The alliance fatigue by Timothy Davies

There are bad marriages, there are loveless marriages and then there are those long diplomatic arrangements that continue out of habit, paperwork and fear of the neighbors. NATO increasingly resembles the last category. The chemistry is gone. The old passion, the sweeping moral confidence of the postwar Atlantic alliance has cooled into the sort of brittle coexistence where both parties still share a house but eat dinner in separate rooms.

For decades, the arrangement worked because it rested on a simple emotional bargain. America provided muscle, money, and strategic clarity. Europe provided legitimacy, markets, and the comforting illusion that the West still represented a coherent civilization rather than a collection of competing anxieties wrapped in procedural language. During the Cold War, the relationship had urgency. The Soviet Union was a looming presence that forced coherence upon people who otherwise might have spent their time arguing over tariffs and wine regulations.

But history has a cruel sense of humor. NATO won the Cold War and slowly lost the plot. The alliance today often feels less like a military pact than an exhausted corporate retreat where nobody remembers the original mission statement. Washington complains that Europe free-rides on American defense spending while simultaneously resenting any attempt by Europe to pursue strategic independence. Europe complains about American recklessness while depending almost entirely on American logistics, intelligence, and military infrastructure whenever a genuine crisis appears. Each side accuses the other of immaturity. Both are correct.

The deeper problem is psychological. America no longer sees Europe as the center of the world. Asia dominates strategic thinking now. China absorbs the imagination once reserved for Moscow. Europe, meanwhile, has become trapped between dependency and denial. Its political class speaks constantly about “strategic autonomy” in the same tone people discuss finally learning Italian or committing to yoga, always beginning next year.

And then there is the issue nobody wants to state plainly: the emotional mythology underpinning the alliance has collapsed. The old Atlantic narrative depended on shared confidence in liberal democracy, economic growth and Western inevitability. That confidence is evaporating simultaneously on both continents. America looks increasingly inward, polarized and suspicious of its own institutions. Europe looks fragmented, aging, and uncertain whether it still believes in borders, industry, or power itself.

The result is not an imminent collapse but something potentially worse: a hollow continuation. Alliances rarely die dramatically. They decay administratively. Meetings continue. Statements are issued. Summits produce carefully staged family photographs beneath enormous flags. Yet underneath the choreography sits a growing recognition that the interests of Washington, Berlin, Paris, Warsaw, and Ankara are diverging faster than diplomats can invent new language to conceal it.

A bad divorce may still be avoidable. But the relationship now survives less through affection than inertia. NATO once embodied strategic romance: a grand union forged in existential danger. Today it increasingly resembles two exhausted partners staying together because separating would be expensive, frightening, and geopolitically inconvenient.

History suggests that is rarely enough.

 

Ovi History #eMagazine #19: The Dunkirk evacuation begins

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On May 26, 1940, as German forces closed in on the trapped British Expeditionary Force (BEF) and Allied troops at the French port of Dunkirk, the massive evacuation code-named Operation Dynamo began.

Over 338,000 soldiers, British, French, Belgian, and Canadian, were surrounded on the beaches, facing relentless Luftwaffe bombing and advancing Panzer divisions. A hastily assembled fleet of over 800 vessels, known as the "Little Ships of Dunkirk," including naval destroyers, merchant marine boats, and civilian fishing boats, pleasure craft, and lifeboats, crossed the English Channel to rescue them.

Under heavy fire and in shallow waters that precluded large ships from reaching the shore, soldiers waded out to be ferried by smaller craft to larger vessels offshore.

Despite grim weather, air cover from the RAF, and Hitler’s controversial order to halt the panzers, the evacuation succeeded beyond all expectations. By June 4, over 338,000 men had been saved, providing a crucial morale boost and preserving the core of the British Army to fight another day, a "miracle of deliverance" that turned a staggering defeat into a symbol of resilience.

For this issue of Ovi History, a historical fiction short stories from Lucas Durand and Mike Nomads.

So, turn the pages and ...take cover.

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Thanos Kalamidas


The convenient villain in Bolivia’s crisis by Mia Rodríguez

Bolivia’s streets are once again filled with tear gas, chants, barricades and the familiar soundtrack of public fury. Demonstrators have poured into the roads to reject austerity measures proposed by President Rodrigo Paz, whose government argues that painful economic sacrifices are necessary to stabilize a fragile economy. Yet instead of confronting the political reality staring his administration in the face, officials have chosen a far easier strategy, blame Evo Morales.

