Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Cages Over Communities: Where America’s Money Is Going


 It usually starts as background noise.

A headline scrolls by about the border. A politician raises their voice on TV. Someone in a comment section says, “Finally, something is being done.” And if you don’t look too closely, it all feels straightforward—like a problem being met with a solution.

But the moment you stop and ask a quieter, more practical question—where is the money actually going—the entire picture begins to shift.

Because what’s happening in the United States right now isn’t just enforcement. It’s investment. Massive, deliberate, sustained investment into a system that is being built out in real time.

Over the past few years, tens of billions of dollars have been committed to immigration enforcement, with one major package alone setting aside roughly $45 billion specifically to expand detention capacity. That number isn’t about maintaining what already exists; it’s about growth—more facilities, more beds, more infrastructure designed to hold more people. Altogether, detention spending has climbed to around $14 billion per year, a figure that now exceeds what the federal government spends to operate the entire prison system.

That comparison is hard to ignore, not just because of the scale, but because of what it represents. The country is now spending more money detaining immigrants—many of whom have no criminal record—than it does incarcerating people convicted of federal crimes. And once you sit with that long enough, it becomes difficult to see it as a narrow policy choice. It starts to look like something structural.

What makes it even more real is how tangible the system has become. Across the country, ordinary buildings—empty warehouses, industrial spaces that could have been repurposed for housing or local economic use—are being converted into detention centers. The transformation is quiet but significant, turning spaces of potential growth into spaces of confinement, funded by public dollars that could just as easily have gone elsewhere.

At the same time, the cost of holding a single person in detention continues to add up in ways that are both predictable and staggering. On average, it costs about $166 per day to detain one individual. Over weeks and months, that figure compounds into thousands of dollars per person, multiplied across tens of thousands of detainees at any given time. This isn’t incidental spending—it’s a system that requires constant, high-volume funding to sustain itself.

That system is largely overseen by agencies like U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Customs and Border Protection, both of which have seen their budgets expand dramatically over the past two decades. What were once smaller enforcement bodies have evolved into multi-billion-dollar operations, reflecting not just an increase in activity but a shift in national priorities. Growth at that scale tends to reveal what a country is willing to invest in long-term, and here, the trajectory has been consistently upward.

And detention is only one part of the equation. What happens after—how people are removed from the country—adds another layer that is less visible but equally costly.

In many cases, deportation does not simply mean returning someone to their country of origin. Increasingly, migrants are being sent to third countries—places they are not from, and in some cases have no prior connection to—through complex international arrangements. The logistics of these transfers are not simple, and they are not cheap. Rather than relying solely on commercial flights, the government often uses privately chartered planes to carry out these removals, turning what might sound like a routine administrative step into a high-cost operation involving aviation contracts, security personnel, and coordination across multiple jurisdictions.

The image is striking when you pause long enough to picture it clearly: individuals being transported across borders on private aircraft, not back to where they came from, but to entirely different countries, at a cost that can reach tens of thousands of dollars per flight. When combined with the already substantial expenses of detention, processing, and legal oversight, the total cost per person grows significantly, creating a system where enforcement is not just strict, but extraordinarily expensive.

And this is where the story begins to loop back on itself, because every one of those dollars is drawn from the same pool that funds everything else. The same federal budget that supports detention centers and deportation flights is also responsible for infrastructure, education, healthcare, and public services that affect everyday life for millions of Americans.

Which raises a question that is less political than it is practical: what are we choosing to prioritize?

Because the needs elsewhere are not hypothetical. Roads and bridges across the country continue to age and deteriorate. Public schools in many districts remain underfunded. Healthcare costs are still one of the most persistent financial burdens facing American families. These are long-standing issues with well-documented solutions, most of which require exactly what is being spent so heavily elsewhere—large-scale, sustained investment.

