Hijra, Zohran Mamdani, and the Politics of Fear

 When Zohran Mamdani referenced the Hijra in a speech about immigration, critics quickly framed it as something darker. Within hours, a seventh-century migration story was described as a coded announcement of conquest.

The reaction tells us less about the Hijra and more about how modern political narratives escalate.

The debate around Hijra and Zohran Mamdani is not only about theology. It reflects deeper anxieties about identity, demographics, and institutional power in Western democracies.


What the Hijra Actually Represents

The Hijra refers to the migration of Prophet Muhammad from Mecca to Medina in 622 CE. It marks the beginning of the Islamic calendar. In Islamic tradition, it symbolizes refuge from persecution and the formation of a new political community.

According to the Oxford Islamic Studies Online archive, the Hijra is widely interpreted as a foundational moment of communal reorganization and survival rather than merely territorial expansion. Academic historians such as Fred Donner, in Muhammad and the Believers (Harvard University Press), emphasize its community-building dimension.

Later conflicts in Medina are part of early Islamic historiography. Those events are debated among scholars regarding context, numbers, and political circumstances. Serious scholarship treats them as historical episodes shaped by tribal alliances and wartime conditions, not as timeless templates for future societies.

Religious metaphors are frequently used in political speech. American presidents have cited Exodus and the “city upon a hill,” language traced to John Winthrop and later invoked by Ronald Reagan. No serious analyst interprets those references as literal theocratic blueprints.

Context matters.


The Muslim Brotherhood Allegation

Some critics alleged that Mamdani is aligned with the Muslim Brotherhood. That claim requires evidence.

The Muslim Brotherhood was founded in Egypt in 1928 by Hassan al-Banna. The Council on Foreign Relations provides a detailed overview of its ideological structure and political evolution (CFR Backgrounder, “Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood”). It is historically rooted in Sunni political Islam.

Mamdani comes from a Shia Muslim background. Sunni and Shia theological traditions are institutionally distinct. While political alliances can cross sectarian lines, affiliation cannot be assumed by identity alone.

Serious allegations require documentation such as formal membership, financial links, leadership positions, or explicit ideological endorsement. Without that, the claim remains rhetorical rather than evidentiary.

Precision strengthens debate. Vagueness weakens it.


Why the Reaction Escalated So Quickly

The speed of escalation reveals something important.

Western democracies are experiencing demographic transitions. According to the Pew Research Center, religious composition in the United States is shifting, with Islam projected to become the second-largest religious group by mid-century under certain migration scenarios (Pew Research Center, “The Future of World Religions”).

At the same time, birth rates in many developed societies are declining. Economic insecurity and cultural fragmentation amplify fears about long-term identity.

In that environment, symbolic language becomes combustible.

A migration story is no longer read as refuge. It is read as demographic strategy. A faith reference becomes a geopolitical code.

This pattern is not confined to Islam. It is part of a broader political dynamic where identity is securitized.


The Algorithm Incentive

Digital media structures reward escalation.

Research from MIT on misinformation diffusion has shown that emotionally charged or alarming narratives travel faster than neutral information. Fear spreads more efficiently than context.

A headline suggesting “conquest” generates more engagement than one analyzing immigration policy mechanics.

When commentary shifts from governance to civilizational survival, engagement metrics rise. Interpretation becomes prophecy.

This incentive structure shapes discourse.


What Should Actually Be Evaluated

If the concern is governance, the questions should be concrete:

  • What immigration policies has Mamdani proposed?

  • How does he approach public safety funding?

  • What are his stated positions on antisemitism protections?

  • What budget priorities reflect his administration’s values?

These are measurable areas of accountability.

Predicting medieval outcomes from symbolic language is not.


The Real Risk

There is a risk on both sides of this debate.

Extremist movements exist. Islamist organizations have articulated political ambitions in various regions. Security concerns are legitimate topics of policy analysis.

