Showing posts with label Geopolitics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Geopolitics. Show all posts

Saturday, February 14, 2026

MERZ'S IMPERIAL FANTASY: Guns For War ---No Power For Workers!


... HOW GERMANY MOVED FROM EUROPE’S INDUSTRIAL ENGINE TO BECOME IT'S SICK OLD MAN

Nord Stream, energy shock — and now Volkswagen’s historic rupture


By Norris R. McDonald, DIJ, Author, Economic Journalist

@sulfabittasnews


Norris R. McDonald, DIJ
Germany for decades was the industrial engine of Europe. Its factories powered the continent’s prosperity. Its export machine set global standards in automobiles, chemicals, precision tools, and industrial machinery. Its social market economy balanced capitalism with worker protections in a way many nations tried to emulate.


Today, that model is under severe strain. 


Germany faces a structural economic rupture driven by energy shock, geopolitical alignment, and strategic miscalculation. The destruction of the Nord Stream pipelines in 2022 was not simply an infrastructure event — it was an economic turning point. Those pipelines delivered the cheap and reliable Russian gas that underwrote Germany’s industrial competitiveness for decades.


The German working class are going through extremely hard times not seen since the Post World War II era. 


Cheap Russian Gas Fueled Germany's Industrial Base

Before 2022, roughly 55 percent of Germany’s natural gas came from Russia. That supply sustained energy-intensive sectors — chemicals, steel, fertilizers, glass, aluminum, autos. When it vanished, Germany did not just lose fuel. It lost cost stability.


The shift to higher-priced liquefied natural gas and emergency substitutes has kept industrial energy costs elevated compared to pre-war levels. For globally competitive manufacturing sectors, margins matter. And when margins collapse, relocation becomes rational.


Industrial production has weakened. Investment has slowed. Executives increasingly explore expansion in the United States or Asia rather than at home. Economists describe “structural demand destruction.” Workers experience something simpler: layoffs, reduced shifts, and long-term uncertainty.


Nord Stream and the Energy Shock

Energy is the bloodstream of industrial society. Germany’s post-Cold War growth model rested on abundant, affordable gas feeding vast manufacturing ecosystems.


The bombing of Nord Stream abruptly severed that lifeline. What followed was not a short-term adjustment but a permanent increase in operating costs for German industry.


This shock ripples outward. Higher energy prices raise production costs. Higher production costs reduce competitiveness. Reduced competitiveness accelerates offshoring. Offshoring erodes employment, tax revenue, and industrial know-how. Once this cycle takes hold, reversing it becomes extremely difficult.


Volkswagen and the Symbolism of an 84-Year Pillar

Nowhere is Germany’s vulnerability more symbolically visible than in the crisis facing Volkswagen.


For 84 years, Volkswagen has stood as a pillar of German industrial identity. From the Beetle to the Golf, from Audi engineering to Porsche performance, the company anchored vast supply chains across Europe. Entire regions depend on its plants.


 Volkswagen, once a great symbol of Germany's industrial might, has now collapsed. 


Today, Volkswagen confronts weak European demand, fierce Chinese competition in electric vehicles, high domestic production costs, and the broader energy burden weighing on German manufacturing.


Reports of restructuring, potential plant closures, or severe cost-cutting represent more than corporate belt-tightening. They signal that even Germany’s most iconic manufacturers are struggling to remain competitive at home.


If Volkswagen cannot comfortably produce profitably in Germany, the implications extend far beyond one company. They point to a system-wide problem.


Deindustrialization in Slow Motion

Chemical producers have cut output. Steelmakers warn of permanent capacity losses. Fertilizer and aluminum plants have shut down or relocated.


Economists increasingly acknowledge that Germany is experiencing “structural demand destruction” — a polite term for factories that will never reopen.


This is not a normal business cycle. It is deindustrialization in slow motion.

Germany now risks developing its own Rust Belt along the Rhine.


Rearmament Without an Industrial Base

Berlin’s political leadership speaks confidently about transforming Germany into the strongest military power in Europe.


