Thursday 15th of January 2026

the EU has descended into fascistoid practices....

A passage from Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale has been haunting me: “That was when they suspended the Constitution. They said it would be temporary. There wasn’t even any rioting in the streets. People stayed home at night, watching television, looking for some direction. There wasn’t even an enemy you could put your finger on.” 

 

How the West Unpersons Its Critics:

Or about the Kafkaesque Europe

BY BILJANA VANKOVSKA

 

From time to time, something suddenly crystallizes in my mind, something that can be explained precisely in these terms, only to fade again, until it resurfaces later with renewed force. At the heart of this thought lies silence: the unquestioning acceptance of the erosion of freedom, passivity, and the zombification of society. I deliberately say society, even masses, because these are no longer citizens in the meaningful sense of the word. From today’s perspective, the difference is largely technological. We no longer stare at TV screens; instead, we scroll endlessly on our phones, jumping from one sensation to the next, from one distraction to another. And unlike Atwood’s fictional moment, today we do have enemies—sometimes an entire menu to choose from: Russia, China, Venezuela, Iran, or Hamas.

The immediate trigger for this text is the introduction of so-called “restrictive measures” (an innovation associated with Kaja Kallas), together with Ursula von der Leyen’s much-advertised “Democracy Shield.” I call this a trigger because the phenomenon itself, the quiet, extrajudicial punishment of individuals and groups, has been with us for some time. We were simply watching TV then, or scrolling just as passively as we do now. The most recent case that disturbed part of the alternative intellectual and media scene concerns a Swiss citizen: a retired intelligence officer and frequent guest on podcasts discussing the war in Ukraine. He is not an exception. He is merely one name among nearly sixty individuals who have already been subjected to sanctions. What differs is that outrage tends to erupt only when someone from “our” supposedly law-based, civilized world is targeted by measures that defy not only common sense, but the very idea of law itself.

Alongside Jacques Baud, several other EU citizens have been sanctioned. For those unfamiliar with what this entails: these individuals are prohibited from working—or even speaking publicly for remuneration—anywhere within the EU; their freedom of movement, including within the Union, is revoked; and all their income and assets are frozen, from bank accounts to movable and immovable property. To grasp the cruelty of this punishment, one need only imagine oneself in their position. How does one survive without access to one’s own money, without the right to work, and without the ability to cross borders—depending on where the “restrictive measures” happened to catch you? Orwell had a term for such people in 1984unperson.

Seen from the perspective of those now branded as security threats simply because they speak and analyze—and against the backdrop of the EU’s carefully cultivated self-image as a value-based community, even a global exporter of values—it is legitimate to ask: how did we reach a point where virtually every public, critical, or outspoken intellectual has become a potential target? The EU’s long arm has already extended to citizens of third countries who do not even reside on its territory. The conclusions of the most recent EU–Western Balkans summit implicitly demand that similar measures be introduced domestically if these countries wish to be fully aligned with EU foreign and security policy. In short, some of us are potential unpersons.

The unpersons enjoy no legal protection whatsoever. Astonishingly, decisions of the EU Council in the realm of foreign and security policy are exempt from judicial review, leaving affected individuals without any effective legal remedy. They are enemies—and for enemies, the rule of law no longer applies, if one allows oneself a moment of cynical clarity. The Balkans inherited a proverb from Ottoman times that captures this logic perfectly: the kadi accuses you, the kadi judges you (kadija te tuži, kadija te sudi). All of this occurs for acts that are not defined in any criminal code—such as “spreading disinformation” or promoting “pro-Russian narratives.”

You don’t need to be a seasoned jurist to recognize the systematic breach of fundamental legal principles, many of which trace back to Roman law. Not only is an incompetent authority issuing punishments, but these punishments target acts that are not even defined as criminal offenses (Nullum crimen, nulla poena sine lege). The presumption of innocence has been discarded (Ei incumbit probatio qui dicit, non qui negat), the protection of personal liberty is ignored (Habeas corpus), and procedural safeguards—including the right to appeal (Recursus) and limits on the duration of sanctions—are absent. In short, the very pillars of justice have been undermined. Citizens are treated as if they were already guilty, stripped of their rights, and rendered powerless before arbitrary authority. The result is a Kafkaesque reality in which law exists only as a performative façade, while liberty, due process, and human dignity are suspended.