However, treating every Muslim politician’s religious reference as coded subversion carries its own danger. It converts civic participation into suspicion and identity into evidence.

When religious language automatically triggers securitized interpretation, public trust erodes.

New York’s future will not be shaped by seventh-century precedent. It will be shaped by municipal policy, institutional checks, voter oversight, and legal safeguards embedded in American constitutional structure.

The real inflection point is whether political disagreement remains grounded in evidence.

If every metaphor becomes a declaration of war, democratic debate shrinks.

Not because of Hijra.

Because of fear.



Why “Made in Europe” Is About Power, Not Just Industry

 

Modern European factory with robotic arms assembling electric vehicle batteries under the EU Made in Europe industrial policy.
A high-tech European manufacturing facility where robotic arms assemble electric vehicle battery modules while workers supervise production. A subtle EU flag overlay symbolizes the European Union’s push for domestic manufacturing and reduced reliance on foreign supply chains through its Made in Europe strategy.

For the first time in decades, Europe is preparing to pay more on purpose.

The European Union’s emerging “Made in Europe” strategy is not merely an industrial adjustment. It is a geopolitical shift. After years of debate, EU leaders have backed plans to increase domestic manufacturing and reduce dependence on external powers, especially the United States and China.

The forthcoming Industrial Accelerator Act would introduce local-content requirements in strategic sectors such as renewables, batteries, and electric vehicles. The ambition is clear: raise manufacturing’s share of EU GDP from roughly 14 percent today to 20 percent by 2035.

This is not just about factories. It is about strategic control.


The Data Behind the Anxiety

At the beginning of the 2000s, the EU accounted for roughly 25 percent of global manufacturing output. Today, that figure has fallen to around 16 percent, according to World Bank manufacturing data:
https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NV.IND.MANF.ZS

Meanwhile, Europe’s economic model remains heavily export-driven. In 2023, the EU recorded a goods trade surplus of €502 billion, according to Eurostat:
https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php?title=International_trade_in_goods

That surplus reflects competitiveness. It also reflects exposure.

The Ukraine war exposed something deeper. Before Russia’s full-scale invasion, the EU depended on Russia for roughly 40 percent of its gas imports, according to the European Commission:
https://energy.ec.europa.eu

When those flows stopped, energy-intensive industries were hit hard. German chemical producers, steel plants, and glass manufacturers saw production costs spike sharply. BASF, one of Europe’s largest chemical companies, announced capacity reductions in Germany in 2023, citing permanently higher energy costs.

German industrial production fell by 1.5 percent in 2023, according to Destatis:
https://www.destatis.de

That is not abstract decline. It translates into closed furnaces, reduced shifts, and skilled workers reassigned or laid off.


The China and US Squeeze

While energy costs surged, global competition intensified.

The European Commission launched anti-subsidy investigations into Chinese electric vehicles in 2023:
https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_23_4752

At the same time, the United States moved aggressively through the Inflation Reduction Act, tying green subsidies to domestic production:
https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/inflation-reduction-act

China supports scale.
America supports domestic industry.
Europe relied on openness.

That balance no longer feels stable.


What “Made in Europe” Would Do

The proposal under discussion would:

• Tie public subsidies to minimum EU-made component thresholds
• Require up to 70 percent local content in certain critical sectors
• Prioritize European suppliers in public procurement
• Link industrial capacity to defence autonomy

Commissioner Stéphane Séjourné has framed competitiveness as a geopolitical imperative.

China has “Made in China.”
The US has “Buy American.”
Europe, he argues, must respond in kind.

The language has shifted from efficiency to sovereignty.


Why It May Not Work

The EU is divided.

France supports a strict “Made in Europe” approach. Germany prefers a broader “Made with Europe” framework that includes the European Economic Area and trusted partners. Export-oriented economies in Scandinavia and the Baltics warn that heavy protectionism undermines the single market.

There is also a cost problem.

