Monday, March 02, 2026

Don’t End TPS for Our Immigrant Neighbors


March 2, 2026

Photograph by Nathaniel St. Clair

This February, a panel of conservative federal judges ruled that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) can move forward with terminating Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for immigrants from Nicaragua, Honduras, and Nepal.

For the over 60,000 immigrants impacted by this decision, this is an incredible loss. As Jessica Bansal, an attorney with the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, writes, the “decision allows mothers, fathers, students, and workers who have lived lawfully in this country for decades to be stripped of status without even acknowledging the devastation caused to them and their families or the contribution they have made to their communities.”

Let’s be clear about what’s happening here: DHS is eliminating TPS for immigrants who are lawfully residing in the United States solely on the basis of their race, ethnicity, and nationality. They are turning documented immigrants into undocumented immigrants, slandering them as “killers” and “leeches” simply to create the pretext for more ICE violence.

This is not speculation. Before a judge blocked its termination, TPS for Haitians was slated to end on February 3. News outlets began reporting in late January that the Trump administration was planning to launch an operation targeting Haitians in Springfield, Ohio and across the state.

The end of TPS would have set the stage for another brutal Minnesota-style operation.

While DHS denies that such an operation was planned, the end of TPS would still give federal agents — who are operating under mandatory arrest quotas — an excuse to question any given Black person in Ohio under suspicion that they may be an undocumented Haitian immigrant. After all, President Trump’s Supreme Court justices have ruled that immigration enforcement agents can use race as the basis for stopping people.

While the end of TPS for immigrants is particularly dangerous for people of color, as the murders of Renee Good and Alex Prettimake clear, more ICE is bad for everyone.

What’s more, DHS is deporting them to nations — including NicaraguaHonduras, and Nepal — that are currently facing political turmoil.

The Trump administration has also terminated TPS for people from Venezuela, Afghanistan, Cameroon, and Cuba. Since then, the U.S. has invaded Venezuela and kidnapped President Nicolás Maduro. The Trump administration is currently imposing a total blockade on oil imports to Cuba, while threatening retaliatory tariffs on any country that sells oil to the Cuban government. Afghanistan and Cameroon continue to struggle with their own political instability and social upheaval.

In short, none of these countries are in a position to welcome tens of thousands of people.

At the same time that the Trump administration is deliberately manufacturing these humanitarian crises, it is weakening international aid networks. This includes eliminating the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and withdrawing the U.S. from the World Health Organization, the UN Human Rights Council, and other organizations.

In their absence, vulnerable countries will be left to fend for themselves — or worse, become the next victim of Trump’s global real estate firm: the deceptively named Board of Peace.

The Trump administration has attempted and thus far been successfully blocked from ending TPS for people from Ethiopia, Haiti, South Sudan, Burma, and Syria. TPS is currently scheduled to end for Somali, Yemeni, Salvadoran, Sudanese, and Ukrainian nationals in the upcoming months. While judges may rule against some of these efforts, DHS will likely appeal until they find a court that will give them the decision they want.

TPS was specifically designed to aid those in need — its moral and political duty cannot be forfeited to the racist and xenophobic whims of this administration. We must stand with our immigrant neighbors and push our elected officials to put guardrails on DHS’s clear abuse of power.

Jordan Liz is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at San José State University. He specializes in issues of race, immigration, and the politics of belonging.

 

From the Barstool


Into every commentator’s life falls a one-time permission slip to make ad hominem remarks. This is confirmed by Hoyle, the Marquess of Queensbury and natural law.

