Dear Daily Disaster Diary,
It is time to tell the truth to the last educated people.
Because if we cannot speak honestly now—when cities burn, when civilians suffocate under the fallout of geopolitical games, when governments pretend that bombs are diplomacy—then we are simply documenting our own moral collapse.
Let’s start with the uncomfortable part.
The United States is no longer able to claim the mantle of the “good guys” with a straight face.
That myth—carefully cultivated since 1945—has been cracking for decades. Iraq shattered it. Afghanistan exhausted it. Gaza exposed it. And now, the widening war in Iran may finish what remains of the illusion.
When bombs fall on oil depots outside a city of 15 million people, the result is not merely a “strategic strike.” It is a chemical event.
Burning crude oil releases a toxic mixture of benzene, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, sulfur dioxide, heavy metals, and carcinogenic particulate matter. These compounds do not politely remain near the target. They spread. They coat buildings, streets, lungs, and drinking water. They linger in soil and bodies for years.
When massive petroleum facilities burn near a megacity, every child breathing that air becomes an involuntary participant in the fallout.
Call it collateral damage if you like.
Call it strategic necessity.
But chemically speaking, it is indistinguishable from poisoning a city.
History has words for that.
And yet the language of modern war has evolved precisely to avoid those words.
We say precision strike instead of bombing.
We say targeted infrastructure instead of urban contamination.
We say security operations instead of collective punishment.
Language launders violence.
Meanwhile, ordinary people—the ones who never voted for this war, never launched the missiles, never approved the strategy—inherit the consequences.
The Netanyahu Doctrine: Survival Through Escalation
Anyone pretending that Israel’s current leadership operates under restraint has not been paying attention.
For years, Benjamin Netanyahu has demonstrated a governing principle that can be summarized bluntly:
Escalation is politically useful.
War consolidates power.
War postpones accountability.
War unifies frightened populations.
Gaza has already been reduced to rubble under this logic. Entire neighborhoods flattened, civilian infrastructure annihilated, humanitarian access throttled to the point of famine warnings.
And now the battlefield expands.
Iran is not Gaza.
It is a nation of nearly 90 million people, with a regional network of allies and proxies stretching from Lebanon to Yemen.
Anyone who believes bombing campaigns will neatly contain the consequences is either naïve—or lying.
History offers a simple lesson: wars rarely behave the way their architects imagine.
The Complicity Problem
The United States may not drop every bomb.
But when weapons, intelligence, diplomatic shielding, and political cover come from Washington, the distinction between participant and enabler becomes thin.
And this is where the constitutional problem emerges.
Under the U.S. Constitution, Congress—not the president—holds the authority to declare war.
That provision was not an accident.
The framers feared exactly this scenario: a small executive circle entangling the nation in conflicts that the public never meaningfully debated or approved.
Yet for decades, American foreign policy has drifted into something closer to permanent, semi-authorized warfare.
Military commitments appear.
Weapons shipments flow.
Regional conflicts expand.
And only later—if ever—does the democratic process catch up.
The result is a profound disconnect between public will and government action.
Poll after poll shows Americans increasingly skeptical of endless foreign entanglements.
Yet the machinery of war continues almost automatically.
The Strategic Contradiction
At the same time Washington continues massive military support for Israel, aid to Ukraine—a country resisting an outright invasion by Russia—has become politically contested and sporadic.
To the rest of the world, this contradiction is glaring.
One conflict receives near-unconditional backing.
Another becomes a partisan bargaining chip.
Whether one supports either policy or opposes both, the inconsistency erodes credibility.
Allies notice.
Adversaries notice.
Neutral nations notice.
Superpowers cannot claim moral authority while applying principles selectively.
The Environmental Cost of War
War is not just a humanitarian disaster.
It is an ecological one.
Burning oil facilities release millions of tons of climate-warming carbon and toxic pollutants. Bombed industrial zones leak chemicals into groundwater. Military operations destroy infrastructure needed for sanitation, waste treatment, and clean water.
Every major war leaves behind what environmental scientists call “conflict pollution.”
It can persist for decades.
The oil fires of Kuwait in 1991 created black rain across the Persian Gulf.
The bombing of industrial plants in Serbia in 1999 contaminated the Danube.
The destruction of infrastructure in Iraq left a legacy of heavy metals and toxic dust.
War doesn’t just kill people today.
It quietly sickens the next generation.
The Moral Numbness
Perhaps the most disturbing development is how quickly the public conversation adjusts.
Mass death becomes background noise.
Politicians argue about messaging strategy while entire cities absorb the consequences of decisions made thousands of miles away.
We have normalized a level of destruction that previous generations would have considered unthinkable.
And that normalization is the real danger.
Because when citizens stop demanding accountability, power expands to fill the silence.
The Democratic Question
This is not about partisan loyalty.
It is about democratic control.
A republic cannot function if foreign policy decisions with enormous humanitarian consequences occur without transparent debate, congressional oversight, or meaningful public consent.
Accountability mechanisms exist for a reason.
They are supposed to prevent exactly the scenario we are witnessing: a widening regional war whose costs—in lives, in stability, in environmental damage—will be borne by people who never chose it.
The Hard Truth
Nations rarely see themselves clearly while history is unfolding.
Every country prefers to believe it stands on the side of righteousness.
But the measure of a democracy is not the myths it tells about itself.
It is the willingness of its citizens to question those myths.
Right now, millions of ordinary people around the world—Iranians, Israelis, Palestinians, Ukrainians, Americans—are trapped inside decisions made by leaders who will never personally face the consequences.
Cities burn.
Children choke on smoke.
And somewhere in a secure conference room, someone calls it strategy.
If the educated, the informed, the people still capable of independent thought do not speak honestly about what is happening, then history will record something even more disturbing than the war itself.
It will record the silence.
And silence, in moments like these, becomes its own form of participation.
— End entry
