Corruptions’ offspring by Mia Rodríguez

Latin America has always had a complicated relationship with its ghosts. Every generation claims it has buried them, only to discover that the dead have a remarkable talent for finding their way back into politics. Last week Peru appeared ready to add another chapter to that long and familiar story as Keiko Fujimori, daughter of the disgraced former president Alberto Fujimori, emerged as the projected winner of a razor-thin presidential runoff. Her ascent is significant not simply because of who she is, but because of what she represents: the return of political dynasties built on authoritarian legacies, now repackaged for a new era of populist politics.

The Fujimori name remains one of the most polarizing brands in Latin America. Alberto Fujimori is remembered by supporters as the man who crushed insurgencies and stabilized a collapsing economy. Critics remember him as an authoritarian who dismantled democratic institutions, tolerated corruption, and ultimately fled the country in disgrace. Those two realities have always existed side by side. Yet what is striking about Keiko Fujimori’s rise is how little distance she has needed to place between herself and that inheritance.

Around the region, a broader pattern is becoming impossible to ignore. The children, relatives, and political heirs of controversial strongmen increasingly occupy center stage. The old dictators may be gone, but their surnames remain politically valuable. In countries exhausted by economic stagnation, corruption scandals, and dysfunctional institutions, nostalgia has become a currency. Voters who never experienced the darker side of these regimes often inherit only simplified memories: stability, order, decisiveness. The messier details fade with time.

This phenomenon bears an uncomfortable resemblance to the political style associated with Donald Trump. Not because the circumstances are identical, but because the appeal is familiar. Institutions are portrayed as obstacles rather than safeguards. Political opponents become enemies rather than rivals. Complexity is dismissed in favor of certainty. The promise is not careful governance but strong leadership. Democracy is treated less as a system of rules than as a vehicle for delivering victories.

What makes Peru’s case especially revealing is that the country has spent years cycling through political crises. Presidents have come and gone with astonishing speed. Corruption allegations have become almost routine. Congress and the presidency seem locked in permanent conflict. Under such conditions, voters often begin searching not for ideal candidates but for recognizable names. Political familiarity becomes a substitute for trust.

That is where dynasties thrive. The irony is that many of these political heirs present themselves as outsiders battling a corrupt establishment even when they are direct products of the very systems that produced the dysfunction. The family name becomes both shield and weapon. It provides instant recognition while allowing supporters to reinterpret history through a more forgiving lens.

None of this means that Latin America is marching inevitably toward a new age of authoritarianism. Democracies remain resilient, and voters remain unpredictable. But the success of figures like Keiko Fujimori should serve as a reminder that democratic backsliding rarely arrives dressed as a military coup. More often, it returns wearing a familiar surname, promising competence, order, and a return to better days.

The ghosts, it turns out, never really left. They simply waited for their children to run for office.


Retreat by Harry S. Taylor

European governments have argued, complained, negotiated and occasionally exasperated Washington but beneath every disagreement rested a comforting certainty; America would be there. Its aircraft, its ships, its intelligence networks and ultimately its military power formed the backbone of European security.

That certainty is beginning to look less certain. Reports that the Trump administration has informed European allies of plans to significantly reduce American military assets assigned to NATO missions should not be viewed merely as another adjustment in force posture. Defense bureaucracies are constantly moving units around the globe. Aircraft come and go. Ships rotate. Numbers rise and fall. Yet there are moments when arithmetic becomes symbolism. A one-third reduction in fighter aircraft, a substantial cut in strategic bombers, and a dramatic decline in reconnaissance and attack capabilities send a message far larger than the statistics themselves.

The message is that America is reconsidering its role. For years, European leaders have heard warnings from Washington. Successive American administrations, Republican and Democratic alike, complained that Europe relied too heavily on U.S. military protection while underinvesting in its own defense. Those complaints often sounded like family arguments, loud, repetitive and ultimately harmless. Everyone assumed the alliance would endure because the strategic interests binding it together were too powerful to abandon.

But assumptions have expiration dates. The debate today is no longer about burden-sharing. It is about strategic priorities. Washington increasingly sees China as the central challenge of the twenty-first century. Every aircraft squadron stationed in Europe is a squadron unavailable elsewhere. Every naval deployment in the Atlantic is a deployment not focused on the Indo-Pacific. From an American perspective, reallocating resources may appear logical.

From a European perspective, however, the implications are unsettling. The uncomfortable reality is that Europe still lacks many of the military capabilities that make modern deterrence credible. Strategic bombers remain largely an American specialty. Intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance, and logistical support are areas where European dependence on the United States remains profound. NATO's collective strength is often portrayed as the sum of thirty-two members. In practice, much of that strength has rested on one nation supplying the most critical pieces.

