Tuesday, January 20, 2026

 

Prosecutor shoots judge at Istanbul courthouse, convict saves her life

Prosecutor shoots judge at Istanbul courthouse, convict saves her life
Muhammed Cagatay Kilicarslan sports a Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) moustache. Together with two eyebrows, it makes three crescents, the MHP’s emblem. / Facebook page, Muhammed Cagatay Kilicarslan.
By Akin Nazli in Belgrade January 20, 2026

There were dramatic scenes at an Istanbul courthouse when a prosecutor shot a judge, whose life was then reportedly saved by a convict who works for the tea service at the premises.

Prosecutor Muhammed Cagatay Kilicarslan on January 13 shot judge Asli Kahraman at the Istanbul courthouse in Kartal district serving the Anatolian side of Istanbul, according to local media reports. Kilicarslan, 33, and Kahraman, 45, had a relationship and worked together at the Istanbul regional courts of justice 23rd penal chamber, the reports suggested.

Combatted violence against women

Kilicarslan worked at the office for combatting violence against women between 2022 and 2024, the reports added. Court documents suggest he fired his gun, wounding Kahraman in her foot in her court room.

Convict comes to the rescue

At that precise moment, Yakup Karadag, who works for the courthouse tea service, has entered the court room to collect empty glasses. Karadag is said to have saved Kahraman from death by grabbing and pushing up Kilicarslan’s hand as he shaped to fire his gun for a second time.

Karadag is a convict still serving a jail sentence at Maltepe prison. He was imprisoned in 2006 and spent 6,985 days at a closed prison before being transferred to an open prison. He has so far served 19 years and nine months of his sentence. He is due to be released on probation in 2031.

“Thought it was a joke”

“I entered the room to collect the empty glasses. As I did, the judge asked me to help her. At first, I didn't think anyone would attack a judge in the courthouse. I thought it was a joke,” Karadag on January 15 told local broadcaster NTV.

“When I fully realised the seriousness of the situation, I felt the need to intervene,” he added.

“We are convicts, so inevitably we go into life one-nil behind. But sometimes convicts can do good things too... We too can be useful to society. Let no one doubt that we will strive to be useful,” he remarked.

Why ‘AI inbreeding’ is your new big problem


By Terri Davis
DIGITAL JOURNAL
January 19, 2026


Photo by Tim Witzdam on Unsplash

Terri is a thought leader in Digital Journal’s Insight Forum (become a member).


When using generative AI often and broadly, modern organizations tend to assume their strategies are original by default.

In reality it’s the opposite, with ‘AI inbreeding’ happening at every prompt.

Unfortunately, history offers repeated warnings about what happens when systems become overly self-referential.

Over time, that inward focus (think of it as dipping into the same gene pool) creates sameness to a detrimental extent.

By feeding strategies, language, and decisions back through the same AI systems repeatedly, companies risk reinforcing what already exists and what the competition is doing, rather than expanding what is possible.
What’s new is old again

Large language models (LLMs) excel at identifying probability.

They surface what has worked before, what resembles prior success, and what aligns with dominant patterns. Used indiscriminately, which they most often are, these LLMs compress thinking toward the centre.

Strategic deformity takes familiar forms. Products begin to resemble competitors’ offerings. Marketing adopts the same cadence, metaphors, and vocabulary. Strategy decks differ in format but not in substance. Teams rely on identical prompt frameworks and celebrate efficiency, while gradually abandoning the friction that produces originality.

The organization does not fail outright. It first becomes indistinct.

How do you know you could be experiencing algorithmic inbreeding?Your strategic plan resembles your competitors’ more than it used to.
Your brand voice feels technically sound but emotionally flat.
Your most AI-literate hires are also the least surprising thinkers.
Why this is a leadership problem, not a technology one

AI systems are not designed to imagine what does not yet exist.

They are designed to predict what is most likely to work based on historical data. When executives treat AI outputs as finished thinking rather than informed input, leadership begins to defer rather than decide.

Over time, decisions narrow. Instead of asking what could work, teams ask what the model recommends. Strategic ambition is replaced by statistical reassurance, and judgment becomes optional.

This is a failure of governance.
The governance gap no one is talking about

Many organizations believe they have addressed this risk by appointing a Chief AI Officer.

In theory, this makes sense. AI touches strategy, operations, talent, and brand, and someone should own it.

In practice, most CAIO roles are measured on deployment speed, cost efficiency, and adoption. Very few are accountable for protecting strategic differentiation or intellectual diversity.

As a result, AI leadership often becomes an optimization function rather than a strategic one. Models are implemented correctly, workflows improve, and output accelerates. However, no one is explicitly responsible for asking the most important executive question:

What are we giving up by letting the model lead first?

Without that counterweight, AI becomes the default decision-maker by convenience rather than intent.
The three failure patterns of AI

When algorithmic deference takes hold, it tends to surface in three consistent ways.
Strategic Convergence

Organizations pursue similar growth strategies, pricing models, and product roadmaps because AI systems reinforce what already dominates the market.
Linguistic Flattening

As AI increasingly shapes internal and external communications, brand voice loses texture. Language becomes technically sound but emotionally inert. Customers disengage not because messaging is wrong, but because it feels interchangeable.
Talent Homogenization

AI-driven hiring tools optimize for pattern matching. Candidates who do not resemble previous “successful” profiles are filtered out. Over time, organizations select for tool fluency over original thinking.
What CEOs must do differently in 2026

This problem cannot be solved with better prompts or more advanced models. It requires executive intervention.

The CEO’s responsibility is not to align the organization with AI, but to ensure AI does not collapse strategic diversity and human judgment. That means making deliberate choices, including:Preserving space for dissent in planning cycles.
Protecting ideas that test poorly but feel directionally right.
Treating AI outputs as inputs rather than verdicts.
Leadership must reassert judgment as the final authority.

Organizations that avoid AI inbreeding behave differently. They hire for intellectual friction rather than culture fit, elevating leaders with non-linear experience across industries and disciplines. They slow decision finality to allow for exploration before optimization.

Progress does not come from eliminating variance but from protecting it.
Don’t optimize your way to irrelevance

One path leads to a sleek, efficient, and ultimately forgettable organization.

Automated. Polished. Interchangeable.

