Sunday, March 29, 2026

NASA announces its plan to build a lunar base.

https://youtu.be/IBu4AJzbAkU?si=GRY42ahhcM_S3Q_J

NASA's Artemis II crew arrives for launch.

https://www.youtube.com/live/lg-sDsbJp7E?si=9lPadJ4Uhu5YSy1I

ቀይ ሽብር እንዴት ተጀመረ? | How did the Red Terror start?

https://youtu.be/SF2oOvVnmec?si=ITHb8Rkeg5F5svUo

Ignoring the situation in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and Africa, and failing to overthrow the regimes in power, is an unforgivable sin against the world | Excerpt from an AI novel generator

The Weight of Unseen Hands

Addis Ababa, 2027. The city smells of coffee and diesel, of rain that never quite washes the dust away.

Selam stood on the balcony of her family’s cramped apartment, watching the traffic chug along Bole Road. Horns blared, minibuses squealed, and somewhere in the distance a child laughed, his voice swallowed by the constant hum of engines. Above all of it, the sky was a bruised violet, the kind that appears when the sun has already set but refuses to fully surrender.

She had been told, as a child, that the world was a tapestry of stories—each thread vital, each knot a place where lives met and mattered. Her mother would weave those tales into the soft chants she sang while cooking injera, and her father would tell her of the revolutionaries who once marched through these very streets, their banners a blaze of red and green. “Never forget,” he’d say, “that the people’s voice is the only thing that can cut through the walls of power.”

Now the walls were taller than ever. The regime, a collection of men and women who had learned to wear democracy like a costume, held the country in a grip that was both invisible and ironclad. Elections were held, but the ballots were always pre‑filled. The press was a chorus of whispers, and dissent was a word that dissolved into silence as soon as it left the mouth.

Selam’s phone buzzed. It was a message from an encrypted app she barely remembered installing—a thin line of code that pulsed with a blue logo: PEACE.

You cannot stand by while the world forgets. Meet at the old railway station at 19:00. Bring the notebook.

She stared at the screen, at the stark white letters, at the weight of the word “PEACE” perched like an accusation. Who had decided that ignoring the situation in Addis Ababa—ignoring the drought that had turned fields into cracked ash, ignoring the arrests of student leaders, ignoring the children who slept under bridges—was an unforgivable sin? And why did the sin feel so personal, as if someone had written it on her skin?

The old railway station was a ruin now, a skeleton of colonial ambition. Its platform, covered in graffiti, read: “Revolution is a train that never stops.” Selam arrived with her notebook—a battered Moleskine, the kind she used to write poetry in before the world grew heavier.

A figure stepped out of the shadows. He was tall, his face half‑covered by a scarf, his eyes bright with a restless fire.

“Selam?” he asked, his voice low enough that only the night could hear. “I’m Tadesse. I’m with PEACE.”

She nodded, pulling the notebook from her bag.

“The world has turned its back,” Tadesse said, “and it calls it peace. But peace without justice is a lie. We have a network—people in Nairobi, in Khartoum, in Addis—who gather stories, evidence, images. We feed them to the global conscience. We have been trying to pressure the sanctions committees, the UN, the NGOs.” He leaned in. “But they keep saying ‘we’ll do more tomorrow.’ Tomorrow never comes.”

Selam opened the notebook. Her hand trembled slightly as she turned to a page where she had written, in her best attempt at hope, a poem about the river that no longer flowed through the city.

“The sin,” Tadesse continued, “is not just that we ignore. It’s that we let the world think silence is acceptable. It is unforgivable, because each day we stay idle, another child dies of malnutrition, another journalist disappears, another activist is silenced. The regimes are not just sitting there; they are feeding on our indifference.”

She looked up at him. “What can we do?” she asked, “when the powers that be are so entrenched? Overthrow them? That sounds…violent. And the world will label us terrorists.”

Tadesse’s eyes softened. “Violence is a language the state already knows. The question is, do we become the very thing we denounce? That’s why we call ourselves PEACE—not because we are pacifists, but because we believe a sustainable peace cannot be built on the ashes of bloodshed.”

He pulled out a folded map. On it were the locations of community wells, schools that were still open, clinics hidden in alleyways. The lines connecting them formed a web—an underground network of care, of information, of small acts that defied the regime’s narrative.

“The answer,” Tadesse said, “is not one grand coup, but a thousand micro‑revolutions. We help the people plant gardens in abandoned lots. We smuggle medicine into the wards where the state says there is none. We broadcast the truth on hacked frequencies. We teach kids to read the news for themselves. We teach the world to listen.”

Selam thought of the children she had seen sleeping under the bridge, their hair tangled, their hands clutching worn‑out toys. She thought of the teachers who risked their jobs to teach calculus, the doctors who treated patients with no electricity, and the mothers who whispered prayers for a better tomorrow. These were the people she had loved, the people she could not abandon.