What happens if that nation gradually steps back? The immediate answer is probably not collapse. NATO is unlikely to disappear overnight. Alliances rarely die in dramatic explosions. They fade through accumulated doubts. Confidence erodes. Questions multiply. Governments begin planning for contingencies they once considered unthinkable.

That process may already be underway. European capitals now face a choice they have postponed for decades. They can continue hoping that future American administrations restore previous commitments, or they can accept that the era of guaranteed U.S. military predominance in Europe may be ending. The second option is far more expensive, politically difficult, and strategically demanding. It also may be unavoidable.

Perhaps the most significant aspect of these reported reductions is not the military impact itself but the psychological one. Alliances depend as much on belief as on hardware. Once allies begin wondering whether the security guarantee is permanent, the alliance has entered a different phase of its existence.

This may not


The virtue of staying small by Zakir Hall

The modern economy has developed a peculiar habit; it assumes that every act of creation is secretly a business plan. Build a website and someone will ask about your revenue model. Start a newsletter, and the inevitable question follows, how many subscribers are paying? Launch a niche app, and investors seem to materialise from thin air to discuss growth, scalability and market opportunity. The assumption is so deeply embedded that many people struggle to imagine another possibility that someone might build something simply because they enjoy building it.

Yet a quiet counterculture is emerging. Across the internet, creators are constructing side businesses with no ambition to turn them into empires. They make tools, publish newsletters, design software, write blogs and launch tiny digital products not because they dream of venture capital or acquisition offers, but because the act of creation itself remains rewarding. In an age obsessed with monetisation, this may be one of the most radical economic choices available.

The prevailing startup narrative treats smallness as a temporary condition. A project is expected to grow, then scale and then dominate. Remaining modest is interpreted as failure or lack of ambition. This mindset has become so pervasive that people often struggle to distinguish between a hobby, a craft and a company. Everything must eventually become a business, and every business must eventually become larger.

But what if growth is not always the objective? The creators who intentionally remain small have discovered something many larger organisations forget. Growth carries costs. More users require more support. More customers create more expectations. More revenue often demands more management, more compliance, more meetings and more bureaucracy. What begins as a joyful experiment can slowly transform into a full-time obligation.

The irony is that many successful side projects become less enjoyable precisely because they succeed. A developer who built a useful tool for a few hundred enthusiasts suddenly finds themselves answering support emails at midnight. A writer who enjoyed sharing ideas with a small audience becomes trapped by publishing schedules and subscriber expectations. The freedom that inspired the project gradually disappears beneath the weight of operating it.

Choosing not to scale is therefore not necessarily a sign of limited ambition. It can represent a different kind of ambition altogether. Instead of maximising revenue, creators maximise autonomy. Instead of pursuing market share, they pursue satisfaction. Instead of asking how large something can become, they ask how enjoyable it can remain.

This approach reflects a broader shift in attitudes towards work. For decades, professional success was measured primarily by expansion. Bigger companies, larger teams and higher revenues served as universal indicators of achievement. Yet many people now view these metrics with growing scepticism. They have witnessed founders become managers, artists become brands and hobbies become obligations. They have learned that scale often changes the nature of the thing being scaled.

The internet has made this alternative path increasingly viable. Digital infrastructure allows individuals to build products that serve small communities without requiring massive audiences. A niche website can survive comfortably with a few thousand loyal users. A specialised software tool can remain useful without conquering an industry. A newsletter can flourish without becoming a media empire.

Such ventures may never appear on lists of disruptive startups. They will not attract headlines celebrating billion-dollar valuations. Investors will mostly ignore them. Yet they perform an important cultural function. They remind society that creation does not always need a commercial justification.

There is something deeply refreshing about a person who builds because they want to build, writes because they want to write or launches a product because they find the process fascinating. Not every project must become a corporation. Not every creator must become an entrepreneur. Sometimes the most successful side business is the one that stays exactly the size its creator wants it to be.


Maples & Oranges #067 #cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

Taunting oranges in the midst of other fruity links,
constantly spreading the wares of their juicy gloom.

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The G7 Summit that mistook silence for stability by Kingsley Cobb

For a few fleeting days, the mood among Western leaders was almost celebratory. At the latest G-7 summit the sense of relief was unmistakable. There were no dramatic walkouts, no public explosions of anger, no headline-grabbing attacks on allies. French President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer reportedly went as far as offering military support to help the United States secure the Strait of Hormuz after Iran threatened one of the world's most important energy corridors. In return, they sought stronger American backing for Ukraine. Diplomacy appeared to be functioning once again.

