Passport theater by Emma Schneider

There is something almost touching about the speed with which European leaders rediscover nationalism the moment their poll numbers begin to sag. One week they are lecturing voters about the dangers of emotional politics and the next they are standing before microphones, grim-faced, warning citizens about the moral contamination of crossing borders. Germany’s Chancellor, Friedrich Merz, has now entered this familiar phase of political improvisation with a flourish dramatic enough to deserve its own stage lighting.

“I would not advise my children today to go to the U.S.,” Merz told students this week, citing the supposedly dangerous “social climate” under President Donald Trump. America, in this telling, has become too polarized, too volatile, too ideologically combustible for civilized Europeans to comfortably inhabit. One could almost picture terrified German exchange students fleeing Manhattan coffee shops while constitutional crises erupt beside the pastry counter.

The remark was not merely clumsy. It was revealing. Europe’s political establishment has spent nearly a decade constructing Trump as a kind of roaming atmospheric condition, a democratic hurricane permanently threatening Western civilization. Every disagreement becomes existential. Every election becomes “the most important in modern history.” And every politician struggling at home eventually discovers that criticizing America is a convenient substitute for solving domestic problems.

Merz appears to have noticed what Canada’s Prime Minister, Mark Carney, already understands instinctively: anti-Trump rhetoric still performs remarkably well among elite audiences. There is a reliable applause line available in almost every university hall, newsroom, and transatlantic conference room. Mention Trump with sufficient alarm and one immediately acquires the aura of democratic heroism without the inconvenience of actual political courage.

But imitation is difficult when the original performance is already beginning to wear thin. The irony is impossible to ignore. Germany itself is hardly radiating social stability. The country is wrestling with economic stagnation, rising political fragmentation, energy anxieties, immigration tensions, and a widening disconnect between governing elites and ordinary voters. Across Europe, governments increasingly confront electorates that no longer trust institutions speaking in the language of moral superiority. Yet instead of addressing those fractures directly, leaders often externalize the anxiety. America becomes the symbolic villain onto which broader Western unease can be projected.

It is a curious form of dependency: Europe simultaneously condemns and obsesses over the United States. Trump, especially, functions less as a foreign leader than as a psychological weather system for Europe’s governing class. He is discussed with the intensity once reserved for invading armies or theological schisms. Entire political identities are now built around opposition to a single American politician.

Meanwhile, millions of Europeans continue visiting, studying, working, investing, and vacationing in the United States without incident. American universities remain magnets for global talent. American companies still dominate sectors Europeans struggle to compete in. New York, Boston, Austin, and San Francisco have not descended into dystopian collapse despite the feverish rhetoric of international commentators.

What makes Merz’s comments particularly unfortunate is the underlying paternalism. Young Germans do not require political guardians warning them away from democratic societies because elections produced undesirable outcomes. The implication that America is somehow culturally unsafe because its politics are contentious, reveals a remarkably fragile understanding of democracy itself. Democracies are noisy. They are argumentative. They are occasionally vulgar. That is not evidence of collapse. Often it is evidence they are still alive.

There is also something strategically foolish in Europe’s increasingly fashionable habit of publicly sneering at its most important ally. Alliances survive on interests, certainly, but also on cultural goodwill. Leaders who casually encourage distrust toward America may discover later that contempt, once normalized, rarely remains selective.

Merz likely intended his comments as moral seriousness. Instead they sounded like continental performance art: elite anxiety disguised as parental concern, delivered at precisely the moment his own political standing appears increasingly uncertain. Europe’s voters have seen this play before. The scenery changes. The villain remains Trump. And the applause grows slightly weaker every season.


The geography of desperation by Sabine Fischer

A struggling presidency discovers an external villain, wraps itself in the flag and suddenly the endless noise of inflation, economic failures, factional warfare and political exhaustion is replaced by the cleaner language of national purpose. Donald Trump, whose political instincts are closer to television production than ideology, understands this better than most presidents before him.

The fantasy currently drifting through certain corners of American political conversation, Greenland or Cuba, reveals something deeper than strategy. It reveals mood. Greenland sounds like the fantasy of an aging empire still addicted to nineteenth-century maps, a place large enough to look impressive on television graphics but remote enough to remain emotionally abstract. Cuba, however, is different. Cuba comes with memory. Cuba comes with history, exile politics, Cold War mythology, and unresolved American masculinity.

