"I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life"

Father God, thank you for the love of the truth you have given me. Please bless me with the wisdom, knowledge and discernment needed to always present the truth in an attitude of grace and love. Use this blog and Northwoods Ministries for your glory. Help us all to read and to study Your Word without preconceived notions, but rather, let scripture interpret scripture in the presence of the Holy Spirit. All praise to our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

Please note: All my writings and comments appear in bold italics in this colour

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Christian Genocide in the Democratic Republic of Congo

 

Democratic Republic of Congo: Muslims ‘began killing many Christians who were crying to Jesus Christ,’ murder 21


Terror is not incidental to this. It is the whole point of the endeavor: “Make ready for them all that you can of force and of warhorses, so that by them you may strike terror in the enemy of Allah and your enemy…” — Qur’an 8:60

The jihadis want to frighten the Christians into fleeing the area. Then they can claim it as “Muslim land.” This is what has happened all over the “Islamic world.” In fact, it is what created the domains of Islam, far more than preaching Islam ever did. The domains of Islam are the product of terrorizing Infidels into submission and conversion, by killing them and/or making life so difficult for them as non-Muslims that they see conversion to Islam as the only way forward.

Apakolu, Democratic Republic of Congo, International Christian Concern


More Christians Slaughtered in Biakato, DRC

International Christian Concern, May 14, 2026:

On May 13, ADF rebels attacked Christians in Biakato, Mambassa Territory, Ituri province, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), slaughtering 21 people and burning down homes.

“The rebels came during the night and started tying people,” a villager named Kabanga said. “Then they began killing many Christians who were crying to Jesus Christ. I had hidden myself under the bed. After that, I started hearing loud pangas (large knives) on Christian bodies and the cries of many people crying for help.”

The Islamic group, which intends to expand its religion through the killing of innocent Christians, has now become a source of fear in the DRC, especially in the east.

Biakato is fast becoming the site of some of the rebels’ deadliest attacks. This is evident by the successive attacks that have taken place since May 5, extending to nearby communities where many people were brutally killed.

“ADF Islamists have killed a lot of people among us!” a local named Bibuya said. “We just found a few, but others are nowhere to be seen. Sometimes smell has helped us find others who were not found on the day of the attacks. We just go to bed not knowing what the night will bring.”…



UK becoming more godless every day > Preacher arrested for preaching

 

UK pastor arrested for preaching Islam’s history of violence and calling on Muslims to be saved by Jesus


Merely a shadow of its former self, Britain  has become unrecognizable as it descends into the abyss of becoming a Sharia-adherent country.

Meanwhile, as the UK embraces dhimmitude, Tommy Robinson told tens of thousands of freedom supporters at his “Unite the Kingdom” march on Saturday to prepare the “battle of Britain,” as the country stands at a turning point:

Photo: Screenshot, X


UK pastor says he was arrested for preaching the gospel, speaking out against Islam

by Kristine Parks,  Fox News, May 17, 2026:

Steve Maile was handcuffed and detained for 12 hours, faces public order offense charge

A 66-year-old U.K. pastor arrested while street preaching in London, said he is facing hate speech-related charges for preaching the Bible and speaking out against Islam.

“It’s called inciting religious hatred — which is false,” Pastor Steve Maile told Fox News Digital. “The cross of Christ is a message of hope, love, mercy, and reconciliation to a fallen world… How could that be hate?”

Maile is a gospel singer and the senior pastor of Oasis City Church in Watford, England, a town outside London. For 45 years, the New Zealand native has preached and performed mission work globally. He told Fox News Digital that he often performs famous songs with lyrics altered to convey a Christian message.

However, a complaint led to his arrest while he was preaching on a high street in Watford on April 18. According to the Christian Legal Centre, which is supporting Maile’s case, he was singing and preaching a gospel message for about 10 minutes when he discussed Islam’s history of violence and called on Muslims to be saved by Jesus…


Politics at Cannes > Right wing Canal+ drops bomb on Cannes Film Festival

 

French film giant Canal+ to blacklist hundreds over petition against right-wing owner

FRANCE

France's biggest film producer Canal+ will no longer work with hundreds of industry professionals who signed a petition against right-wing billionaire owner Vincent Bolloré, the group announced Sunday at the Cannes Film Festival, sending shockwaves through the European film industry. The petition called on people to oppose "the growing grip of the far right" on French film.