But military strength rests on industrial strength. Tanks, aircraft, drones, ammunition, and advanced electronics require factories, skilled labor, and affordable energy.


A shrinking manufacturing base cannot sustain long-term military ambitions.


The contradiction is stark: Germany is asked to shoulder greater geopolitical responsibility while its productive core erodes.


Social Democracy Under Pressure

Germany’s postwar stability rested on an implicit bargain: industrial strength would generate rising living standards and fund social protections.


That bargain is fraying.


Households face higher energy bills. Rents rise. Public infrastructure ages. Job insecurity spreads.


Russian cheap Nord Stream gas once have Germans a better quality of life than most Europeans. 


As economic security weakens, political polarization grows. The erosion of social democracy follows the erosion of industrial confidence.


Geopolitics and Double Standards

Ukraine is framed as an existential moral cause. Gaza exposes glaring double standards in how civilian suffering is judged.


Principles appear selective. Credibility erodes.


For Washington, Europe’s break from Russian energy advances long-standing strategic objectives. For Germany, the economic price has been devastating. Energy independence from Moscow has translated into dependence on higher-cost imports and reduced industrial competitiveness.


A Choice Still Exists

Germany still possesses extraordinary assets: world-class engineers, research institutions, skilled workers, and a respected industrial brand. But assets require strategy. Without a coherent plan for affordable energy, competitive production, and genuine strategic autonomy, Germany’s decline will deepen.


History shows that great economic powers rarely collapse overnight. They decay through accumulated policy choices.


If icons like Volkswagen stumble after 84 years, the warning could not be clearer. Germany must decide whether it intends to remain an industrial nation — or accept managed decline dressed up as moral virtue.


That is the Bitta Truth.



Friday, February 13, 2026

President Trump escalates economic embargo as Cuba faces its worst energy crisis in decades!

When energy becomes a weapon, suffering becomes policy!

President Donald Trump


Kingston, Jamaica — @sulfabittas News

Breaking news on Cuba’s deepening energy crisis as U.S. sanctions block Venezuelan and Mexican oil supplies, trigger jet fuel shortages and rolling blackouts, and spur international responses from Mexico, China, and Russia. Latest updates, analysis, and impact for Cuba, Caribbean travel and global geopolitics.


Latest Verified Developments

• U.S. Oil Blockade and Tariffs Intensify Pressure
The Trump administration’s intensified sanctions and tariff threats have effectively stopped Venezuela — Cuba’s main oil supplier — and pressured Mexico to curb shipments, causing severe fuel shortages.

• Jet Fuel Shortages Halt Flights
Cuba announced aviation fuel shortages at nine airports, leaving airlines unable to refuel on the island until at least mid-March and forcing flight cancellations and reroutes that hit tourism hard.

• Humanitarian Aid and Geopolitical Response
Mexican navy ships carrying humanitarian food aid have arrived to ease shortages, even as Mexico walks a diplomatic tightrope with Washington. China vows to assist Cuba with supplies, and Russia plans fuel shipments that could defy U.S. tariffs.


U.S. imposed economic hardships have worsened Cubans daily life. 


President Trump’s latest sanctions escalate decades-old U.S.–Cuba tensions and follow broader U.S. moves affecting Venezuela’s leadership and oil industry — a strategy with far-reaching consequences for Cuban civilians, tourism, and regional geopolitics.


International responses are mounting: Mexico provides vital aid, while China and Russia reject what they call unilateral U.S. pressure. The crisis now threatens not just fuel systems but food, healthcare and civil stability across the island.


**********

BOOKS BY CARIBBEAN AUTHORS... 

