Posts Tagged ‘Palestine’

“CIVIC AGENCY”

December 9, 2025

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Ricardo Morín
Teratological Topographies Series One: CIVIC AGENCY
Oil On Linen
Quadtych: Each panel: 14 by 18 by 3/4 inches
2009

Ricardo F. Morín

November, 2025

Oakland Park, Florida

Billy Bussell Thompson, Editor, NY, NY

This essay examines conditions frequently distorted by ideology, moral inheritance, or historical narrative.   Questions of sovereignty, occupation, revolution, exile, and national identity are often debated through claims that appeal to absolutes—religious entitlement, historical grievance, or revolutionary legitimacy.   These claims differ in language but share the same structure:   they place a single idea over civic realities of people whose lives are structured by such narratives.

To address what is obscured by these narratives, the essay turns to a structural factor that cuts across these differences:   civic agency, understood as the capacity of people to shape the conditions of civic life through their participation, representation, and lawful processes.   When civic agency is removed—whether through external control, internal authoritarianism, or deterrence directed at displaced populations; the form of the constraint may change, but the civic effect remains constant.

This essay does not compare political histories.   It examines how State power, in its various configurations, regulates civic life.   It considers how ideology obscures this regulation and how populations experience the consequences of decisions in which they have little or no role.   The goal is not to reduce political conflict but to call attention to the structures that determine whether freedom is possible or remains beyond reach.

This essay will argue that the most reliable way to understand situations that appear politically incompatible—such as Palestinian statelessness and Cuban authoritarian sovereignty—is to examine the structural absence of the civic agency that defines both.   Although the forms of constraint differ, the civic condition comes together:   the State, whether external or internal, restricts the capacity of the population to shape its own civic life.   By analyzing how State regulation limits participation, suppresses representation, or fragments jurisdiction, this essay will show how civic agency becomes the central measure of freedom.   It will further examine how ideological narratives, policies of deterrence, and migratory pressures hide this structural reality.   The aim is not to adjudicate political claims but to bring to light the conditions under which civic life can be formed, protected, or denied.


1

Every attempt to understand political life must begin with the recognition that populations do not experience freedom as an abstraction; they experience it through the structures regulating their civic existence.   These structures determine how decisions are made, how authority is exercised, and whether or not people can participate in shaping the conditions for their own lives.   Civic agency is therefore not an ideal but a condition that either exists or not.   When it is absent, freedom appears as a formal claim rather than a lived condition.

2

Civic agency consists of three components:   participation, representation, and lawful process.   Participation allows individuals and communities to influence public decisions.   Representation provides continuity between the governed and the governing body.   Lawful processes ensure that authority is exercised within defined limits.   When any of these components is removed, the people lose their capacity to shape the civic environment they inhabit.   This loss may occur by external regulation, internal authoritarianism, or policies reducing civic life to a set of restrictions that diminishes a shared domain.

3

The absence of civic agency can take different forms.   A population may be governed by institutions that do not recognize the communities’ sovereignty and thus leave civic agency subject to regulations that the people have no significant role in its shaping.   Alternatively, a people may inhabit a sovereign State that suppresses political pluralism, restricts lawful dissent, and monopolizes institutional authority.   In both cases, the civic condition is suppressed:   the people are without the ability to influence the rules that govern them.

4

The Palestinian case illustrates the first form.   Multiple authorities regulate movement, territory, and public life without providing unified jurisdiction or sovereign protection.   Decisions made by external States define daily existence and leave the population without consistent civic rights or a stable institutional framework.   The absence of sovereignty is not only territorial but civic; this absence takes away the mechanisms by which participation and representation are possible.

5

The situation with Cuba represents the second form.   Although the State possesses sovereignty, it concentrates political authority within a single institutional apparatus and restricts lawful avenues for dissent, competition, or structural reform.   Citizens live under a system that maintains political continuity by restricting avenues for participation.   Sovereignty prevails; civic agency is limited.

6

Palestine and Cuba differ, of course, in history, structure, and origin; yet they align in one respect:   the State, whether external or internal, restricts participation in ways that make civic agency unattainable.   The absence of agency is the common element that marks the civic condition beneath political narratives.   This absence also provides a framework through which populations that experience different forms of constraint are to be understood without conflation.