Local content rules mean excluding cheaper global suppliers. That raises production costs. Subsidies can offset some impact, but taxpayers ultimately fund those subsidies.

The European Central Bank has repeatedly warned that eurozone inflation remains sensitive to supply-side shocks:
https://www.ecb.europa.eu

If production becomes structurally more expensive, inflationary pressure does not disappear. It shifts.

Critics argue that Europe’s deeper competitiveness issues lie elsewhere: fragmented capital markets, regulatory complexity, slow scaling of innovation, and uneven energy policy coordination.

Industrial nationalism may protect. It does not automatically reform.


The Strategic Calculation

The EU now faces a structural choice.

Globalization rewarded Europe’s export model for decades. Persistent trade surpluses since 2008 confirmed its strength. But interdependence has evolved into strategic vulnerability.

Russia weaponized energy.
The US weaponized technology access and sanctions regimes.
China leverages industrial scale and state subsidies.

Economic neutrality is no longer guaranteed.

“Made in Europe” signals that Brussels believes the era of benign globalization has ended. The policy accepts higher costs today to reduce strategic risk tomorrow.

Whether that trade-off strengthens Europe or gradually weakens its competitiveness will define the next decade.

Europe is not just building factories.

It is redefining what security means in an economic age.

Buying Glasses Online? These 6 Mistakes Can Damage Your Vision (And How to Avoid Them)

 

South Asian man ordering prescription glasses online while checking eye prescription at home

Editorial-style featured image showing a Karachi consumer ordering glasses online, highlighting the importance of accurate prescription and measurements.




Somewhere between rising inflation and shrinking household budgets, a quiet shift happened. People stopped walking into optical stores and started buying glasses online. Cheaper. Faster. Convenient.

But here’s the uncomfortable truth: the savings are real — the mistakes are expensive.

This guide cuts through the marketing noise and tells you what actually matters before ordering prescription glasses online.


Why Online Glasses Became So Popular

The price gap is the big driver.

  • In-store prescription glasses (U.S.): $200–$600 average

  • Online retailers: $20–$150

  • Global online eyewear market size: $23 billion (2024)

  • Expected to reach $45 billion by 2030
    (Source: Grand View Research, Statista)

For middle-income households — including many families in Pakistan — the math is simple. Online wins.

But cheaper frames don’t fix poor measurements.


Step 1: Start With a Current Prescription

This is non-negotiable.

Your prescription must include:

  • Sphere (SPH)

  • Cylinder (CYL) if you have astigmatism

  • Axis

  • Pupillary Distance (PD)

Why this matters:
A study published in Optometry and Vision Science found that inaccurate prescriptions or PD errors are among the top reasons for online eyewear complaints.

If your prescription is more than 1–2 years old, get an eye exam first.

Vision changes quietly. The headache comes later.


Step 2: Frame Size Matters More Than Style

Most people choose frames based on appearance. That’s mistake number one.

Look at your current glasses. You’ll see three numbers on the inside arm:

Example: 52–18–140

  • 52 = lens width (mm)

  • 18 = bridge width

  • 140 = temple length

Match these measurements when buying online.

Why this matters:
Oversized or poorly fitted frames can distort vision because your eyes no longer align with the optical center of the lenses.

That’s not a fashion issue. That’s a vision problem.


Step 3: Measure Your Pupillary Distance (PD) Correctly

PD is the distance between your pupils. If this is off, your eyes will constantly strain.

If your prescription doesn’t include PD:

  • Use a reputable measurement app

  • Take the reading 2–3 times

  • Use the average

The American Optometric Association warns that incorrect PD is one of the main causes of discomfort with online glasses.

If your new glasses give you dizziness or eye fatigue, PD is usually the culprit.


Step 4: Understand Lens Types (Don’t Overpay)

Most online stores push upgrades. Here’s what actually matters:

Standard Clear Lenses

Good for everyday use.