The other path is slower and more human. It tolerates disagreement, funds uncomfortable ideas, and accepts that originality often looks inefficient before it looks inevitable.

AI can accelerate execution. Only leadership can preserve evolution.

The companies that define the next decade will not be the most optimized. They will be the most adaptive in the truest sense of the word. They will retain room for the equivalent of the duck-billed platypus among their ranks and ideas: rare, unconventional, outside thinking, resistant to easy categorization.


Written ByTerri Davis
Terri is the founder of ProFound Talent and oolu, an AI-powered platform connecting businesses with fractional leaders. With 25+ years in executive search, she’s redefining how we hire — blending tech, heart, and strategy to grow companies and careers. Terri is a member of Digital Journal's Insight Forum.
What makes job satisfaction: The outcome is good for the economy

By Dr. Tim Sandle
SCIENCE EDITOR
DIGITAL JOURNAL
January 19, 2026


In New York City, workers spill out onto the streets, grabbing a quick lunch amid the city's constant buzz. — © Digital Journal

New research finds that employers and policymakers should start paying attention to how workers are feeling. This is because employee happiness contains critical economic information.

To derive at this finding, researchers from the University of Georgia used an empirical model to relate job satisfaction, wages and work environment.

The neoliberal theory of work runs that if workers are paid fairly for their working conditions they will be satisfied. This is a so-termed hedonic wage model. This is something that requires ‘perfect’ job and labour market conditions and assumes workers are rational, fully informed of workplace conditions and can switch jobs freely.

Of course, this is not reality as multiple critiques of free markets and related theories of human capital have demonstrated. Often, the worst jobs are also the jobs that pay the least, and yet workers do not (often cannot) exit.


The hedonic wage model explains how wages are determined by the characteristics of jobs, where workers trade off job attributes against compensation, leading to compensating differentials for less desirable job conditions.

Taking a new approach, the study used overall gratification to understand employees and uncover the trade-offs between working conditions and pay — including under circumstances where job markets are rigid, and workers might feel “stuck” at their jobs.

The researchers assessed data pertaining to nearly 35,000 European workers across jobs and sectors in 30 countries. It was found that, on average, workers facing higher risks were paid less. This is not in line with neoliberal theory. This is partly because such theories do not adequately account for job satisfaction indicators.
What is the price of job satisfaction?

Alternatively, looking at the data from an economic perspective, the researchers considered how much money workers think is reasonable to stay in a job that is inherently unsatisfying?

Adjusted for U.S. dollars at the time of publication, the study found that on average, workers would have to be compensated with approximately $29 per hour to eliminate all the health and safety risks they perceive at work to remain satisfied with their position. The research also found that avoiding days off due to work accidents had an estimated price tag of $362 per year, and improved workplace conditions had a value of more than $12,000 per year.
Implications

The study shows that workplace satisfaction is much more important than many theoretical models (and management practice) accounts for. Higher pay and a safer work environment have an immense impact on worker contentment. Consequently, happier workers can mean plenty of good things for the business itself, including productivity.
Example of appreciation

An example of a different dynamic is for employees to be appreciated by colleagues, a factor that can help employees cope with negative experiences at work. Research has shown that employees experience ’embitterment’ — an emotional response to perceived workplace injustice — on days when they are assigned more unreasonable tasks than usual. This negative emotion not only affects their work but also spills over into their personal lives, leading to an increase in rumination, the repetitive dwelling on negative feelings and their causes. This can result in difficulty detaching from work, ultimately preventing recovery from job-related stress.
New paradigm

The researchers point out that asking workers in general about how they feel and gathering subjective well-being data contains a lot of important economic information and this approach has tended to be ignored by economists.

The research appears in the Journal of Environmental Economics and Management. The research paper is titled “Measuring job risks when hedonic wage models do not do the job.”
Global tourism hit new record level in 2025: UN


By AFP
January 20, 2026


Demand for travel is at a record high - Copyright AFP/File Thomas COEX

Global tourism hit a new record level in 2025 with 1.52 billion international tourist arrivals recorded worldwide, driven by strong increases in Asia and Africa, UN Tourism said Tuesday.

“Demand for travel remained high throughout 2025, despite high inflation in tourism services and uncertainty from geopolitical tensions,” the secretary general of the Madrid-based body, Shaikha Alnuwais, said in a statement.

“We expect this positive trend to continue into 2026 as global economy is expected to remain steady and destinations still lagging behind pre pandemic levels fully recover.”

The number of international tourist arrivals last year was 4.0 percent higher than the 1.4 billion recorded in 2024, reaching its highest level in the post-pandemic era and a new record, UN Tourism said.

Africa saw an 8.0 percent rise in arrivals in 2025 to 81 million, with Morocco and Tunisia posting particulary strong results.

International arrivals grew by 6.0 percent in Asia and Pacific to reach 331 million in 2025, some 91 percent of pre-pandemic levels.

Europe, the world’s most popular destination region, recorded 793 million international arrivals in 2025, a 4.0 percent increase over the previous year and 6.0 percent above 2019, the year before the pandemic paralysed travel.
Chagos Islands: international dispute and human drama

By AFP
January 20, 2026


Britain leased the islands to the US for 50 years so that it could set up a military base - Copyright DoD/AFP/File Handout

Britain agreed to return the Chagos Islands to Mauritius in May 2025 — a move described by US President Donald Trump as “an act of great stupidity” on Tuesday.

The remote Indian Ocean archipelago was bought by Britain in 1965 before Mauritius gained independence, after which it expelled the local population and leased the territory to the United States for what became one of its most important military bases.

Britain’s ownership was disputed for years, with the United Nations ruling in 2019 that the UK should hand back the roughly 55 islands and atolls.

– Mass eviction –

In 1965, Britain separated the Chagos Islands from the rest of Mauritius, then a semi-autonomous British territory, and paid three million pounds to acquire them, the equivalent of around $65 million today.

When Mauritius became independent three years later, the islands remained under British control and were renamed the British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT).

In 1966, Britain leased the islands to the US for 50 years so that it could set up a military base. In 2016, the deal was extended to 2036.

Between 1968 and 1973, around 2,000 Chagos islanders were evicted, described in a British diplomatic cable at the time as the removal of a few “Tarzans and Man Fridays”. Most were shipped to Mauritius and the Seychelles.

Mauritius argued it was illegal for Britain to break up its territory and demanded the right to resettle former residents.


