The Top Stories You Missed This Week
Reviewing this week on Let's Address This (plus a new Dad Joke)
This week I was privileged to speak at the Trending Up Conference in Washington D.C. on the importance of effective messaging across platforms.
I emphasized that the best response to the click bait for profit corporate media is authentic, genuine, fact based insight driven by values, not money. While such an approach may not get viral views, it attracts thoughtful people who are committed to building a sustainable platform that benefits society.
Thank you to the 131,000+ activists who have subscribed to Let’s Address This with Qasim Rashid. Your commitment to human rights makes what I do possible. If you have not yet subscribed, you can do so for free at www.qasimrashid.com/subscribe (or for a cup of coffee a month if in your budget!)
Now let’s dive into the content we covered this week!
This week on The Qasim Rashid Show we spoke with David Hogg, Vice Chair of the DNC, and Dr. Abdul El Sayed, US Senate Candidate in Michigan. I wrote about how corporate Democrats are joining MAGAs to pass the worst suppression of free speech in modern history and shared a new episode of Hate Mail of the Weak. I documented again how Netanyahu is (again) openly proclaiming genocide, I read the new Pope’s entire Twitter history, and I broke down the Pakistan-India crisis. All links below.
This Week’s Articles and Podcast
Dad Joke of the Week
Cows make high schoolers feel better because they’re 100% pro-teen. :D #DadJokes




Thank you for educating me. I am now reading Anne Applebaum and taking a hard look at the world I live in
Thank you very much for the clear summation of the India-Pakistan conflict. I'll admit I haven't focused on it since I was in high school in the sixties. I was lucky enough to attend a school where the head cared about world events and was determined that we would, too. Reading you, I had the same sensation of understanding that it's important, and I'd be wise to pay attention. Maybe you should consider offering a pop quiz once in a while.