The emperor and the supply chain by John Reid

For Donald Trump, statecraft resembles professional wrestling, entrances, taunts, oversized personalities and the constant need for a villain. Yet China presents a peculiar challenge to that instinct because China is not a rival that can be insulted into retreat. It is a civilization-state with factories, ports, engineers, batteries, shipyards and patience. So when Trump traveled alongside Elon Musk and Tim Cook, the contrast between the two businessmen revealed more about America’s confusion than about China itself.

Musk represents the modern American myth in its purest MAGA form; the heroic disruptor who believes rules are for slower people. He thrives on confrontation, speaks in provocations and treats politics like an extension of social media. But there is an irony buried beneath the mythology. In nearly every field where Musk has planted his flag China has produced a domestic equivalent that is often cheaper, faster and astonishingly efficient. Tesla faces aggressive Chinese electric vehicle companies capable of manufacturing at terrifying scale. SpaceX may dominate headlines in the West, yet China’s state-backed space ambitions move with relentless discipline. Even in artificial intelligence, where Silicon Valley once assumed permanent supremacy, Chinese firms now compete with startling speed while benefiting from enormous state coordination.

China does not imitate America anymore. It industrializes ideas more efficiently than America can commercialize them. That is the uncomfortable reality hovering over every smiling photograph from these diplomatic excursions.

Tim Cook occupies the opposite moral and managerial universe from Musk. Where Musk performs disruption, Cook practices calibration. He rarely raises his voice, avoids ideological spectacle and understands that supply chains matter more than slogans. Apple’s global success did not emerge from patriotic chest-thumping about manufacturing returning home. It emerged from a deep integration with Chinese production ecosystems built over decades. Cook understood earlier than most American executives that China was not merely a cheap labor market. It was becoming the operational center of modern industrial precision.

That difference matters because Trump views economics emotionally, almost tribally. Factories symbolize strength to him in the same way skyscrapers once symbolized success in nineteen-eighties Manhattan. He talks about tariffs with the confidence of a casino owner explaining blackjack strategy. Yet the presence of Musk and Cook beside him suggested two competing visions of American capitalism confronting Chinese power.

Musk embodies America’s appetite for dominance through innovation and spectacle. Cook embodies America’s dependence on global integration and disciplined manufacturing partnerships. One sells the fantasy of technological conquest. The other quietly manages the machinery that keeps consumer capitalism alive.

Trump likely believed the trip elevated his own image as the indispensable negotiator between American business and Chinese leadership. He has always measured diplomacy through visible proximity to wealth and celebrity. Standing beside Musk gives him the aura of futurism. Standing beside Cook grants him proximity to the world’s most profitable consumer brand. But China probably interpreted the tableau differently. Beijing sees American elites arriving not as conquerors but as petitioners seeking market access, industrial cooperation and economic stability.

This is the central tension of modern America. The country still speaks the language of supremacy while increasingly depending on systems it no longer fully controls. China builds infrastructure while Washington produces political content. Chinese companies refine manufacturing capacity while American politics descends into performance art.

In that sense, the trip was not really about Trump at all. It was about an aging superpower trying to decide whether it still wants to build things or merely brand them.

Perhaps that is why the image of Musk and Cook beside Trump felt symbolic. One man represents disruption without restraint. Another represents stability. Trump, meanwhile, represents nostalgia dressed as strategy. China understands that empires are not preserved through slogans or charisma. They survive through production, discipline, education and long-term planning. America still possesses strengths but behaves like a nation to market greatness instead of manufacturing it.


Going #Poem by Abigail George

“When we can’t think for ourselves, we can always quote.”
Ludwig Wittgenstein

I offer you cranberry bread.
I offer you this knife for the hard cheese.
I offer you this clock.
I offer you the dark.
I offer you this fruit.
I offer you this orange.
I offer you this as a blessing.

I offer you this sweetness.
I offer you this shroud.
I offer you this veil.
I offer you this truth.
I offer you this memory.
I offer you, Africa.
I offer you these gifts.
I offer you equality.
I offer you this ancient sea.
I offer you music.
I offer you this river.
I offer you this garden as meditation.
I offer you the history of this continent.
I offer you this as an alternative.
I offer this to you for our salvation.
I offer this to you because I love you.
I offer you this because today you are getting on a ship,
and sailing far away from me.
I offer you sleep, captor.
I offer you this forest that I dragged behind me
because you have the personality
of foolish paper and the medicine of the wildflower.
I offer you this frozen mist.
I am offering you this blue cat. Take it.
Please accept it gracefully.
Let it be your companion.
I offer the dissolution of the sun.
And now, now I come to peace.
Now I come to minister to you.
I bring you coffee and poetry books.
I will bring you a pen and an empty journal for your thoughts.
It was Christ who brought us this morning.
It is time. It is the hour of your departure.
I turn to embrace you, to say goodbye.