– Strategic military base –


The US military base on Diego Garcia, the largest island, took a major strategic role in the Cold War.

It offered proximity to Asia as an assertive Soviet navy was extending communist influence in the Indian Ocean.

After the 1979 Iranian revolution, the US expanded the base to receive more warships and heavy bombers.

It later served as a staging ground for US bombing campaigns in Afghanistan and Iraq, and was used recently to launch B-2 bomber attacks on Houthi rebels in Yemen during the Gaza war.


– Islands returned –


Britain signed a deal with Mauritius in May 2025 to return the islands, while paying to lease Diego Garcia for $136 million annually for 99 years, which London says will secure the use of the military base.

It follows decades of legal wrangling dating back to 1975 when Chagos islanders living in Mauritius launched legal proceedings against their expulsion, resulting in a 1982 payment of four million pounds in compensation along with land valued at one million pounds.

In 2007, a British appeals court paved the way for Chagossians to return home but its decision was annulled by the upper branch of parliament, the House of Lords, the following year.

In 2016, the British government confirmed its opposition to the resettlement of Chagossians, including for reasons of defence, security and cost.

Today, around 10,000 Chagossians and their descendants are divided between Mauritius, the Seychelles and Britain.

– ICJ ruling –

In 2010, Britain declared the islands part of a Marine Protected Area, arguing that people should not be permitted to live there.

Diplomatic cables revealed by WikiLeaks quoted a British official as saying the plan “put paid to the resettlement claims of the archipelago’s former residents”.

The move backfired as a UN arbitration tribunal declared it illegal in 2015. The International Court of Justice (ICJ) stated in 2019 that Britain had illegally split the islands and should relinquish control.

Britain rejected the ruling, insisting that Mauritius was wrong to bring the case to court, and arguing the Diego Garcia base played a “vital role” in keeping the region safe.

Later that year, a UN General Assembly resolution demanded Britain cede the islands.

– Colonial history –

Located several hundred kilometres south of the Maldives, the Chagos Islands were colonised by France in the 18th century and African slaves were shipped in to cultivate coconuts and copra.

In 1814, France was made to cede the islands to Britain, which in 1903 merged them with Mauritius, its colony around 2,000 kilometres (1,200 miles) to the southwest.

After the abolition of slavery in 1834, Indian workers arrived and mixed with the first settlers.

Only three of the islands were inhabited: Diego Garcia, Salomon and Peros Banhos.

Israel begins demolitions at UNRWA headquarters in east Jerusalem


By AFP
January 20, 2026

BOYCOTT CAT


AFP photos showed heavy machinery demolishing at least one structure at the compound - Copyright AFP ilia yefimovich

Israeli bulldozers began demolitions at the headquarters of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees in east Jerusalem on Tuesday, in what the organisation called an “unprecedented attack”.

UNRWA spokesman Jonathan Fowler said in a statement to AFP that Israeli forces “stormed into” the compound shortly after 7am (0500 GMT) and ousted security guards from the site, before bulldozers entered and began demolishing buildings.

“This is an unprecedented attack against UNRWA and its premises. And it also constitutes a serious violation of international law and the privileges and immunities of the United Nations,” Fowler said.

“This should be a wake-up call,” he added.

“What happens today to UNRWA can happen tomorrow to any other international organisation or diplomatic mission around the world.”

AFP photos showed heavy machinery demolishing structures at the compound, where an Israeli flag fluttered overhead.

An AFP photographer reported that far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir had made a brief visit to the site.

“This is a historic day, a day of celebration, and a very important day for governance in Jerusalem,” Ben Gvir was quoted as saying in a statement.

“For years, these supporters of terrorism were here, and today they are being removed from here along with everything they built in this place. This is what will happen to every supporter of terrorism,” he added.

Israel has repeatedly accused UNRWA of providing cover for Hamas militants, claiming that some of its employees took part in the group’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, which sparked the war in Gaza.

A series of investigations, including one led by France’s former foreign minister Catherine Colonna, found some “neutrality-related issues” at UNRWA but stressed Israel had not provided conclusive evidence for its headline allegation.



– ‘No immunity’ –



In a statement, the Israeli foreign ministry defended the demolitions and said “the state of Israel owns the Jerusalem compound”.

“Today’s move does not constitute a new policy, but rather the implementation of existing Israeli legislation concerning UNRWA-Hamas.”

The compound in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem has been empty of UNRWA staff since January 2025, when a law banning its operations took effect after a months-long battle over its work in the Gaza Strip.

“UNRWA-Hamas had already ceased its operations at this site and no longer had any UN personnel or UN activity there,” the foreign ministry said.

“The compound does not enjoy any immunity and the seizure of this compound by Israeli authorities was carried out in accordance with both Israeli and international law,” it added.

Though the UNRWA ban applies in east Jerusalem due to its annexation by Israel, the agency still operates in the occupied West Bank and Gaza.

In early December, UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini denounced the seizure by Israeli authorities of assets from the compound, which police told AFP was part of a debt-collection operation.

In a post on X, Lazzarini said authorities took “furniture, IT equipment and other property”, while the compound’s UN flag was replaced with an Israeli one.

At the time, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres issued a statement strongly condemning the “unauthorised entry”, saying the compound remained “United Nations premises and is inviolable and immune from any other form of interference”.

Months after the war in Gaza began in October 2023, Israeli authorities declared Guterres and Lazzarini as persona non grata in Israel.
Moscow revels in Trump’s Greenland plans but keeps concerns quiet


By AFP
January 20, 2026


President Donald Trump says owning Greenland is critical for US national security - Copyright AFP ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS

As President Donald Trump intensifies his push to secure control of Greenland for the United States, Russia is revelling in the chaos while keeping its own position on US ownership over the island unclear.

European countries have warned any US attempt to seize Greenland would rupture NATO, a transatlantic alliance that Russia has long seen as a security threat.

But Moscow has also expressed concern about the West expanding its military foothold in the Arctic, an area where it has its own ambitions and which it sees as strategically important.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has not spoken publicly about the dispute this year, while his spokesperson and foreign minister have called the situation “unusual” and denied Moscow has any intentions to seize the Arctic territory itself.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Monday that Trump would “go down in history” if he took control of the island, while declining to comment on whether this was “good or bad”.

