Imagine modern skyscrapers akin to Dubai. Imagine white sand beaches and hotels. Imagine first class restaurants. And imagine them all sitting atop the world’s biggest mass grave.
The New York Times, the so-called “paper of record.” presents Jared Kushner’s plan as “glittering.” It is almost as if Gollum, himself, penned it.
As this grotesque plan was presented in the posh resort village of Davos, a place where Nazis holidayed in the 1930s, where only the world’s most monied scoundrels convene to discuss their portfolios and prospects, Benjamin Netanyahu sat at home, unable to attend for fear of being arrested for war crimes.
The Trump regime, which resembles more a band of two bit gangsters, is assembling a pack of jackals to feast on the carcass of Gaza. With Israel razing what is left of its society to dust and pushing the remaining population into walled, militarized ghettos or deported somewhere else.
Gaza is the template for what the powerful plan for the rest of us. Canadian Prime Minister, Mark Carney, said in his speech in Davos that “if we’re not at the table, we’re on the menu.” He was talking about the so-called “middle powers.” But the stark reality is that most of us will never be invited to the party. And if we are, it will be through the kitchen door and straight into the oven.
Gaza is only the beginning. Trump’s sham “Board of Peace” is both an oxymoron and an insult. Its raison d’etre is a mechanism for the wealthy and powerful to extract even more wealth, property and power. Billionaires like Peter Thiel will be integral to this plan. Through his surveillance company, Palantir, it will clamp down on dissent in a manner only dreamed about by elites in decades past.
Others, like Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates, Sam Altman and Michael Bloomberg, are heavily involved in this slash, extract and suture economy. Every region on earth is viewed as a capital investment to them. In truth, they were always viewed as such. But with the planet’s climate heating up, the game has become more cutthroat than ever before.
As for the rest of us, we are the dregs of the earth to them. An impediment which is best replaced by AI and robotics. Servants who cannot complain, cannot organize, cannot strike. We are expendable, as is democracy, a concept they see as quaint, but useless.
Gaza called out to us. It shouted its warning to the world. And it is still shouting. They aren’t listening. The question is, are we?
Kenn Maurice Orfanos, January 2026