To demonstrate that this fascistoid (some would say feudal) logic of governance, shared not only by the EU but also by the UK and the United States, is nothing new requires little effort. One need not even begin with Assange; merely invoking his name should suffice to recall why he was unlawfully imprisoned. Perhaps younger generations have already forgotten. Only weeks ago, Yanis Varoufakis published a brilliant piece on a related case involving French judge Nicolas Guillou of the ICC, sanctioned by the Trump administration for authorizing arrest warrants against Israel’s prime minister and former defense minister over war crimes in Gaza.

Varoufakis describes a Europe that has lost all sovereignty—unable and unwilling to protect its own citizens. The same applies to the French state, so proud of its revolutionary slogans. We may also recall the ban imposed by Germany on Varoufakis’ participation in a debate on genocide, as well as similar threats directed at Francesca Albanese. With Kallas’ restrictive measures, the EU has moved even closer to Trump’s punitive model—indeed, it has refined it by sanctioning its own citizens alongside Russians and Ukrainians. At one point, we mocked Ukrainian authorities when they compiled target lists of allegedly pro-Russian individuals. Today, the EU has effectively “Ukrainized” itself—copying and upgrading these practices rather than restraining Ukraine’s kleptocratic and militant elites.

Most disturbing of all is that we do not even know how many people have already fallen victim to this Kafkaesque machinery, nor how many procedures have taken place in silence. Recently, a friend from the EU shared an eerily familiar story: years before October 7, 2023, her foundation had all its funds frozen due to cooperation with peace groups from Iran and Palestine. Look at who is targeted today, even dragged before courts, for alleged terrorist activities, merely for wearing a keffiyeh or expressing solidarity with Gaza. Countless people have lost their jobs, including in universities, for similarly benign acts.

The fault lies with us. We react only to isolated cases, usually only when the threat approaches us personally. Yet the problem is systemic. This is systemic violence against rights and freedoms—against what makes a human being human. And it continues relentlessly, as in the famous warning: “First they came for…”

I live in what can only be described as a semi-colony of the US or the EU (sorry, lately the distinction has become increasingly blurred). What I do know is that in our cursed avliya, the enclosed courtyard borrowed from Ivo Andrić’s Prokleta avlija; in English translation known as The Damned Yard) constitutional sovereignty was taken from us collectively. Very few protested. Cancelling is a routine. People mutter in the old servant mentality: stay quiet, it could be worse. And now the visible worst arrives: the Kafkaesque soft power of the UK and the EU, operating as part of a so-called Coalition of the Willing.

Narratives are imposed through NGOs under the benevolent banner of supporting democratic institutions. I will not recount the three externally imposed agreements that reshaped our political system—that is a long and painful story. Through USAID, NED, and similar foundations, young minds are molded. One telling example: one of my best students—deeply indoctrinated—received an award from the German Embassy just days ago for excellence in human rights knowledge, precisely as “restrictive measures” were unfolding. This cannot be invented. Naturally, he already imagines himself as a future leader, a loyal priest of the new faith, entirely silent on the suspension of rights within the EU.

Even more alarming is when these measures are internalized and implemented by those in power at home. The rhetoric has shifted gradually: first “hybrid threats” (which no one can clearly define), then “disinformation,” followed by “malign influences,” “third power centers,” and “resilience.” Most recently, the Macedonian parliament passed a resolution effectively banning the opposition from spreading “disinformation”—a euphemism for censorship. This operates on multiple, interconnected levels.