If one were forced to guess which symbolic confrontation would tempt Trumpworld more, Cuba is the obvious answer.

Not because invasion is likely in any conventional sense. Modern America is too tired, too indebted, and too internally fragmented for grand military occupations disguised as liberation campaigns. But because Cuba offers something Greenland never could, narrative oxygen. The Castro name still functions in American conservative politics like a relic from another age, capable of instantly awakening old anti-communist reflexes. Even Raúl Castro, now elderly and politically diminished, retains symbolic utility. In politics, symbolism is often more useful than power itself.

One can already imagine the choreography. Legal accusations. Dramatic language about justice. Allegations tied to repression, disappearances, criminality, perhaps even vague international-security claims inflated through cable news repetition. The point would not necessarily be legal success. The point would be spectacle. Trump has always understood that the accusation matters more than the verdict. The headline is the destination.

And there is another uncomfortable truth lurking beneath all this speculation: American politics increasingly rewards emotional theater over governing competence. Trump’s political career has survived scandals that would have destroyed previous presidents precisely because he operates like a permanent opposition figure, even when occupying the center of power. He thrives on conflict because conflict simplifies reality into heroes and enemies. Cuba provides a ready-made enemy Americans have been trained to recognize for over sixty years.

Greenland, by comparison, feels almost comical. The old proposal to acquire it carried the atmosphere of a billionaire casually trying to purchase another luxury property. It became a meme because it exposed something strangely honest about modern geopolitics: the transactional worldview of powerful men who see nations less as cultures than as assets. But it lacked emotional voltage. Nobody fears Greenland. Nobody dreams about Greenland. There are no generational grudges attached to Greenland.

Cuba still burns in the American imagination, particularly in Florida, where politics is often conducted with the emotional intensity of inherited memory. Any confrontation there would instantly dominate media cycles, unify fractured factions of the Republican base, and allow Trump to reposition himself yet again as the singular defender of American strength against old enemies.

Whether such a strategy would succeed is another matter entirely. America in 2026 is not America in 1962. The public is more cynical, institutions weaker, alliances shakier, and military triumph far less guaranteed. But desperation has always made political leaders believe history can be edited through spectacle.

And Trump, more than anyone in modern American politics, trusts spectacle as if it were destiny itself.


#eBook: The parasocial trap by Virginia Robertson

 

We used to owe each other something. Not love necessarily, that was always too heavy a word for the small, stubborn currency of village life. But inconvenience.

The low-grade, daily friction of sharing air with people we had not chosen. A neighbour’s late-night argument. The butcher’s unsolicited opinion on the weather. A cousin’s tedious story, told for the fourth time.

That friction, it turns out, was a muscle. And we have let it atrophy.

Non-fiction social books reveal the hidden structures, power dynamics, and cultural forces shaping society, from inequality to community. Using investigative journalism, ethnography, or critique, writers turn complex research into compelling narratives. These works challenge assumptions, foster empathy, and connect personal stories to systemic issues, helping readers see their world anew. In an era of polarization, they provide clarity and tools for meaningful change.

Ovi eBook Publishing 2026

The parasocial trap

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Puppi & Caesar #45 #cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

Another cartoon with a mean and know-all of a bully cat, Puppi and her intellectual, pompous companion categorically-I-know-all, Caesar the squirrel!  

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Red lines for sale by Markus Gibbons

Imagine an American administration announcing a multibillion dollar fund to compensate loyalists for alleged political persecution while simultaneously shielding the president, his relatives, and his companies from federal tax scrutiny. In another era, such a proposal would have been laughed out of Washington as the plot of an overwrought political thriller. Today, many Americans would simply scroll past it between weather alerts and grocery coupons, which may be the most alarming development of all.

The true danger in moments like these is not merely corruption. America has survived corruption before. Cities were once run by political machines that treated public office like a neighborhood pawnshop. Presidents have rewarded donors, punished enemies and stretched the law until it squealed. The greater danger is the normalization of power without restraint, the steady conversion of democratic institutions into private instruments of loyalty, grievance, and profit.