By: FRANCE 24

Video by: Nicholas RUSHWORTH

The head of France's biggest film producer, Canal+, said Sunday that the group would no longer work with 600 industry professionals who signed a petition against right-wing billionaire owner Vincent Bolloré.

The announcement, made at the Cannes Film Festival, is likely to send shockwaves through the European industry at the annual gathering of the world's movie elite on the French Riviera.

READ MOREFrench media tycoon Vincent Bolloré casts shadow over Cannes opening

"I experienced that petition as an injustice toward the Canal+ teams, who are committed to defending the independence of Canal+ and the full diversity of its choices," chief executive Maxime Saada said on Sunday in Cannes.

"I will no longer work with and I no longer want Canal to work with the people who signed that petition," he added.

The petition called people to mobilise against "the growing grip of the far right" on the film industry under the influence of Bolloré and the Canal+ group.

Maxime Saada, président de la chaîne de télévision privée française Canal+, pose à son arrivée à la 46e cérémonie des César, qui s'est tenue à l'Olympia à Paris le 12 mars 2021. © Thomas Samson, AFP

Signatories included French superstar Juliette Binoche as well as director Arthur Harari, who co-wrote the Oscar-winning "Anatomy of a Fall" in 2023 and is premiering his film "The Unknown" in the main competition in Cannes.

Emmanuel Marre, whose film "A Man Of His Time" about France's collaboration under Nazi rule, is also in the Cannes competition and also signed the petition.


The tumult mirrors similar upheaval in the media and publishing worlds where Bolloré, who is close to far-right politicians, is reshaping businesses he controls from television channels to publishing houses.

In a sign of Bolloré's divisive reputation, the Canal+ logo was booed in Cannes at some screenings this year, including for the opening film "The Electric Kiss".

Last month, more than 100 authors at the Bolloré-owned Grasset publishing group, home to some of the biggest names in French literature, said they would leave after the ousting of its long-time CEO.

Bollore's aggressive expansion into the French media in recent years has been cheered by conservatives as rebalancing what they see as long-standing left-wing bias.

The billionaire, a devout Catholic who made his money in logistics, has been frequently compared by commentators to Australian-born US media mogul Rupert Murdoch, with the Bolloré-owned CNews news channel bearing similarities to Murdoch's right-wing US network Fox News.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)




Monday, May 18, 2026

Military Madness > NATO breaking up! What will that look like?

 

North Atlantic separation: What might follow a NATO divorce

Canceled troop deployments and delayed weapons deliveries are signaling the end of the bloc’s old military order

Published 18 May, 2026 12:55

North Atlantic separation: What might follow a NATO divorce

The decoupling of the US and European armies within NATO is no longer theoretical – the process is already underway. American troop deployments are being canceled, and weapons deliveries – delayed.

The latest example came in early May, when the US canceled the rotation of 4,000 troops into Poland, a week after the announcement Washington is pulling 5,000 soldiers from Germany following German Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s criticism of the US-Israeli war on Iran as misguided.

US War Secretary Pete Hegseth has also canceled the deployment to Germany of a battalion specializing in long-range missiles, according to a leaked memo.

The bigger picture: America in Europe 

US forces have been permanently stationed on the European continent since World War II. Up to 80,000 American troops were stationed there in 2025 under a “coupled” system that is now unravelling. 

Both US President Donald Trump and his predecessor Joe Biden have signaled that Washington’s commitment to European defense is on the wane.

Washington’s National Security Strategy currently describes the EU as a “globalist entity” designed to “screw” the US while free-riding on military protection. In a profound break with decades of political orthodoxy, Trump has publicly berated European leaders over military spending, questioned the value of NATO, and openly speculated about US troop withdrawals from Germany, Spain and Italy.

Responses by NATO’s European members have ranged from outright rejection of US militarism, as in the case of Spain, to both verbal criticism and acquiescence.

What decoupling actually means 

Decoupling armies in practical terms means the withdrawal of most of the 80,000 US troops in Europe, ending the post-1945 tradition of combined territorial defense and deterrence.

NATO’s European capitals are thus waking up to the prospect of living without the US military umbrella. “For the first time in human memory, we are alone,” as ex-ECB chief Mario Draghi has put it.

