Are America and the West Not Doing the Same Thing?

 


They say Russia must end its occupation of Ukraine, Georgia, and parts of Africa. Fair enough. But it makes me think of something else. When the West speaks about “liberation” or “defense of democracy,” what does it really mean?

I have seen too many headlines that sound noble and end in rubble.


The Mirror We Refuse to Face

Take Iraq. The invasion that promised freedom left more than a million people dead and a generation without homes. Libya, once stable if repressive, was turned into a marketplace for human trafficking. Afghanistan was abandoned after twenty years of “nation-building,” leaving behind chaos and broken promises.

The tools are different but the method is the same. Airstrikes instead of tanks. Sanctions instead of soldiers. Loans and “partnerships” instead of open control. Yet the result is still dependence, still humiliation, still the loss of dignity for ordinary people.


A Softer Vocabulary for the Same Idea

Russia uses words like “security” and “protection.” America says “peacekeeping” and “counterterrorism.” Europe prefers “stabilization.”
Each finds a word to justify power. Each exports its will in the name of a higher cause.

In the Middle East, in Africa, in parts of Asia, the story repeats. Behind every noble declaration, there are oil routes, military bases, or mineral concessions. The flags change, the pattern does not.


The Human Cost Hidden in Plain Sight

When a family in Tripoli or Mosul loses their home, do they care whether the missile came from Moscow or Washington?
When food prices rise in Sudan or sanctions suffocate Iran, does the flag on the embargo matter?

Empires compete, and people pay. That is the part rarely shown in press briefings.


What If We Stepped Back

Maybe it is not about Russia versus the West at all. Maybe it is about how both sides see the rest of the world — not as equals, but as spaces to be managed, tested, or saved.

The tragedy is that moral language hides material hunger. Every empire learns to preach goodness to justify its reach. And every generation forgets how familiar it sounds.


Maybe that is what real decolonization means. Not slogans, not flags. Just learning to see power for what it is, wherever it comes from.

When the Superpower Says No: What U.S. Votes Reveal About Democracy at the United Nations

 To be published on medium.com

From Cuba to Climate, the world’s most powerful democracy keeps saying no to the very idea of collective welfare


When you scan the roll calls at the United Nations, one country keeps turning up on the lonely end of the tally. Against the “Right to Development.” Against ending the embargo on Cuba. Against the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Even against the International Day of Peaceful Coexistence.

It’s the United States—the self-proclaimed leader of the free world, the model democracy. And yet, time and again, Washington’s votes speak less of freedom and more of a deep discomfort with equality, solidarity, and global responsibility.


The pattern behind the “No”

Look closely, and a pattern forms. In November 2024, the U.S. voted against the UN resolution recognizing the Right to Development—a principle that every human being has a right to participate in, contribute to, and benefit from economic, social, cultural, and political development. The American explanation was clinical: the right “is not recognized in any of the core UN human rights conventions.”

A few months later, Washington voted against a resolution reaffirming the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, dismissing it as a “globalist endeavour inconsistent with U.S. sovereignty.” Then came the rejection of the Decade of Sustainable Forest Management, another nod to its resistance to UN-led climate initiatives.

And when 187 countries voted to end the decades-old Cuba embargo, the United States—joined only by Israel—stood apart again.

This is not diplomatic coincidence. It is ideological architecture.


War as an industry, not an aberration

If democracy is supposed to value peace, then the U.S. interpretation is an odd one. A nation that spends more on its military than the next ten countries combined often treats war less as tragedy and more as enterprise.

At the UN, this shows up in voting behaviour that sidelines peacebuilding when it challenges strategic or corporate interests. When the General Assembly voted on a framework for a “just and lasting peace” in Ukraine, the U.S. opposed it—aligning with the militarised logic that peace cannot precede victory.

The military-industrial complex Dwight Eisenhower warned about has become the spine of U.S. foreign policy. Every war, from Iraq to Ukraine, feeds a chain of supply, innovation, and profit. Drones, software, logistics, private contractors—war has become America’s largest export.

So when Washington resists UN resolutions about demilitarisation, nuclear restraint, or sustainable peace, it isn’t simply ideology. It’s economics.


Democracy for whom?

