A resurfaced political warning from 2011 is gaining traction again—but not for the reason many assume. Beyond the personalities involved lies a deeper pattern shaping U.S. foreign policy toward Iran, one that transcends administrations and challenges the illusion of political change.
Africa’s Strategic Map: Conflict, Geography, and the Competition for the Future
Across Africa’s Horn and Sahel regions, geography, conflict, and global power competition intersect in ways that increasingly shape the strategic map of the 21st century.
The Bible America Keeps Editing—and the Ancient Ethiopian Canon It Can’t Erase
The Catholic Church has edited Scripture for centuries. Now U.S. bishops plan another round of Bible changes for America. InnerKwest traces the pattern from Rome to Ethiopia—from colonial manipulation to Africa’s ancient canon—to ask a bold question: Who owns the meaning of the Bible, and why does it keep changing?