Years ago, an NGO specializing in media studies launched a project called SHTETNA (ШТЕТНА), a wordplay combining “harmful” (штета) and “narratives” (наративи) or Harm-Tive, aimed at identifying narratives allegedly undermining trust in democratic institutions, despite the reality of a captured, disintegrating state. More recently, the British ambassador and the TRACE project’s director announced a new two-year project TRACE along similar lines, in the presence of a smiling prime minister. The irony is almost unbearable: Macedonian society has long been silenced; intellectuals have retreated into mouse holes or ivory towers; the media self-censor efficiently; the people scroll.

Figures such as Jacques Baud or Judge Nicolas Guillou matter not as individuals, but as warnings—signals of what awaits anyone who refuses to remain silent as Europe marches toward a third world war, or as the dragon of Zionism devours an entire nation, beginning with its children. (It does not mean we should not solidarize with them.) Months ago, during the formation of a global, multipolar peace network, I suggested that mechanisms of solidarity would be necessary; commitment to peace has become a dangerous act. Some Western colleagues likely thought I was cowardly or paranoid. They did not know that my second name is Cassandra—the one who foresaw the fall of Troy. Two months later, we all ask the same question: what now?

The greatest irony is this: people like me learned courage, critical thinking, and intellectual honesty under “communism,” in socialist Yugoslavia. That was my father’s ethos; it is mine. For me, the role of the public intellectual is to speak uncomfortable truths to power—at any cost. And now, those raised in “democracy” are shocked that their beloved EU has descended into fascistoid practices. I taught European political systems for decades and always knew it was an empty shell of corporate, colonial, and imperial power—draped in the rhetoric of peace, welfare, and justice. Not because I am particularly clever, but because I retained the childlike freedom to say when the emperor has no clothes.

Now that we all see the emperor naked, will we do anything? Or will we hide and remain silent until they come for us too?

https://biljanavankovska.substack.com/p/how-the-west-unpersons-its-critics

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

AI at WSWS....

 

Science vs. suspicion and fear: An Open Letter to a critic of Socialism AI

BY David North

 

This is an Open Letter responding to several harsh criticisms of Socialism AI posted by Professor Tony Williams in the comments section of the WSWS. 

Professor Williams, well-known and respected for his work on film history, has been a long-time reader of the WSWS. We believe that a public reply is warranted as Professor Williams’ rejection of Socialism AI reflects views and misconceptions that are widely held among academics and artists.

***

Dear Professor Williams,

I and other comrades on the World Socialist Web Site editorial board have read the criticisms that you have posted opposing the launching of Socialism AI. The WSWS does not suppress criticisms of its policies that are presented in good faith. 

As you are a long-time reader and supporter of the WSWS, we appreciate the concerns you have raised about Augmented Intelligence relating to the environment, mental health and the quality of public discourse. They speak to the destructive ways in which capitalism misuses technology. But for precisely that reason, it is important to examine carefully what is being developed, how it is already used and what possibilities it opens up for the education and organization of the working class, before condemning it out of hand.​

One central difficulty in your argument is that it fails to engage with the core question posed by Socialism AI: How can this new instrument of Augmented Intelligence help workers and youth access, understand and make use of the accumulated theoretical and historical experience of the Marxist movement? Workers today confront an extraordinarily complex world—wars, economic breakdown, climate catastrophe, authoritarianism—and do so after decades in which serious education, historical knowledge and critical thinking have been systematically eroded. 

In the United States, the first year of the Trump regime—which has brought the criminal dregs of the ruling class to power—has exposed the political and intellectual bankruptcy of not only the Democratic Party but also of the middle-class tendencies and organizations that orbit around it. For decades these warriors of protest politics have waged war against Marxism, especially from within the academy. But they are paralyzed and impotent when confronted with the open emergence of a serious threat of fascism. The pathetic pilgrimage of Zohran Mamdani to the White House, where he embraced Donald Trump, exemplified the utter worthlessness of American pseudo-leftism. 