The irony deepens when we consider how these votes undermine the very values the U.S. claims to defend—freedom, democracy, and human rights. In principle, democracy should mean the will of the majority. In practice, at the UN, it often means the will of the wealthy.

Each “no” from Washington carries weight far beyond a single ballot. Aid, trade, debt, and technology are all instruments that can bend smaller nations to comply. A developing country that dares to defy the U.S. line risks economic punishment or diplomatic cold shoulders.

That is not democracy—it is dominance wrapped in democratic language.

Even the UN itself bends around this reality. The structure of the Security Council, with permanent veto powers for the U.S. and four other countries, is proof that global democracy is conditional. One veto can erase the will of nearly 200 nations.

If a superpower can routinely vote against global welfare measures and still claim moral leadership, what does democracy mean anymore?


Capitalism over cooperation

These votes also reveal something larger about the American worldview: a persistent belief that markets, not multilateralism, solve everything. The U.S. frequently opposes collective frameworks for redistribution—whether climate finance, global taxation, or technology sharing—because they run counter to the logic of profit.

In May 2025, for instance, Washington pushed to weaken a global development-finance deal in Seville, stripping it of language on climate, gender equality, and fossil-fuel phase-outs. Development, in this worldview, remains an investment opportunity, not a moral duty.

At its core, it’s a choice between two futures. One imagines a planet governed by cooperation, sustainability, and fairness. The other is still trapped in the 20th-century model of extraction, arms, and capital accumulation. America’s record suggests it knows which one benefits its corporations more.


The illusion of moral authority

And yet, at home, the U.S. continues to sell its foreign policy as “defending democracy.” The problem is that democracy without empathy becomes theatre. When the same hand that signs human-rights statements also blocks food, medicine, and development funds through sanctions, the rhetoric collapses.

The UN, too, becomes complicit—by design or by paralysis. Its structure allows the very nations most responsible for war and inequality to police everyone else. It preaches universality but practices hierarchy.

From Karachi or Havana or Kigali, the message looks different: the votes of the powerful often decide whether clean water flows, whether sanctions choke a child’s medicine, whether peace talks ever begin.


What these votes really say

Perhaps the most telling part is not the votes themselves, but the explanations attached to them. The U.S. rarely says it opposes humanity. It says it is defending “sovereignty,” “efficiency,” or “freedom of markets.” Yet behind that language lies the same old hierarchy—the belief that power, not justice, governs progress.

Democracy, in the American sense, seems less about giving voice to the global majority and more about maintaining control of the global system.

Until that changes, the United Nations will remain a stage, not a parliament—a place where the powerful pretend to listen, while the rest of the world keeps counting the cost of every “No.”

How Seniors Can Outsmart Airline Pricing Algorithms

 

Because airfares should reward experience, not confusion


When my friend Richard, a retired airport staffer, told me how people book tickets, I laughed and winced at the same time.
“They don’t book flights,” he said, “they wrestle algorithms.”

He’s right. What used to be a clear price board is now a shifting target. You check a fare on Monday, and by Wednesday it’s higher. Then on Thursday afternoon, mysteriously, it drops again. Seniors, who often book calmly and early, are usually the first to pay more simply because the system predicts they will.

But the good news is, you can outsmart it.


The Game Airlines Don’t Admit Exists

Airline pricing runs on dynamic algorithms, meaning fares change constantly based on demand, cookies, browsing history, and even your location.

In 2024, the U.S. Department of Transportation confirmed that airlines use Revenue Management Systems to predict “willingness to pay” based on search patterns. If you check a route multiple times, the system flags you as a serious buyer and raises the price slightly the next time you visit.

That’s why your friend who books from a café sometimes gets a cheaper fare than you sitting at home.

So, before you book:

  • Clear your cookies or use an incognito tab.

  • Use a VPN to compare fares from different regions. Prices can vary even within the same country.

  • Avoid logging into your frequent flyer account until checkout. That prevents the airline from tracking your interest level too early.

For American travelers, the DOT’s consumer guide explains your rights clearly:
👉 U.S. Department of Transportation: Aviation Consumer Protection


Timing is the Secret Weapon

You’ve heard people say “book on Tuesdays.” It’s partly true, but the real pattern is about advance timing, not weekdays.

Studies by CheapAir.com and Hopper show that domestic U.S. flights are cheapest 60–90 days before departure, while international fares drop about 100–150 days in advance.