PEENIE WALLIE: THE GLOW OF A FOOL'S LIGHT!: The true life story of a young boy misunderstood but destined to shine


By Norris R. McDonald 

The Jamaican African Coromantee Maroon spiritual ancestors still continues to shine a bright light forward like "Peenie Wallie's" fireflies! "Peenie Wallie" setting is in the rural, St. Mary, Jamaica community where the land tells stories of hope, that emerges from the souls of Black Jamaican people. "Peenie Wallie" explores themes such as: rural poverty, internal migration, hardships, sacrifice, self-motivation, self-development, education, love, kindness, hope, traditions and community spirit versus selfishness. The book tells this story through the eyes of the protagonists:

- Aunt Sissy
- Peenie Wallie and his fireflies
- Mass Moses, a Maroon spiritual leader
- Sheldon, their benefactor.

This busy-buzzing life of the hard-working people of Epsom District, St. Mary, reflects the hope and joy for a prosperous future for the Jamaican people.

The small village of Epsom, once a symbol of hardship, had transformed into a thriving community thanks to the education programs and opportunities he had championed. Many of the village’s children went on to achieve greatness, inspired by his example. "The Glowing House of Epsom" and Peenie Wallie legacy became a cultural landmark, visited by people from all walks of life. Inside its walls, photographs and awards told the story of Peenie Wallie’s journey and that of Aunt Sissy.

The lush gardens outside were filled with blooming flowers—a tribute to the natural picturesque beauty of Epsom, St Mary that had brought Peenie Wallie and Aunt Sissy together and had shaped their ‘Sulfabittas’ life. Peenie Wallie’s fireflies became an enduring symbol of hope.

Saturday, February 7, 2026

BRITAIN’S PERMANENT POVERTY: The Collapse of Social Britain!


By Norris R. McDonald
Sulfabittas News | @sulfabittasnews

...A Nation Trapped in Permanent Poverty...

Britain is not experiencing a temporary cost-of-living crisis. It is living inside a permanent condition of mass impoverishment. The latest assessment from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, UK Poverty 2026: The Essential Guide to Understanding Poverty in the UK, confirms what millions of households already know through daily experience: poverty in Britain has been structurally high for two decades and is now locked into the country’s economic model. Even more damning, the JRF anticipates no meaningful improvement under a government led by Keir Starmer, because the underlying drivers of low growth, weak productivity, and stagnant wages remain untouched. Britain is not failing to solve poverty. It has built a system that reproduces it.


From 2005/06 through to the 2024 general election, between 20 and 22 percent of the population has lived in poverty. That translates into roughly 14.2 million people. Within this figure are 7.9 million working-age adults, millions of pensioners, and an estimated 4.5 million children. These are not marginal numbers. They describe a society in which deprivation has become normalized. 


When one in five people in a wealthy country is poor, poverty is no longer an exception at the edges of the system; it is one of the system’s central outputs.


Abandonment

The geographical distribution of poverty exposes its structural nature. London records poverty rates around 26 percent, the West Midlands 24

percent, the North West 23 percent,

Norris R. McDonald 
and Yorkshire and Humber 23 percent. Wales averages 22 percent, Scotland around 20 percent, and Northern Ireland roughly 17 percent. These patterns mirror decades of deindustrialisation, the destruction of unionized employment, privatization of public assets, and chronic underinvestment outside a narrow collapsing political economic system. The same places sacrificed to market “restructuring” in the 1980s are now the epicenters of social pain.


Yet political debate still frames poverty as personal failure rather than political economy. People are told they lack skills, discipline, or ambition. This narrative protects the system. If poverty is individual, then the economic model is innocent. If poverty is structural, then those who designed and defend that model stand accused.


Children as Economic Hostages

The most morally searing dimension of Britain’s poverty crisis is its impact on children. The number and proportion of children living in poverty has risen for three consecutive years and now stands roughly 600,000 higher than before the pandemic. This deterioration cannot be separated from deliberate policy choices, particularly the two-child benefit cap introduced in 2017. By limiting welfare support to the first two children in a household, the state knowingly reduced incomes for families already struggling to survive.


Extreme poverty, hunger, rising homeless and hopelessness is a fact of life in Britain. 


The policy did not reduce births. It did not raise wages. It did not improve family stability. It simply made poor families poorer. The refusal of Starmer’s Labour to commit unequivocally to scrapping the cap exposes the true boundary of its politics. 