It is a tactic as old as politics itself. When governments lose public confidence, they search for ghosts, saboteurs, or hidden puppet masters. In Bolivia today, Morales has become the all-purpose explanation for unrest. Officials accuse him of stirring anger, mobilizing supporters, and fueling demonstrations behind the scenes. Perhaps he is influencing events to some degree; former leaders rarely disappear quietly from political life, especially in Latin America, where political rivalries tend to outlive elections. But reducing nationwide anger to the scheming of one former president is not only intellectually lazy, it is politically dangerous.

People do not flood the streets because they are hypnotized by a politician. They protest because they feel abandoned, squeezed, and ignored.

Bolivia’s economic pressures are real. Rising living costs, public frustration, and fears about worsening conditions have created fertile ground for unrest. Austerity policies, regardless of how carefully economists package them, almost always land hardest on ordinary citizens. They threaten subsidies, weaken purchasing power, and deepen anxiety among workers already struggling to stay afloat. Governments may defend such policies as “necessary corrections,” but citizens experience them as punishment.

That is why blaming Morales feels less like analysis and more like deflection. The irony is impossible to ignore. Centrist governments often claim to represent pragmatism and moderation, yet when social tensions explode, they frequently retreat into political paranoia. Instead of persuading the public, they criminalize dissent. Instead of debating policy failures, they invent conspiracies. The message becomes painfully clear: if people are angry, someone must have manipulated them into being angry.

This approach insults the intelligence of Bolivians. Morales remains a deeply polarizing figure. To supporters, he symbolizes indigenous empowerment and resistance to elite politics. To critics, he represents authoritarian instincts and political division. But whatever one thinks of him, the current protests reveal something much larger than the ambitions of a former president. They expose a widening disconnect between political leaders and a public exhausted by economic instability.

Governments that rely too heavily on blaming political enemies eventually stop listening to their own citizens. Every protest becomes sabotage. Every critic becomes a destabilizer. Every act of dissent becomes evidence of some hidden plot rather than a reflection of legitimate social frustration. Democracies weaken when leaders become incapable of distinguishing opposition from treason.

Bolivia now stands at that uncomfortable crossroads. President Paz may genuinely believe austerity is unavoidable. Perhaps parts of his economic argument are even correct. But if his administration continues treating public anger as merely the shadow of Evo Morales, it risks missing the deeper truth entirely: the protests are not only about one man from Bolivia’s past. They are about a government rapidly losing control of Bolivia’s present.


Fika bonding! #122 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

Fika is a state of mind and an important part of Swedish culture. It means making time for friends and colleagues to share a cup of coffee and a little something to eat.

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The king of the north dreaming of Downing Street castle by Jerome Weiss

There is something unmistakably deliberate about Andy Burnham these days. The mayor of Greater Manchester no longer sounds like a regional politician fighting for buses, trams and devolved budgets. He sounds like a man rehearsing for national office. Every television appearance, every carefully calibrated row with Westminster, every appeal to “ordinary people outside London” feels less like local governance and more like an audition for No 10.

And perhaps Labour should be paying closer attention. Burnham occupies a curious space in British politics: part old Labour bruiser, part modern media operator. He has managed to survive multiple political deaths, losing leadership contests, being written off by Westminster insiders, and disappearing north only to reinvent himself as the voice of England’s forgotten cities. In an age where authenticity is rarer than competence, Burnham has cultivated both. That alone makes him dangerous.

His greatest political asset is not ideology. It is geography. For years, British politics has revolved around London voices speaking to London assumptions. Burnham recognised earlier than most that the country outside the M25 had grown tired of being managed rather than heard. He turned Greater Manchester into more than a mayoralty. He turned it into a political stage set. The fights over transport, homelessness and pandemic restrictions were not merely civic disputes; they were carefully framed morality plays about power, fairness and respect.

During the Covid years especially, Burnham emerged as a rare politician willing to confront central government publicly and emotionally. While others hid behind briefing papers and managerial jargon, he sounded angry on behalf of people. Whether one agreed with him became almost secondary. He understood the theatre of politics better than many cabinet ministers.

That instinct matters because British politics is entering another volatile chapter. Voters increasingly distrust polished career politicians who speak like corporate consultants. They want conviction, or at least the appearance of it. Burnham offers exactly that. He speaks in football-ground cadences rather than Westminster dialect. He sounds rooted somewhere real.