She closed the notebook, but left the pen inside it—an act of faith.

“The next step,” Tadesse said, “is to get this story out. I have a contact in a European newsroom. If we can get them to broadcast the footage from the market—where the prices have tripled overnight—if we can get their cameras to show the faces of the children, the world will have no excuse to stay silent. And then the sanctions will tighten, the aid will flow, and the regime will be forced to negotiate.”

Selam felt a tremor of hope, thin as the first light at dawn.

“Will they ever understand?” she asked.

Tadesse smiled faintly. “They will, because we will make them understand.”

In the weeks that followed, Selam became a conduit for stories. She slipped out of her apartment at night, carrying a small handheld recorder, a camera hidden inside a bag of lentils. She visited the hospital where a young doctor, Aisha, was caring for a boy whose fever would not subside. She recorded the doctor’s quiet defiance: “We cannot wait for the world. We must act ourselves.”

She documented the market where vendors sold wilted cabbage for double the price, and the smiles that tried to mask the ache behind them. She listened to the elders who spoke of the river that once sang through the city, now reduced to a trickle, and wrote their lament on scraps of paper she tucked into the hollow of a wooden bench.

All the while, the PEACE network spread the images, the testimonies, the poems. The footage appeared on a satellite channel as a midnight special, the broadcast captioned: “Addis Ababa: The Silence That Screams.” The world watched. In Paris, a parliamentarian raised a question. In Washington, an aid agency sent a team. In Nairobi, a student movement organized a march, chanting “No more silence, no more sin.”

When the first aid convoy arrived, the regime’s soldiers tried to block the roads, but a massive crowd—students, mothers, shopkeepers—stood in front of the trucks. The scene was captured by a drone and streamed live. The soldiers hesitated; the crowd’s resolve was a wall of human solidarity that no gun could pierce without turning the world’s gaze irreversibly toward them.

The regime, feeling pressure from both inside and out, finally called for a national dialogue—a word that had become a hollow promise. Yet Selah’s voice—her notebook filled with the poems, the recordings, the faces—echoed through the hall where the dialogue took place. She read aloud her poem about the river, and the room fell silent.

“Peace is not the absence of conflict,” she said, “it is the presence of justice, of listening, of caring for those we deem ‘other.’ If we ignore the suffering of a single city, we betray the whole world. That is our unforgivable sin.”

The dialogue lasted days. Some policies changed. A commission was formed to investigate the arrests of journalists. Aid began to flow to the drought‑hit regions. The regime’s leaders, pressed by both protest and the looming threat of international isolation, agreed to a limited election.

Selam did not know if the election would be free, but she understood that the first step had been taken. She closed her notebook for the last time, the pages now heavy with ink and history. She placed it on the battered wooden bench, beneath which the river’s old stone marker lay—a forgotten stone that once read “Here the Blue Nile sang.”

A passerby stopped, noticed the notebook, and lifted it. Inside, the poem about the river was still there, its lines shimmering like a promise. The passerby turned, looked up at the sky, and whispered, “Peace,” before continuing on his way.

Later, under the same bruised violet sky, Selam stood again on her balcony. The city hummed, but this time the hum carried a different timbre—a note of possibility. The world had not turned its back entirely; it had been forced to look, to feel the weight of an unforgivable sin, and to act.

In the distance, a child’s laughter rose, louder than the traffic, bright as sunrise. The river, though still a trickle, glistened in the faint moonlight, as if it knew that even a thin stream could carve a canyon if it never stopped moving.

Peace, Selam thought, is not the quiet that hides the cries of the world, but the chorus that lifts them together.


FOR MORE INFORMATION 

AI Story Generator

የቀረው ይቅር (Yekerew Yeker) - Tsehaye Yohannes | Modern Ethio-Soul & AI Fusion ✨🎻

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IGNORING THE SITUATION IN ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA, AND AFRICA, AND FAILING TO OVERTHROW THE REGIMES IN POWER, IS AN UNFORGIVABLE SIN AGAINST THE WORLD.

Ignoring the situation in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and Africa, and failing to overthrow the regimes in power, is an unforgivable sin against the world. PEACE.

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IGNORER LA SITUATION À ADDIS-ABEBA, EN ÉTHIOPIE ET EN AFRIQUE, ET NE PAS RENVERSER LES RÉGIMES EN PLACE, EST UN PÉCHÉ IMPARDONNABLE CONTRE LE MONDE.

Ignorer la situation à Addis-Abeba, en Éthiopie et en Afrique, et ne pas renverser les régimes en place, est un péché impardonnable contre le monde. PAIX.

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Terrorist attack in Paris foiled after suspects attempted to detonate a bomb in a bank.

https://youtu.be/792VsUz3xbo?si=Te3eAIC9qOGadD0j

The Houthis launch a missile at Israel and join the war waged by Iran against Trump.

https://youtu.be/Fd5PsDJn_lM?si=xKSRjRKrCZVsXfQO

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