·       Donald Trump is a psychotic Fascist who is consumed by the mad fantasy of becoming the global emperor. The former was evident 9 years ago; the latter was evident on Inauguration Day 12 months ago
·       The American voting public nonetheless chose him President twice – almost did so on a third occasion
·       The United States’ elites – political and otherwise – have failed totally to protect the Republic by their acquiescence in his despotic actions. Treating his rise first as entertaining spectacle and then normalizing his pathology out of crass self-interest, ignorance and cowardice
·       The global strategy of Trump and his helpmates is to extend and to institutionalize global domination around the world by coercive means. The notorious Wolfowitz Memo of March 1992 is the template. The fixed goal of everything that the United States does in the world is the securing of American hegemony – in every sphere of international life that counts and in every region where either the stakes are high or the prospect of a putative rival arising exists
·       The essential elements of that plan have been assimilated by the overwhelming majority of the country’s foreign policy elites
·       Much ink has been spilt in a serious pondering of these propositions: that Trump is hesitant about the application of American power as in the “useless” wars of Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, etc.; that his thinking runs counter to the “deep state”; that his obsession with the Nobel Peace Prize did correspond with that part of him that wants to be a conciliator abroad; that he was resetting the country’s gyroscope to stress strength at home, to step back from forward commitments and intervention with the exception of Taiwan; to concentrate on the Western Hemisphere – the so-called Donroe Doctrine. These notions have been delusory, ill-informed and frankly silly – when not outright ridiculous. It reflects a complete misunderstanding of the man and our foreign affairs elites
·       Living in fantastical worlds of make-believe – a pervasive phenomenon in American and an abject Europe, as well – opened the way to this distorted vision of the Trump phenomenon
·       The most egregious expression of this distorted perception is the groundless faith that Trump is honestly committed to negotiating with Russia a peaceful settlement of the Ukraine conflict. This illogical, evidence-free article of faith has been shared by a cross-section of sober analysts – including Vladimir Putin. America’s leaders could not tolerate terms minimally acceptable to Russia. For such terms would represent a) an unmistakable loss of status and self-regard; b) a reversion from the strategic foundations of the country’s foreign policy put firmly in place over the past 35 years; and c) a domestic political embarrassment carrying heavy costs for Trump and his movement. Furthermore, Trump’s narcissistic, warped personality is too vulnerable to endure a rebuke and a failure of that magnitude. He is terrified at the prospect of looking like a loser.
·       Trump has been emboldened in his audacious, reckless enterprises by the muted criticism at home and abroad that it has met. China and Russia (especially the latter) have put misplaced hope in achieving a working relationship with Trump above denouncing at full throat his belligerence and military aggression. The travesty of the UN approved Board of Peace for Palestine, Putin’s washing his hands of the outrageous Greenland landgrab, his tolerance and lack of reaction to American (and allied) acts of war on Russian territory and at sea, passivity in Syria, largely ignoring the Venezuelan Anschluss, the desultory relief efforts for Cuba – together could only have fed Trump’s appetite and fueled his maniacal drive to control all by acts of impunity.

Putin’s long-standing and enduring hopes of engaging constructively with the United States by following a non-confrontational approach from the outset has carried the risk of entrenching Trump’s deformed view of the world.

The gross irresponsibility of the parties noted above now has brought us to the portals of Hell.
We have brought it on ourselves – foolishness carries heavy costs
The ultimate truth is that there is little that we can do about it – fortunes of war unseen.

Michael Brenner is Professor Emeritus of International Affairs at the University of Pittsburgh and a Fellow of the Center for Transatlantic Relations at SAIS/Johns Hopkins. He was the Director of the International Relations & Global Studies Program at the University of Texas. Brenner is the author of numerous books, and over 80 articles and published papers. His most recent works are: Democracy Promotion and IslamFear and Dread in the Middle EastToward a More Independent EuropeNarcissistic Public Personalities & Our TimesRead other articles by Michael.

 

The Age of Human Arrogance, Part II


What on Earth Are We Doing? The Madness of Mining the Cosmos While Poisoning Our Only Home

Humanity stands at a strange and tragic crossroads. We boast of our intelligence, our innovation, our “progress,” yet we behave like a species determined to sabotage its own future. We tear open the earth for minerals, metals, and rare elements—lithium, cobalt, gold, copper—feeding an insatiable appetite for technology, weapons, and spectacle. We burn forests, poison rivers, and choke the atmosphere, all while congratulating ourselves for planning missions to Mars in search of water.

What kind of madness is this?

We are a civilization that contaminates the water beneath our feet while spending billions to search for droplets on distant planets. We destroy ecosystems that sustain life, then celebrate engineering triumphs that promise to help us escape the consequences of our destruction. We behave as if the universe owes us another home, another chance, another planet to plunder.