Trump says US ownership of Greenland is critical for his country’s national security.

He and his aides have argued Denmark, a fellow NATO member, would be unable to defend Greenland should Russia or China ever seek to invade the vast island, a Danish autonomous territory.

Greenland sits under the flight path between the United States and Russia, making it a potentially critical outpost for air defences.

Without commenting on Trump’s claim, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told a news conference on Tuesday: “Greenland is not a natural part of Denmark, it is a colonial conquest.”

He pointed to France’s control of Mayotte and Britain’s ownership of the Falkland Islands — which Lavrov referred to as the “Malvinas Islands”, as Argentina calls them — as examples of European powers retaining control of conquered territory.



– ‘Close eye on situation’ –



Peskov said last week Russia was “like the rest of the world, keeping a close eye on the situation.”

“We proceed from the premise that Greenland is a territory of the Kingdom of Denmark,” he added in remarks last Friday.

“The situation is unusual, I would even say extraordinary, from the point of view of international law,” Peskov said, adding that Trump “as he has said himself, is not somebody for whom international law is some kind of priority”.

Pro-Kremlin media outlets have meanwhile revelled in the dispute.

The Moskovskiy Komsomolets tabloid said on Sunday it was watching with joy at Europe falling into “complete disarray” over the crisis.

Although Moscow has not said whether it would oppose the United States taking control of the territory, it has repeatedly warned NATO against deploying troops and equipment to the Arctic region.

Last week, the Russian Embassy in Belgium — where NATO is headquartered — accused the alliance of embarking on an “accelerated militarisation of the North”.

Putin has not commented publicly on the issue since it reemerged as a focus for the Trump administration in recent weeks.

The Kremlin chief had in March 2025 said Trump had “serious plans regarding Greenland” that had “long-standing historical roots”, after the US President mooted the need for American control of the territory.

At the time, Putin said the issue “concerns two specific nations and has nothing to do with us”, but that Russia was “concerned” about what he called increasing NATO activity in the Arctic.

Hungary rejects joint EU stance on Greenland, foreign minister says

Hungary rejects joint EU stance on Greenland, foreign minister says
Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto at a joint press conference with his Czech colleague, Petr Macinka in Prague / Facebook/Peter Szijjarto
By bne IntelliNews January 20, 2026

Hungary does not consider the issue of Greenland to be a European Union matter and therefore does not support issuing a joint EU statement on the subject, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Peter Szijjarto said on January 18 in Prague.


Dogsled diplomacy in Greenland proves elusive for US


By AFP
January 20, 2026


An Inuit hunter rides his dogsled on the soft sea ice as he looks for seal outside Ittoqqortoormiit, on the frozen Scoresbysund Fjord, on the east coast of Greenland - Copyright AFP Olivier MORIN


Pierre-Henry DESHAYES

Greenland’s biggest dogsled race is a cultural mainstay on the Arctic island, but US envoys keep finding themselves disinvited, frustrating attempts by President Donald Trump’s team to wield soft power in the Danish autonomous territory.

The annual Avannaata Qimussersua race is dear to Greenlanders as the most prestigious event of its kind, pitting around 30 teams against each other to decide the territory’s top dog sledders.

That has piqued the interest of team Trump as the American president pushes to take over Greenland.

In the space of a few days, Trump’s special envoy for Greenland, Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry, was first invited and then uninvited to this year’s race, to be held on March 28 in Qasigiannguit, a small community on the west coast.

Last year, after Trump revived his ambition to acquire Greenland, Usha Vance, wife of US Vice President JD Vance, had also planned to attend the race, before her appearance was cancelled.

“We’re looking at manoeuvres that, if not outright interference, are at least a form of soft diplomacy that involves meeting local populations with the intent of influencing them,” Mikaa Blugeon-Mered, a researcher on Arctic geopolitics, told AFP.

The would-be visits are part of a broader push by Washington to get a feel for the Greenlandic population — which at this point is overwhelmingly opposed to joining the United States — and encourage pro-American sentiment in order to win hearts and minds, according to the researcher.

In August, Danish public broadcaster DR reported that at least three Americans linked to Trump were conducting influence operations in Greenland.

Their mission was to identify those favouring closer ties to the United States, as well as those in fierce opposition, according to DR.

In May, the Wall Street Journal reported that US intelligence agencies had been ordered to gather information on Greenland’s independence movement and views on potential US exploitation of the island’s natural resources.



– Identity marker –



For many of Greenland’s 57,000 inhabitants, of whom nearly 90 percent are Inuit, the Avannaata Qimussersua is strongly tied to identity.

The race, generally held at the end of the winter season, is part of the island’s “living culture”, said Manumina Lund Jensen, an associate professor in the Department of Cultural and Social History at the University of Greenland.

“It’s very important for the Greenlanders, and it is a very emotional journey if you go there,” she told AFP.

Amid renewed tension between Washington and Europe, the Greenland Dog Sledding Association (KNQK) recently announced that the invitation to Landry — which had been extended without its knowledge by a private tour operator — had been cancelled.

“KNQK has been informed that the tourism company that invited Governor Jeff Landry from the United States has unilaterally withdrawn its invitation,” the organisation said in a statement.

“This is reassuring,” it added.



– ‘Political pressure’ –



Greenlandic broadcaster KNR reported last week that Landry had been invited by tour operator Kristian Jeremiassen.

Speaking to KNR, Jeremiassen said he had invited “many different people” to the race, without specifying whom, “to promote tourism in northern Greenland”.

However, the Greenland Dog Sledding Association said it found it “unacceptable that political pressure is being exerted from outside” and called the invitation “wholly inappropriate”.

According to Blugeon-Mered, alongside his work as a tour operator, Jeremiassen is a politician “on the wane… whose primary goal is to make himself a kind of go-between (with the United States) to boost his business”.

A year ago, Usha Vance had planned to attend the race without an official invitation.

“The US consulate had offered to fund most of the race,” Blugeon-Mered said.

“They thought that by being the race’s main sponsor, they could buy the organisers and do whatever they wanted. It didn’t work.”

JD Vance’s planned visit had sparked strong objections in Denmark, which saw it as “unacceptable pressure” and said it risked provoking demonstrations during the event.

The US delegation ultimately changed its programme, and JD and Usha Vance instead visited an American air base at Pituffik, in the territory’s northwest.