In today's geopolitical climate, however, the definition of success has become remarkably modest. The benchmark is no longer bold agreements or visionary leadership. It is simply avoiding disaster. As one observer noted, success now means the absence of rupture. If the United States behaves in a relatively normal fashion and the summit concludes without a transatlantic crisis, leaders leave feeling victorious.

That alone says a great deal about the state of the Western alliance. The optimism surrounding the summit was real, but it was also fragile. It existed largely within the carefully managed confines of diplomatic meetings, private discussions, and choreographed public appearances. Once the summit ended, reality returned with remarkable speed. Opinion pages, political analysts, and foreign policy commentators quickly filled the media landscape with a very different conversation: the growing possibility that we are witnessing the gradual end of American dominance.

The contrast was striking. Inside the summit halls, leaders spoke of cooperation, stability, and shared interests. Outside those halls, the debate centered on decline, fragmentation, and uncertainty.

This disconnect reveals the central challenge facing Western governments. They are attempting to project confidence at a time when confidence itself has become increasingly difficult to sustain. The institutions built after World War II were designed around the assumption of consistent American leadership. NATO, the global trading system, and much of the international security architecture depended on a United States that was both powerful and predictable.

Today, power remains. Predictability does not. The rest of the world notices this. Allies notice it. Rivals certainly notice it. China continues expanding its influence across multiple continents. Russia remains determined to challenge Western interests despite immense economic pressure. Middle Eastern powers are pursuing increasingly independent foreign policies. Even traditional allies are quietly discussing scenarios that would have seemed unthinkable a decade ago: a future in which Washington becomes less willing, or less able, to act as the central pillar of the international order.

None of this means American dominance will disappear tomorrow. Great powers rarely collapse overnight. More often, influence erodes gradually while political leaders insist everything remains under control. The real danger is not sudden decline but complacency, the belief that maintaining appearances is equivalent to maintaining strength.

That is why the relief displayed at the G-7 summit deserves closer examination. Relief is not strategy. Temporary harmony is not long-term stability. And the absence of conflict during a few days of meetings does not answer the larger questions confronting the West.

As leaders prepare for the upcoming NATO summit, they face a reality they would rather avoid. The challenge is no longer simply keeping the United States inside the Western camp. The challenge is convincing the world that the camp itself remains coherent, confident, and capable of leading.

For now, Western leaders are celebrating a summit that did not go badly. In another era, that would have been the bare minimum. Today, it is treated as a triumph. That may be the most revealing sign of all.


Italy’s endless rightward frontier by John Kato

Italian politics has a peculiar habit: just when observers conclude that the right has reached its outer limits, another politician appears to argue that it has not gone nearly far enough. The launch of Roberto Vannacci’s new party, National Future, is merely the latest chapter in a story that has been repeating itself for decades.

Vannacci is not an obvious political novice. A highly decorated retired general, he arrives with the sort of public profile that many aspiring politicians spend years trying to construct. He has cultivated an image of bluntness, defiance and unapologetic patriotism. To supporters, he is a truth-teller willing to challenge political orthodoxies. To critics, he is another populist entrepreneur exploiting cultural anxieties for electoral gain. Either way, he understands a central rule of modern politics: visibility matters more than pedigree.

What makes his move significant is not simply the creation of another party. Italy has never suffered from a shortage of those. Rather, it is the political space he seeks to occupy. Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni already leads one of the most right-leaning governments in modern Italian history. Conventional wisdom would suggest that there is little room to maneuver further right. Yet Vannacci clearly believes otherwise.

His calculation may prove less reckless than it initially appears. Italian politics has long been characterized by fragmentation, ideological reinvention and voter volatility. Parties emerge, merge, collapse and reappear with astonishing frequency. Political brands are often temporary; political grievances are not. Every time a governing coalition settles into office, a portion of its supporters inevitably becomes disappointed. Some feel betrayed by compromises. Others conclude that campaign promises have been diluted by the realities of governing. These voters often begin searching for a purer alternative.

That search creates opportunities for challengers like Vannacci. The paradox of successful right-wing governments is that they often generate demand for even more radical competitors. Once in power, parties that once thrived on protest must suddenly administer budgets, negotiate with European institutions and make difficult trade-offs. Governing turns revolutionaries into managers. Inevitably, some voters interpret pragmatism as surrender.

Meloni herself benefited from this dynamic. For years she positioned herself as the uncompromising alternative to an established political class. Now she occupies the establishment's seat. The outsider has become the incumbent. That transformation creates political space, and ambitious figures are rarely slow to occupy it.