Counting votes, not cartoons by Kingsley Cobb

Every few years in the United States, Americans are treated to the same traveling circus disguised as civic duty. Television analysts stand before giant digital maps, counties turn red and blue like mood rings and somewhere in the middle of the spectacle sits the voter, increasingly aware that the system was designed less to reflect public opinion than to manipulate it. Gerrymandering, once a technical term buried in political science textbooks, has become one of the defining symbols of democratic exhaustion in America.

The absurdity is no longer subtle. Districts twist across states like spilled spaghetti, carefully engineered to dilute some votes and inflate others. Politicians are no longer choosing voters rhetorically; they are choosing them literally, with software precise enough to carve neighborhoods block by block. The result is a democracy that often feels prearranged before a single ballot is cast. Americans are told their vote matters deeply while simultaneously watching entire elections become mathematical exercises in partisan survival.

What makes this especially dangerous is not simply unfair representation. It is the psychological effect. Millions of citizens now approach elections with the numb suspicion that outcomes are already predetermined. In heavily gerrymandered districts, many voters correctly believe their ballots will change nothing. That cynicism does not remain confined to election season. It spreads outward into every institution. Trust evaporates. Political opponents stop looking like fellow citizens and start resembling hostile tribes gaming a broken machine.

The United States loves to present itself as the world’s great democratic example, yet its electoral map increasingly resembles a legal loophole competition. In functioning democracies, parties attempt to persuade more people. In modern America, parties increasingly attempt to redraw enough lines to avoid persuasion altogether. That is not democratic strategy. It is institutionalized avoidance of accountability.

The deeper irony is that both major parties condemn gerrymandering passionately whenever they are victims of it and defend it quietly whenever they benefit. This bipartisan hypocrisy has turned electoral reform into a moral pantomime. Americans are left arguing endlessly about personalities while the structure itself quietly distorts representation underneath them.

It does not have to remain this way. The principle should be embarrassingly simple: every vote should count equally, regardless of zip code or party affiliation. Independent redistricting commissions would help. Proportional representation would help even more. National standards for district drawing could restore at least a minimal sense of legitimacy. None of these ideas are radical. The truly radical idea is continuing to accept a system where politicians can effectively design their own electorates.

Democracy is not merely the right to vote. It is the belief that the vote carries genuine weight. Once citizens lose that belief, elections become ceremonial theater rather than democratic participation. America has reached the point where many people no longer argue over policies first; they argue over whether the game itself is honest.

That may be the clearest warning sign of all. A democracy can survive disagreement. It cannot survive widespread suspicion that representation itself has become fictional.

Until the country confronts that reality directly, polarization will deepen and turnout will continue shrinking beneath waves of frustration. Citizens do not become apathetic because they suddenly hate democracy. They become apathetic because democracy stops recognizing them. Gerrymandering did not create division, but it sharpened all of them


Absurdity Woke 26#009 #cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

Our top story; common sense has left the frame, the inmates are running the asylum
and the asylum is now identifying as a luxury resort. This is Absurdity Woke.

For more Absurdity Woke, HERE!
For more Ovi Cartoons, HERE!


Carpond #013 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

A cacophony of singalongs, stifled yawns,
and surprisingly insightful debates
on the existential dread of a four wheeler vacuum

For more Carpond, HERE!
For more Ovi Cartoons, HERE!


The chancellor’s fatigue by Emma Schneider

Friedrich Merz increasingly looks like a man who arrived at the summit of German politics only to discover that the mountain itself had already eroded beneath him. For years, conservatives in Germany spoke of him as a corrective figure, a stern adult returning to restore order after the cautious, managerial drift of the Merkel era. Younger Germans on the center-right, especially frustrated professionals and first-time voters exhausted by bureaucratic paralysis, projected onto Merz something almost mythological, decisiveness, clarity, movement. What they received instead was fatigue disguised as discipline.

The problem is not merely that Merz has struggled to produce dramatic change. Germany is structurally resistant to dramatic change. Coalition politics, federal fragmentation, constitutional caution and a political culture deeply suspicious of volatility ensure that every chancellor eventually becomes an administrator of compromise. The deeper issue is that Merz campaigned emotionally as a breaker of stagnation while governing psychologically as its final product.

He speaks like someone who believes the country has lost confidence in itself, and on that point he is probably correct. Germany does appear trapped in a strange twilight mood: economically anxious, militarily uncertain, demographically nervous and culturally hesitant. The old German promise, that stability itself was enough, has stopped inspiring younger generations who grew up amid housing shortages, expensive energy, digital backwardness and the quiet realization that their parents’ prosperity may not be reproducible.