The limits of US power 

The US-Israeli war on Iran has stretched American stocks of ammunition, artillery systems, and missile interceptors thinner than at any point since the end of the Cold War.

US officials have warned several NATO members – including Baltic and Scandinavian states – that crucial weapons deliveries through the Foreign Military Sales program will be delayed, citing the US-Israeli war on Iran.

Beyond Iran, China remains the Pentagon’s primary long-term concern. Every brigade kept in Europe is one less available for a potential Pacific conflict.

Europe has become a secondary theater where NATO’s Euro-bloc will be expected to fend for itself.

‘Big bang’ or non-starter – EU’s army plan 

Earlier this year, EU defense chief Andrius Kubilius called for a “big bang in defense” – a 100,000-strong standing army to operate independently of the US and NATO.

The idea is deeply controversial. It would violate the EU treaty, require a new intergovernmental accord, and force member states to cede sovereignty over their armed forces – a non-starter for many capitals.

France has long championed the plan, with President Emmanuel Macron arguing for “strategic autonomy” from Washington, though Paris insists its nuclear deterrent would stay outside any joint command.

In practice, such a force would be a tightly integrated EU military structure built around shared command, joint procurement, and rapid-reaction units, rather than a single army replacing national militaries. Operational control would likely fall to an expanded EU military headquarters in Brussels.

But analysts say the idea faces insurmountable legal hurdles: the EU’s founding treaties explicitly rule out a common army, and defense policy remains the exclusive preserve of national governments.

Europe’s capability problem 

Europe’s armies however remain highly dependent on the US for spy satellites, long-range missiles, heavy airlift aircraft, and undersea warfare capacity.

Earlier this month, German defense experts and industry executives published a paper arguing that EU defense autonomy will cost around $59 billion per year for the next decade.

The dramatic rise in NATO’s European members military spending has not translated into greater operational autonomy, though that may come. Vast amounts have been and will be spent, but capabilities remain fragmented across the bloc.

The internal European scramble 

Across the continent NATO’s European members are arming themselves at a pace not seen since the Cold War, citing intelligence reports of a ‘Russian threat’ – despite Moscow’s outright rejection of such – in an apparent effort to consolidate the EU and to reboot their economies through militarization.

In total, European NATO members spent a combined $559 billion on defense in 2025, with Germany’s outlays rising 24% to $114 billion and Spain’s jumping 50% to $40.2 billion.

The Franco-German brotherhood is the obvious place to find dissonance. In March, French President Emmanuel Macron announced plans to expand his country’s nuclear stockpile to ensure a secrecy-obscured arsenal so that “no state, however powerful, could shield itself from it, and no state, however vast, would recover from it.”

Germany’s Merz has unlocked the country’s historical debt brake and spent billions on military capacity while private demand in his country collapses and his electorate lurches to the far right. In a speech just days after the 80th anniversary of the fall of the Third Reich last May, Merz vowed to turn the Bundeswehr into the “strongest conventional army in Europe.”

Berlin remains deeply uncomfortable with Macron’s nuclear overtures, while German officials have started recalling their country’s past military forays in ways that are making neighboring countries nervous.

The view from Moscow 

For Russia, the militarization of European states and transformation of the EU into a military alliance resembling NATO, but without US defense and deterrence, presents a direct and growing threat. European elites have a historical tradition of ‘marching eastward’.

Russia has scorned the EU army idea, suggesting that the bloc should first tackle its internal problems – refugees, energy dependence, and lagging NATO contributions.

Moscow has also repeatedly condemned the EU’s militarization as “using ostentatious Russophobia” as a pretext to turn Russia into a “model external enemy” and divert attention from internal European crises.

For Moscow, any transformation of the EU into a military alliance would raise security concerns and upset an already fragile strategic balance in Europe.


The madness, of course, is that Europe is preparing for an invasion by Russia that will never happen. They are completely oblivious to the real enemy within. Within is few very short years, long before Moscow has recovered from it Ukrainian headache, civil war will break out across the continent as Europeans finally wake up to the threat from Islam. 


The weapons developed for a war against Russia will be of little use in urban street fighting and Europe will have to develop more new weapons systems at great costs.

There is nothing good in the near future for Europe!