Red hats and Union Jacks by Yash Irwin

There is something deeply unsettling about watching a political culture with centuries of its own identity begin to cosplay another nation’s worst instincts. Yet here we are, Nigel Farage, flanked by a rotating cast of former Tory figures clinging to relevance, eagerly importing the theatrics, slogans and intellectual emptiness of American MAGA politics into the United Kingdom.

This is not admiration, it is imitation at its most cynical. Farage has always been a political opportunist, a man who understands the power of grievance better than the responsibility of leadership. But what we are witnessing now goes beyond his usual brand of populism. This is a deliberate attempt to reshape British political discourse into something louder, angrier and far less accountable. It is not about policy; it is about performance. Not about governance; about perpetual outrage.

The irony is almost laughable. Britain, with its long parliamentary traditions, nuanced political debates and often understated rhetoric, is being force-fed a diet of American-style political spectacle. The subtlety is gone. In its place, slogans, culture wars and the endless recycling of “us versus them.”

Former Tory politicians joining this parade make it even worse. These are individuals who once operated within the structures of governance, who understood the complexities of policy and compromise. Now, stripped of power and perhaps of purpose, they have found refuge in the easy applause of outrage politics. It is easier to shout than to solve. Easier to provoke than to persuade.

What makes this transformation particularly dangerous is its calculated simplicity. MAGA-style politics thrives on division, on reducing complex societal issues into digestible anger. Immigration becomes invasion. Opposition becomes betrayal. Facts become optional. It is politics designed not to inform citizens, but to inflame them.

And Farage knows exactly what he is doing. By borrowing from this playbook, he taps into a ready-made emotional framework. Fear, resentment, nostalgia, these are powerful tools. But they are also corrosive. They erode trust, undermine institutions and leave behind a political landscape where winning matters more than governing.

Britain deserves better than this imported chaos. The United Kingdom has its own challenges, economic pressures, social divisions, questions about its place in the world. These require serious leadership not theatrical imitation. Turning British politics into a second-rate version of American culture wars does nothing to address these issues. It distracts, it divides and ultimately, it diminishes.

There is also something profoundly unpatriotic about this entire exercise. To drape oneself in the Union Jack while mimicking another country’s political dysfunction is not nationalism, it is insecurity. True political confidence would mean engaging with Britain’s problems on British terms, not outsourcing outrage to a foreign template.

What we are seeing is not strength. It is desperation dressed as defiance. And perhaps that is the most telling part of all. This push to “MAGA-form” UK politics is not a sign of momentum, it is a sign of exhaustion. When ideas run out, volume increases. When credibility fades, spectacle takes over.

The question is whether the British public will accept this transformation or reject it.

Because once politics becomes pure performance, reality itself becomes negotiable. And that is a road that, once taken, is very difficult to leave.


For the boy child sitting in the front row at the book fair #Poem by Abigail George

 

The flower is lonely
look how it weeps
look how the stone edge
precipice of the tips
of the tears form an iceberg
It's tired of the night
its polarities
its dimensions
its ghosts

The flower finds the day empty
and filled with longing
solitude
the interloper, regret
the people are as depressing
as rain and winter light
The time to have children is over
I eat bread and cheese
for one
The light dims
Another night is over
And I am left to think
of our separation
the much younger
(than I am now)
woman in your life
I think of how fragile
the word “ceasefire” is
“novelist”
and I come up for air
reach for memory
and all of its tenderness
What remains is this
a sickly father
the traits of manic depression
hope
Yes, hope
all of its blessed assurance
I find faith in a clock
The spaghetti of time
The years
turn into mist
while I listen
to a poem by Akhmatova
I am not the only woman
who has felt alone
who has been rejected by a man
and became a poet
instead of a mother.

A republic of fearing children’s books by Shanna Shepard

Every April, a gentle irony floats across the calendar. International Children’s Book Day arrives with its usual fanfare, posters of dragons and dreamers, librarians arranging bright displays, teachers urging reluctant readers toward stories that might quietly change their lives. It is in theory a celebration of imagination, curiosity and the sacred, subversive act of a child discovering a world larger than their own.

And yet, in the United States, the day increasingly lands with a hollow echo. Because while one hand gestures toward celebration, the other has been busy removing books from shelves.

There is something almost literary about the contradiction itself, a kind of dark allegory. A nation that prides itself on free expression now finds itself nervously scanning the contents of children’s literature, as though stories themselves might be contraband. School boards debate not literacy, but acceptability. Librarians, once quiet custodians of curiosity, are recast as reluctant arbiters of controversy. The question is no longer “What should children read?” but “What should they be prevented from encountering?”