For seniors flying from Karachi, here’s what the data says:

  • Middle East routes (Emirates, Qatar, Etihad): Cheapest 8–10 weeks ahead.

  • European routes (Turkish, Lufthansa): Best prices appear around 90–120 days out.

  • U.S. routes via Gulf or Turkish hubs: Lowest fares usually on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons Pakistan time, when airlines quietly adjust prices for the American market overnight.

You can cross-check this data using:
👉 Google Flights Price Graph
👉 ITA Matrix by Google — a powerful tool that shows hidden fare classes.


The Seat Trick No One Mentions

Seniors often prefer aisle seats or extra legroom. Airlines know this and charge extra. But here’s the quiet loophole:

If you request a seat “for medical comfort or back support” at the counter, agents can reassign you without a fee if seats are available. Mentioning a medical or mobility concern (even mild) triggers a different response. It’s not gaming the system, it’s using your rights.

You can confirm this under the U.S. Air Carrier Access Act:
👉 Air Carrier Access Act Summary (U.S. DOT)

Internationally, the same rights apply under:
👉 IATA Resolution 700 on Passenger Services

For flights departing from Karachi, you can refer to:
👉 Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority Passenger Rights


When to Call, Not Click

Airlines still keep certain discounts off their websites, especially senior fares, veteran fares, and multi-city medical fares.

  • American Airlines Senior Desk: +1-800-433-7300

  • United Airlines Senior Travel: Available through phone booking only

  • Turkish Airlines Karachi Office: +92-21-111-849-849

  • Emirates Senior Assistance Line: www.emirates.com/pk/english/help

If you’re flying from Karachi, these calls can save you money because the human agents see fare buckets the website hides.


The Human Side of It

A reader once told me, “I don’t want discounts. I just want fairness.”
That line sums it up.

Seniors built the flying world that now treats them like variables in a spreadsheet. Yet, for those who know where to look, in privacy settings, in timing charts, in polite phone calls, the old travel wisdom still holds. Patience and kindness open more doors than frustration ever could.

The next time you book a ticket, remember that the system may be smart, but you’ve lived longer. Use that experience.

Why Divisive Polls Are the New Weapons of Influence

 

A strange kind of poll keeps appearing on social media these days.
You’ve probably seen them — posts that ask “Who’s the real enemy of America?” and list options like “The Left,” “Islam,” “Russia,” or “China.”
They look like casual opinion games. They’re not.

These polls are part of a much larger pattern — the gamification of hate.

The Hidden Purpose

They’re not meant to measure public opinion.
They’re designed to shape it.
Every such poll forces people into a moral corner: either you’re “with us,” or you’re “against us.”
That binary framing isn’t about truth; it’s about loyalty.
And loyalty sells — to algorithms, to influencers, and to political machines that feed off division.

Accounts that post such content — like the “Ivanka Trump News” fan page that recently asked followers to pick America’s “most dangerous enemy” — know exactly what they’re doing. They trade outrage for reach.
Every comment, angry or supportive, boosts their visibility.
It’s emotional clickbait disguised as patriotism.

Manufactured Consensus

When thousands of people click an option that says “Democrats are America’s greatest threat” or “Islam is the problem,” it creates the illusion that such opinions are normal — even popular.
This is called manufacturing consensus.
The same trick has been used for decades in propaganda campaigns: repeat a false idea often enough, and it starts to feel like fact.

What It Destroys

The cost of this manipulation isn’t abstract.
It’s human.

  1. National Unity Erodes – When citizens start seeing other citizens as enemies, society loses its cohesion.

  2. Prejudice Becomes Normal – Religion and race become political fault lines again. Hate crimes follow words.

  3. Ignorance Becomes Power – Complex issues are replaced with slogans. Thoughtful disagreement gives way to blind rage.

  4. Algorithms Radicalize – Once you engage with one such poll, social media starts feeding you more of the same — harder, angrier, narrower.

The Real Enemy

It’s not Democrats.
Not Muslims.
Not even foreign rivals.
The real enemy is the mindset that profits from dividing people and calling it patriotism.
Every time we “vote” on such polls, we feed that system — one click at a time.

Maybe the smarter question isn’t “Who’s America’s biggest enemy?” but “Who benefits when we stop listening to each other?”