Blue-Light Filtering

Evidence is mixed. The American Academy of Ophthalmology says blue-light glasses are not medically necessary for digital screens, but some users report comfort.

Photochromic (Transitions)

Useful if you move frequently between indoors and outdoors.

Sunglass Lenses

Best for driving or outdoor work.

If you don’t have a specific need, basic lenses are usually enough.


Step 5: Choose the Right Lens Index

Lens index determines thickness and weight.

  • 1.50 – standard prescriptions

  • 1.61–1.67 – moderate prescriptions

  • 1.74 – strong prescriptions (±3.00 or higher)

Higher index lenses:

  • Look thinner

  • Feel lighter

  • Reduce edge distortion

For high prescriptions, this upgrade is worth the money.


Step 6: Don’t Skip Anti-Reflective Coating

This is one upgrade eye professionals consistently recommend.

Benefits:

  • Reduces glare

  • Improves night driving

  • Makes lenses clearer on video calls

  • Reduces eye strain

Choose oil- and smudge-resistant versions if available. They last longer.


The Hidden Risk of Online Glasses

A 2016 study by the Optical Laboratories Association tested online glasses and found:

  • Nearly 50% failed quality standards

  • Common issues: incorrect prescription, poor optical alignment

That doesn’t mean online buying is unsafe. It means quality control depends entirely on the retailer.

Cheap is fine. Blind cheap is not.


When You Should NOT Buy Online

Avoid online orders if you:

  • Need progressive lenses for the first time

  • Have a very high prescription

  • Have eye disease or complex vision issues

  • Need precise occupational lenses (pilots, surgeons, etc.)

In these cases, professional fitting matters.


The Real Rule (Nobody Tells You This)

Online glasses are not about finding the cheapest pair.

They’re about getting two things right:

  1. Accurate measurements

  2. Proper lens quality

Get those right, and you save money.

Get them wrong, and you’ll buy glasses twice.


Final Thought

Online eyewear is part of a larger shift — healthcare moving into e-commerce. Convenience is winning. Price is winning.

But your eyes are not a shopping experiment.

Measure carefully. Choose wisely. And if something feels off after wearing your new glasses for a few days, don’t adjust to the problem.

Your eyes are telling you something.


Karachi Consumer Angle

(Because here’s the reality: most prescriptions don’t include PD. And local online buyers guess. Bad idea.)

Where to Measure Pupillary Distance (PD) in Karachi

If your prescription does not include PD, you have three safe options:

1. Visit a Local Optical Shop (Best option)
Most shops will measure PD for free or for a small fee.

Reliable areas:

  • Saddar – Zaibunnisa Street optical market

  • Gulshan-e-Iqbal – Block 13 optical shops

  • Clifton / DHA – major optical chains

  • Aga Khan University Hospital Optical

  • Liaquat National Hospital Eye Clinic

Just ask:
“Mera PD measure kar dein.”
Takes two minutes. Costs little. Saves your eyes.


2. Hospital Eye Clinics

Recommended if your prescription is old or your number is high:

  • Aga Khan Eye Clinic

  • Hashmanis Hospital (Clifton / Saddar)

  • Al-Ibrahim Eye Hospital (Malir)

These clinics provide accurate PD and full optical measurements.


3. Mobile Apps (Use Carefully)

If you must measure at home:

  • Use a reputable PD measurement app

  • Take 3 readings

  • Use the average

  • Measure in good lighting, face straight

If your glasses cause dizziness later, PD error is usually the reason.


Local Reality Check 

In Karachi, many people buy frames from Daraz or international websites to save money. Nothing wrong with that. But here’s what usually happens:

They upload the prescription.
PD missing.
They guess.
Glasses arrive. Headache starts.

Then they blame the website.

The problem wasn’t the website.
It was the measurement.