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Sunday, December 01, 2024

The Fascist Counter-revolution



Karl Korsch
 1940

First Published: in Living Marxism, Volume 5, Number 2, Fall 1940, pp. 29-37
Source: Class Against Class;
Transcribed: by Zdravko Saveski, for marxists.org 2009;

What hope have we revolutionary Marxists, remnants of a past epoch, inheritors of its most advanced theories, illusions, ideologies-what hope have we left for a revolutionary turn of the sweeping counterrevolutionary movement of victorious fascism? The fate of France has finally proved that the old Marxist slogan of "world revolution" has in our epoch assumed a new meaning. We find ourselves today in the midst not of a socialist and proletarian but of an ultra-imperialistic and fascist world revolution. Just as in the preceding epoch every major defeat-the defeat of France in 1871, that of Russia, Germany, Hungary in 1905, 1917, 1918-resulted in a genuine revolution, so in our time each defeated country resorts to a fascist counterrevolution. Moreover, present-day war itself has become a revolutionary process, a civil war with an unmistakably predominant counterrevolutionary tendency. Just as in a horse race we do not know which horse will win but we do know that it will be a horse, so in the present war the victory of either party will result in a further gigantic step toward the fascization of Europe, if not of the whole European, American, Asiatic world of tomorrow.


I

There seem to be two easy ways for the "orthodox" Marxist of today to handle this difficult problem. Well-trained in Hegelian philosophical thought, he might say that all that is, is reasonable, and that, by one of those dialectical shifts in which history rejoices, socialism has been fulfilled by the social revolution implied in the victory of fascism. Thus Hegel himself at first followed the rising star of the French Revolution, later embraced the cause of Napoleon, and ended by acclaiming the Prussian state that emerged from the anti-Napoleonic wars of 1812-1815 as the fulfilment of the philosophical "idea" and as the "state of reason" corresponding to the given stage of its historical development.

Or, for that matter, our orthodox Marxist might not be willing, for the present, to go so far as to acknowledge the fascist allies of Stalin as the genuine promoters of socialism in our time. He would then content himself with feeling that the victory of fascism, planned economy, state capitalism, and the weeding out of all ideas and institutions of traditional "bourgeois democracy" will bring us to the very threshold of the genuine social revolution and proletarian dictatorship - just as, according to the teachings of the early church, the ultimate coming of Christ will be immediately preceded by the coming of the Anti-Christ who will be so much like Christ in his appearance and in his actions that the faithful will have considerable difficulty in seeing the difference.

In so reasoning, our orthodox Marxist would not only conform with the church but would also keep well in line with the precedents set by the earlier socialists and "revolutionary" Marxists themselves. It was not only the moderately progressive bourgeois ex-minister Guizot who was deceived by the revolutionary trimmings of Louis Napoleon's coup d'etat of 1851 and, when he heard the news burst out into the alarmed cry, "This is the complete and final triumph of socialism." Even the leading representative of French socialism, P. J. Proudhon, was taken in by the violently anti-bourgeois attitude displayed by the revolutionary imperialist, and he devoted a famous pamphlet to the thesis that the coup d'etat of the Second of December did in fact "demonstrate the social revolution."[1]

Indeed, in many ways that counterrevolutionary aftermath of 1848 is comparable to the infinitely more serious and more extended counterrevolutionary movement through which European society is passing today after the experience of the Russian, the German, and the other European revolutions which followed in the wake of the First World War. Every party and every political tendency had to go through a certain period of bewilderment until it had adapted itself to a totally changed situation. Marx himself, although he utterly despised the imperialist adventurer because of his personal inadequacy, was inclined to believe in the revolutionary significance of the counterrevolutionary coup. He described the historical outcome of the two years of revolutionary defeat from 1848 to 1849 by the paradoxical statement that "this time the advance of the revolutionary movement did not effect itself through its immediate tragicomic achievements but, the other way round, through the creation of a united and powerful counterrevolution, through the creation of an antagonist by opposing whom the party of revolt will reach its real revolutionary maturity." And even after the fateful event he most emphatically restated his conviction that "the destruction of the parliamentary republic contains the germs of the triumph of the proletarian revolution." This is exactly what the German Communists and their Russian masters said 80 years later when they welcomed the advent of Nazism in Germany as a "victory of revolutionary communism."

This ambiguous attitude of Proudhon and Marx toward counterrevolution was repeated ten years later by Ferdinand Lassalle, a close theoretical disciple of Marx and at that time the foremost leader of the growing socialist movement in Germany. He was prepared to cooperate with Bismarck at the time when that unscrupulous statesman was toying with the idea of bribing the workers into acceptance of his imperialistic plans by an apparent adoption of the universal franchise and some other ideas borrowed from the 1848 revolution and the Second Empire. Lasalle did not live to see Bismarck at the end of the 70's, when he had subdued the liberals and the ultra-montane Catholic party, revert to his old dream of enforcing a kind of "tory-socialism" based on a ruthless persecution and suppression of all genuine socialist workers' movements.

There is no need to discuss the wholesale conversion of internationalists into nationalists and proletarian Social Democrats into bourgeois democratic parliamentarians during and after the First World War. Even such former Marxists as Paul Lensch accepted the war of the Kaiser as a realistic fulfilment of the dreams of a socialist revolution, and the about-face of the socialists they themselves glorified as a "revolutionization of the revolutionaries." There was a "national-bolshevist" fraction of the German Communist party long before there was a Hitlerian National Socialist Party. Nor does the military alliance that was concluded "seriously and for a long time" between Stalin and Hitler in August 1939, contain any novelty for those who have followed the historical development of the relations between Soviet Russia and imperial, republican, and Hitlerian Germany throughout the last twenty years. The Moscow treaty of 1939 had been preceded by the treaties of Rapallo in 1920 and of Berlin in 1926. Mussolini had already for several years openly proclaimed his new fascist credo when Lenin was scolding the Italian Communists for their failure to enlist that invaluable dynamic personality in the service of their revolutionary cause. As early as 1917, during the peace negotiations in Brest Litovsk, Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht had been aware of the dreadful danger that was threatening the proletarian revolution from that side. They had said in so many words that "Russian socialism based on reactionary Prussian bayonets would be the worst that still could happen to the revolutionary workers' movement."

