history
Past politicians, legislation and political movements have changed the course of history in ways both big and small. Welcome to our blast to the past.
The Worst-Kept Secret of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
One of the more poorly kept secrets of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is that many of those involved would prefer to take all the land and have the other side disappear. A 2011 poll found that two-thirds of Palestinians believed that their real goal should not be a two-state solution, but rather using that arrangement as a prelude to establishing “one Palestinian state.” A 2016 survey found that nearly half of Israeli Jews agreed that “Arabs should be expelled or transferred from Israel.” A poll in 2000, conducted during negotiations toward a two-state solution, found that only 47 percent of Israelis and 10 percent of Palestinians supported a school curriculum that would educate students to “give up aspirations for parts of the ‘homeland’ which are in the other state.”
By Kristen Orkoshneli6 months ago in The Swamp
The GCC Is Rewriting the Script on Global Diplomacy
While once relegated to strategic hedges and security dependence on major powers, GCC states are now actively shaping a new narrative; one rooted in pluralistic engagement, mediation, and global partnership.
By Victor Trammell6 months ago in The Swamp
What If Donald Trump Had Run as a Democrat?
Imagine this alternate political reality: Donald J. Trump, a former registered Democrat and lifelong New York powerbroker, never joins the Republican Party. Instead, he leverages his populist instincts, media mastery, and brash celebrity persona to storm the gates of the Democratic Party. What happens next? Would the world implode—or would America look startlingly different today?
By Michael Phillips6 months ago in The Swamp
BBC Verify Analysis on the Claim of Shooting Down Five Indian Warplanes, Including Rafale – and the Story of the Bathinda YouTuber
Pakistan's Claim In May this year, Pakistan’s military claimed that it had shot down five Indian Air Force jets. Before this, the Indian military had claimed to have struck nine locations in Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir.
By Ikram Ullah6 months ago in The Swamp
35 Years of the ADA
Next week, America will mark 35 years since the signing of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)—the landmark civil rights law enacted on July 26, 1990, meant to guarantee equality for individuals with disabilities. But while government agencies prepare their press releases and advocates prepare their hashtags, many disabled Americans remain sidelined, silenced, and ignored—especially by the very systems that claim to protect them.
By Michael Phillips6 months ago in The Swamp
The Man Who Hacked America
A single man made a superpower like America see stars in broad daylight. In 2013, he stole over one million top-secret U.S. government documents and exposed them to the world. Since then—over the past 11 years—he has remained America’s most wanted criminal.
By Jehanzeb Khan6 months ago in The Swamp
Between Bombs, Bluster and Broken Treaties
For over 30 years, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has warned the world that Iran is “months away” from building a nuclear bomb. On 13 June 2025, with his Arab neighbours destabilised, the moment he had been waiting for became reality when Israel began military action on key Iranian nuclear and military sites. What transpired after, brought the region and the rest of the world, one step closer to the point of no return.
By Marios Loizides6 months ago in The Swamp
Why its impossible to Escape from North Korea
In this jeep sits a North Korean soldier who, fed up with Kim Jong-un’s policies, is speeding toward the border in an attempt to cross it. He knows very well that he’ll either be killed or at the very least badly injured. So, what desperate situation has pushed him to take such a drastic step? We'll get to that in a moment.
By Jehanzeb Khan6 months ago in The Swamp
Lenin vs Stalin: Their Showdown Over the Birth of the USSR
The question of where Russia begins and ends—and who constitutes the Russian people—has preoccupied Russian thinkers for centuries. The collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 and the Russian aggression against Ukraine in 2014 turned these concerns into a big “Russian question” that constitutes a world problem: What should be the relation of the new Russian state to its former imperial possessions—now independent post-Soviet republics such as Georgia, Armenia and Ukraine—and to the Russian and Russian-speaking enclaves in those republics? How should mental maps of Russian ethnicity, culture and identity be reconciled with the political map of the Russian federation?
By Kristen Orkoshneli6 months ago in The Swamp
Pakistan Dares India. AI-Generated.
🔥 A Bold Challenge Sends Shockwaves In a provocative and defiant stance, Pakistani military officials issued a direct challenge to India this week, escalating the already tense relationship between the two nations. Framed by state media as a response to “repeated violations and strategic arrogance” by New Delhi, Pakistan’s move is being interpreted by analysts as the start of a new, more aggressive chapter in the long-standing conflict.
By Saboor Brohi 6 months ago in The Swamp