Modern authoritarianism rarely arrives in polished boots or through dramatic declarations from palace balconies. It comes wrapped in the language of victimhood. It insists that accountability is persecution, that investigations are coups, that courts are enemies, and that laws apply differently to people who claim to embody the nation itself. The strongman no longer promises virtue. He promises revenge on behalf of followers who feel humiliated, ignored, or culturally displaced.

What makes this political era especially unsettling is its open contempt for ethical boundaries once maintained through shame rather than force. There was a time when presidents at least pretended to separate personal interests from public duty. They released tax returns because voters expected transparency. They avoided obvious conflicts because appearances mattered. Now the performance has changed completely. The brazenness is the message. Every shattered norm becomes proof of strength. Every outrage becomes a loyalty test.

The old American assumption was that institutions would restrain any one leader from becoming too powerful. But institutions are only as durable as the people willing to defend them. Courts require compliance. Congress requires courage. Federal agencies require independence. Journalism requires public trust. Remove those invisible supports and the constitutional structure begins to resemble an abandoned movie set, impressive from a distance but hollow behind the painted walls.

The saddest part is how quickly exhaustion becomes political surrender. Citizens grow tired of permanent scandal. They stop reacting. They accept behaviour that once would have ended careers because outrage itself becomes draining. This is how democratic erosion happens in wealthy countries. Not through one decisive collapse, but through accumulated tolerance. One exception follows another until the exceptions become the system.

The United States still possesses enormous democratic resilience, but resilience is not immortality. No republic receives permanent exemption from history. Nations decline when leaders convince supporters that the state exists primarily to protect one man and punish his enemies. At that point, patriotism becomes confused with obedience, accountability becomes betrayal, and public office becomes a business opportunity with flags attached.

The most revealing feature of such politics is not secrecy but spectacle. The deals are announced loudly, almost gleefully, because the objective is domination through repetition. Citizens are meant to internalize the lesson that nothing can stop the ruling circle, not ethics boards, not prosecutors, not elections, not even basic standards of decency. Once enough people believe resistance is futile, democratic culture weakens long before democratic laws formally disappear.


The war beyond the battlefield by Maddalena Conti

The brief violation of Estonian airspace by a Ukrainian drone and its subsequent destruction by a NATO jet, is the kind of incident that reminds Europe how dangerously thin the line has become between regional war and continental crisis. Officially, the explanation is straightforward: electronic warfare interference likely redirected the drone, Ukraine blamed Russian disruption systems, and NATO responded according to protocol. Yet beneath the technical details lies a far larger and more uncomfortable truth. Modern wars no longer stay contained within borders, nor do they always obey human intention.

This was not a deliberate Ukrainian provocation against Estonia. Few serious observers believe Kyiv would intentionally risk alienating NATO allies while depending on them for survival. But intention matters less and less in an age where algorithms, jamming systems, spoofed coordinates, and invisible electronic attacks can alter the course of weapons in real time. The battlefield today is not only trenches and missiles. It is signals, frequencies, satellite deception, cyber manipulation, and systems designed to confuse machines faster than humans can react.

Russia understands this perfectly. For years, Moscow has invested heavily in electronic warfare capabilities precisely because it allows disruption without openly crossing the threshold into direct NATO confrontation. If a drone loses its route, if navigation is manipulated, if communications collapse, responsibility becomes blurred. Confusion itself becomes a weapon. Plausible deniability becomes strategy.

That is what makes this incident so alarming. A NATO aircraft shooting down a Ukrainian drone over Estonia would once have sounded unimaginable, allies destroying allied equipment inside allied airspace because of electronic interference from an adversary. Yet this is now the reality Europe inhabits. The war in Ukraine has evolved into a sprawling contest where geography is almost secondary to technological reach. The front line extends invisibly across the Baltic region, the Black Sea, cyberspace, and even civilian infrastructure.