It appears from this historical record that there is indeed something basically wrong with the traditional Marxian theory of the social revolution and with its practical application. There is no doubt, today less than at any former time in history, that the Marxian analysis of the working of the capitalist mode of production and of its historical development is fundamentally correct. Yet it seems that the Marxian theory in its hitherto accepted form is unable to deal with the new problems that arise in the course of a not merely occasional and temporary but deep-rooted, comprehensive, and enduring counterrevolutionary development.


II

The main deficiency of the Marxian concept of the counterrevolution is that Marx did not, and from the viewpoint of his historical experience could not, conceive of the counterrevolution as a normal phase of social development. Like the bourgeois liberals he thought of the counterrevolution as an "abnormal" temporary disturbance of a normally progressive development. (In the same manner, pacifists to the present day think of war as an abnormal interruption of the normal state of peace, and physicians and psychiatrists until recently thought of disease and more especially the diseases of the mind as an abnormal state of the organism.) There is, however, between the Marxian approach and that of the typical bourgeois liberal this important difference: they start from a totally different idea about just what is a normal condition. The bourgeois liberal regards existing conditions or at least their basic features as the normal state of things, and any radical change as its abnormal interruption. It does not matter to him whether that disturbance of existing normal conditions results from a genuinely progressive movement or from a reactionary attempt to borrow revolution's thunder for the purpose of a counterrevolutionary aggression. He is afraid of the counterrevolution just as much as of the revolution and just because of its resemblance to a genuine revolution. That is why Guizot called the coup d'etat "the complete and final triumph of the socialist revolution" and why, for that matter, Hermann Rauschning today describes the advent of Hitlerism as a "revolt of nihilism."

As against the bourgeois concept, the Marxian theory has a distinct superiority. It understands revolution as a completely normal process. Some of the best Marxists, including Marx himself and Lenin, even said on occasion that revolution is the only normal state of society. So it is, indeed, under those objective historical conditions which are soberly stated by Marx in his preface to the "Critique of Political Economy."

Marx did not, however, apply the same objective and historical principle to the process of counterrevolution, which was known to him only in an undeveloped form. Thus, he did not see, and most people do not see today, that such important counterrevolutionary developments as those of present-day fascism and nazism have, in spite of their violent revolutionary methods, much more in common with evolution than they have with a genuine revolutionary process. It is true that in their talk and propaganda both Hitler and Mussolini have directed their attack mostly against revolutionary Marxism and communism. It is also true that before and after their seizure of state power they made a most violent attempt to weed out every Marxist and Communist tendency in the working classes. Yet this was not the main content of the fascist counterrevolution. In its actual results the fascist attempt to renovate and transform the traditional state of society does not offer an alternative to the radical solution aimed at by the revolutionary Communists. The fascist counterrevolution rather tried to replace the reformist socialist parties and trade unions, and in this it succeeded to a great extent.

The underlying historical law, the law of the fully developed fascist counterrevolution of our time, can be formulated in the following manner: After the complete exhaustion and defeat of the revolutionary forces, the fascist counterrevolution attempts to fulfil, by new revolutionary methods and in widely different form, those social and political tasks which the so-called reformistic parties and trade unions had promised to achieve but in which they could no longer succeed under the given historical conditions.

A revolution does not occur at some arbitrary point of social development but only at a definite stage. "At a certain stage of their development the material productive forces of society come into contradiction with the existing production-relations (or property-relations) within which they hitherto moved. From being forms of development, those relations turn into fetters upon the forces of production. Then a period of social revolution sets in." And again Marx emphasized, and even to a certain extent exaggerated, the objectivistic principle of his materialist theory of revolution according to which "a formation of society never perishes until all the forces of production for which it is wide enough have been developed." All this is true enough as far as it goes. We have all seen how evolutionary socialism reached the end of its rope. We have seen how the old capitalistic system based on free competition and the whole of its vast political and ideological superstructure was faced by chronic depression and decay. There seemed no way open except a wholesale transition to another, more highly developed form of society, to be effected by the social revolution of the proletarian class.

The new historical development during the last twenty years showed, however, that there was yet another course open. The transition to a new type of capitalistic society, that could no longer be achieved by the democratic and peaceful means of traditional socialism and trade unionism, was performed by a counterrevolutionary and anti-proletarian yet objectively progressive and ideologically anti-capitalistic and plebeian movement that had learned to apply to its restricted evolutionary aims the unrestricted methods developed during the preceding revolution. (More particularly, both Hitler and Mussolini had learned much in the school of Russian Bolshevism.) Thus, it appeared that the evolution of capitalistic society had not reached its utter historical limit when the ruling classes and the reformistic socialists-those self-appointed "doctors at the sickbed of capitalism" -reached the limits of their evolutionary possibilities. The phase of peaceful democratic reforms was followed by another evolutionary phase of development-that of the fascist transformation, revolutionary in its political form but evolutionary in its objective social contents.

The decisive reason that the capitalistic formation of society did not perish after the collapse of the First World War is that the workers did not make their revolution. "Fascism," said its closest enemy, "is a counterrevolution against a revolution that never took place." Capitalistic society did not perish, but instead entered a new revolutionary phase under the counterrevolutionary regime of fascism, because it was not destroyed by a successful workers' revolution, and because it had not, in fact, developed all the forces of production. The objective and the subjective premises are equally important for the counterrevolutionary conclusion.

From this viewpoint all those comfortable illusions about a hidden revolutionary significance in the temporary victory of the counterrevolution, in which the earlier Marxists so frequently indulged, must be entirely abandoned. If counterrevolution is only extremely and superficially connected with a social revolution by its procedures, but in its actual content is much more closely related to the further evolution of a given social system, and is in fact a particular historical phase of that social evolution, then it can no longer be regarded as a revolution in disguise. There is no reason to hail it either as an immediate prelude to the genuine revolution, or as an intrinsic phase of the revolutionary process itself. It appears as a particular phase of the whole developmental process, not inevitable like revolution yet becoming an inevitable step within the development of a given society under certain historical conditions. It has reached its up-to-now most comprehensive and important form in the present day fascist renovation and transformation of Europe, which in its basic economic aspect appears as a transition from the private and anarchic form of competitive capitalism to a system of planned and organized monopoly capitalism or state capitalism.