Nvidia’s $1 Billion Bet on Nokia: The Next AI Frontier Isn’t in Silicon, It’s in Signals

 



When Nvidia quietly bought a 2.9 percent stake in Nokia this week, few noticed how strategic the move was. A billion dollars isn’t charity. It’s chess.

For years, Nvidia has ruled the world of artificial intelligence through its chips and data centers. But AI doesn’t just live in silicon anymore. It needs fast, adaptive networks that can move information as quickly as it’s computed. That is where Nokia comes in.

From Phones to Fiber

Many still remember Nokia for the indestructible 3310 and the slogan “Connecting People.” The phones are gone, but the idea remains. Nokia now connects the world in a deeper way — through 5G towers, optical networks, and internet backbones. It is the second largest telecommunications company in the world, holding over seven thousand patents in 5G alone.

While most think Nokia disappeared when Microsoft bought its mobile division in 2014, the real company survived. Under CEO Rajeev Suri, Nokia reinvented itself between 2014 and 2020, buying Alcatel-Lucent, inheriting Bell Labs, and focusing entirely on communications technology. It was a quiet transformation that turned a fallen mobile giant into a network powerhouse.

Why Nvidia Chose Nokia

Nvidia isn’t just buying stock. It’s buying access. Nokia controls the “data highways” that AI needs to function. Every AI model — from self-driving cars to remote surgery — depends on those highways to move signals in real time.

So this deal gives Nvidia something it cannot build alone: reach. The ability to extend its AI ecosystem from data centers to the edge of the network — into routers, 5G towers, and base stations.

A YouTube commenter from the UAE recently said, “I’m working under Nokia here; they already captured most of the market.” That’s not hype. Nokia’s equipment runs the networks that carry our calls, our streaming, and soon, our machine-to-machine communication.

Old Power Meets New Intelligence

Nvidia brings the intelligence. Nokia brings the durability. Together they could shape the next evolution of connectivity — smart networks that don’t just carry data but learn from it. Networks that can predict traffic, adapt in milliseconds, and secure themselves before threats even appear.

The real prize isn’t short-term profit but control over tomorrow’s network intelligence, where every signal learns before it connects.

When Borders Blur: The Vision of Greater Israel and What It Means for the Region


Israel’s ever-shifting borders reveal a deeper logic: the idea of Greater Israel. Drawing on historical Zionism, modern settlement policy and Islamic-prophetic interpretations advanced by Dr Israr Ahmed, this blog unpacks what lies ahead for Palestinians and the wider Middle East.


Introduction

Did you know that Israel has never fully defined its borders? Most nations show on official maps exactly where their sovereignty begins and ends—but Israel does not. Its borders with Egypt and Jordan were first drawn as armistice lines after the 1948 Arab-Israeli war, later formalised through peace treaties in 1979 and 1994. But its boundaries with Lebanon, Syria, Gaza, and the West Bank remain vague or unrecognised. Even within Israel itself, there is no official map showing clearly agreed national boundaries.

This ambiguity is not accidental. As long as Israel’s borders aren’t set in stone, they can continue to shift. This is the story of a borderless project—the Zionist vision of Greater Israel—and what it means not just for Palestinians, but for the entire region.


1. The Origins of the Idea

For more than a century, Zionist leaders have pressed for the establishment of a Jewish state that stretches far beyond the territory Israel controls today. In the late 1800s, early Zionist thinkers debated bold visions for a homeland.

  • Theodor Herzl, the Austrian-Hungarian founder of modern Zionism, imagined borders stretching from the Euphrates in Iraq to the Nile in Egypt.

  • Zeev Jabotinsky, a Russian-born ideologue tied to the Likud tradition, foresaw Israeli sovereignty on both sides of the Jordan River.

In 1947, Zionist leaders accepted the UN partition plan that proposed two states—one Palestinian, one Jewish—but this was a tactical move. David Ben‑Gurion, Israel’s first Prime Minister, emphasised that this was only a first step toward achieving control over all of what he envisioned as Greater Israel. His strategy: secure international recognition for part of the land, then build military strength to take the rest. And that is precisely what unfolded.