7

Ideological narratives frequently align with existing distributions of power.   Religious entitlement asserts that land is secured by divine mandate rather than civic protection.   Revolutionary rhetoric proclaims that political authority is justified by historical struggle rather than accountability.   Both forms of narrative elevate an absolute over the civic realities of the population.   They replace agency with allegiance, and they interpret restriction as necessity, and not as a failure of representation.

8

Migration provides a third lens through which the limits of civic agency become visible.  People leave their countries when the structures regulating their lives collapse or become uninhabitable.  They seek stability, protection, and the ability to rebuild civic participation in new surroundings.   Yet policies of deterrence in host States often mirror the pressures that displaced them.   The new States restrict the migrants’ movements, their access to social institutions, and narrow the possibilities of belonging to a civic order.   These policies do not reproduce the original dilemma, but host States reintroduce the experience of living under rules that they cannot influence.

9

For many asylum seekers, these restrictive measures narrow the distance between the pressures that forced their departure and the pressures they encounter upon their arrival, a shift that makes stability hard to distinguish from exclusion.  European examples such as Denmark and the United Kingdom reveal how deterrence is used to discourage asylum without acknowledging the civic vacancy it creates.  The United States employs similar policies at its borders and presents deterrence as an instrument of order, which leaves migrants suspended between exclusion and unresolved civic status.

10

The structural argument is not that these situations are equivalent, but that the absence of civic agency creates a civic condition transcending political differences.   Populations ruled without participation, governed without representation, or confined within systems that restrict lawful processes experience freedom as external to their civic environment.   This condition cannot be explained by ideology because ideology addresses identity, justification, or legitimacy—not agency.

11

Understanding civic agency clarifies the difference between political claims and civic realities.   Sovereignty does not guarantee freedom; revolution does not guarantee participation; religious entitlement does not guarantee protection.   Civic agency exists only when people can shape the conditions that guide them.   When this becomes impossible, the people do not inhabit a civic order but a regulated space.

12

When civic agency becomes the measure through which political life is understood, ideological narratives lose their authority, and the structure of constraint becomes visible.  This visibility does not resolve conflict but reveals the conditions under which freedom can either emerge or remain unapproachable.   Civic agency is where the possibility of civic life begins and where its absence becomes structurally apparent.


“Lens of Procedural Incoherence”

November 30, 2025

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Ricardo Morín
Triangulation 8: Lens of Procedural Incoherence
22″ x 30″
Watercolor and wax pencil on paper
2007

Ricardo Morín

November 2025

Oakland Park, Florida

This essay examines how procedures governing the use of force, the classification of conflict, and the articulation of self-defense diverge from declared principles in three areas of U.S. foreign policy:   the Trinidad maritime strike, the war involving Ukraine and Russia, and the conflict involving Israel, Palestine, and adjacent countries.   The analysis traces how inconsistencies arise when official language does not align with established norms, when criteria shift across comparable circumstances, and when the stated basis for action changes according to political need rather than procedural coherence.   The comparison highlights how these divergences contribute to instability and weaken interpretive clarity across international affairs.


1

The Washington Post report titled “‘Kill them all’: Hegseth’s battlefield rhetoric shaped Trump-era strike” (https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2025/11/28/hegseth-kill-them-all-survivors-boat-strike/) describes a U.S. military operation near Trinidad in which a small vessel believed to be transporting narcotics was struck after being misidentified.   Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth issued a spoken directive “to kill everybody,” and the strike killed most individuals on board.   When surveillance identified two survivors clinging to debris, a second strike was ordered that killed them as well.   Subsequent explanations to Congress presented the follow-on strike as an effort to remove a navigational hazard, even though the presence of survivors had already been confirmed.   The Office of Legal Counsel (OLC), whose opinion later justified the actions as part of an armed conflict with designated narcoterrorist groups, introduced a legal classification that departed from the facts presented in the initial reports.   These elements create a single set of materials from which procedural coherence can be examined.