The shift is subtle in tone but enormous in implication. Defenders of these bans often frame them as protective measures. Children, they argue, must be shielded from complexity, from discomfort, from ideas that challenge inherited beliefs. It is a familiar instinct and not an entirely unreasonable one. Childhood is, after all, a fragile terrain. But literature has never been merely decorative. The best children’s books have always smuggled difficult truths beneath whimsical surfaces. They speak of loss, difference, fear, injustice because children, contrary to the sanitizing impulse, already live in a world where such things exist.

To deny them stories that reflect that reality is not protection. It is erasure. And erasure, in its quiet way, is far more dangerous than any paragraph. What is lost in this climate is not just access to specific titles, but a broader trust in the reader. A child picking up a book is not a passive vessel awaiting ideological imprinting. They are active interpreters, capable, often surprisingly so, of navigating ambiguity. To assume otherwise is to underestimate them, to flatten their intellectual and emotional lives into something far smaller than it truly is.

Meanwhile, the adults wage their battles. There is, too, a peculiar irony in the choice of targets. Books, printed, bound, sitting quietly on shelves, have become the focal point of cultural anxiety in an age where far more aggressive, less mediated content streams endlessly through screens. It is the book, with its patient demand for attention, that is deemed suspect. Perhaps because books, unlike fleeting images, linger. They invite reflection. They create interiority. And interiority, in a polarized moment, can feel like a threat.

On International Children’s Book Day, we are meant to celebrate the idea that stories open doors. That they expand the boundaries of a child’s world, offering not just escape but understanding. The act of reading is, at its core, an act of empathy—of stepping into another perspective, another life.

To restrict that act is to quietly narrow the future. The deeper question, then, is not about any single book or policy. It is about what kind of readers and eventually, what kind of citizens we hope children will become. Curious or cautious? Open or guarded? Capable of wrestling with complexity, or trained to avoid it?

A society reveals itself not just by what it permits, but by what it fears. And on a day meant to honour children’s literature, the growing discomfort with certain stories suggests that the fear is not of books themselves but of the ideas and the independence, they might inspire.


Me My Mind & I #12: Moving boxes #Cartoon by Patrick McWade

 

A different way to check internal and external ...thoughts!
'Me My Mind & I' is a cartoon series by Patrick McWade.
For more 'Me My Mind & I' HERE!
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Fika bonding! #119 #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.

For more Fika bonding!, HERE!
For more Ovi Cartoons, HERE!


The illusion of progress in an age of regression by Brea Willis

For a fleeting moment it seemed the world had reached a fragile consensus, oil, that stubborn relic of the industrial age, would no longer dictate the fate of economies or the rhythm of geopolitics. Nations spoke in earnest about wind corridors and solar fields, about tidal innovations and the quiet promise of water-powered grids. It was not perfect, nor fast enough, but it was movement and movement mattered.

Then came the disruption. What had been a cautious but collective march toward energy transition began to fracture under the weight of political short-termism and revived fossil fuel loyalties. The shift was not immediate but it was unmistakable. Climate rhetoric softened, replaced by the familiar language of “energy independence” that, more often than not, translated into drilling more, extracting more and delaying more.

The consequences of this reversal are no longer abstract. They are visible in the volatility of oil markets, in the uneasy alliances being rekindled, and in the quiet abandonment of ambitious renewable targets. Nowhere is this contradiction more glaring than in regions already strained by geopolitical tension, where reliance on oil remains both a lifeline and a liability. As instability deepens, oil prices climb, predictably, relentlessly and with them rises the cost of clinging to an outdated system.

There is a particular irony in watching governments scramble to manage rising energy costs while simultaneously neglecting the very alternatives that could have insulated them. Wind and water do not spike in price due to conflict. Sunlight is not subject to sanctions. And yet, these truths are repeatedly sidelined in favour of immediate political gains or economic nostalgia.

The argument often presented is one of practicality: that the world is simply not ready to abandon oil. But this is a convenient half-truth. The world was not ready and perhaps still isn’t but it was preparing. Infrastructure was being tested, investments were being made, and public sentiment was, however slowly, shifting. What stalled progress was not impossibility, but interruption.

And interruptions, particularly political ones, have consequences that extend far beyond election cycles. They reshape priorities, redirect funding and perhaps most damagingly, erode trust. When governments signal inconsistency on something as foundational as energy policy, industries hesitate, innovators retreat and citizens grow sceptical of long-term promises.