2. Expansion Through War and Facts on the Ground

In 1948, Israel expanded far beyond the UN partition lines during the Nakba: Zionist militias expelled over 750,000 Palestinians and destroyed or depopulated more than 400 villages.
In 1967, Israel seized the West Bank, Gaza, the Golan Heights, and the Sinai Peninsula. While it later returned the Sinai to Egypt after the 1973 war, the other territories remained under its control.

Since then, expansion has continued—not always through open war, but through “facts on the ground”: settlements, outposts, military zones across the West Bank that are illegal under international law but practically irreversible. The number of Israeli settlers in the West Bank and East Jerusalem has grown from a few thousand in 1967 to more than 800,000 today—and the past year marked the largest expansion yet.


3. From Fringe Vision to State Policy

For a long period, despite gradual expansion, most Israeli leaders publicly distanced themselves from the explicitly “Greater Israel” formula—so as not to provoke neighbouring Arab states with whom they sought normalization. But radical settler groups such as Gush Emunim (founded in the 1970s) never abandoned the vision—they tied settlement expansion to religious destiny.

Today, Israel’s government is widely considered the furthest-right in its history. Extremist ministers such as Itamar Ben‑Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich have placed territorial expansion at the heart of their platforms. Even Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has recently embraced the idea of his generation carrying forward a “historic and spiritual mission”. This alignment of ideology and state power means the idea of Greater Israel is no longer a fringe fantasy—it is entering the mainstream.


4. Dr Israr Ahmed’s Prophetic View

Dr Israr Ahmed, a prominent Pakistani Islamic scholar, offered a distinct angle rooted in Islamic eschatology: he argued that the pattern of expansion and control he observed in Israel corresponds with Hadith-predictions about the end-times.

  • He links the movement of certain territories and their removal from Muslim hands to the narrative in Hadiths where specific lands will be reclaimed or lost in the lead-up to final days. (See his speeches “Greater Israel, The Jewish Plan for the Middle East!” and “The Greater Israel Plan? Pakistan’s Role”.) YouTube+3SoundCloud+3YouTube+3

  • According to him, the ambiguous borders of Israel and its ability to redefine territorial control are signs of a bigger prophetic arc still unfolding.

  • He warns that the Muslim world’s inaction in the face of settlement, occupation and expansion plays into this larger script of transition and transformation.

  • For example, one lecture mentions: “All these countries are present in the Hadith that they will get out of the hands of the Muslims, whom the Jews include in Greater Israel, Syria…” facebook.com

While his reading is interpretative rather than universally accepted in the Islamic tradition, it offers a deeply felt lens from which many in South Asia apprehend the geopolitical shifts in Israel-Palestine.


5. Consequences and the Road Ahead

This convergence of ideology, strategy, and prophecy has real-world implications:

  • Israeli soldiers have been photographed wearing “Greater Israel” patches in the war in Gaza.

  • Senior Israeli politicians have publicly called for the removal of Gaza’s population and replacement with settlers.

  • Some voices even invoke Nazi-Germany’s Lebensraum doctrine—“living space”—to justify expansion into southern Lebanon and Syria.

  • In the West Bank, new settlement approvals are designed to cut the territory into non-contiguous fragments—effectively ruling out a viable future Palestinian state.

  • Because Israel never formally defined its borders, every war, land-grab or bombing has the potential to redraw control — each “fact on the ground” inches Israel closer to turning Greater Israel from ideological ambition into reality.

  • And every time the global community averts its gaze, permits violations, or fails to enforce international law, Israel’s leadership becomes more emboldened. History shows expansionist powers won’t stop unless compelled to.


6. Personal Reflection (Karachi-Voice)

Living in Karachi, hearing about these distant border shifts, it’s easy to feel removed—yet the ripples come our way too. The silence in global fora, the recalibrated alliances in the Gulf, the changing map of refugees and migration—all tie into this story of un-defined borders and expansive ambition. If peaceful borders are the foundation for sovereign states, then ambiguous borders are the foundation for ongoing conflict.

As a writer rooted in South Asia, I notice the same logic re-emerging in other contested zones: ambiguity, power-vacuum, incremental fact-making, and the silence that lets big ideas sneak into policy. The Gaza war is not just a local demand; it is being shaped by a vision of statehood, land, prophecy, and rhythm of history.


7. Call to Action

  • Map-makers, policymakers and global institutions: ask who draws the lines when lines don’t exist?