Under these conditions, the launching of Socialism AI, which can help a worker, at any time of day, in any part of the world, explore Marxist-Trotskyist theory and politics, clarify concepts, connect past struggles with present events, and do so interactively and in accessible language, is not a marginal technical curiosity. It is a historic advance in the means of socialist education. It opens up the possibility of breaking the stranglehold of the ruling class over an extraordinarily powerful new technology by adapting it, to the greatest extent possible, to the interests of the working class.

There is a long historic precedent for the WSWS’s response to the emergence of AI. In the latter third of the nineteenth century, the development of mass circulation newspapers—made possible by advances in technologies that transformed industrial production, communications and transportation—had a profound effect on the shaping of mass consciousness. The promotion of “Yellow Journalism” was intended by the ruling classes of the United States and Europe to saturate public opinion with pro-imperialist and racist propaganda. The socialists of that era sought to oppose this tendency by making use of the new technology in the launching of mass socialist newspapers.

In the more recent period, the International Committee responded to the development of the Internet with the launch of the World Socialist Web Sitein February 1998. At that time, there were many voices who claimed that the Internet was a purely destructive phenomenon and expressed the hope that it would prove to be nothing more than a fad. Among our opponents on the pseudo-left, the initiative was met with scorn. As you may recall, the Spartacist League wrote: “To pretend dumping some documents into cyberspace is any substitute for the hard fight—in the real world, among real people—to build a revolutionary workers party, only confirms the total depths of cynicism and humbug for which the Northites are infamous.” We can leave this criticism to the judgment of history.

Augmented (a more precise term than “artificial”) Intelligence is already a major factor in how people obtain and process information. Surveys indicate that roughly a quarter of news users now turn to generative AI assistants at least weekly, and weekly use for “getting information” has more than doubled within a year, overtaking purely creative use cases. Industry analyses estimate that a single platform such as ChatGPT has reached on the order of hundreds of millions of weekly active users and around a billion searches per week, with roughly a third of consumers using such models daily or near‑daily as an information tool. 

Traffic studies show that the 10 largest chat‑based systems have recorded tens of billions of visits in a year. Within news production, more than four‑fifths of North American newsrooms now employ AI in some form, up from little more than a third a few years ago, including for automated article generation, data analysis, headline testing and content discovery. Major agencies such as the Associated Press already rely on AI systems to automatically generate tens of thousands of corporate earnings reports annually, while surveys of journalists in the Global South suggest that a large majority use AI tools in their work. Under these conditions, for the socialist movement to ignore or abstain from this technology would be a profound strategic error. It would amount to conceding an entire, rapidly expanding sphere of intellectual life to the unchallenged domination of capitalist and bourgeois ideology.​

Your claim that Augmented Intelligence is “untested” is misinformed and false. Forms of Augmented Intelligence are already deeply embedded in modern life. Machine learning helps doctors detect cancers and other diseases at earlier stages by analyzing medical images; it powers the search engines, translation tools, voice recognition, spam filters and navigation systems that billions use every day; it helps manage logistics, traffic flows and aspects of energy distribution in modern power grids. One may criticize how these systems are used under capitalism—and one should—but it is not accurate to treat the technology itself as a kind of untried novelty. The real question is whether the working class will leave these powerful tools entirely in the hands of corporations, states and the military, or whether it will consciously appropriate them for its own emancipatory purposes.​

I can also fully understand why many artists, writers and other cultural workers feel particular anxiety about Augmented Intelligence. They see corporations already using automation and digital tools to devalue their labor, and they fear that these systems will be used to undercut their livelihoods still further. That danger is real under capitalism. But it cannot be fought simply by rejecting the technology in the abstract. It can only be fought by mobilizing the working class politically to establish its collective, democratic control over the productive forces—so that advances in technique, including Augmented Intelligence, become the basis for expanded cultural life and secure conditions for artistic work, rather than instruments for unemployment and super‑exploitation.​

