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Welcome to Grappy's Soap Box - a platform for insightful commentary on politics, media, free speech, climate change, and more, focusing on Australia, the USA, and global perspectives.

Monday, 2 March 2026

Weekly Roundup - Top Articles and Commentary from Week 10 of 2026




Here are links to some selected articles of interest and our posts from this week.


We welcome all feedback; please feel free to submit your comments or contact me via email at grappysb@gmail.com or on X at @grappysb

Iran War Reveals Where Everyone Stands

There are moments in history when ambiguity evaporates.

Moments when events are so stark, so morally unclouded, that they expose people for who they really are.

The recent US–Israel action against Iran’s Islamist regime is one of those moments.

For decades, the regime of the Ayatollahs has terrorised its own people, funded proxy wars across the Middle East, armed militias sworn to the destruction of Israel, chanted “Death to America,” and worked relentlessly toward nuclear capability. It has crushed dissent at home with brutality. In the most recent uprising alone, some 30,000 Iranians are believed to have been murdered, disappeared, or executed.

This is not a misunderstood government.
It is a terror regime.

And now it has been struck.

The Scenes They Don’t Show You

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While some Western commentators wring their hands, many ordinary Iranians are dancing in the streets. Ex-patriate Iranians around the world are waving pre-revolutionary flags. Women who have lived under compulsory veiling laws and morality police brutality are daring to hope.

Hope.

Hope that the regime that has held their country hostage since 1979 may finally be weakened beyond repair.

This is not a people mourning a fallen hero.
It is a people glimpsing freedom.

The Regime and Its Axis

The Islamic Republic has not acted alone. It has aligned itself with the anti-Western strongmen of our age — figures such as Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping — forming an axis of convenience united by one common thread: opposition to American influence and democratic values.

Iran has financed and armed terror militias. It has sought to encircle Israel with rocket arsenals. It has pursued nuclear capability while preaching annihilation.

This was never about peaceful coexistence.

It was about power, intimidation, and ideological domination.

And Then… The Exposure

Here is where things become uncomfortable.

Because war does not only expose regimes.
It exposes us.

When a terror state is struck, you would expect peace-loving citizens everywhere to sigh with relief.

Instead, what do we see?

• Politicians using carefully crafted, weasel-worded statements — condemning “violence on all sides” rather than acknowledging moral asymmetry.
• Public broadcasters framing the story through the lens of American aggression rather than Iranian tyranny.
• Mosques in Western nations reportedly holding vigils for the dead dictator rather than for the thousands murdered by his regime.

In that moment, masks slip.

Those who claim to stand for human rights suddenly find nuance when the oppressor is anti-American.
Those who preach tolerance discover sympathy for the intolerant.
Those who condemn “colonialism” remain silent about Islamist imperialism.

It is revealing.

This Is Not Complicated

Was the Iranian regime democratic? No.
Did it murder its own citizens? Yes.
Did it sponsor terror armies sworn to destroy Israel? Yes.
Did it seek nuclear weapons while chanting for the destruction of the West? Yes.

If Iranians are celebrating the death of a dictator, who exactly are Western critics defending?

Not the Iranian people.
Not peace.
Not freedom.

They are defending a regime.

The Moral Line

History will remember this moment not merely for missiles and military strategy, but for the clarity it brought.

There are those who stand with oppressed peoples seeking liberation.

And there are those who, out of ideology, tribal politics, or fear of upsetting voting blocs, cannot bring themselves to say plainly that a terror regime’s fall is a good thing.

When the people of Iran dance in the streets at the weakening of their oppressors, all freedom-loving people should celebrate with them.

Because this was never about America versus Iran.
It was about tyranny versus liberty.

And now we know who stands where.

Thursday, 26 February 2026

Is Lowering Cholesterol Always Good for you?

We've all heard the mantra: lower your cholesterol to save your heart. It's drilled into us by doctors, guidelines, and endless ads for statins. But what if that advice isn't just flawed—what if it's deadly? A recent video from Nick Norwitz MD PhD uncovers a forgotten experiment that flips the script on everything we thought we knew about fats and heart health. If you're skeptical of Big Pharma's one-size-fits-all narratives, this is a must-watch. Let's dive in.