Karachi Cost Comparison (Useful for Readers)

  • PD measurement at local optical: Free – Rs. 500

  • Full eye test: Rs. 1,000 – Rs. 3,000

  • Wrong online glasses replacement: Rs. 5,000 – Rs. 15,000

Cheap mistakes are the most expensive kind.


Sources

  • American Optometric Association (AOA)

  • American Academy of Ophthalmology (AAO)

  • Optical Laboratories Association Quality Study (2016)

  • Grand View Research – Global Eyewear Market Report

  • Statista – Online Eyewear Market Data

Why Online Glasses Sometimes Feel Wrong Even With the Right Prescription

 

Professional wearing glasses while working on a laptop in a bright office, showing lens clarity and screen use.
A modern professional working on a laptop with clear eyeglasses, illustrating the importance of proper lens quality, coatings, and eye comfort for digital work.



Last year, a colleague ordered glasses online. Same prescription he had worn for years. Same power. Same frame style.

Within two days he had headaches.

The screen looked tilted. Night driving felt strange. He thought his eyesight had suddenly worsened.

It hadn’t.

The problem was two millimeters.

That tiny gap between where his eyes actually looked and where the lenses were centered turned a medical device into a daily strain. And that’s when I realized something most people don’t know: when two pairs of glasses feel different, the issue is rarely the frame.

It’s the engineering inside the lens.


The Quiet Science Behind a Simple Pair of Glasses

The eyewear world has changed quickly. What used to require a visit to a local optical shop can now be done in ten minutes from a phone. A modern online glasses retailer offers thousands of frames, virtual try-ons, and prices that make traditional stores look outdated.

Convenience is real.

But so is responsibility.

A prescription is only the starting point. The real performance of your glasses depends on three technical factors most buyers ignore:

  • Lens material (index)

  • Optical alignment (PD)

  • Surface coatings

Get these right, and the glasses disappear on your face.
Get them wrong, and you feel them every minute.


Lens Index: Thin, Light… and Not Always Better

Standard lenses use a 1.50 index material. It works well for mild prescriptions. But as the power increases, lenses become thick and heavy. That’s where high-index materials come in:

  • 1.61

  • 1.67

  • 1.74

These bend light more efficiently, allowing thinner lenses. They look better. They feel lighter.

There is a trade-off, though. Higher index lenses often have lower Abbe values, which means more potential for edge distortion or color fringing. Quality manufacturers compensate for this with better design and coatings, but the material choice still matters.

In materials research and pharmaceutical analysis, experts like Dr. Fareha Jamal often emphasize the same principle: synthetic materials perform only as well as their structural integrity allows. Optical plastics are no different. Precision at the molecular level shows up as comfort at the human level.


The Most Common Online Mistake: Pupillary Distance

In clinical practice, Dr. Maryam Jamal often sees patients who say:

“My prescription is correct, but these glasses feel wrong.”

The cause is usually Pupillary Distance (PD).

PD measures the distance between the centers of your pupils. It tells the lab where to position the optical center of each lens. If that center is off, even slightly, your eyes must constantly adjust. The result can be:

  • Eye strain

  • Headaches

  • A pulling or floating sensation

  • Poor depth perception

Two millimeters. That’s enough to ruin the experience.

The better online glasses retailers now use camera-based PD tools and AI alignment systems that come surprisingly close to clinical measurements. But accuracy still depends on the user following the instructions carefully. A rushed measurement can turn convenience into discomfort.


Your Lifestyle Matters More Than You Think

Another hidden factor is how you actually use your eyes.

Someone working ten hours a day on a computer needs strong anti-reflective coating and possibly blue-light filtering.

A night driver needs glare reduction.

Someone outdoors all day may benefit from polarized lenses.

Generic optics treat every user the same. Good optics match the lens to the life behind it.

The difference shows up at the end of a long workday, when your eyes either feel fresh… or exhausted.


Anti-Reflective Coating: Not a Luxury

Many buyers skip coatings to save money. That’s a mistake.