Meanwhile, the clock does not pause. Environmental pressures intensify, economies remain vulnerable to supply shocks and the illusion of control that oil can indefinitely serve as a stable backbone, grows thinner by the day. The recent surges in prices are not anomalies; they are reminders. Reminders that dependence carries risk and that diversification is not a luxury but a necessity.

What makes the current moment particularly frustrating is not just the regression, but the awareness of it. We know what alternatives exist. We have seen them work, even if imperfectly. The path forward is neither mysterious nor unattainable. It simply requires consistency, a quality too often sacrificed at the altar of political expediency.

History will not judge this era kindly if it is remembered as the moment when progress was within reach, only to be wilfully set aside. The tragedy is not that the world relied on oil for so long. It is that, having begun to move beyond it, we chose or allowed ourselves to turn back.


Emotion #Poem by Jan Sand

The world, to be fair
Simply
Is not there
If you don’t care.
The notion
That emotion
Merely spices up the nices,
Gives significance to chance,
Provides devices to circumstance
To enhance or dismiss
What you prefer to miss
Loses an essential.

Emotion’s not a triviality.
It’s the basis of reality.

You must love or hate,
Discriminate
To act to create fate
Or otherwise you simply don’t exist.

That robots do not care,
Are not aware,
But derive their drive
From algorithm
Is exorcism of its livingness.

When a soldier or a torturer
Or just an average employee
Refuses to be
Emotional,
To care of what or where
Or how performance does
What performance does
As long as money is reward,
He or she becomes
Mere robotry.


Manish Zodiac Predictions for April 2026 #Horoscope by Manish Kumar Arora

Aries ( 21 March – 19 April )  - Your creativity can blossom in this period, so it’s a good month to start a creative venture. It’s a good time to do some traveling, especially somewhere you’ve never been to before, or to learn something new, opening up your mind. You can also focus on your beliefs, figuring out what your beliefs really are and which are true to you. You can be lazy with your friendships, the groups you belong to, and the dreams you have for your future, not wanting to be bothered by any responsibilities. Favorable Dates : April 1, 6, 10, 15, 19, 24 Favorable Colors : Purple & Red

Taurus ( 20 April – 20 May )  - You will have renewed energy for your work. The more work you do, the more energy you seem to have, and you can get through many small projects, start new ones, make progress at work, look for new work, and have more work opportunities.In love, you’re more romantic, and want to spend more time with your partner, if attached. If single, you can find other people are attracted to you without you putting in much effort, and they come to you, so you have your pick of the litter. Favorable Dates : April 1, 5, 10, 14, 19, 23 Favorable Colors : White & Blue

Gemini ( 21 May – 20 June ) - You come up with ideas that are different, unusual, or innovative, and you enjoy going outside of your intellectual comfort zone. You know what you’re capable of, and you know exactly what has to be done. You’ll keep going until you get what you want, no matter how hard it gets. You can be lazy with your loved ones, in your relationships, and with your commitments. Don’t slouch too much or you’ll make things worse. You can flake out on your family responsibilities, and have a hard time sifting through your emotions. Favorable Dates : April 3, 6, 12, 15, 21, 24 Favorable Colors : Purple &  Green

Cancer  ( 21 June – 22 July ) - You think about the direction your life is going in, and want to be sure you’re on the right path. You feel most like yourself when you’re with friends, in groups, and surrounded by other people. You would enjoy being with people you feel are your equal, especially intellectually, and who push the envelope. You can experience a more positive time with your home and family and being in tune with your feelings could even prove to be beneficial to you. You can strengthen your inner foundation, and become even more stable and secure. Favorable Dates : April 2, 8, 11, 17, 20, 26 Favorable Colors : White & Yellow

Leo ( 23 July – 22 August )-  You may come across as more inventive, independent, or rebellious. You would feel enthusiastic in like minded groups. The more people there are around to give you input and point out what you’re missing, the better. This is a good time to try putting together a budget or financial arrangement. You can enter into an important new relationship that brings great new things into your life, start a new partnership that’s beneficial to both of you, become more committed in your existing relationships, or take it to the next level. Favorable Dates : April 1, 6, 10, 15, 19, 24 Favorable Colors : White & Blue