Artists may also feel personally vulnerable at the thought that algorithms could somehow “replace” their creativity. History shows that every major technical innovation—photography, sound recording, cinema, digital editing—has forced artists to grapple with new conditions and possibilities. What is crucial here is to understand that Augmented Intelligence does not “think” and “create” in the way human consciousness does. It can, perhaps, produce a sophisticated imitation or even an effective enhancement of the style of a Hemingway, Dreiser, Fitzgerald, Bellow or Roth, because it can model patterns in existing texts. But it cannot anticipate, or “know” in an artistic sense, how these writers would have responded to future experiences, love affairs, the deaths of friends, the outbreak of wars, new eruptions of class struggle, and other unforeseen changes in the social and intellectual environment. Those leaps—into new forms, new sensibilities, new historical insights—remain bound up with living human experience and consciousness. It is likely that writers, including the greatest ones, will come to use Augmented Intelligence as one tool among others in their work, but they will interact with it in a way that is creative: as an aid to formulation, exploration and revision, not as a substitute for their own artistic judgment and vision.​

In your initial critical comments, you objected to Socialism AI from the standpoint of “intellectual property,” implicitly defending the idea that the products of intellectual and cultural labor should remain fenced off as private assets. From a Marxist standpoint, however, the struggle against capitalist property relations has never exempted so‑called intellectual property; on the contrary, it insists that knowledge, science and culture are the collective product of social labor and must be freed from private control. Your emphasis has recently shifted from objections over copyright infringement to the alleged threat posed by AI to public health. But at a deeper level, the effect of both arguments is similar: they discourage the working class from making use of an advanced instrument of thought, and leave the most powerful applications of Augmented Intelligence safely in the hands of the existing powers.​

It may be helpful to pose the question in a more direct and comradely way. Should the working class, which is being asked to navigate a world of immense complexity, rely only on pre‑digital methods of learning and communication, while the ruling class systematically exploits every modern tool of analysis and prediction? Is it really in workers’ interests to abstain from a technology that could help them study history, assimilate theory and coordinate internationally, simply because that technology has thus far been developed within capitalist society? Or is it more consistent with a socialist outlook to master that technology, understand it critically, and turn it into an instrument for liberation rather than oppression?​

You also express a broader mistrust of Augmented Intelligence that, in some respects, parallels the mistrust directed at other complex products of scientific labor, such as vaccines. The anti-AI phobia appears as the political first cousin of the anti-vax hysteria. The analogy is not meant as a personal reproach, but as a warning about a genuine danger. In both cases one encounters a deep and even pathological suspicion of collective scientific work, a preference for anecdote and intuition over mediated understanding, and a tendency to treat powerful technologies as inherently corrupting rather than asking under what social relations, and for what purposes, they are used. The criminal fraud of the anti‑vax movement is that it does not weaken big pharmaceutical corporations, but harms ordinary people by depriving them of available protections. In a similar way, a categorical rejection of Augmented Intelligence does not prevent corporations and states from using it; it primarily weakens the capacity of workers to use advanced tools in their own defense and for their own education.​

None of this means ignoring the real issues you raise: the environmental cost of large‑scale computing, the strain on existing infrastructure, the shallow or misleading content these systems can produce under commercial and entertainment‑driven pressures. Marxism does not deny these negative elements of AI, but it insists that they arise from the subordination of technology to private profit, military competition and advertising, not from the existence of the technology itself. The solution is not abstention, but the transformation of the social relations under which these tools operate and the conscious use of them in the interests of human development.​

From this standpoint, Socialism AI should be seen as an attempt—imperfect, evolving, but immensely important—to appropriate an advanced technological form for socialist ends. It does not replace thought, study or struggle; it is meant to assist and deepen them. It offers workers and youth a way to investigate the history and theory of the Marxist movement more systematically than would otherwise be possible under conditions of isolation, long working hours and the decay of traditional institutions of learning. Before rejecting it, the most reasonable and genuinely scientific approach would be to use it, explore what it does and does not do, and then form a judgment.​