The danger is not merely escalation through aggression. The greater danger may be escalation through accident. History is full of wars widened by misunderstandings, navigational errors, or split-second military decisions made under pressure. In previous generations, a pilot might stray across a border because of bad weather or mechanical failure. Today, a drone can be digitally manipulated without its operators fully understanding what is happening until it is too late. That creates a terrifying strategic environment where everyone is armed, nervous, and dependent on systems vulnerable to interference.

NATO did what it had to do. Estonia could not simply allow an unidentified armed drone to roam its airspace unchecked, regardless of origin. Sovereignty means enforcing borders, especially when you share proximity with a hostile Russia that constantly probes for weakness. But the political symbolism still matters. It reveals how even partners on the same side can become entangled in the chaos of modern warfare.

Europe should treat this as a warning, not an isolated anomaly. The next incident may not end as cleanly. A misdirected drone today could become a civilian casualty tomorrow, or a direct military confrontation the day after. Electronic warfare creates ambiguity, and ambiguity is fertile ground for disaster.

The war in Ukraine is no longer merely a conflict between two nations. It is increasingly a demonstration of how fragile security becomes when technology outruns political control. And that should concern every country on the continent.


The gospel of orbit by Zakir Hall

There was a time when America built railroads, then highways, then social networks; now it builds mythologies. The latest is wrapped in titanium alloy and streamed in cinematic slow motion from South Texas, where explosions are marketed as progress and billionaires are mistaken for civilizational necessity. SpaceX, now marching toward what may become the largest IPO in history, is not merely entering the public markets. It is entering the pantheon of modern American fantasy.

The numbers themselves have become surrealist art. A seventy-five-billion-dollar raise. A valuation approaching $1.75 trillion. The figures float above reality like weather balloons, untethered from ordinary measures of profitability or prudence. Wall Street, once allegedly skeptical and disciplined, now behaves like a medieval court watching astrologers interpret the heavens. Every rocket launch is read as prophecy. Every Elon Musk tweet becomes market scripture.

And yet the deeper story is not about rockets. Rockets are almost incidental now. The real commodity is belief.

Musk has mastered a distinctly twenty-first-century alchemy, converting attention into valuation. Investors are no longer buying companies so much as buying emotional futures. SpaceX represents the ultimate emotional asset, the promise that humanity will transcend its earthly dysfunctions through technology, preferably branded technology. Climate collapse? Mars. Political decay? Mars. Social fragmentation? Also Mars. Silicon Valley has reinvented escapism as infrastructure.

The cult surrounding Musk survives because it feeds on contradiction. He is presented simultaneously as outsider and kingmaker, genius and victim, futurist and internet troll. Each failure only enlarges the legend. Rockets explode and admirers applaud the courage of experimentation. Factories miss targets and shareholders praise the ambition. Ordinary corporations are punished for instability; Musk’s empire monetizes it.

But financial gravity has not been repealed simply because engineers can briefly defy physical gravity. At some point, markets remember arithmetic. Hype can inflate almost indefinitely, especially in eras where cheap capital and digital spectacle merge into one giant casino. Yet history leaves a trail of collapsed certainties: railway manias, dot-com delusions, crypto kingdoms evaporating overnight. Every age convinces itself its bubble is different because this time the storytellers are more charismatic.

SpaceX is undeniably a remarkable company. It has achieved engineering feats once thought impossible for a private firm. But America increasingly struggles to separate admiration from worship. The danger begins when markets stop pricing companies and start pricing messiahs.

One can already sense the instability hidden beneath the triumphalism. Musk’s business universe resembles a system held together by personal mystique rather than institutional durability. The higher the balloon rises, the more catastrophic even a small puncture becomes. Public markets are patient during ascents and merciless during descents. The same culture that canonizes visionary billionaires delights in televised downfalls.

And perhaps that is where this story is heading, not toward Mars, but toward the oldest American tradition of all: building giants large enough for the public pleasure of watching them fall.


2nd opinion! 26#09 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

Seriously, a human hater self-centred agoraphobic in quarantine!
I think you’ll need a second opinion after this.

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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

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is ovi-history-isssue-no19-dunkirk.jpg 

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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With the hope that you will read and learn from the articles,
so ...do read this historic chronicle

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.


Passport theater by Emma Schneider

There is something almost touching about the speed with which European leaders rediscover nationalism the moment their poll numbers begin t...