2

The procedural irregularity becomes visible once the chain of actions is placed in order:   an unverified assumption about the vessel’s identity, a directive that treated all occupants as combatants, a second strike executed after survivors were identified, and a later legal justification grounded in a classification that recast the operation as part of an armed conflict.   Each step relied on a different principle—assumption, directive, reinterpretation, and reclassification.   The divergence among these principles reveals how procedure shifted to accommodate the desired framing rather than guiding the action itself.   This shift does not imply motive; it demonstrates how administrative language can detach from the criteria that normally govern the use of force.

3

A similar procedural disjunction appears when U.S. positions regarding Ukraine and Russia are placed alongside the Trinidad case.  The United States publicly condemns Russia’s attacks on Ukrainian civilians and cites violations of distinction, proportionality, and accountability under the laws of armed conflict.   Yet discussions about scaling back support for Ukraine have introduced a reversal in which the procedural commitments used to justify condemnation of Russia are not consistently applied when considering the implications of reducing assistance to a State defending its sovereignty.  The shift from emphasizing legal norms to weighing political costs illustrates how procedures can be reshaped by circumstances, even when the stated principles remain unchanged.  The inconsistency does not rest in the declarations themselves but in the procedural reversals that appear when support for Ukraine becomes entangled with broader strategic calculations.

4

The conflict involving Israel, Palestine, and neighboring states such as Iran, Lebanon, and Yemen reveals another form of procedural divergence.   The United States affirms Israel’s right to self-defense and stops short of recognizing Palestine’s claim to self-determination in equal procedural terms.  The same criteria invoked to justify one party’s actions do not extend to the other party’s pursuit of sovereignty, even though both claims arise within a single territorial and political circumstance.   This asymmetry becomes more pronounced when regional attacks are considered:  the procedures invoked to justify Israeli strikes in response to threats from Iran, Lebanon, or Yemen differ from those applied to Palestinian actions, despite operating within an interconnected region where the consequences of one engagement affect all others.  The divergence reflects a procedural evasiveness that stabilizes one position while it leaves another without an articulated pathway toward recognition or resolution.

5

When the three circumstances—the Trinidad strike, the shifting position toward Ukraine and Russia, and the procedural asymmetry in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict—are examined together, their differences do not obscure the common pattern.   In each case, established procedures that ordinarily govern the use of force or the recognition of sovereignty diverge from the principles publicly invoked.   In Trinidad, the divergence takes the form of reclassification after the fact.   In Ukraine, it appears as a reversal in how the principles of civilian protection and territorial integrity are applied.   In Israel and Palestine, it emerges as a partial application of the right to self-defense without a corresponding recognition of the procedural requirements associated with sovereignty.   The alignment across cases arises from the way procedures shift to accommodate political needs rather than guiding action according to a stable set of criteria.

6

This alignment does not rest on the equivalence of the conflicts but on the consistency of the procedural departures.   Each case shows how the same vocabulary—armed conflict, self-defense, sovereignty, and civilian protection—operates differently when applied to different actors.   The procedures attached to these terms change according to circumstance rather than principle.   As a result, the meaning of each term becomes unstable.   What counts as an armed conflict in Trinidad, a sovereign defense in Ukraine, or a legitimate use of force in Gaza depends not on a uniform procedural standard but on the political frame selected in each instance.

7

A coherent foreign policy requires that procedures governing the use of force, recognition of sovereignty, and classification of conflict remain consistent across situations.   The Trinidad strike shows how procedures can be rearranged after the fact to protect the narrative of an operation.   The evolving position on Ukraine demonstrates how procedural commitments can weaken when strategic considerations gain priority.   The treatment of Palestinian claims and Israeli self-defense reveals how procedures can be selectively applied within the same region.   Together, these inconsistencies demonstrate how the absence of procedural coherence reduces interpretive clarity and complicates the relationships on which international stability depends.

8

The examination of these cases through a single lens does not equate them; it identifies the procedural incoherence that appears when the principles governing the use of force, recognition of sovereignty, and classification of conflict do not align with the actions taken.   The result is a field of international affairs in which the stated basis for action varies according to circumstance, and in which procedural language adapts to political needs rather than providing a stable standard for decision-making.   The inferences that follow are left to the reader, who can judge how the departure from procedural coherence shapes the credibility of U.S. conduct abroad.