Instead, that investment is being directed toward a system built around detention and removal, one that has grown not only in size but in permanence. A significant portion of it is operated by private companies, meaning that taxpayer money flows into contracts where the continuation—and expansion—of detention directly supports revenue. Over time, that creates a structure where growth becomes self-reinforcing, as capacity leads to usage, and usage justifies further capacity.

Seen from a distance, it begins to resemble less of a temporary response and more of an established industry.

And yet, despite the scale and the cost, public support for these policies remains strong in many circles. Part of that support comes from the sense that something decisive is being done, that action is being taken in a visible and immediate way. Enforcement is tangible; it produces images, numbers, and outcomes that are easy to point to. By contrast, investments in healthcare, education, or infrastructure tend to unfold slowly, often without the same sense of urgency or spectacle.

But budgets tell their own story, whether or not they are framed that way. They reveal priorities in their most concrete form, showing not what is promised, but what is actually funded.

And right now, those priorities are clear. The United States is committing vast resources to building and maintaining a system designed to detain and deport at scale, while many of the systems that directly improve quality of life remain underfunded or delayed.

If the idea of putting Americans first were reflected purely through spending, it would look different. It would show up in stronger schools, more reliable infrastructure, and a healthcare system that reduces, rather than creates, financial strain. Those outcomes require investment, just as enforcement does—but the distribution of that investment tells its own story.

In the end, following the money doesn’t just explain what is happening. It explains what matters.

And right now, what the numbers show is a country willing to spend billions building a system of detention and removal, even as the needs at home remain in plain sight, waiting for the same level of commitment.

Monday, April 13, 2026

Why “I Don’t Like It, So No One Should Read It” Is a Parenting Fallacy


Let’s get one thing straight: there is absolutely nothing wrong with a parent deciding a certain book isn’t right for their child. Maybe your kid is six and wants to read Game of Thrones, and you’re like, “Not today, tiny human. Let’s stick to Magic Tree House.” That is parenting. That is reasonable. That is not a problem.

The colossal problem arises when a parent says, “I don’t like this book…therefore, no child should be allowed to read it.” Suddenly, we’re in the land of the literary monarchy, where one person’s taste dictates what hundreds of thousands of other kids get to see. And trust me, the data says kids notice.

According to a 2021 survey by the American Library Association, over 60% of parents report restricting books in their home for their kids’ age or maturity. Fine. But here’s the kicker: books like Captain Underpants and Harry Potter regularly top the ALA’s “Most Challenged Books” list. Why? Because a small, vocal minority decided, “This is not for my child…therefore it must not be for anyone else either.” Meanwhile, kids across the country were discovering literacy, imagination, and the ability to stay up past their bedtime reading because of those same books.

And here’s an important nuance: a book can genuinely be inappropriate for one child of the same age but not another. Research in developmental psychology shows that children’s emotional maturity, prior experiences, and sensitivity to certain themes vary widely even within the same age group. For example, a story with intense conflict or scary situations may be exciting and manageable for one child but cause anxiety or nightmares for another. Cognitive development and empathy levels also differ, meaning one child might understand and process complex moral dilemmas, while another could misinterpret or become distressed. So, parental discretion absolutely has a role—but only for their own child.

Let’s talk about the comedy of it all. Take Captain Underpants—a story about two fourth graders hypnotizing their principal into wearing underwear on his head. Some parents called it “inappropriate” and “encouraging bad behavior.” Yet, those same parents were probably the ones who cheered when their kids wrote fart jokes in math class. The irony is so rich, it practically deserves a library card of its own.

Or consider Harry Potter. Banned in some school districts for “promoting witchcraft” (spoiler: it’s fiction). Meanwhile, kids are learning to read faster, grapple with themes of friendship and courage, and—statistically speaking—are more likely to visit a library as adults. According to Pew Research, people who read for fun in childhood are 50% more likely to be avid readers later in life. So banning Harry Potter for your child might feel protective, but banning it for everyone? That’s how we accidentally create a generation of reluctant readers.