National Future therefore represents less a challenge to Italy’s political system than an expression of its enduring logic. Italian voters have repeatedly demonstrated an appetite for movements that promise renewal, authenticity and national revival. The names change. The slogans evolve. The underlying appeal remains remarkably consistent.

Whether Vannacci can transform media attention into electoral success is another matter entirely. Launching a party is easy. Building a durable political organization is far harder. Italian history is littered with charismatic personalities who generated headlines but failed to establish lasting movements. Celebrity and controversy can attract supporters; sustaining them requires discipline, structure and a coherent governing vision.

Still, dismissing National Future would be unwise. Its emergence highlights a broader reality about contemporary Italy. The political contest on the right is no longer primarily between conservatives and progressives. Increasingly, it is a competition among different shades of conservatism, nationalism and populism. The battle is over who best embodies those instincts, not whether they should dominate the agenda.

That is why Vannacci’s arrival feels familiar. In many democracies, political space eventually reaches a boundary. In Italy, it often seems more elastic. Every time analysts declare the right fully occupied, someone discovers another frontier beyond it. And every few years, a segment of the electorate decides to explore it.


Ovi Pulp Vortex #eMagazine - Issue 2

 

Welcome back to the Ovi's Pulp Vortex second issue; where the air is thin, but the ideas are suffocatingly thick. This month, we turn our gaze skyward and immediately regret it. In our lead feature, The Glass Horizon, we explore a chilling new subspecies of climate fiction: the Aeropocalypse.

Forget rising seas; the real terror is the very thing keeping you alive, breathable atmosphere, turning into a weapon, a commodity, or a tomb.

Pulp Vortex - Issue 2
Ovi Pulp stories eMagazine
June 2026
Ovi eMagazines Publications 2026

Pulp Vortex - Issue 2

Read the Ovi Pulp Vortex eMagazine online HERE!
View, read it online or download it in PDF/epub format HERE!
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Berserk Alert! #110 #Cartoon by Tony Zuvela

 

Tony Zuvela and his view of the world around us in a constant berserk alert!
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Trekking Chat #010 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

They trek across surreal cartoon streets, armed with quirky sarcasm
and boundless humor. They map uncharted valleys, befriend bizarre creatures
and find the real adventure in their square frames.

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The illusion of victory by Robert Perez

After nearly four months of fighting, the United States finds itself declaring success in a war that appears to have delivered remarkably little of what it set out to achieve. Washington may point to destroyed targets, military sorties and diplomatic agreements as evidence of victory. Yet when measured against strategic outcomes rather than battlefield headlines, the campaign against Iran increasingly resembles an expensive exercise in self-deception.

The figures alone are sobering. Thirteen American personnel have lost their lives. Roughly 3,500 Iranians have been killed. At least $29bn has been spent. Such costs might be justified if they had fundamentally weakened the Islamic Republic’s ability to threaten its neighbors, sponsor militant groups or pursue nuclear ambitions. Instead, the evidence suggests otherwise.

Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium has not disappeared. By most accounts, it remains buried beneath rubble in hardened tunnel complexes, inaccessible but far from eliminated. The distinction matters. A nuclear program delayed is not a nuclear program dismantled. Washington’s objective was never merely to create debris; it was to remove a strategic threat. On that measure, success remains elusive.

Nor has Iran’s military capacity been broken. Despite sustained attacks, Tehran retains a substantial missile and drone arsenal. The war demonstrated vulnerabilities, certainly, but it also highlighted resilience. The Islamic Republic absorbed punishment that many expected would cripple its armed forces. Instead, it continues to possess the tools necessary to project power across the region and threaten adversaries far beyond its borders.

Equally striking is what has not changed among Iran’s network of proxies and allied militant groups. The organizations that form the backbone of Tehran’s regional influence remain largely intact. Years of American policy have rested on the assumption that weakening Iran would weaken these groups. Yet the war has not delivered that outcome. The infrastructure of influence that stretches from Lebanon to Iraq and beyond survives.

Perhaps most damagingly for Washington, the conflict may have enhanced Iran’s strategic standing rather than diminished it. The regime has demonstrated an ability to withstand a massive American military assault and remain in power. In authoritarian systems, survival itself often becomes a form of victory. Tehran can now present endurance as proof that it successfully resisted the world’s most powerful military.

The economic dimension is equally troubling. By disrupting shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, Iran reminded the world of its capacity to hold global markets hostage. Energy prices trembled. Governments scrambled. Investors watched nervously. The episode reinforced a reality that military action was supposed to reduce: Iran remains capable of exerting enormous leverage over the international economy.