The Kieth Starmer British Labour is prepared to manage the suffering created by austerity, but not to dismantle the machinery that produces it.


The Myth of Post-Austerity Britain

Politicians regularly claim that Britain has “moved on” from austerity. The evidence says otherwise. Public services remain hollowed out. Local councils teeter on insolvency. Housing is treated primarily as an investment vehicle rather than a human right. Real wages remain below pre-2008 levels once inflation is accounted for. 


After the global financial crash, Britain faced a historic choice. It could have rebuilt the economy around public investment, industrial renewal, and social protection. Instead, it chose to rescue banks and discipline the population. Conservative governments enforced this openly. Labour now accepts the same framework quietly.


Starmer’s strict fiscal rules, reluctance to pursue meaningful wealth taxation, and rejection of large-scale public ownership confirm that continuity, not transformation, defines his economic vision. This is why the JRF foresees no improvement under Labour. You cannot fix inequality with an ideology that treats inequality as inevitable.


Poverty as a Tool of Political Control

Permanent mass poverty does more than harm individuals. It reshapes politics.

A population living under constant economic stress is less able to organize, more fearful of losing what little it has, and more vulnerable to scapegoating narratives. This environment is fertile ground for right-wing populism. The rise of Nigel Farage’s Reform UK is inseparable from Britain’s poverty crisis. Economic despair provides the emotional fuel. Cultural grievance provides the direction.

Will Nigel win the next U.K. election?


When mainstream parties refuse to name landlords, monopolies, and financial elites as the sources of hardship, populists step in and offer simpler villains. Migrants, minorities, and general immigrant bashing as become convenient substitutes for systemic analysis. So to as Britain’s embrace of the Gaza Genocide and support for a the Ukraine anti-Russia project. 


Starmer’s Fatal Contradiction

Starmer presents himself as a safe pair of hands in a dangerous world. But safety for markets is not safety for people. Stability for investors does not pay rent. Fiscal caution does not heat homes. Market confidence does not feed children.

Poverty in the U.K. is at a very extreme level, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation say. 

By choosing continuity over confrontation, Labour signals that permanent mass hardship is an acceptable price for economic orthodoxy. Voters understand this message even when it is not spoken aloud. That is why Labour bleeds support both to the Greens, who seek moral clarity, and to Reform, which offers rage as an outlet. The centre cannot hold because it is trying to preserve a settlement that no longer commands belief.


History’s Warning

Periods of prolonged stagnation combined with political inertia rarely produce calm endings. In 1970s Britain, the collapse of the post-war consensus produced Thatcherism. After 2008, austerity across Europe hollowed out social democratic parties and fueled the far right. The pattern is consistent. When centre parties manage decline instead of confronting its causes, they eventually collapse.


Britain is now entering that phase.


The 'Bitta' Truth

Fourteen million people in poverty is not simply a social tragedy. It is a destabilizing force. It erodes trust, corrodes social cohesion, and radicalizes politics. A society cannot indefinitely absorb that level of deprivation without consequences.


Britain’s poverty crisis is not a glitch. It is the system and a corrupt, Gaza Genocide supporting, morally bankrupt one at that!


 Kier Starmer is facing a survival crisis!
Unless a future government is prepared to break with austerity economics, tax wealth aggressively, invest at scale in housing and public services, and abolish punitive welfare policies, poverty will remain permanently high regardless of who occupies Downing Street.


Starmer’s Labour has already signaled it will not make that break. 


Which means Britain enters the late 2020s with high poverty, low growth, fractured politics, and rising authoritarian temptation.


That is not stability. That is a slow national unravelling of dysfunctional, dystopian Britain. 


This is just the Bitta Truth!


[ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Norris R McDonald, is an Author, Respiratory Therapist and Economic Journalist who writes public commentary features for The Jamaica Gleaner. He writes on critical issues regarding Political Economics, Health Care & Public Policies, Black Culture and, World Affair. He also Publishes

SULFABITTAS NEWSMAGAZINE on SUBSTACK]