This also opens up a teachable moment: if parents want to guide their kids toward age-appropriate books, they can do so by helping them learn decision-making skills and critical thinking. For instance, discussing why certain themes might be challenging, encouraging them to ask questions, and showing them how to choose books responsibly when they’re not under parental supervision. That way, children build the ability to self-regulate their reading choices instead of relying entirely on adult gatekeepers.

Here’s the takeaway: personal taste is subjective. Your kid might be fine skipping Holes or To Kill a Mockingbird until they’re older. That is entirely your prerogative. But insisting no other child should read it is a whole other level. That’s not protecting kids—that’s imposing personal bias under the guise of morality.

And let’s be real: the kids will notice. Nothing screams “rebellion” quite like being told a book is forbidden. There is evidence that the forbidden fruit effect is very real—even in literature. The Journal of Applied Social Psychology finds that when something is restricted, children (and adults) are more motivated to seek it out. So every time a parent says, “No one should read this,” somewhere a kid is sneaking a copy under their pillow, grinning like a tiny, justified anarchist.

So, fellow parents, guardians, and caretakers: protect your own child if you feel a book isn’t appropriate. That is reasonable, responsible, and frankly, smart. But don’t pretend your taste in literature is a universal moral compass. Because in the end, books are bigger than our opinions, and imagination doesn’t need a parental veto. And if you’re teaching kids how to pick books for themselves, remember: guiding them to think critically will matter far more than banning a single story ever could.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

Nothing Was Wrong Until She Died

Every few years, the same statistic makes its rounds: Black women are two to three times more likely to die during pregnancy, childbirth, or shortly after. It gets posted, people shake their heads, maybe add a sad emoji or a “this is unacceptable,” and then we move on. What almost never happens is an explanation. Not outrage. Not empathy. Explanation.

Because when something keeps happening and no one explains the mechanics, it starts to feel mysterious. Inevitable. Like one of those sad facts you’re supposed to accept instead of interrogate.

But there is no mystery here.

Black women are not dying because pregnancy is inherently more dangerous for their bodies. They are dying because of what happens—or doesn’t happen—once they enter the medical system.

Let’s talk about what actually goes wrong.


Most Black women who die in connection with childbirth die from the same things anyone else does: severe bleeding, dangerously high blood pressure, heart problems, blood clots, and infections. None of these are rare. None of these are obscure. Every single one of them is well-studied, well-documented, and very treatable—if caught early.

That last part is the key.

Take bleeding, for example. After delivery, some bleeding is expected. Too much bleeding can turn deadly fast. Hospitals have plans for this—step-by-step emergency responses designed to stop blood loss before it becomes catastrophic. On paper, these plans exist everywhere. In practice, they are not used the same way everywhere.

Hospitals that serve mostly Black patients are more likely to be underfunded, understaffed, and stretched thin. That means fewer nurses, slower access to blood, and more reliance on eyeballing how much blood someone has lost instead of measuring it. And here’s an uncomfortable truth: blood loss is more likely to be underestimated on darker skin. If the bleeding doesn’t look dramatic enough, the response is delayed. Minutes pass. Then more minutes. By the time the situation is treated as urgent, the body is already in crisis.

Now layer in high blood pressure. Pregnancy-related hypertension can lead to strokes, seizures, and organ failure. Black women are more likely to enter pregnancy with higher baseline blood pressure—not because of genetics, but because lifelong stress does real, physical damage to the body. When Black women report headaches, swelling, or vision changes, those symptoms are more likely to be brushed off as “normal pregnancy stuff.” Or stress. Or anxiety. Or pain tolerance myths that should have died decades ago.

So treatment is slower. Monitoring is less aggressive. And when things escalate, they escalate quickly.