  • For Muslim thinkers and South Asian intellectuals: consider how prophetic readings like Dr Israr’s shape popular awareness and policy engagement.

  • For civil society and global media: pay attention to “facts on the ground”, not just the cease-fires—because they prefigure the next map.

  • And for readers: when borders blur, ask whose vision is being made real, and what human cost lies behind the lines we don’t see.

Justice Has No Flag: Why War Crimes Are War Crimes — No Matter Who Commits Them

 After my last piece on October 7, someone left a comment that stopped me mid-scroll.

“It takes being a real human to write something like this,” they said. Then they added something I’ve been thinking about ever since:

“Hamas attacking soldiers and taking POWs are not war crimes. All civilian killings are potential war crimes. Targeting civilians and taking civilian hostages is absolutely a war crime. Hamas definitely committed war crimes on Oct. 7.

Israel has been committing war crimes since 1948. That does not justify Hamas committing war crimes.

Which also means that Israel has no justification for committing war crimes after Oct. 7. Those crimes include attacking anyone inside Gaza, as it is Israeli-occupied territory.”

That comment said, in a few tight lines, what whole conferences and TV panels have failed to say: that justice cannot wear a uniform.


The Law of the Unequal

I have spent the past year watching a strange inversion unfold. The side that speaks of resistance justifies terror. The side that speaks of self-defense rains bombs on a trapped population. Both speak of survival. Both speak of God. Neither speaks of law.

International law, of course, is not perfect. But it is the last fragile thread that holds the idea of shared morality between nations. The Geneva Conventions were not written for perfect times; they were written for war. They remind us that even during horror, the line between soldier and civilian must hold.

When Hamas crossed that line on October 7, the world saw barbarity in motion.
When Israel crossed it again, and again, and again in Gaza, the world looked away.

In Gaza, parents now sleep in shifts. One stays awake to listen for drones, the other curls around the children as if their arms could shield them from steel. Bread lines stretch through bomb dust. Babies drink water mixed with ash because it is all their mothers can find.


The Mirror of 1948

The commenter was right to bring up 1948. That year, the foundations of the modern Middle East were laid on broken promises and uprooted families. Villages erased. Children made stateless.
What began as displacement became occupation. What began as security became apartheid.

Israel’s long history of impunity doesn’t erase Hamas’s crimes, but it does explain the rage that birthed them. And yet, if we start justifying cruelty through memory, there will never be an end to vengeance.

I think often of what my father used to say when we spoke of wars at the dinner table in Karachi. The radio hummed in the background, the smell of lentils thick in the air. He would pause mid-bite, look at me, and say, “Son, if both sides are right, it means both sides are wrong in some way.” Those words have aged better than most governments.


The Human Cost That No One Counts

Each time I see footage from Gaza now, it feels like déjà vu layered with disbelief. Hospitals turned to ashes. Whole families gone.
Israel says it is targeting Hamas. But the rubble always hides children.

And yet, even as I write this, some will say that condemning Hamas is betrayal and condemning Israel is antisemitism. That is how far we have drifted from the language of conscience.

The truth is simpler.
Hamas committed war crimes. Israel is committing them still.
No flag makes that right.

 Somewhere in Tel Aviv, a mother still keeps her son’s room ready, waiting for a hostage exchange that may never come. In Rafah, another mother digs with her hands because the excavators have run out of fuel. Two women, same night, same prayer — “Please let my child live.”


Why the Comment Mattered

What moved me most was not the legal accuracy but the human honesty in that reader’s words. To say both sides are guilty takes courage in a world addicted to sides.

Maybe that’s what being “a real human” means now — refusing to let horror blind us to principle.

In Munich, my daughter told me how her German colleagues now whisper around the topic, afraid to choose the wrong sentence. “No one wants to talk about Gaza,” she said. “It’s like grief itself became dangerous.” I told her silence can be its own kind of war crime too.

We cannot control armies or governments, but we can decide how we speak about them.
And sometimes, that choice — to speak evenly, painfully, without loyalty — is the only act of resistance left.

Why Cities from Jakarta to New York are Slowly Disappearing Beneath Our Feet: The Sinking Reality of Karachi

 I remember watching the ground crack in a neighboring urban block and wondering if the earth itself was tired of holding our weight. The bl...