Yet the path to Downing Street remains complicated. Inside Labour, Burnham is both admired and viewed with suspicion. Keir Starmer’s project is built on discipline, caution and central control. Burnham represents something messier: emotional politics, regional power and a willingness to freelance publicly. That may win elections eventually, but it also unsettles party machines obsessed with message management.

Still, political timing changes everything. Starmer may dominate today, but British politics devours certainty at alarming speed. One difficult government term, one economic downturn, one perception that Labour has become too technocratic, and the appetite for a more instinctive populist figure could grow rapidly.

Burnham understands this. He does not need to rush. In fact, patience strengthens him. Every year spent outside Westminster allows him to sharpen the image of outsider competence, a politician who governs rather than merely comments. It is a powerful contrast in an exhausted political culture.

The irony is that Burnham’s greatest strength may be that he does not appear desperate for power. British voters have become suspicious of ambition worn too openly. Burnham hides his carefully. But it is there, unmistakably.

The mayor of Greater Manchester is no longer simply governing a city-region. He is building a national story about identity, fairness and power beyond London. And stories, more than manifestos, are what eventually carry politicians to Downing Street.


The art of betrayal in a red tie by Edoardo Moretti

Donald Trump has always understood one thing better than most modern politicians: performance matters more than consistency. His political genius lies not in ideology, but in instinct, the ability to sense outrage, exploit grievance and wrap contradiction inside the language of patriotism. That is why his latest balancing act over Taiwan feels less like diplomacy and more like political theater staged for two audiences at once.

On one side stands Beijing, eager to hear signals that Washington’s commitment to Taiwan is weakening. On the other stands Trump’s nationalist base, conditioned to believe he alone projects American strength abroad. So after appearing to soften America’s posture during his China visit, Trump suddenly floats the idea of speaking directly with Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te about arms sales, a move that would shatter decades of carefully maintained diplomatic convention.

It is classic Trump; create the fire, then sell yourself as the firefighter. Since 1979, Washington has walked an intentionally ambiguous line with Taiwan. The United States recognized the government in Beijing while maintaining unofficial but strategically vital relations with Taipei. Every president since Jimmy Carter understood the fragility of that arrangement. Democrats and Republicans alike avoided direct leader-to-leader communication not because they were weak, but because they understood that symbolism in Asia can carry the weight of military action.

Trump, however, views diplomacy the way reality television producers view ratings. Stability is boring. Disruption commands attention.

The irony is impossible to ignore. Trump built much of his political identity on attacking the global elite for “selling out” America. Yet his posture toward authoritarian strongmen has often looked remarkably accommodating. He praises Xi Jinping’s “strength,” admires centralized power and speaks about alliances as if they are overpriced business contracts rather than pillars of geopolitical order.

Now he wants credit for sounding tough on Taiwan after appearing to hand Beijing precisely what it has long wanted: uncertainty. This is the essence of modern populism. It is not about coherent doctrine. It is about emotional sequencing. First reassure isolationists that foreign commitments are wasteful. Then reassure hawks that America remains feared. Say NATO allies are freeloaders, then boast about military dominance. Compliment dictators, then threaten them on social media. The contradictions are not liabilities; they are the product itself.

And for many supporters, it works because the appearance of toughness matters more than strategic consistency. Trump understands that in the age of fragmented media, politics is consumed in clips, not doctrines. A provocative statement about Taiwan generates headlines. The deeper consequences, increased Chinese military pressure, confusion among allies, heightened instability in the Indo-Pacific, arrive later, if they arrive visibly at all.

But Taiwan is not a campaign prop. It is one of the most dangerous flashpoints in the world. Ambiguity has preserved an uneasy peace for decades precisely because every American president treated the issue with caution bordering on obsession. Recklessness dressed as bravado can alter calculations in Beijing and Taipei alike.

Trump’s defenders will argue that unpredictability is strategic. Yet unpredictability without discipline becomes improvisation and improvisation in great-power politics can be catastrophic.

The deeper concern is not merely what Trump says about Taiwan today. It is that American foreign policy increasingly resembles a pendulum swinging between spectacle and retreat. Allies no longer know whether Washington’s commitments survive beyond the next news cycle. Adversaries test boundaries because they sense confusion.

