WAR: A Conversation We Keep Having

There's a haunting moment in the movie Oppenheimer. A quiet scene. Oppenheimer, the father of the atomic bomb, walks beside Albert Einstein by a lonely pond. The wind stirs the trees. Oppenheimer, troubled by what he's unleashed, turns to Einstein and asks something profound-not just about science, but about consequences. About war. About whether they might have set the world on fire without knowing it. That moment lingers. Because it wasn't just a conversation between two scientists-it was a whisper between mankind and its future. But today, we will talk about war. War is not just the clash of armies. It's the silence of a mother waiting for a son who might will never return. It's the emptiness at a dinner table. It's the child who learns the sound of bombs before the sound of lullabies. The world, once again, finds itself on the edge of sharp uncertainty. The recent conflict between Israel and Iran has flared into one of the most dangerous confrontations in...