The diplomatic consequences may prove even more enduring. The conflict exposed disagreements between Washington and Jerusalem that had previously been contained behind closed doors. Strategic unity gave way to visible friction. Allies who entered the crisis expecting coordination instead witnessed growing divergence. Such fractures are not easily repaired.

Then there is the agreement that emerged from the fighting. If reports of its contents are accurate, it compares unfavorably with the nuclear deal negotiated during Barack Obama’s presidency. Tehran appears positioned to benefit from sanctions relief and access to billions of dollars in previously frozen assets. A war supposedly intended to force concessions may ultimately provide financial rewards.

This leaves an uncomfortable question. What exactly has America gained? It has spent vast sums, sacrificed lives and destabilized a crucial region. Yet Iran’s nuclear potential persists, its military remains dangerous, its proxies survive and its leadership stands defiant. Meanwhile, Tehran may soon enjoy economic benefits that strengthen rather than weaken the regime.

President Trump insists that history will record a triumph. History, however, tends to judge wars by results rather than rhetoric. If strategic objectives are the benchmark, America has not secured a decisive victory. It has merely paid a very high price to discover the limits of military power.


A princess, Champagne and nationalism by Nadine Moreau

For years, Jordan Bardella has been one of the most effective political salesmen in Europe. Young, polished and relentlessly disciplined, the leader of France’s National Rally has helped transform a party long associated with fringe extremism into a mainstream electoral force. He has done so by presenting himself as a man of ordinary France, the product of a modest upbringing, a resident of the outer suburbs, and a politician who understands the frustrations of workers, commuters and struggling families.

That image has now collided with a rather awkward photograph. The sight of Bardella sipping champagne in a VIP enclosure at the Monaco Grand Prix alongside his girlfriend, Princess Maria Carolina of Bourbon-Two Sicilies, may seem trivial. Politicians are entitled to holidays, relationships and moments of leisure. Yet politics is rarely about reality alone. It is about symbols. And in modern populism, symbols matter more than ever.

The National Rally has spent years constructing a narrative of social proximity. Its leaders speak constantly of forgotten citizens, neglected provinces and elites detached from everyday concerns. The party’s success rests not merely on its policies but on the perception that it belongs to the same world as its voters.

Monaco belongs to a different world entirely. The principality is less a city than a global symbol of wealth. It represents inherited privilege, luxury lifestyles and the kind of international elite networks that populist movements typically denounce. Formula One’s most glamorous race, watched from yachts and exclusive terraces, is hardly the natural habitat of a politician seeking to embody popular anger against established power.

This is not simply a matter of hypocrisy. All successful populist movements face a structural problem. Their leaders often rise so far that they become exactly the sort of elite figures they once criticised. Success changes lifestyles. Electoral victories bring influence, access and wealth. The outsider eventually becomes an insider.

The challenge is particularly acute for the European hard right because its appeal increasingly transcends class. National Rally no longer relies solely on working-class voters. It attracts professionals, entrepreneurs and segments of the middle class. As the party broadens its coalition, its leaders inevitably move within circles that would once have seemed politically dangerous.

Yet voters remain sensitive to authenticity. Many supporters will shrug at the Monaco photographs. Some may even admire them. Modern politics is not driven entirely by class resentment. Plenty of voters enjoy seeing their leaders appear successful and glamorous. The real danger lies elsewhere. Every populist party depends on maintaining a distinction between “the people” and “the elite.” Once that distinction becomes blurred, the movement risks losing part of its emotional force.

Bardella’s opponents understand this perfectly. They will seize every opportunity to portray him as another member of the establishment he claims to oppose. The image of a suburban politician turned champagne-drinking guest of aristocratic circles writes its own attack advertisements.

The irony is that National Rally has worked hard to normalise itself. Marine Le Pen spent years detoxifying the party’s image, while Bardella has become its youthful, media-friendly face. Their ambition is not merely to protest against the system but eventually to govern it. Yet governing parties are judged differently from insurgent movements. They are expected to embody responsibility rather than rebellion.

That transition is never easy. For now, the Monaco episode is unlikely to inflict serious political damage. French voters have larger concerns than a weekend at a motor race. But it serves as a reminder of a deeper tension running through contemporary populism. The more successful populist leaders become, the harder it is for them to pretend they remain outsiders.

Jordan Bardella’s problem is not that he was seen drinking champagne with a princess. It is that the photograph captured a question that haunts every populist movement once it approaches power: when does the champion of the people become part of the elite?


Corruptions’ offspring by Mia Rodríguez

Latin America has always had a complicated relationship with its ghosts. Every generation claims it has buried them, only to discover that ...