Finally, there is a political issue that should not be overlooked. Even if you continue to have reservations about the use of this particular technology, it would be entirely wrong to elevate this into a matter of principle that justifies a break with the SEP or the WSWS. In the Marxist movement, breaks are justified only when they arise from fundamental differences over program—over the class nature of the state, the historical role of the working class, the perspective on war, revolution and the building of the party. The use, or non‑use, of a specific technological tool—whether an internet-based website or a system of Augmented Intelligence—does not, in itself, constitute a change of program. The SEP and the WSWS have not abandoned their program in any sense by developing and employing Socialism AI; they are seeking to apply that program, and the Marxist method, using the most advanced means available today.​

For all these reasons, I am urging in a comradely spirit that you reconsider your opposition, or, at the very least, the manner in which you are presently expressing it. No one is asking you to accept uncritically any particular system or method. But it would be a serious mistake to allow concerns about technology to turn into a barrier between you and a party that is fighting, on a principled and internationalist basis, for the interests of the working class. At the very least, give yourself the chance to explore Socialism AI, to question it, test it, and see how it handles the very issues that concern you. Only on that basis—through experience, critical investigation and political discussion—can a genuinely informed judgment be made.

With best wishes for the New Year,

David North

https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2025/12/21/bzhq-d21.html

 

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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

abyss....

 

EU in the abyss of lawlessness

Press release by MEPs Michael von der Schulenburg and Ruth Firmenich

 

Brussels, 15 December 2025

The decision by the EU Foreign Affairs Council to impose sanctions on further European citizens – including former Swiss intelligence officer and retired colonel Jacques Baud – represents another serious blow to the rule of law in the European Union. With the measures now adopted against Jacques Baud for alleged “disinformation activities”, the EU’s political elite is attempting to silence one of the most renowned analysts of the war in Ukraine, says von der Schulenburg. “The EU is using the sanctions list as a tool against critics and is manoeuvring itself further and further into an abyss of lawlessness,” says Ruth Firmenich.
  Without a solid legal basis, European citizens are being sanctioned for “disinformation”. At the same time, the illegal conversion of permanently frozen assets of the Russian central bank into collateral for loans to Ukraine is to take place this week. In parallel, proceedings are underway before the European Court of Justice concerning the unlawful application of Article 122 as the legal basis for the 150 billion euros SAFE Regulation. With its measures, the EU is threatening the rule of law. Schulenburg and Firmenich demand: “The European Parliament must act now. It can request the lifting of the sanctions regime for ‘disinformation’ – and it must make use of this option.”
  A recent legal opinion commissioned by MEPs Michael von der Schulenburg and Ruth Firmenich – available at tinyurl.com/4pkttj6z – supports this critique. In it, Professor Dr Ninon Colneric, former judge at the European Court of Justice(formerly: Court of Justice of the European Communities), and Prof. Dr. Alina Miron, professor of international law at the University of Angers, conclude that numerous elements of the EU sanctions framework against “disinformation” are incompatible with EU law. They also identify significant shortcomings in the protection of minimum fundamental rights standards.
  The experts are particularly critical of the denial of the right to a hearing for individuals accused of disinformation before sanctions are imposed on them. They argue that this approach is disproportionate and therefore unlawful. The damage caused to “one of the cornerstones of democracy – freedom of expression” is disproportionate to the objective of combating disinformation. The measures violate both the proportionality requirements of EU law and Article 11 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union.
  Furthermore, the restrictions on the freedom of movement of EU citizens provided for under the sanctions regime are unlawful, while the legal safeguards for those affected are insufficient overall. The terms used, such as “information manipulation and interference”, are so broad that they effectively give the Council almost unlimited discretion in imposing sanctions. This opens up the risk of politically motivated persecution.
  Finally, the authors emphasise the deterrent effect of the new sanctions regime on journalists. It makes it risky to take up topics of public controversy, as information could be classified as “disinformation” at any time. The regime could deter journalists and other actors from exercising their right to freedom of expression and information without restriction. •

https://www.zeit-fragen.ch/en/archives/2025/nr-26-9-dezember-2025-1/eu-im-abgrund-der-gesetzlosigkeit

 

 

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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.