Heart problems are another quiet killer. Pregnancy puts enormous strain on the heart, and some women develop heart failure during or after pregnancy. The symptoms—fatigue, shortness of breath, swelling—sound an awful lot like “new mom exhaustion.” For Black women, they are more likely to be labeled exactly that. Normal recovery. Anxiety. Overwhelm. Meanwhile, the heart is struggling, and no one is listening closely enough to hear it.

Blood clots follow a similar pattern. Pregnancy already raises clot risk. Add surgery, limited mobility, or delayed follow-up, and the danger increases. But complaints like leg pain or chest discomfort aren’t always treated with urgency. Imaging gets delayed. Prevention measures aren’t consistently used. A treatable clot becomes fatal because no one moved fast enough.

Infections, too, slip through the cracks. After delivery—especially after a C-section—serious infections can develop. Fever, pain, and unusual discharge should trigger immediate action. Too often, Black women are told to wait and see. Sent home too early. Given reassurance instead of antibiotics. Sepsis doesn’t wait. It never has.

What surprises many people is that a large number of maternal deaths don’t happen during delivery at all. They happen days or weeks later, after the baby is home, when the focus has shifted entirely to the newborn and the mother is expected to quietly recover on her own. Postpartum care in this country is thin across the board, but Black women are especially likely to miss out on early follow-ups, home blood pressure checks, and clear guidance on warning signs. The system treats birth like the finish line. For many women, it’s the most dangerous stretch of the race.

And running through all of this—every condition, every delay—is bias. Not always loud. Not always intentional. But real. Black women’s pain is more likely to be underestimated. Their symptoms more likely to be questioned. Their urgency more likely to be downgraded. In medicine, urgency saves lives. Even small delays can mean the difference between recovery and catastrophe.

Add to this the cumulative toll of chronic stress—what researchers call “weathering.” Decades of navigating racism, discrimination, and vigilance raise inflammation, damage blood vessels, and strain the heart. By the time pregnancy begins, many Black women are already carrying a heavier physiological load. Not because of personal failure, but because of constant exposure to stress that never fully turns off.

So when people ask, “Why does this keep happening?” the answer is not vague. It’s not unknowable. It’s not tragic coincidence.

Black women are more likely to die in childbirth because their complications are recognized later, treated less aggressively, and followed up less consistently.

And here’s the part that matters most: when hospitals standardize care, use objective measurements instead of judgment, empower nurses to escalate concerns, and remove discretion from life-saving steps, the racial gap shrinks. Dramatically.

Which tells us the truth we don’t say out loud enough.

Black women are not dying because pregnancy is more dangerous for them.
They are dying because the system is.

So the call to action isn’t abstract. It’s concrete. Ask questions. Demand clarity. Believe Black women the first time they say something feels wrong. Support hospitals and policies that prioritize postpartum care, standardized protocols, and accountability. And stop sharing the statistic without sharing the explanation—because silence is part of how this continues.

The information exists. The solutions exist.
What’s been missing is the will to connect the dots—and to listen.

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Pentagon Leadership Shake-Up: Meritocracy or Priority Politics?



The claim that recent Pentagon leadership changes reflect a return to “meritocracy” invites scrutiny. Merit, in a military context, is not abstract—it is observable. It can be measured through concrete indicators: years of service, rank attained, scope of command, joint and combat experience, and prior senior leadership roles.

When those criteria are applied to the recent wave of removals and appointments, a more complicated picture emerges. Across several high-profile cases, the issue is not whether incoming leaders are qualified—they are—but whether they represent a like-for-like or upward replacement based on traditional measures of experience. A parallel concern arises around diversity: some of the officers removed were historic “firsts,” breaking racial or gender barriers. Their departures, combined with less diverse successors, raise questions about the broader equity implications of these decisions.


Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr. → Lt. Gen. Dan “Razin” Caine

The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs is traditionally selected from the most senior and experienced officers—typically four-star generals who have led a service branch or a major combatant command.

Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr., the first Black Air Force Chief, exemplified this standard. He served as Chief of Staff of the Air Force and previously commanded Pacific Air Forces, giving him both service-level and theater-level leadership experience. His successor, Lt. Gen. Dan Caine, a retired three-star general, had not served as a service chief nor commanded a combatant command. His background included operational flying and intelligence roles, but not leadership at the same institutional scale.

This is not a subtle distinction—it is structural. Brown led both a military branch and large operational commands. His successor had not held an equivalent level of command. By traditional metrics—rank, scope, and prior roles—this represents a downward shift in experience. Coupled with the fact that Brown was the military’s first Black Air Force Chief, his removal and replacement may also be viewed as a setback in representation at the highest military levels.


Chief of Naval Operations

Adm. Lisa Franchetti → Adm. Daryl Caudle

Adm. Lisa Franchetti, the first woman to lead the Navy, brought a combination of forward-deployed fleet command (U.S. 6th Fleet) and senior Pentagon leadership as Vice Chief of Naval Operations. Her successor, Adm. Daryl Caudle, also a four-star admiral, previously commanded U.S. Fleet Forces Command, a role focused on force generation, readiness, and sustainment rather than forward operational command.

While both are qualified, the transition represents a shift in the type of experience emphasized: operational theater leadership versus force management. Franchetti’s removal, alongside other senior women, also reduces the representation of women at the service chief level, raising equity concerns beyond the question of operational experience.


Chief of Staff of the Army

Gen. Randy George → Gen. Christopher LaNeve (acting)

Gen. Randy George, a four-star general, had been serving as Army Chief of Staff since 2023. His career included combat service in multiple conflicts and senior Pentagon leadership roles. He was asked to step down early, without public explanation.

His replacement, Gen. Christopher LaNeve, also a four-star officer, rose quickly through the ranks, becoming Vice Chief shortly before being elevated to acting Chief. The distinction here is not rank but tenure at the very top: George had deep institutional experience as a sitting chief, while LaNeve’s top-level experience was comparatively compressed.


Intelligence Leadership: NSA and DIA

Gen. Timothy Haugh → Lt. Gen. William Hartman (acting)
In April 2025, Lt. Gen. William Hartman was named acting director of the National Security Agency (NSA) and acting commander of U.S. Cyber Command (CYBERCOM), replacing Gen. Timothy Haugh. Haugh and his deputy were removed amid reported “America First” loyalty pressures. Hartman, formerly commander of the Cyber National Mission Force, defended the dual-hatted role, arguing it enabled faster cyber operations. As of March 2026, Gen. Joshua Rudd was confirmed as permanent director.

Lt. Gen. Jeffrey Kruse → Christine Bordine (acting)
Deputy Director Christine Bordine became acting director of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) after Kruse was removed in August 2025, following DIA assessments that contradicted White House claims about Iranian nuclear site strikes. Bordine had previously served as DIA Deputy Director. Both removals contributed to a broader shake-up at the Pentagon.


Commandant of the Coast Guard

Adm. Linda Fagan → Adm. Kevin E. Lunday (acting)

Adm. Linda Fagan, the first woman to lead a U.S. military service branch, was removed in January 2025. Adm. Kevin E. Lunday, previously Vice Commandant, assumed the role. Fagan had led the Coast Guard through significant operational and diversity initiatives; Lunday’s expertise is in administration and operations management. This transition reduces female representation at the highest level of the service.


Patterns and Implications

Across these cases, three patterns emerge:

  1. Breaks from historical selection norms
    • Joint Chiefs: a clear downward shift in experience.
  2. Shifts in type of experience prioritized
    • Navy and Coast Guard: operational command replaced by readiness and administrative leadership.
  3. Compressed top-level tenure
    • Army and intelligence: acting leaders with less time at the apex of their organizations.

In addition, multiple removals involved historic firsts—leaders who were Black or women—while their replacements were more conventional demographically. While it is not proof of explicit bias, the pattern raises legitimate equity concerns.