A quality anti-reflective (AR) coating increases light transmission from about 92% to more than 99%. That means:

  • Clearer vision

  • Less glare from screens and headlights

  • Better night visibility

  • Reduced eye fatigue

It also eliminates the distracting reflections others see when looking at you. Small detail. Big difference.


Convenience Is Real. But Precision Still Matters.

The digital shift in eyewear isn’t a gimmick. Online optical platforms now match traditional stores in many technical areas. The choice, the pricing, the speed — all of it favors the consumer.

But glasses are not fashion accessories alone. They are medical devices.

When ordering online:

  • Choose the correct lens index

  • Measure PD carefully

  • Select coatings based on your daily use

  • Avoid rushing the process

Because when everything aligns properly, you forget you’re wearing glasses at all.

And when it doesn’t…

Your eyes remind you. Every hour.


The Real Value of an Online Glasses Retailer

The best online providers combine convenience with optical accuracy. The worst ones sell frames and treat the lenses as an afterthought.

That difference doesn’t show up on the website.

It shows up on your face. And in your comfort.

In the end, buying glasses online isn’t just about style or price. It’s about understanding that behind every clear view is a small piece of engineering doing its work quietly, all day long.

Choose carefully.

Your eyes will know the difference.


The “72 Virgins” Myth: How a Caricature Replaced History

 

Editorial image titled “The 72 Virgins Myth” showing two historical silhouettes representing different suicide attack contexts, highlighting political rather than religious motives
A minimalist black-and-white editorial composite featuring two historical silhouettes — a 1990s South Asian militant figure and a World War II pilot — placed on either side of the title “The 72 Virgins Myth.” The image visually challenges the stereotype that suicide attacks are exclusively linked to Islam, emphasizing the broader political and historical context of such violence.

The Day That Does Not Fit the Joke

On 21 May 1991, Thenmozhi Rajaratnam approached former Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi at an election rally in Tamil Nadu. Moments later, an RDX device concealed beneath her clothing exploded. Gandhi and fourteen others died instantly.

She was not Muslim.

She belonged to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, a secular Tamil nationalist movement. Her act was tied to India’s military intervention in Sri Lanka. It was retaliation. It was political. There was no theology guiding that explosion. No paradise promise. No “72 virgins.”

Yet the reflex persists. Hear “suicide bomber,” think Islam.

That reflex deserves scrutiny.


What the “72 Virgins” Myth Actually Is

The 72 virgins myth does not originate in the Qur’an. It appears in certain Hadith traditions describing rewards in Paradise. Classical scholars debated whether such descriptions were literal or symbolic. Mainstream Islamic theology did not build its moral framework around sensual reward.

The phrase gained prominence in modern times through extremist propaganda and post-9/11 media narratives. It became a simplified explanation for a complex tactic of political violence.

The persistence of the 72 virgins myth says more about modern storytelling than about classical doctrine.


What the Data Actually Shows

Political scientist Robert Pape, who led the University of Chicago Project on Suicide Terrorism, examined suicide attacks between 1980 and 2003. His research found that the majority were not primarily religious in motivation. They were strategic. They were nationalist. They were aimed at compelling democratic states to withdraw military forces from contested territories.

In fact, the LTTE in Sri Lanka carried out more suicide attacks during that period than Islamist groups. Their ideology was secular Tamil nationalism.

History complicates the stereotype further.

Japanese Kamikaze pilots in World War II deliberately crashed into Allied ships. They were driven by imperial loyalty and wartime honor culture, not religious paradise narratives.

Secular Marxist movements have conducted missions designed for self-sacrifice in pursuit of revolutionary objectives.

Suicide terrorism is a tactic. It has been used across religions, cultures, and ideologies.

The 72 virgins myth collapses this diversity into a single caricature.


Why the Caricature Survives

Stereotypes persist because they simplify.

The 72 virgins myth transforms geopolitical violence into a cultural punchline. It diverts attention from foreign policy decisions, occupation, ethnic grievances, and political marginalization. It reduces strategic analysis to mockery.