Trump calls this strength. History may call it something else entirely: the slow corrosion of credibility masquerading as populist swagger.


#eBook: Eritrea Confronts Ethiopia by Ovi History

 

Following a brutal 30-year armed struggle against the Ethiopian military regime (the Derg, and later its successor government), Eritrean People's Liberation Front (EPLF) forces entered the capital city of Asmara in May 1991.

The Derg had been weakened by internal collapse and military defeats in the north, and EPLF commander Isaias Afwerki ordered his fighters to secure the city. Their arrival was met with widespread celebration, as the EPLF quickly established administrative control and effectively ended Ethiopia’s long-standing claim over the territory.

With the entry into Asmara, the EPLF immediately reinstated Eritrea’s de facto independence—a status that would be formalized two years later by a UN-supervised referendum in April 1993, in which nearly 99.9% of voters chose sovereignty.

This victory marked the culmination of Africa’s longest guerrilla war for self-determination, transforming the EPLF into the de facto government and laying the foundation for post-independence Eritrea under the leadership of Isaias Afwerki.

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Eritrea Confronts Ethiopia

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AntySaurus Prick #130 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

Dino is a vegetarian virgin dinosaur and his best friend is Anty,
a carnivorous nymphomaniac ant.
They call themselves the AntySaurus Prick and they are still here
waiting for the comet to come!

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Ralph Waldo Emerson: A bridge to the Spirit of the World by Rene Wadlow

As Life and Nature are not great with reference to the Present only,
but greater still from what is yet to come, out of that formula for Thee I sing.
Walt Whitman

Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882) whose birth anniversary we mark on 25 May, stressed the need for thinking and writing in an American style, separate from that of England which dominated American culture at that time - an early voice for "America First". He called for a poetry "of insight and not of tradition".  Yet at the same time, he knew that the "Oversoul" - the 'Thee' for which Walt Whitman sang, transcended all frontiers.

Emerson was a leader of what is often called "American Transcendentalism " - a vision of a cosmic force whose immanent nature courses its way  upward through all creation toward its source.  The Transcendentalists held that the sacred, which transcends the world but manifests itself in this world, thereby sanctifying it and making it real.  God's immanent presence in the creation is an ongoing process of progressive spiritual evolution. Walt Whitman that Emerson recognized as a intellectual and spiritual kin, gives these ideas a more poetic form. Evolutionary theory and democratic thought led Whitman to a new understanding of the divine-human relationship.(1)

Emerson came from a long line of Protestant ministers.  His father was a Unitarian minister, a New England reform movement that stressed the human rather than the divine nature of Jesus.  William Ellery Channing (1780-1842) was the leading Unitarian minister of his day, placing an emphasis on a God of love rather than a God of judgment.  Two of his nephews, Ellery Channing and William Henry Channing were close friends of Emerson.

Emerson went to Harvard University and then to Harvard Divinity School.  He was a minister from 1829 to 1832 but then resigned.  He was not attuned to the ritual aspect of a minister's work.  Thus he turned from preaching in a church service to lecturing and writing.  Many of his essays were first given as lectures - usually some 80 a year.  It is estimated that he gave 1500 lectures.  He was a good speaker, and people returned faithfully to his lectures. "Nature" "Self-Reliance" "Experience" are some of his best known.  Many dejected secular people have gone to them regularly to see the world in renewed terms of beauty and harmony.

Emerson lived in Concord, a town near Boston. A good number of writers, teachers and people interested in social reform lived there. Emerson was known for the conversations that took place in his home or in that of his friends.  Henry David Thoreau, (1817-1862) who was later recognized as an important thinker had lived in Emerson's Concord home, before building a little house on a piece of land owned by Emerson at Walden Pond.

Emerson did much in his lectures and essays to introduce Indian thought to the United States. (2)  He was a strong American voice that was also open to the world and to the forces of the Spirit.

******************************************

Notes
1) See the fine biography by Van Wyck Brooks who sets Emerson in his New England milieu at a high point in New England's cultural life: Van Wyek Brooks. Ralph Waldo Emerson (New York: E.P. Dutton, 1932)
2) See Carl T. Jackson. The Oriental Religions and American Thought (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1981)

******************************************

Rene Wadlow, President, Association of World Citizens


May 25, 2020; George Floyd, died during an arrest by Minneapolis police officers

There are dates that divide a country’s memory into a before and an after. November 22, 1963. September 11, 2001. And now May 25, 2020, the evening an unarmed Black man named George Floyd lay face down on a Minneapolis street while a police officer pressed a knee into his neck for nine minutes and twenty-nine seconds.