This is not progress. This is arrogance—pure, unfiltered, and catastrophic.

The Violence Hidden in Our Minerals

Every device we hold, every battery we charge, every rocket we launch is built on the backs of minerals extracted from wounded lands. The soil of the Congo, the deserts of Chile, the mountains of Bolivia, the forests of Indonesia—all bear the scars of our hunger for “advancement.” Children dig for cobalt. Rivers run red with tailings. Entire species vanish without ceremony.

And yet, we dare to call this “innovation.”

We have mastered the art of extracting everything except wisdom.

A Planet We Refuse to Share

The tragedy is not only environmental—it is moral. We cannot even share this earth with the species that preceded us. We bulldoze habitats, poison oceans, and drive animals to extinction, then marvel at the silence we created. We treat the natural world as an inconvenience, an obstacle to be cleared for profit, a resource to be consumed without restraint.

We forget that the earth is not ours alone. It never was.

The arrogance of believing that humanity is the center of creation has led us to a precipice. We have mistaken dominion for domination, stewardship for ownership, and intelligence for entitlement.

The Cosmic Distraction

While our oceans fill with plastic and our air thickens with toxins, we point telescopes toward distant galaxies and declare ourselves pioneers of the future. We dream of colonizing Mars while failing to protect the miracle of Earth. We fantasize about terraforming other planets while refusing to heal the one that already sustains us.

This is not exploration—it is escapism.

A species that cannot live in harmony with its own home has no moral right to seek another.

The Moral Question We Refuse to Ask

What does it mean to search for water on the moon while poisoning the rivers of Ghana, India, Brazil, and Flint, Michigan? What does it mean to dream of life on Mars while extinguishing life in our forests, wetlands, and coral reefs? What does it mean to call ourselves civilized while treating the earth as disposable?

The question is not scientific. It is spiritual. It is ethical. It is existential.

Humanity is not suffering from a lack of knowledge. We are suffering from a lack of humility.

A Call to Return to Earth

The future will not be saved by rockets, satellites, or interplanetary fantasies. It will be saved by a radical shift in consciousness—a return to reverence, restraint, and responsibility. We must learn again to live with the earth, not above it. To honor the ecosystems that sustain us. To recognize that every species, every river, every tree is part of a sacred web of life.

We must confront the truth: The greatest threat to humanity is not climate change, pollution, or extinction. The greatest threat is human arrogance.

Until we humble ourselves before the earth, no amount of technology will save us.

Sammy Attoh is a Human Rights Coordinator, poet, and public writer. A member of The Riverside Church in New York City and The New York State Chaplains Group, he advocates for spiritual renewal and systemic justice. Originally from Ghana, his work draws on ancestral wisdom to explore the sacred ties between people, planet, and posterity, grounding his public voice in a deep commitment to human dignity and global solidarity. Read other articles by Sammy.
Pakistan–Afghanistan War

Neither Islamabad nor Kabul: A Left Perspective on the Pakistan–Afghanistan War


Sunday 1 March 2026, by Farooq Sulehria




As cross-border strikes intensify and Pakistan’s defence minister declares “open war” against the Afghan Taliban government, the long arc of Islamabad’s Afghanistan policy appears under severe strain. Is this merely another episode in a volatile frontier relationship — or the blowback of decades of militarised strategy and proxy politics?

In this conversation with Alternative Viewpoint, Pakistani left activist, academic and journalist Farooq Sulehria examines the crisis through a structural lens: the legacy of “strategic depth,” the Frankenstein logic of jihadist patronage, the ideological character of the Taliban regime, and the dangers of campism within sections of the left. Rejecting both state militarism and theocratic authoritarianism, Sulehria argues that the current confrontation reflects a deeper crisis of the regional order — one whose costs will be borne overwhelmingly by working people on both sides of the Durand Line.

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Alternative Viewpoint: Pakistan’s Defence Minister has declared an “open war” against the Afghan Taliban government. Is this escalation a tactical rupture, or does it mark the exhaustion of Pakistan’s long-standing Afghanistan doctrine?