Blaming theology alone provides psychological comfort. If violence is purely “their religion,” then there is no need to examine structural causes.

But comfort does not produce clarity.


The Systems Problem We Avoid

Misdiagnosing violence leads to flawed responses.

If policymakers assume suicide terrorism is primarily a religious phenomenon, they may focus on religious reform rather than territorial disputes, state repression, or geopolitical intervention. That misreading can prolong conflict rather than resolve it.

The 72 virgins myth is not simply inaccurate. It distorts analysis. It narrows policy imagination. It prevents societies from seeing patterns across cases.

Political violence emerges where power, identity, and perceived injustice intersect. Religion can be present, but it is rarely the sole driver. When it is treated as the master explanation, serious inquiry stops.

And perhaps that is the real danger.

Caricatures are easier than systems thinking.

But systems, not slogans, shape outcomes.

Who Really Brings Death to the Middle East? A Data-Based Conflict Analysis


 The accusation is direct. Israel and its allies bring death to the Middle East.

The anger behind this claim reflects real suffering. The Gaza war has caused severe civilian casualties. The United States continues to provide more than $3 billion annually in military assistance to Israel under long-standing agreements confirmed by the U.S. Congressional Research Service.

Yet when measured against forty years of regional conflict data, the pattern of death in the Middle East tells a broader story.

This analysis draws from internationally recognized datasets and conflict research institutions.


Civil Wars vs Interstate Wars: What the Data Shows

According to the Uppsala Conflict Data Program (UCDP), civil wars account for the majority of battle-related deaths in the Middle East since 1980.
Source: https://ucdp.uu.se

Iran–Iraq War (1980–1988)

Estimates range from 500,000 to 1 million deaths.
Source: Pierre Razoux, The Iran–Iraq War, Harvard University Press

This war was initiated by Iraq under Saddam Hussein. It remains one of the deadliest conflicts in modern Middle Eastern history.

Syrian Civil War (2011–Present)

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights estimates over 500,000 deaths.
Source: https://www.syriahr.com

The United Nations Commission of Inquiry documented systematic attacks on civilians.
Source: https://www.ohchr.org

While Israel conducted limited strikes against Iranian targets inside Syria, the overwhelming destruction resulted from state repression and multi-actor civil war.

Yemen Conflict (Since 2014)

The United Nations Development Programme estimated hundreds of thousands of deaths, including indirect famine-related fatalities.
Source: https://www.undp.org

This conflict reflects proxy competition between regional powers, particularly Iran and Saudi Arabia.


Non-State Violence: ISIS and Jihadist Groups

ISIS committed mass killings across Iraq and Syria. The United Nations recognized ISIS crimes against the Yazidi population as genocide.
Source: https://www.un.org

Most ISIS victims were Muslim civilians.

This wave of violence emerged from institutional collapse following the Iraq War and Syrian instability.


The Iraq War and Regional Destabilization

The 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq dismantled state institutions and reshaped regional power balances. Political scientist Fawaz Gerges argues that Iraq became the epicenter of sectarian fragmentation.
Source: Gerges, ISIS: A History, Princeton University Press

The invasion contributed to insurgency, militia expansion, and eventually the rise of ISIS.

This represents a major case where Western intervention directly contributed to structural instability.


Where Israel Fits

Israel has conducted repeated military operations in Gaza and Lebanon. Civilian casualties are documented by organizations such as Human Rights Watch.
Source: https://www.hrw.org

Israel argues its actions respond to rocket attacks and security threats. Hamas is designated as a terrorist organization by the United States and the European Union.
Source: U.S. State Department Terrorist Designations
https://www.state.gov

The Israeli–Palestinian conflict remains unresolved and cyclical.

Israel’s actions contribute to regional death. The data shows they are one part of a wider conflict ecosystem.