The phrase “I can’t breathe” entered the American lexicon long before Floyd uttered it. Eric Garner said it in 2014 on Staten Island before dying in police custody. So had others, in hospitals, prisons and battlefields. But Floyd’s repetition of the phrase, fading from panic to exhaustion to something approaching resignation, landed differently because millions of people saw it unfold in nearly real time. The camera did not blink away. There was no ambiguity in the posture of power, hands in pockets, knee on neck, bystanders pleading, a man slowly dying beneath the machinery of the state.

History often turns on technology as much as morality. The civil-rights movement of the nineteen-sixties benefited from television. Bull Connor’s dogs and fire hoses in Birmingham horrified northern viewers who might otherwise have remained comfortably detached from southern segregation. The Vietnam War entered suburban living rooms nightly. In 2020, the smartphone played a similar role. The bystander video recorded by a seventeen-year-old, Darnella Frazier, became one of the most consequential pieces of citizen journalism in modern American history.

The timing mattered, too. America in the spring of 2020 was already psychologically unmoored. The pandemic had trapped millions indoors. Death counts scrolled endlessly across television screens. Cities were silent except for ambulance sirens. Anxiety hung over the country like static electricity. Into that atmosphere came eight minutes and forty-six seconds, later corrected to nine minutes and twenty-nine seconds, of recorded suffering. People did not merely watch Floyd die; they watched him die while they themselves were isolated, frightened, unemployed, masked, grieving and staring at screens for entire days. The country was emotionally combustible.

The officer at the center of the killing, Derek Chauvin, did not resemble the cartoon racist villain Americans prefer in retrospect. He was not Bull Connor snarling at cameras in 1963. He was worse in a subtler way: procedural, calm, bureaucratically confident. One of the chilling aspects of the video is Chauvin’s composure. He appears utterly certain that the system will protect him. In a sense, history had taught him that it probably would.

American policing has always carried contradictions inherited from the nation itself. In the South, slave patrols enforced racial hierarchy long before modern police departments emerged. In northern industrial cities, police often served as strikebreakers and guardians of property. Throughout the twentieth century, law enforcement became intertwined with political rhetoric about “law and order,” a phrase that often functioned as coded language during periods of racial unrest. After the assassinations and riots of the late sixties, politicians from Richard Nixon onward built careers promising protection from urban disorder.

Then came the War on Drugs. Then mass incarceration. Then the militarization of local police after 9/11. Armored vehicles appeared in neighborhoods where potholes went unfixed and schools lacked funding. Police departments acquired surplus military gear while social services eroded. The result was a strange civic arrangement in which officers became, by default, mental-health responders, addiction managers, homelessness regulators, and visible enforcers of inequality.

By 2020, distrust between many Black communities and police departments was not a sudden emotional reaction but the accumulation of generations. The names formed a grim litany: Rodney King, Amadou Diallo, Tamir Rice, Breonna Taylor, Michael Brown. Each case ignited outrage, yet outrage in America has a notoriously short half-life. The difference with Floyd was scale. The protests that followed became the largest in American history, spreading from Minneapolis to tiny rural towns, from London to Tokyo, from Nairobi to Sydney.

The demonstrations were remarkable not merely for their size but for their demographics. In photographs from the summer of 2020, one sees multiracial crowds in places where previous civil-rights protests might have drawn only activists and directly affected communities. There were skateboarders and clergy, suburban parents and labor organizers, teenagers with handmade signs and elderly veterans marching with canes. A strange moral consensus briefly emerged: something fundamental in American policing had broken public trust.

Of course, America being America, consensus quickly mutated into polarization. The slogan “Defund the Police” became both a rallying cry and a political disaster. Activists often meant reallocating portions of police budgets toward social services, mental-health interventions, housing, and education. Opponents heard abolition, chaos, surrender. Conservative media converted isolated incidents of looting into evidence of nationwide collapse. Liberals who had marched in June grew nervous by August as violence and property destruction dominated headlines. The old American cycle resumed: reform colliding with backlash.