Farooq Sulehria: It is neither a tactical rupture nor the exhaustion of the strategic depth doctrine. The declaration reflects Islamabad’s mounting frustration over an ongoing conflict. A declaration of war is not made lightly; preparations would have preceded it. Only after exhausting other avenues did Pakistan designate the very Taliban regime it once helped bring to power as an adversary. Ironically, Defence Minister Khawaja Asif himself had expressed gratitude when the Taliban defeated the United States and regained control of Kabul.

Border clashes have escalated since last October into Pakistani attacks on Kabul and other towns. Qatar, Turkey and China reportedly facilitated 65 rounds of talks between Kabul and Islamabad — all without resolving the TTP question. Meanwhile, Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has intensified its attacks inside Pakistan, operating from sanctuaries in Afghanistan. Nearly 1,000 terror attacks were reported last year, most attributed to the TTP.

Since October, Pakistan has closed its border and halted trade with Afghanistan. As a landlocked country, Afghanistan depends heavily on Pakistan for transit trade, including access to India, and for essential imports such as wheat, vegetables and medicines.

Simultaneously, nationalist militancy has intensified in Pakistan’s Balochistan province. Islamabad accuses India of backing Baloch separatists. The Taliban regime, in turn, has cultivated ties with New Delhi — much to Islamabad’s frustration — partly to counter Pakistani pressure.

For decades, Pakistan justified providing safe havens to the Afghan Taliban under the doctrine of “strategic depth” — the idea that Afghanistan would serve as a “friendly backyard” in the event of conflict with a much larger India. That logic continues to shape Islamabad’s thinking.

AV: The concept of “strategic depth” has influenced Islamabad’s policy for decades. Has this doctrine now collapsed, and if so, what might take its place?

FS: On the contrary, it appears far from collapsed. Commentators close to the establishment have floated the idea of regime change in Kabul. Whether Islamabad is actively pursuing such a course is difficult to substantiate, but such thinking cannot be ruled out. Pakistan has historically explored coups and political engineering in Afghanistan.

Such ideas may be unrealistic and even self-defeating. Yet they reveal the persistence — even obsession — with strategic depth. The current escalation reflects Islamabad’s desperation to rein in a Taliban regime that no longer behaves as a compliant proxy.

AV: Islamabad portrays the crisis as being centred on TTP sanctuaries in Afghanistan. To what degree is this conflict a result of Pakistan’s historical engagement in proxy warfare and its support for militant groups?

FS: This is a classic case of Frankenstein’s monster — or the sorcerer’s apprentice. Pakistan has long been both the origin and a breeding ground for Islamic fundamentalism. Since the so-called “Afghan Jihad” — derisively called “Dollar Jihad” by critics — the state fostered what can only be described as a jihad industry.

Initially, this infrastructure was directed against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan; later it was turned toward India. The classification of some militants as “good Taliban” and others as “bad Taliban” indicates that the underlying policy logic has remained intact.

AV: At the same time, how should we assess the Taliban regime’s responsibility? Has Kabul failed—or refused— to restrain cross-border militancy for ideological or strategic reasons?

FS: The Afghan regime appears to have done little to rein in the TTP. Some argue that it lacks the capacity to fully control the group. There are ideological affinities, practical constraints and geopolitical calculations at play. The Taliban have also used the TTP card strategically — including to signal autonomy from Pakistan and to cultivate ties with other regional actors, including India.

AV: Should the current confrontation be viewed primarily as a clash between two regimes driven by security concerns, both influenced by decades of conflict, rather than merely as a straightforward instance of aggression and retaliation?

FS: It is a clash of barbarisms. Neither side can claim moral superiority. The Taliban regime has institutionalised what amounts to gender apartheid and rules through fear and intimidation. Its social base is limited, relying heavily on extremist religious constituencies.

At the same time, Pakistan’s military establishment governs through a securitised worldview, framing every issue as a matter of national security. Diplomatic space shrinks when both regimes privilege coercion over politics.

In this tragic scenario, civilians pay the price. Afghans have endured hellish conditions since 1979. People in Pakistan — particularly in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa — have suffered immensely since 9/11, caught between Taliban violence, state military operations and spiralling sectarian conflict. Western imperial interventions — from the Cold War to the War on Terror — laid the foundations for this catastrophe, but regional actors have since entrenched it.