Merz understood the diagnosis but not the treatment. There is something revealing in the way he carries himself publicly. He projects competence, but not momentum. Precision, but not imagination. Even his critics rarely accuse him of recklessness; instead they accuse him of arriving twenty years too late. He often sounds like a politician addressing the Germany that existed before overlapping crises shattered public patience. Yet the younger Germans who flirted with supporting him were not looking for a restoration of the old Federal Republic. They were looking for proof that the country still possessed forward motion.

Instead, Merz has governed like a man trying to conserve political oxygen. Part of the disappointment surrounding him comes from expectation inflation. German conservatives convinced themselves that merely replacing the tone of government would change the energy of the country. But national exhaustion cannot be cured rhetorically. Germany’s infrastructure remains creaky, its economic model vulnerable, its military rebuilding painfully slow, and its immigration debate permanently unresolved. On issue after issue, Merz appears less like a transformational figure than a reluctant accountant balancing decline.

That image is particularly damaging because he was never supposed to be a transitional leader. Olaf Scholz often seemed emotionally detached from events, but voters already expected caution from him. Merz, by contrast, sold the impression of urgency. He implied that Germany had wasted too much time. Ironically, his own leadership now feels defined by time management rather than direction.

There is also a generational mismatch haunting his chancellorship. Younger Germans increasingly consume politics emotionally rather than institutionally. They want leaders who appear dynamic, culturally aware, and capable of translating national problems into a compelling future narrative. Merz still communicates like a boardroom presentation from the early 2000s: technically polished, emotionally dry, vaguely paternal. In another era, that style may have reassured voters. In the age of permanent anxiety and digital impatience, it often feels bloodless.

None of this means Merz is incompetent. In fact, his tragedy may be the opposite. He looks like a competent man trapped inside an exhausted system, offering incremental repairs to a society quietly demanding reinvention. Germany wanted reassurance after Merkel, then stability after turbulence, and now something far harder,  renewal. Merz seems capable of governing Germany. What he has not shown is an ability to awaken it.


#eMagazine Ovi Dark - Issue #02 - Phantom Tide

 

There is a specific kind of chill that has nothing to do with winter. It crawls up from the space between your shoulder blades, settles at the base of your skull and whispers… you are not alone. That is the chill we have chased for this second issue of Ovi Dark.

We told ourselves, as rational creatures of the modern age, that ghosts are echoes. That the creak in the hallway is just the house settling. That the figure in the peripheral vision is a trick of tired light. But then we read the reports. The real ones. The case files and maritime logs and abandoned diaries that refuse to fit into clean, logical boxes.

And we realized …the horror was never a metaphor.

Ovi Dark - Issue 2
Pulp Fiction Short Stories
May 2026
Ovi eMagazines Publications 2026

Ovi Dark - Issue #02

Read the Ovi Thematic eMagazine online HERE!
View, read it online or download it in PDF/epub format HERE!
And enjoy viewing & reading it online or download in PDF format HERE!
All Ovi eMagazines and eBooks downloads are FREE

The drone at the Aegean’s edge by Melina Barnett

Reports have surfaced of a Ukrainian drone, allegedly armed, discovered in Greek waters, an image that reads less like routine military debris and more like a narrative misplaced from a different theater of war.

In the careful choreography of modern conflict, drones are supposed to be punctual instruments, appearing where they are tasked, vanishing where they are spent. Yet this alleged discovery in the Aegean Sea complicates that tidy expectation, suggesting either an extraordinary navigational failure or something more deliberately opaque.

For Greece, a NATO and European Union member long accustomed to being a geographic hinge between East and West, the implications are less technical than existential. How does a device tied, however loosely, to the Ukrainian battlefield traverse such distances without raising alarms, and what does its presence suggest about the permeability of Europe’s southern maritime edges?

There is also the more uncomfortable possibility that the drone is not simply lost but redirected, or worse, reinterpreted. In an era where attribution is often a political act rather than a forensic conclusion, the object floating in Greek waters becomes less a machine and more a question mark suspended over alliances that pride themselves on clarity.

Ukraine’s own reliance on drone warfare against Russian assets has been both celebrated and scrutinized, praised for ingenuity yet shadowed by concerns about escalation and range. The notion that one of its systems could be found so far afield invites speculation not only about operational reach but also about the unintended geographies of modern warfare.

Perhaps the most telling response, however, is silence. Official statements, when they arrive, tend to flatten ambiguity into reassurance. Yet the Mediterranean has never been merely a backdrop; it is a corridor of histories, and now perhaps of misrouted technologies that refuse to stay within their designated wars.

In this uncertain space, the drone becomes less a singular artifact of war and more a symptom of its diffusion across borders that were once thought to contain it. The image of a Ukrainian system resting in Greek waters resists easy interpretation, precisely because it sits at the intersection of alliance solidarity and strategic anxiety. It raises questions that are less about engineering failure than about the elasticity of contemporary conflict, where distance no longer guarantees separation and proximity is no longer required for influence. Whether the drone arrived by accident, drift or design is almost secondary to the fact that its presence can be read in multiple registers at once.