Yet dismissing the protests because some demonstrations devolved into riots is historically unserious. Nearly every major American movement has contained disorder. The Boston Tea Party was vandalism celebrated retroactively as patriotism. The labor uprisings of the nineteenth century frequently turned violent. Civil-rights protests in the sixties were routinely condemned at the time as dangerous disruptions. Polling during the height of Martin Luther King Jr.’s activism showed many Americans viewed him unfavorably. Historical memory sands down discomfort.

Still, the Floyd era revealed the limitations of symbolic awakening. Corporations issued solemn statements about racial justice while fighting unionization campaigns and paying poverty wages. Bookstores filled windows with antiracist reading lists. Murals appeared. Diversity seminars proliferated. Streaming services rearranged recommendation pages. America entered what might be called the “yard-sign phase” of moral engagement, where public performance sometimes substituted for structural change.

The most enduring reforms turned out to be uneven and local. Some cities banned chokeholds. Others revised use-of-force policies. Body-camera mandates expanded. A few departments experimented with non-police crisis response teams. Yet many of the deeper issues—qualified immunity, police union protections, prosecutorial dependence on police cooperation, economic segregation, remained largely intact.

What did change profoundly was perception. For decades, Americans had been conditioned by police procedurals, political speeches, and institutional mythology to regard law enforcement with near-automatic deference. Floyd’s murder punctured that reflex for millions who had never personally questioned it before. Watching the video, viewers encountered not heroic split-second decision-making but something slower, colder, and more disturbing: indifference.

That indifference extended beyond Chauvin. Three other officers stood nearby. None intervened decisively. The crowd begged. A firefighter pleaded to check Floyd’s pulse. One bystander shouted that they were killing him. The scene resembled less a chaotic confrontation than a civic ritual in which authority insulated itself from ordinary morality.

One cannot understand the emotional force of the event without understanding Minneapolis itself. The city often imagined itself as progressive, enlightened, polite, the sort of upper Midwestern place where residents recycle carefully and vote correctly. Yet Minnesota has long possessed some of the worst racial disparities in housing, education, and criminal justice in the country. Floyd’s killing exposed a truth many liberal cities resist admitting, progressive self-image does not immunize institutions from systemic inequality.

There is also the uncomfortable question of memory. Americans are exceptionally skilled at converting trauma into consumable narrative. The George Floyd protests were immediately historicized while they were still happening. Murals became Instagram backdrops. Politicians knelt in kente cloth inside the Capitol. Brands transformed grief into marketing language with astonishing speed. The machinery of commodification moved almost faster than mourning itself.

And yet cynicism alone is inadequate. Something genuine happened in 2020. Millions of people, especially younger Americans, experienced a moral and political awakening that cannot be entirely dismissed as fashion or performance. For many white Americans, Floyd’s death represented the first time they confronted police violence not as an abstraction but as undeniable visual evidence. One need not romanticize the aftermath to recognize the importance of that rupture.

History rarely offers clean victories. Reconstruction ended in betrayal. The civil-rights movement achieved legislative triumphs while economic inequality persisted. The election of Barack Obama did not usher in a post-racial America; if anything, it intensified reactionary politics that culminated in the rise of Donald Trump. Likewise, the Floyd protests changed consciousness more rapidly than they changed institutions.

But consciousness matters. Future historians may ultimately view the summer of 2020 less as a completed revolution than as a diagnostic moment, a national MRI revealing fractures Americans had spent decades avoiding. The video forced the country to confront intertwined questions about race, force, inequality, surveillance, and citizenship. Who receives the presumption of innocence? Who is seen as threatening? Whose pain is believed? What powers should the state possess over the body of a citizen lying helpless on pavement?

These are ancient questions in American life. The tragedy of George Floyd is not only that he died. It is that so many Americans were unsurprised. The shock came less from the existence of police violence than from the clarity with which it was documented. Black Americans, in particular, had been describing such experiences for generations, often to skepticism or dismissal. The camera altered the burden of proof.

At the trial of Derek Chauvin in 2021, prosecutors relied heavily on the video itself. There was a sense throughout the proceedings that the nation was judging not merely one officer but an entire pattern of impunity. Chauvin’s conviction for murder felt historically significant precisely because such convictions are comparatively rare. Accountability, in America, often arrives as exception rather than norm.