Structural Drivers of Death in the Middle East

Conflict research identifies recurring drivers:

  1. Authoritarian repression

  2. Institutional collapse

  3. Proxy competition

  4. Ideological militancy

  5. Prolonged unresolved national conflicts

When fatalities are categorized by type, civil wars and state collapse consistently exceed interstate wars in cumulative deaths since 1980.

The dominant driver of death in the Middle East has been internal fragmentation amplified by regional and global intervention.


Conclusion: A Shared Architecture of Violence

Death in the Middle East cannot be attributed to a single actor.

Israel and its allies carry responsibility in specific conflicts.
Authoritarian regimes have killed their own citizens in larger aggregate numbers.
Militant groups have targeted civilians across borders.
External powers have destabilized states through invasion and proxy support.

The tragedy is systemic.

Blame may feel clear. Data is more complicated.

And if the region is ever to escape repeated cycles of violence, analysis must move beyond slogans and toward structural accountability.

ISO 20345:2022 Guide: Why Safety Shoes Are Not Just Equipment — They Are Insurance for Your Feet


 
Most workplace injuries don’t begin with a big accident. They start with something small. A dropped tool. A wet floor. One careless step.

And suddenly, a foot is crushed, burned, or worse.

That is why safety shoes are not just another item on the PPE checklist. They are the first line of defence between a worker and a permanent injury.

Safety Shoes: The Real Foundation of Workplace Protection

In environments like warehouses, factories, and airports, the risk to the feet is constant. Heavy loads move overhead. Forklifts cut across lanes. Metal edges, sharp objects, live wires — all part of a normal shift.

Reinforced safety shoes absorb that risk.

My son, Talha Khubaib, Head of EHS and Fire Safety at Changan Pakistan, often says that safety culture does not begin with slogans. It begins with equipment that actually protects people. As a Level 6 qualified HSEQ professional, his priority is simple: the right protection, every time.

For many workers, this means footwear that is:

  • Anti-static

  • Non-conductive

  • Slip resistant

  • Water resistant

  • Designed for long hours on hard surfaces

Under ISO 20345:2022, certified safety footwear must include a toe cap that can withstand:

  • 200-joule impact

  • 15 kN compression

That is the difference between a scare and a serious injury.

Understanding ISO 20345:2022 Categories

Not every workplace needs the same level of protection. The standard classifies safety shoes based on risk:

  • SB – Basic toe protection and slip resistance

  • S1 – SB plus antistatic features and energy-absorbing heel

  • S2 – S1 plus water resistance

  • S3 – S2 plus puncture-resistant midsole and deep-tread outsole

Choosing the wrong category is like wearing a helmet without a chin strap. Protection exists, but not where it matters.

Ergonomics: The Injury You Don’t See Coming

Foot injuries are not always dramatic. Sometimes the damage builds slowly.

Poor footwear leads to fatigue. Fatigue affects posture. Posture strains the knees, hips, and lower back. Over time, workers carry the cost in chronic pain.

Quality safety shoes provide arch support, shock absorption, and stability. Workers stay balanced, especially on uneven or slippery surfaces.

The 2022 update also strengthens slip-resistance testing on ceramic tiles. Another useful feature is the optional Ladder Grip (LG) marking, designed to improve stability on ladder rungs.

Small details. Big difference.

The Real Question

Companies often ask how much safety shoes cost.

The better question is:
How much does one injury cost?

Medical treatment. Lost workdays. Compensation. Reduced productivity. And the human cost — which no audit ever captures.

Talha’s approach remains straightforward: protective equipment is not an expense. It is the foundation of a resilient workforce.

Because in industrial environments, accidents rarely announce themselves.

They just happen. And when they do, your shoes are either protection — or regret

Selective Islamophobia: Why “Jihad” Is a Fear in Europe but a Paycheck in the Gulf

 One of the ugliest comments under the German housing discrimination case didn’t come from a European nationalist. It came from an Indian us...