The Experiment That Vanished

Back in the late 1960s, researchers launched the Minnesota Coronary Experiment—a massive, gold-standard trial with over 9,000 participants from mental hospitals and nursing homes. The goal? Test if swapping saturated fats (think butter and beef) for vegetable oils rich in linoleic acid could slash cholesterol and prevent heart disease. It was randomized, blinded, and even included autopsies to check artery damage. Sounds rigorous, right?

The intervention cranked up linoleic acid by 288% while slashing saturated fats by half. Cholesterol levels plummeted as predicted—by about 14%. But here's the twist: deaths skyrocketed. The more cholesterol dropped, the higher the mortality risk. Why? No clear answer, but the data was damning.

Shocking Results: Lower Cholesterol, Higher Graves

The video breaks it down cold: the cholesterol-lowering diet didn't reduce heart attacks or strokes. In fact, autopsies showed a trend toward *worse* artery buildup in the intervention group—41% had confirmed heart attacks versus 22% in controls. A meta-analysis of similar trials (over 10,000 people) echoed this: no benefits for heart health or survival, with hints of harm from those vegetable oils.

Even more chilling? The greater the cholesterol drop, the deadlier the outcome—a 22% higher death risk per 30 mg/dL reduction. This wasn't some fringe study; it was buried for 40 years, rediscovered on old tapes, and finally published in 2016. Coincidence? Or inconvenient truth?

Why Was It Hidden—and What About the Criticisms?

Norwitz tackles the excuses head-on. Critics claim the linoleic acid doses were too high, or hidden trans fats skewed results. But as he points out, no guidelines cap linoleic acid, and trans fats would likely *raise* cholesterol—not lower it like observed. High dropouts? Explained by hospital discharges, not bias. The real issue? These findings clashed with the rising lipid hypothesis, so they gathered dust while guidelines pushed the same advice.

It's a classic case of science sidelined by dogma. Nutrition isn't black-and-white; it's messy, especially when billions in drug sales are at stake.

Final Thoughts

This video isn't just a history lesson—it's a wake-up call for humility in medicine. Assuming lower cholesterol always saves lives? That arrogance cost lives in this trial. Watch it yourself and question the narratives we're fed. Embedded below for your convenience: Lowering Cholesterol Killed: A Study Buried for 40 Years.

What do you think—time to rethink those seed oils? Share your take in the comments. Stay skeptical, folks.






Wednesday, 25 February 2026

Britain's Orwellian Thought Police


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Britain once gave the world the idea of liberty under law. Now it gives us police knocking on doors over tweets.

Not threats.
Not violence.
Words.

Welcome to the age of the “Non-Crime Hate Incident.”

The Crime That Isn’t a Crime

Under guidance from the College of Policing, officers have been encouraged to record so-called Non-Crime Hate Incidents — speech perceived to be hateful, even if it breaks no law.

Read that again.

No law broken.
No charge laid.
No court appearance.

Yet your name may be logged in a police database.

This is not justice. It is pre-emptive suspicion. A bureaucratic scarlet letter.

Blasphemy Rebranded

Britain abolished formal blasphemy laws in 2008. Or so we were told.

Yet today, criticism of certain religions — particularly Islam — can trigger police “engagement.” A knock on the door. A warning. A quiet note in a file.

Technically lawful.
Practically intimidating.

The State does not need to prosecute you to silence you. It merely needs to remind you it can.

The Real Damage

The defenders say this is about community harmony.

But harmony enforced by fear is not harmony — it is compliance.

When citizens begin to ask not “Is this true?” but “Will this get me in trouble?” the battle for free speech is already lost.

The genius of this system is that it rarely produces martyrs. It produces hesitation.

Self-censorship.

And once a population polices its own thoughts, the State’s work is largely done.

A Dangerous Precedent

The British tradition was built on the idea that speech should be free unless it directly incites violence.

Now it is free unless someone feels offended.

That is not a legal standard.
That is an emotional one.

And emotional standards shift with the political wind.

The Knock at the Door

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Tyranny does not always arrive in jackboots.

Sometimes it arrives politely. With a clipboard. With a “friendly chat.” With reassurance that you’ve done nothing illegal — this time.

Britain may insist it has no blasphemy laws.

But when police record lawful speech because someone dislikes it, the name hardly matters.

If the State can knock on your door for your opinions, you are no longer entirely free.

And if that does not alarm you, it should.