In the years since Floyd’s death, the country has drifted into familiar arguments about crime, disorder, and policing. Some reforms stalled. Some cities increased police funding again after spikes in violent crime. Public attention moved elsewhere, as it always does. Wars returned to headlines. Elections consumed attention. Algorithms rewarded fresh outrage.

But certain images do not disappear. The human brain stores them differently.

A man calling for his dead mother.
A knee on a neck.
Hands in pockets.
Bystanders pleading.
Silence where intervention should have been.

The historian’s task is not simply to record what happened but to interpret why a particular moment pierced the national conscience. George Floyd’s death became historic because it condensed centuries of unresolved American tension into one unbearable scene. The video showed power stripped of euphemism. No speechwriter could soften it. No statistic could abstract it. The encounter was horrifyingly intimate.

And perhaps that intimacy explains why the event still lingers in public memory long after slogans faded and hashtags cooled. Floyd’s death forced Americans into the oldest democratic realization: that institutions are not moral by default. They become moral only when citizens insist upon it, repeatedly, imperfectly, and at great cost.

A republic reveals itself in the moments when nobody thinks the world is watching.

Minneapolis was watching.
America was watching.
History was watching.


The law is not neutral when empires write it by Thanos Kalamidas

The indictment of former Cuban leader Raúl Castro over the 1996 shootdown of two Brothers to the Rescue aircraft is being presented in Washington as a triumph of delayed justice. Nearly three decades after four men died over the Florida Straits, the United States has decided that history still deserves a courtroom. Perhaps it does. The victims’ families certainly deserve answers and states should never casually escape accountability when civilians are killed.

But there is another question hovering uncomfortably over this moment, one that American officials rarely ask themselves because great powers almost never do: what happens when the logic is reversed?

Imagine Venezuela indicting Donald Trump for the killing of Venezuelan soldiers during the American operation that seized Nicolás Maduro. Imagine Caracas announcing murder charges, issuing arrest warrants and declaring that justice transcends borders. One can already predict Washington’s response with absolute certainty. The White House would call it illegitimate, politically motivated and an attack on American sovereignty. Cable news would erupt in patriotic outrage. Congress would likely pass resolutions condemning the “dictatorial abuse of international law.”

And yet that is precisely why the Castro indictment matters beyond Cuba. It exposes the asymmetry at the heart of global justice. The United States insists that its courts possess universal reach when American citizens are harmed, but it rejects the very same principle when Americans stand accused abroad.

That double standard is not unique to Republicans or Democrats. It is embedded in the DNA of American power. Washington supports international tribunals when adversaries are in the dock and undermines them when American officials might face scrutiny. The language changes depending on the target. When enemies are accused, the phrase is “accountability.” When Americans are accused, it suddenly becomes “politicization.”

None of this absolves Castro or the Cuban government. The 1996 shootdown remains one of the ugliest episodes in modern U.S.-Cuba relations. Even international investigators concluded that the aircraft were destroyed in a manner impossible to justify under international norms. But justice loses moral force when it appears selective, especially when delivered by a superpower that often exempts itself from the rules it imposes on others.

The deeper issue is that modern geopolitics increasingly resembles legal warfare dressed in moral language. Indictments are no longer merely judicial acts; they are instruments of foreign policy. Washington knows perfectly well that Raúl Castro, at 94 years old and living in Cuba, is unlikely ever to stand trial in Miami. The practical effect of the indictment is limited. The symbolic effect, however, is enormous. It signals that the Trump administration intends to intensify pressure on Havana and continue framing regime change as a legal and moral crusade rather than simply a geopolitical objective.

That should concern anyone who believes international law must apply consistently or not at all.

The danger begins when justice becomes indistinguishable from power. Smaller nations quickly learn that indictments issued by powerful countries carry weight because they are backed by sanctions, military influence and financial leverage. Meanwhile, accusations against powerful nations rarely travel beyond press conferences and diplomatic protests.

In theory, international law was meant to restrain raw power. In practice, it too often mirrors it. Americans may applaud the Castro charges because the victims were Americans and because Cuba remains an easy villain in domestic politics. But if Washington truly wants a world where leaders can be prosecuted across borders for deadly state actions, then it must accept that principle universally, including when the accusations point back toward the United States itself.

That is the test of whether this is justice or merely jurisdiction with an aircraft carrier behind it.

The alliance fatigue by Timothy Davies

There are bad marriages, there are loveless marriages and then there are those long diplomatic arrangements that continue out of habit, pap...