The Collective Call: Empowering Action for a Liberated Society

Honouring Truth and Reconciliation Day: Truth, Treaty, and the Work Ahead
Each September 30, Canada is meant to pause, reflect, and confront the legacies of colonial violence, especially the residential school system—grieving those who did not return, honouring survivors, and acknowledging that the harms are not all past. For reconciliation to mean anything, it must engage with truth, including the ongoing injustices done to Indigenous peoples through laws, policies, and practices that deny voice, land, and sovereignty. Below are some cases of recent legislation or policy where Indigenous peoples’ rights and input have been challenged. These are not the only ones,... Read more...
The Rise of Authoritarianism in the West: A Warning We Can’t Ignore
Western democracies are becoming unrecognizable. Freedoms we once took for granted—speech, protest, truth—are being stripped away under the false promise of "security" and "order." Peaceful protesters are arrested. Journalists are silenced. And in places like the UK, people face criminal investigation simply for speaking out against genocide in Palestine. This isn’t about public safety. It’s about silencing dissent. Israel's impunity in Gaza—carried out with near-total political and military support from the West—has set a dangerous precedent. If one state can bomb civilians and face no consequences, why wouldn’t others follow... Read more...
The Hollow Throne: When Titles Matter More Than Duty
We live in a time where titles are chased like trophies, not earned through service or sacrifice. People crave the power, the prestige, the spotlight—but have no intention of upholding the responsibilities that come with them. They want to be seen as leaders without actually leading. They want the paycheck, not the purpose. And in the process, systems break down, trust disappears, and those who do care are left cleaning up the mess. Real leadership isn't about wearing a title. It's about carrying the weight that comes with it. Power... Read more...
The Global Failure to Uphold International Law and Protect Human Rights: A Call for Reform of the UN and Accountability for Perpetrators
Reforming the United Nations: A Call for Global Justice The United Nations has repeatedly failed to prevent atrocities like genocide, war crimes, and human rights violations, from Rwanda to Iraq and Palestine. Political gridlock and the influence of powerful nations have undermined its ability to act effectively. Urgent Reform Needed Key issues like the Security Council's veto power, lack of accountability for war crimes, and limited peacekeeping authority must be addressed. Reforming these structures will empower the UN to respond to global crises and enforce international law. A Path to... Read more...
Why “Never Again” Never Came, and Why Emergencies Beyond Borders Take Weeks Instead of Hours
Emergencies do not wait for paperwork. Bombs do not pause for debates in New York or Geneva. Starvation does not respect borders. When disaster strikes at home, governments move in hours. But when genocide unfolds abroad, the world responds in weeks—if at all. ‘Never Again’ was never enforced; it was only spoken. If we are serious about it now, we must treat every atrocity with the same urgency as if it happened to us, in our own neighborhoods, in our own families. Because in truth, it is. Read more...
The Rohingya: A People Without a Home in Their Own Land
For the Rohingya, oppression didn’t begin with the 2017 genocide — it’s the result of decades of deliberate erasure. Denied citizenship since 1982, they have lived as stateless people in their own homeland, facing travel bans, land seizures, and exclusion from schools and hospitals. In 2017, Myanmar’s military burned entire villages, killed thousands, and drove over 740,000 people into exile. Today, nearly a million Rohingya remain trapped in refugee camps, with no safe path home and a world that has largely moved on. Read more...
The Slaughter of Sudan: Paid For by the UAE and Israel
There is a genocide unfolding in Sudan. A man-made humanitarian catastrophe of the highest order. And the world is looking away. Since April 2023, Sudan has been torn apart by a vicious civil war—one not merely born from internal conflict, but fueled, funded, and armed by foreign powers, most notably the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Israel. Behind the scenes of this mass suffering is a web of global complicity, calculated silence, and imperial interests—none of which include justice for the Sudanese people. How It Began The war erupted when... Read more...
There Will Be Justice: The Fight for Accountability in Gaza and the West Bank
Justice doesn’t come from ceasefires or photo-op peace talks. It comes from trials, reparations, and the dismantling of systems built on ethnic cleansing. Gaza is not a tragedy—it’s a crime. And every individual, government, and institution complicit in this genocide will be held accountable. The world has watched long enough. Now it’s time to act, to expose the lies, rake through the evidence, and demand justice—for every life lost, every child buried, every home turned to rubble. History won’t forget. And neither will we. Read more...
The collapse of Gaza and the moral collapse of the world
I can’t sleep. I can’t relax. I can’t eat properly. I can’t even breathe right anymore without feeling like my skin is being ripped open from the inside. This isn’t a phase or burnout. This is what it feels like to be alive and conscious while Gaza is dying. We are witnessing the end of the line. People in Gaza are literally dropping dead from starvation, dehydration, and exhaustion. Not metaphorically — literally. Children are taking their last breaths under rubble. Parents are scraping together dirt water to feed their... Read more...
URGENT: Gaza Is Being Starved to Death — The World Watches in Silence
URGENT: Gaza Is Being Starved to Death — The World Watches in Silence
Gaza has one to two weeks left. Not before more bombs fall — but before we begin to see people collapse in the streets from starvation. Flour is now blood-soaked.... Read more...
Not a Civil War — A Class War: Why North America’s Real Battle Is About Inequality
While headlines warn of a new American civil war, the real conflict unfolding across North America isn’t neighbor against neighbor — it’s the ultra-wealthy against the rest of us. Rising rents, stagnant wages, and corporate power are pushing millions to the edge. This is not about red vs. blue, but rich vs. poor — a class war rooted in decades of inequality. Read more...
Emancipation Day: Remembering the Past, Confronting the Present
Every year, on August 1st, Canadians mark Emancipation Day—a day commemorating the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833, which ended the legal enslavement of African people across most of the British Empire, taking effect in 1834. It is a moment to remember history’s hard truths, celebrate the courage and resilience of those who fought for freedom, and examine why the struggle against anti-Black racism remains far from over—even here, in Canada. What Led to Emancipation Before emancipation, millions of African people were stolen from their homelands and forced into brutal bondage.... Read more...