Rethinking “Meritocracy” and the “Warrior Ethos”

If meritocracy is defined as selecting the most experienced candidate based on senior command roles, institutional leadership, and years at the highest levels, these transitions suggest a redefinition of merit: alignment with administration priorities and rapid succession appear to weigh more heavily than cumulative senior command experience.

The language of restoring a “warrior ethos” is also worth scrutinizing. Strategic leadership at the highest level requires more than combativeness—it demands:

  • Managing global force posture
  • Coordinating with allied nations
  • Integrating intelligence, logistics, and diplomacy
  • Advising civilian leadership on the consequences of military action

Framing leadership primarily around a “warrior ethos” risks undervaluing these broader competencies and the value of experience accumulated over decades of service.


Conclusion

A review of publicly available résumés shows:

  • Departures from historical selection norms
  • Shifts in what types of experience are prioritized
  • Reduced tenure or compressed top-level experience in some cases
  • Loss of representation for Black and female leaders at the most senior levels

These observations do not imply the new leaders are unqualified. They do indicate that the definition of merit—and the metrics used to select leaders—is shifting, and that the equity implications of removing historic firsts cannot be ignored. When meritocracy and representation intersect, scrutiny is not only appropriate—it is essential.

Monday, April 6, 2026

The Quiet Paradox: How Workers Fund Billionaires Twice

I recently saw someone argue that we've become a "socialist nanny-state" — but for ultra-billionaires. It's a provocative phrase, and like most provocative phrases, it simplifies a complicated idea. Still, it stuck with me because there’s an underlying point worth exploring in a more thoughtful, grounded way.

When people make this argument, they usually focus on taxes. The idea is that working-class taxpayers end up funding bailouts, subsidies, and incentives that often benefit large corporations and ultra-wealthy individuals. Whether you're looking at financial bailouts, corporate tax incentives, or publicly funded infrastructure that supports private business operations, there are plenty of examples where public money helps stabilize or grow private wealth.

But there's another layer to this conversation that doesn't get discussed nearly as often. Workers aren't just contributing through taxes — they're also creating the wealth in the first place.

Companies don't generate profits in isolation. Products don't manufacture themselves, logistics networks don't operate on their own, and services don't run without people. Whether someone is working in healthcare, retail, tech, education, manufacturing, or transportation, the day-to-day value that companies produce ultimately comes from labor. Workers are the ones who keep businesses running, solve problems, serve customers, and create the output that generates revenue.

What's particularly interesting is that workers today are producing more value than ever before. Data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that labor productivity has increased significantly over the past several decades. In simple terms, workers are generating more output per hour than previous generations. Historically, productivity growth and wage growth tended to move together, meaning that when workers produced more value, they also saw their pay increase accordingly.

However, beginning in the late 1970s, those trends started to diverge. Productivity continued to rise, but wages grew much more slowly. Over time, this created a widening gap between the value workers were producing and the compensation they were receiving. That gap didn't disappear — instead, it largely flowed toward executives, shareholders, and owners.

This doesn't mean businesses shouldn't be profitable or that investors shouldn't see returns. Rather, it highlights a shift in how the rewards of increased productivity are distributed. Workers are helping generate more wealth than ever before, yet many are capturing a smaller share of that growth.

At the same time, government support for corporations continues to play a role in shaping the economic landscape. This support doesn't come in just one form. It includes tax incentives meant to attract businesses, subsidies designed to encourage growth, bailouts intended to prevent economic collapse, infrastructure investments that benefit private industry, and publicly funded research that later becomes commercially viable.

Some of these policies serve important purposes. Bailouts can prevent widespread economic damage. Infrastructure investments can create jobs and support long-term growth. Research funding can drive innovation that benefits society as a whole. None of this is inherently problematic.

But it's also true that these initiatives are funded by taxpayers, and when you account for payroll taxes, sales taxes, and local taxes, middle- and working-class households contribute a significant portion of that revenue.