AV: Since returning to power in 2021, the Taliban have struggled with economic collapse, diplomatic isolation, and internal factional tensions. How do these pressures shape their stance toward Pakistan?

FS: Soon after consolidating control, the Taliban signalled distance from Pakistan. They recognised that Islamabad lacked the economic and diplomatic leverage to guarantee legitimacy. Instead, they pursued ties with China, Russia, Turkey, the Gulf states — and, to Pakistan’s irritation, India.

Anti-Pakistan rhetoric from Taliban officials also plays well domestically, where Pakistan is deeply unpopular. Such posturing helps consolidate their internal legitimacy.

AV: From a left perspective, how should one characterise the Taliban regime today?

FS: There has been a tendency among some to portray the Taliban as Islamo-nationalists. Tariq Ali’s book The Forty-Year War in Afghanistan reflects this interpretation. I disagree. The Taliban represent one of the most extreme forms of Islamic fundamentalism.

Nationalism emphasises language, culture and shared historical identity. Islamic fundamentalism, by contrast, subordinates such categories to a transnational religious order governed by Sharia. Culture is often denounced as impurity; music and dance become sinful.

Some even framed the Taliban as an expression of class struggle. These misreadings were early signs of campism after 9/11 — where opposition to Western imperialism led some to romanticise reactionary forces.

AV: The Taliban claims it is defending Afghan sovereignty. How can one engage that claim critically?

FS: Pakistan frames TTP sanctuaries as violations of sovereignty; the Taliban frames air strikes as violations of sovereignty. Each invokes legality when convenient. It is a clash of barbarisms.

One may sympathise with Frankenstein or with his monster, but the outcome is devastation. The real victims are civilians on both sides of the Durand Line.

AV: Regional powers — China, Iran, Russia, and Gulf states — have moved quickly to call for de-escalation. What does this episode reveal about the fragility of the wider regional order?

FS: A couple of days after Pakistan’s declaration of war, the US-Israel attack on Iran and the ensuing situation have overshadowed the Pak-Afghan conflict. This conflict is not only regional, but it also underscores the growing number of nation-state wars. United Nations has become increasingly marginal. No matter how hypocritical and problematic the global liberal order was, the Trumpist alternative is proving even more dangerous. Incidentally, Trump has praised the Pakistani attack on Afghanistan.

AV: Both countries face severe economic crises. How does militarised escalation intersect with class realities?

FS: As always, the working classes will bear the burden — through displacement, unemployment, militarisation and deepening austerity. The continuing conflict in West Asia will exacerbate their suffering.

AV: In a conflict between a militarised postcolonial state and a theocratic regime, what principle should the left adopt? How can it oppose both militarism and religious authoritarianism without sliding into geopolitical campism?

FS: Pakistan cannot defeat the Taliban without adopting a genuinely secular orientation. That is fundamental. The Taliban regime should not be recognised, and solidarity must be extended to the Afghan people — especially women facing institutionalised apartheid.

The left must not align with either Islamabad or Kabul. We oppose the war and demand justice, democracy and accountability. We must hold both the Taliban and their regional or imperial backers responsible for war crimes.

It is disturbing to see even some self-described leftists supporting military escalation in the name of opposing fundamentalism. This reflects what I call “internal Orientalism” — a chauvinistic framing of the conflict as a civilisational struggle.

AV: Does this crisis create an opening to rethink security-state politics across the region — and is there any realistic space today for cross-border progressive solidarity between Pakistani and Afghan civil society forces?

FS: Rather than limiting ourselves to AfPak solidarity, we need a broader South Asia-wide project. Inside Afghanistan, civil society faces severe repression, so diaspora networks become crucial. In Pakistan too, progressive voices are marginalised.

Yet such a project is urgently needed. Our newspaper, Daily Jeddojehad (Struggle), will take modest initial steps in this direction. Only by building regional solidarity can we challenge both militarism and fundamentalism.

1 March 2026

Source: Alternative Viewpoint.