III

It would be the greatest folly and, for people even slightly imbued with the great discoveries of Marx in the field of the social sciences, a total relapse into a pre-materialist and pre-scientific manner of thought if one were to expect that the historical progress from competitive capitalism to planned economy and state capitalism could be repealed by any power in the world. Least of all can fascism be defeated by those people who, after a hundred years of shameless acquiescence in the total abandonment of their original ideals, now hasten to conjure up the infancy of the capitalist age with its belief in liberty, equity, fraternity, and free trade, while at the same time they surreptitiously and inefficiently try to imitate as far as possible fascism's abolition of the last remnants of those early capitalist ideas. They feel a sudden and unexpected urge to celebrate the French Revolution's fourteenth of July and at the same time dream of destroying fascism by adopting fascist methods.

In opposition to the artisan and petty-bourgeois spirit of early utopian socialism, the first word of scientific and proletarian socialism stated that big industry and the machine age had come to stay, that modern industrial workers had to find a cure for the evils of the industrial age on the basis of a further development of the new industrial forces themselves. In the same manner the scientific and proletarian socialists of our time must try to find remedies for the wrongs of monopoly capitalism and fascist dictatorship on the basis of monopoly and state capitalism itself. Neither free trade (that was not so free for the workers after all) nor the other aspects of traditional bourgeois democracy - free discussion and free press and free radio - will ever be restored. They have never existed for the suppressed and exploited class. As far as the workers are concerned, they have only exchanged one form of serfdom for another.

There is no essential difference between the way the New York Times and the Nazi press publish daily "all the news that's fit to print"-under existing conditions of privilege and coercion and hypocrisy. There is no difference in principle between the eighty-odd voices of capitalist mammoth corporations-which, over the American radio, recommend to legions of silent listeners the use of Ex-Lax, Camels, and neighbourhood groceries, along with music, war, baseball and domestic news, and dramatic sketches-and one suave voice of Mr. Goebbels who recommends armaments, race-purity, and worship of the Fuehrer. He too is quite willing to let them have music along with it-plenty of music, sporting news, and all the unpolitical stuff they can take.

This criticism of the inept and sentimental methods of present-day anti-fascism does not imply by any means that the workers should do openly what the bourgeoisie does under the disguise of a so-called antifascist fight: acquiesce in the victory of fascism. The point is to fight fascism not by fascist means but on its own ground. This seems to the present writer to be the rational meaning of what was somewhat mystically described by Alpha in the spring issue of Living Marxism as the specific task of "shock-troops" in the anti-fascist fight. Alpha anticipated that even if the localized war-of-siege waged during the first seven months of the present conflict were to extend into a general fascist world war, this would not be a "total war" and an unrestricted release of the existing powers of production for the purpose of destruction. Rather, it would still remain a monopolistic war in which the existing powers of production (destruction) would be fettered in many ways for the benefit of the monopolistic interests of privileged groups and classes. It would remain that kind of war from fear of the emancipatory effect that a total mobilization of the productive forces, even restricted to the purpose of destruction, would be bound to have for the workers or, under the present-day conditions of totally mechanized warfare, for the shocktroopers who perform the real work of that totally mechanized war.

This argument of Alpha’s can be applied more widely and much more convincingly. First of all we can disregard for the moment (although we shall have to return to it at a later stage) the peculiar restriction of the argument to the "shock-troops" and to the conditions of war. The whole traditional distinction between peace and war, production and destruction, has lost in recent times much of that semblance of truth that it had in an earlier period of modern capitalistic society. The history of the last ten years has shown that ever since, in a world drunk with apparent prosperity, the American Kellogg Pact outlawed war, peace has been abolished. From the outset Marxism was comparatively free from that simple-mindedness which believed in an immediate and clear-cut difference between production-for-use and production-for-profit. The only form of production-for-use under existing capitalistic conditions is just the production-for-profit. Productive labor for Marx, as for Smith and Ricardo, is that labor which produces a profit for the capitalist and, incidentally, a thing which may also be useful for human needs. There is no possibility of establishing a further distinction between a "good" and a "bad," a constructive and a destructive usefulness. The Goebbelian defense of the "productivity" of the labor spent on armaments in Germany by referring to the amount of "useful" labor spent in the United States for cosmetics had no novelty for the Marxist. Marx, who described the working class in its revolutionary fight as "the greatest of all productive forces" would not have been afraid to recognize war itself as an act of production, and the destructive forces of modern mechanized warfare as part of the productive forces of modern capitalistic society, such as it is. He, like Alpha, would have recognized the "shock-troops" in their "destructive" activity in war as well as in their productive activity in industry (armament and other industries-war industries all!) as real workers, a revolutionary vanguard of the modern working class. Historically it is a well-established fact that the soldier (the hired mercenary) was the first modern wage-laborer.

Thus, the old Marxian contradiction between the productive forces and the given production relations reappears in the warlike as well as in the peaceful activities of modern fascism. With it there appear again the old contrast between the workers, who as a class are interested in the full application and development of the productive forces, and the privileged classes, the monopolists of the material means of production. More than at any previous time the monopoly of political power reveals itself as the power to rule and control the social process of production. At the same time this means, under present conditions, the power to restrict production-both the production of industry in peace and destructive production in time of war-and to regulate it in the interest of the monopolist class. Even the "national" interest that was supposed to underly the present-day fascist war waged by Hitler and Mussolini is revealed by the war itself and will be revealed much more clearly by the coming peace as being ultimately an interest of the international capitalist and monopolist class. Much more clearly than at the end of the First World War it will appear that this war is waged by both parties-by the attacking fascists as well as by the defending "democrats"-as a united counterrevolutionary struggle against the workers and the soldiers who by their labor in peace and war prepared and fought the truly suicidal war.

What, then, is the hope left for the anti-fascists who are opposing the present European war and who will oppose the coming war of the hemisphere? The answer is that, just as life itself does not stop at the entrance of war, neither does the material work of modern industrial production. Fascists today quite correctly conceive the whole of their economy-that substitute for a genuine socialist economy-in terms of a "war economy" (Wehrwirtschaft). Thus, it is the task of the workers and the soldier to see to it that this job is no longer done within the restrictive rules imposed upon human labor in present-day capitalist, monopolist, and oppressive society. It has to be done in the manner prescribed by the particular instruments used; that is, in the manner prescribed by the productive forces available at the present stage of industrial development. In this manner both the productive and the destructive forces of present-day society-as every worker, every soldier knows-can be used only if they are used against their present monopolistic rulers. Total mobilization of the productive forces presupposes total mobilization of that greatest productive force which is the revolutionary working class itself.