When you step back and look at these two dynamics together, a pattern begins to emerge. Workers contribute to the system in two major ways: first, by generating corporate profits through their labor, and second, by helping fund public programs through taxes. Some of those programs, in turn, support the same corporations whose profits were already built on that labor.

This creates a kind of economic loop where workers are both generating the wealth and helping fund the structures that influence where that wealth ultimately flows. It's not necessarily intentional, and it isn't the result of a single policy decision. Instead, it's something that has developed gradually through a combination of tax policy changes, declining union membership, globalization, technological advancements, and evolving economic priorities.

It's also important to acknowledge that not every example fits neatly into this framework. Corporate support can create jobs, strengthen communities, and stabilize industries during crises. The issue isn't that these policies exist, but rather how their benefits are distributed over time.

That leads to a fairly straightforward question: if workers are creating more wealth than ever before and contributing significantly to public funding, why do so many still feel like they're falling behind?

This isn't necessarily a partisan question, and it doesn't require adopting a particular ideology. It's simply a matter of examining how value is created, how resources are distributed, and whether those two things remain aligned.

When the people who create the value and help fund the system see diminishing returns, it can create a sense that something is off. Not broken, necessarily, but misaligned. And when enough people start to notice that misalignment, conversations about fairness, opportunity, and economic structure naturally follow.

Maybe the more useful conversation isn't about labeling the system as capitalist or socialist. Instead, it may be about whether the system is rewarding the people who keep it running. If workers are generating the wealth and helping fund the infrastructure that supports economic growth, it's reasonable to ask whether they should share more meaningfully in the outcomes.

That isn't a radical idea. It's simply a logical extension of how the system already works — and a question worth considering as we think about what a sustainable economy looks like moving forward...

Sunday, April 5, 2026

Resurrection Is Not a Culture War

Easter celebrates the resurrection of Jesus.
Not bunnies. Not eggs. Resurrection.
📖 Where It Appears in Sacred Texts
📖 In the Christian Bible:
Resurrection accounts:
• Mark 16
• Luke 24
• John 20
📜 In the Torah:
Does not include the resurrection narrative.
📖 In the Qur’an:
Jesus (Isa) appears throughout. However, Surah An-Nisa (4:157–158) states that he was not crucified in the way believed by Christians.
This is a major theological difference.
And it’s okay to say that plainly.
What People Get Wrong
Easter is not about forcing belief. It is about proclaiming resurrection within Christianity.
Disagreement is not hostility.
Shared Themes
Jesus is honored in both Christianity and Islam. The interpretation differs.
Difference does not equal demonization.
Why It Matters Now
Easter asks: Is death final?
That question transcends politics.

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

The Night Freedom Began

Before there was Easter, there was Exodus.
What It Actually Is
Passover commemorates the Israelites’ liberation from slavery in Egypt.
The central ritual meal (Seder) retells the story of oppression and freedom.
It is history remembered as identity.
📖 Where It Appears in Sacred Texts
📜 In the Torah:
Exodus 12–15 (especially chapter 12 for Passover instructions).
This is core Jewish scripture.
📖 In the Christian Bible:
Same Exodus text. Also referenced in the Gospels during the Last Supper.
📖 In the Qur’an:
Moses (Musa) and the Exodus appear extensively:
• Surah Al-Baqarah (2:49–50)
• Surah Al-A’raf (7:103–137)
The Qur’an recounts Pharaoh, oppression, and deliverance.
What People Get Wrong
Passover is not just “Old Testament stuff.”
It is the backbone of Jewish identity.
And no, acknowledging Jewish liberation history is not an attack on anyone else.
Shared Themes
Liberation. Divine justice. Deliverance from tyranny.
This story belongs to all three traditions.
Why It Matters Now
Oppression is not ancient history.
Passover reminds us freedom stories matter.