In Brussels, in Kyiv and in Athens, such ambiguity is not merely inconvenient but structurally revealing, exposing how easily the machinery of modern warfare escapes the categories built to contain it. The sea, in this reading, is not merely a physical space but an archival one, collecting fragments of conflict and redistributing their meanings far from their point of origin. And so the drifting drone becomes a quiet invitation to reconsider the geography of responsibility, where ownership and origin blur beneath the surface of a shared and increasingly entangled security order. In that sense, it is less an incident than a mirror held up to a continent still learning its own reflection.


Sceptic feathers #128 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

Cynicism with feathers on thin wires.

For more Sceptic feathers, HERE!
For more Ovi Cartoons, HERE!


Nigel’s routine of resentment reform by Thanos Kalamidas

Nigel Farage has always understood something many British politicians never fully grasped, politics is no longer merely about governance. It is theatre, grievance and identity wrapped into one permanent performance. He does not speak to Britain so much as narrate its anxieties back to itself, with a pint in hand and a smirk that suggests he alone dares to say what others supposedly fear. That performance has made him, for millions, not just a politician but a symbol of rebellion against institutions they believe abandoned them long ago.

Yet rebellion without honesty quickly curdles into something darker. Farage represents perhaps the purest modern stereotype of the populist politician, endlessly simplifying complex realities into emotionally satisfying myths. The European Union becomes not a flawed political institution but an all-consuming foreign oppressor. Immigration becomes not a nuanced economic and social issue but a catch-all explanation for national decline. Experts, academics, journalists, judges, economists, all are recast as members of a smug elite conspiring against “ordinary people.” In this worldview, facts matter less than emotional resonance. Contradictions are irrelevant if the anger feels authentic.

And Farage has profited magnificently from that anger. The remarkable irony of his political career is that he has spent decades denouncing elites while living increasingly like one. He positioned himself as the voice of forgotten Britons while cultivating a lucrative media persona, thriving on controversy and outrage. Populism, in his case, became not merely ideology but business model. The more divisive the rhetoric, the greater the visibility. The greater the visibility, the larger the platform. In modern politics, indignation monetizes extremely well.

What makes Farage particularly potent is not that he invented anti-immigrant sentiment or Euroscepticism. Those currents existed long before him. It is that he learned how to package resentment into cultural identity. Supporting him became, for many, less about policy than emotional belonging. He offered clarity in a country increasingly defined by economic uncertainty, stagnant wages, hollowed-out communities, and institutional mistrust. To people who felt invisible, he offered recognition, even if the solutions themselves were often shallow or misleading.

This is where the comparison to Oswald Mosley begins to unsettle many observers. The resemblance is not ideological equivalence in any simplistic sense, nor a suggestion that Britain stands on the edge of fascism. History should not be flattened into lazy parallels. But there is an unmistakable similarity in style: the charismatic nationalist presenting himself as the sole truth-teller against a corrupt establishment, using national humiliation and cultural fear as political fuel. Both men understood how powerfully decline can shape public imagination. Both framed pluralism and internationalism as existential threats to national identity. Both relied on the seductive simplicity of blaming outsiders for internal failures.

Farage’s genius lies in twisting the language of freedom into a politics that often narrows empathy rather than expands it. Equality becomes “woke ideology.” Multiculturalism becomes cultural surrender. Humanitarian obligations become weakness. The rhetoric rarely arrives openly as hatred; it arrives wrapped in jokes, provocations, plausible deniability, and carefully calibrated outrage. That ambiguity allows supporters to dismiss criticism as elitist hysteria while critics grow increasingly alarmed at the normalization of scapegoating.

And still, for many Britons, he remains hope.

That fact says less about Farage himself than about the vacuum created by mainstream politics. When traditional parties appear managerial, detached and emotionally sterile, figures like Farage thrive precisely because they channel fury without embarrassment. He gives voice to alienation, even when he distorts its causes.

The tragedy is that populists often flourish not because they solve crises, but because liberal democracies fail to address the despair beneath them.


Another Tomorrow #Poem #Painting by Nikos Laios

 

The rain softly fell
On bitumen streets,
And the rusting hulk
Creaked and groaned
In the harbour and a
Yellow mist covered

The tops of buildings
And the steel bridge
Spanning the harbour,
And the air was cold
And the streetlights
Were dim while
The city slept
And the world
Turned and they
Dreamt of another
Tomorrow.

 *******************************
With a digital painting from Nikos Laios

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Check Nikos Laios' eBOOK, HERE!

The emperor and the supply chain by John Reid

For Donald Trump, statecraft resembles professional wrestling, entrances, taunts, oversized personalities and the constant need for a villa...