Critique
Truth, Theft, and the Courage to Remember: Reclaiming Our Stolen Histories
History, we are told, is about facts. Dates. Kings. Wars. Inventions. But the question I keep returning to is: Whose facts? Whose kings? Whose inventions? I didn’t grow up asking that question. I accepted the timeline I was taught — the one that began in Ancient Greece, skipped to Rome, fast-forwarded to the Enlightenment, then marched triumphantly into the Industrial Revolution. I was told this was progress. That this was civilization. But something always felt off.
By David Thusi9 months ago in Critique
Extreme to Extreme
Extreme to Extreme Why does it seem so hard to follow the motto of the Greeks? They believe in the means between the two extremes. We here in America always appear to vacillate amid the extremes whether it be Democrat or Republican. We find ourselves running from one to the other in rapid succession barely catching our collective breaths. Once we do settle on something or someone, we find that it is quite often not what we thought, and we end up with “buyer’s remorse”. I firmly believe that lately we are feeling that way all the more.
By Shareese Aouad10 months ago in Critique
Russia on new attack
Russia Launches Ukraine's Largest Aerial Assault amid Significant Prisoner Exchange The clash between Russia and Ukraine is probably the first step of the 3rd world war. After a large attack a ceasefire showed the light of the hope. But a recent attack on Ukraine by Russia reminds the world about the hostile nature of the two countries. The international community tried their best for a good solution but this attack shows the failure of their attempt. At present condition if Russia failed to control their attack it can be very harmful for the peace of both countries. This article will cover the present condition of the attack of Russia on Ukraine.
By MD. HEDAYTUN NABI10 months ago in Critique
Stolen Identity: How Europe Built Itself by Erasing Others
I used to look at Europe and admire its order. The marble streets. The paintings. The architecture. The libraries with their golden shelves. And then I began to ask: Where did all of this come from? Not just physically — but morally, historically, and spiritually. And the answer, if we’re honest, is this: Europe’s identity was built on theft.
By David Thusi10 months ago in Critique
Constitutionalism and the Quest for Social Equality in Modern India. Content Warning.
India’s modern constitutionalism, I do call myself a dalit feminist but there can be no feminism without constitutionalism and no constitutionalism without feminism. They are bound to each other like twins and therefore to even begin about women without constitutionalism. Import limitations on state power that’s what it really in its dealing, with its citizens endowed with fundamental rights which the state cannot be violated. Today we notice that there is a demand to put an end to constitutionalism and the demand in certain terms is why do we need codification. Somehow the debate is revolving around the issue of codification and the demand is why having a code, custom, practice and usage is enough. Custom practice and usage we had in this country for centuries and that is what governs us. What exactly is the demand that is there in the country today as its contemporary relevance, now the Judiciary of course is meant to be the guardian of these rights that we possess and I think it’s time to do a reckoning. They really been the Guardians of the rights which have been endowed to us by the Constitution? The other implication of constitutionalism is that the constitution is a binding norm today. We are often in a state of mind that the Constitution as mere guidelines we don’t need to treat it as a binding norm. We need to remind ourselves that constitutionalism means that the constitution is a binding norm binding on our citizens binding also on those who hold positions of constitutional power. It’s also a call to accountability to citizens in their interaction with each other as also of state organs, of course we all know what the Constitution promises it promises social economic and political justice in its directive principles, they are supposed to be binding on. In the matter of lawmaking we must ask ourselves the question that the Constitution adequately address the question of the suffering and compassion and do we fully share that responsibility for such suffering as being a human species among all sentient beings we humans alone have Free Will and the capability of making change, the change that we wish to see and therefore we must take complete responsibility for building the nation we wish to see.
By Kadhambari10 months ago in Critique
The Roar and the Hee-Haw
In the heart of the Serengeti, where animals roamed free and drama bloomed like wildflowers, there lived a lion named Leo. He was everything you'd expect from a king of the jungle: majestic, strong, a little vain, and absolutely terrible at telling jokes.
By Dr Gabriel 10 months ago in Critique