Notes

[1] Oeuvres Completes de Proudhon, vol. VIII, Paris, 1868.

[2] First article on Class Struggles in France, Neue Rheinische Zeitung, January, 1850.

[3] The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, February, 1852.

[4] Ignazio Silone, School of Dictators, 1938.

[5] Living Marxism, vol. V, no. I, pp. 44-58.

Karl Korsch Archive
Canadian military models war plans for 'mass casualties on US' troops headed for Canada


U.S. President Donald Trump with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney on May 6, 2025 (Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok/Flickr)
January 20, 2026 |
ALTERNET

President Donald Trump's threats to take over Greenland have launched the Canadian Armed Forces into military planning mode.

The Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail reported on Tuesday, “military planners are modelling a U.S. invasion from the south, expecting American forces to overcome Canada’s strategic positions on land and at sea within a week and possibly as quickly as two days.

The report explained that Canada doesn't have the personnel or equipment that the United States has to go to war, so they're envisioning some asymmetrical warfare strategies.


In one case, a small group of "irregular military or armed civilians would resort to ambushes, sabotage, drone warfare or hit-and-run tactics" against the Americans, the report said.

The goal would be to ensure "mass casualties on U.S. occupying forces," an official said.

The report went on to cite France and Britain coming to Canada's aid. The two, The Globe and Mail pointed out, are nuclear-weapon states.


"It is believed to be the first time in a century that the Canadian Armed Forces have created a model of an American assault on this country, a founding member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and a partner with the U.S. in continental air defense," the report continued.

Trump declared early Tuesday that there's "no going back" on his decision to take Greenland.

The planners believe that an American attack would not only end the partnership in NORAD, the North American Aerospace Defence Command, but would also mean the U.S. is "taking Canada by force."


Read the full report here.





   



Music streams hit 5 trillion in 2025. Christian, rock and Latin lead growth in the US

NEW YORK (AP) — In the year-end report, it is clear that Christian/gospel music has continued to grow stateside: up 18.5% in on-demand audio volume change compared to 2024.



Maria Sherman
January 16, 2026

NEW YORK (AP) — The global music industry hit 5.1 trillion streams in 2025. It’s a new single-year record, up 9.6% from 2024, which held the previous record.

That’s according to a 2025 Year-End Report from Luminate, an industry data and analytics company that provides insight into changing behaviors across music listenership.

In the U.S., on-demand audio streams hit 1.4 trillion, a 4.6% increase from last year.

But attention is on older music. Less than half all U.S. on-demand audio streams — 43% — were from tracks released in the last five years (2021 – 2025).

One exception? Taylor Swift’s “The Life of a Showgirl” and Morgan Wallen’s “I’m the Problem,” both of which surpassed 5 million album equivalent units in a single year. That’s a combination of sales and streaming combined.

Christian/gospel music, rock and Latin see the most growth stateside

Luminate’s 2025 Mid-Year Report revealed that though streams of new music — music released in the last 18 months — were slightly down from the same time last year in the U.S., new Christian/gospel music defied the trend, said Jaime Marconette, Luminate’s vice president of music insights and industry relations, led by acts like Forrest Frank, Brandon Lake and Elevation Worship.

In the year-end report, it is clear that Christian/gospel music has continued to grow stateside: up 18.5% in on-demand audio volume change compared to 2024.

Other genres that saw an uptick? Rock grew 6.4% and Latin grew 5.2%.

“Rock is the largest growth genre this year, meaning it grew its share of the streaming pie the most,” said Marconette in a statement. “Though rock streaming in general leans catalog (tracks older than 18 months), the genre posted the second highest total of new current streams this year.”

For Latin music’s growth, Bad Bunny is responsible. His on-demand audio streams totaled 5.3 billion — 4.38% of all Latin on-demand audio streams.

“The Latin genre continues to be one of the highest growth-genres in the U.S.,” adds Marconette. “Bad Bunny was a key driver of the growth this year with his new album “Debí Tirar Más Fotos” generating 2.97 billion U.S. on-demand audio streams in 2025.”

High-profile AI artists emerge

The introduction of high-profile artificial intelligence artists became a leading music story in 2025. Those include Xania Monet and the rock band The Velvet Sundown.

Monet went on to become the first AI act to debut on a Billboard radio chart, reaching No. 3 on the organization’s Hot Gospel Songs and No. 20 on the Hot R&B Songs.

There have been quite a few AI country artists as well, including Aventhis, Cain Walker and Breaking Rust. The latter had a song called “Walk My Walk” hit No. 1 on Billboard’s country digital song sales chart in November. The vocal phrasing, melodic shape and stylistic DNA came from the Grammy-nominated country artist Blanco Brown, an artist who has worked with Britney Spears, Childish Gambino and Rihanna.

These artists serve as examples of generative AI continuing to upend the music industry, giving anyone the ability to instantly create seemingly new songs by typing prompts into a chat window, often using models trained on real artists’ voices and styles without their knowledge.

And according to Luminate, they’re having real success. Monet earned 125 million global on-demand audio streams last year. Breaking Rust brought in roughly 72.8 million streams followed by Walker with 48.1 million, Enlly Blue with 34.8 and Juno Skye with 15.5 million.

Who’s atop the global top 10

The top songs, globally, as determined by on-demand audio streams are the following:

1. Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars, “Die With a Smile” — 2.858 billion

2. HUNTR/X (Ejae, Audrey Nuna, Rei Ami) from “Kpop Demon Hunters,” “Golden” — 2.430 billion

3. Alex Warren, “Ordinary” — 2.403 billion

4. Rosé and Bruno Mars’ “APT.” — 2.236 billion

5. Billie Eilish, “Birds of a Feather” — 2.133 billion

6. Bad Bunny, “DtMF” — 1.701 billion

7. Kendrick Lamar and SZA, “Luther” — 1.672 billion

8. Benson Boone, “Beautiful Things” —1.630 billion

9. sombr, “Back to Friends” — 1.587 billion

10. Gracie Abrams, “That’s So True” — 1.544 billion