Virgo ( 23 August – 22 September ) - You may come across as more regal, stubborn, and friendlier. You’re also more comfortable in the spotlight, and crave more attention from people. If single, you can meet lots of potential mates, and you spend your time dating and flirting, playing coy, and while you could fall in love, it’s the playful kind. Your confidence helps you to overcome any financial difficulties. The better your finances are, the better you feel about yourself in general. You can focus on making more money in some way, or on attaining something of value. Favorable Dates : April 4, 7, 13, 16, 22, 25 Favorable Colors : Yellow & Green

Libra  ( 23 September – 22 October ) - You can expand your life in new ways, ways you’ve been dreaming of for some time, and have new experiences that open you up. It’s a great time for travel, going back to school, and pushing the boundaries of your life further apart. There’s plenty in your life that you can smile about. You feel good with your loved ones during the second half of the month, enjoying the time you spend with them and wanting to be around them more as the month goes on. Favorable Dates : April 2, 6, 11, 15, 20, 24 Favorable Colors : Red & Purple

Scorpio ( 23 October – 21 November ) - You can experience an excellent period for work. You take on an important project that gets you recognition and praise.  If in job, you’re offered a new work opportunity or job that’s better than where you’re at, or you decide it’s time to take control of your work and be a leader. You can embrace a financial opportunity that brings good energy. You can be presented with a wonderful opportunity to do something in the background, and it leads to bigger and better things for you later on if you use it right. Favorable Dates :April 1, 9, 10, 18, 19, 24 Favorable Colors :White & Grey

Sagittarius ( 22 November -21 December ) - You may come across as more gregarious, independent, or optimistic.  You feel ambitious and focused on what you can get done and succeed with and you look at the bright side of situations. You can also focus on your beliefs, pursue further learning, or take a well-deserved trip.If in a relationship, you want to connect with loved ones mentally during the first half of the month, and can talk things over with your partner. If single, you want someone who can stimulate your mind. Favorable Dates : April 1, 8, 10, 17, 19, 26  Favorable Colors : White & Yellow

Capricorn ( 22 December – 19 January ) - You have opportunities presented to you to achieve your goals, to reach high places in your career, or to get further along your life path. You feel you’re going in the right direction.  You have the ability to make things happen for yourself, so if you feel motivated to, take the reins. In love, you want an emotional connection, and if in a relationship, you work on having that connection with your partner. If single, you look for someone who can be nurturing, supportive, and sensitive to your emotional needs. Favorable Dates : April 7, 9, 16, 18, 25, 27  Favorable Colors : White & Red

Aquarius ( 20 January – 18 February )–You’re optimistic about life, seeing all of the good that’s around you, and this positive attitude leads to opportunities for you to expand your life in new ways and give you a different perspective. You crave mental stimulation and to have a mental rapport with others, and you want to share your thoughts, ideas, and opinions. You can have lots of conversations and more communications with others than usual. If in relationship, you want to make sure you have a mental connection and get along as friends before you take things any further. Favorable Dates : April 5, 9, 14, 18, 23, 27  Favorable Colors : White & Grey

Pisces ( 19 February – 20 March ) - It can be a good time financially as you put more focus on improving your finances. You take your time with anything you begin, and you keep going until you reach the end. You focus on trying to get everything under control, including your spending habits. You create a stronger value system, sense of security, and bond to your beliefs. If single, you’re attracted to those who are serious, brooding, quiet, and a little dark. If you’re in a relationship, you’re more passionate and intense with your partner. Favorable Dates :April 4, 9, 13, 18, 22, 27  Favorable Colors :Blue& Grey


Sergei Rachmaninoff - Dark Echoes

There are composers who shape music, and then there are composers who haunt it. Sergei Rachmaninoff (1 April 1873 – 28 March 1943) belongs firmly in the latter category, a figure whose work lingers not just in concert halls but in the emotional afterlife of anyone who truly listens. To praise him is easy; to fully reckon with him is harder. His music is lush, unapologetically romantic and often devastatingly sincere and, depending on whom you ask, either timeless or stubbornly backward-looking.

Rachmaninoff’s reputation has always lived in tension. During his lifetime, as modernism surged forward with sharp angles and intellectual rigor, he stood defiantly rooted in the 19th century. While others fractured tonality and dismantled tradition, he doubled down on melody, harmony and emotional directness. Critics of his era often dismissed him as conservative, even irrelevant. And yet, audiences never agreed. They still don’t.

Listen to his piano concertos and you’ll understand why. They don’t merely showcase virtuosity, they weaponize it. The sweeping lines, the surging climaxes, the aching lyricism all feel designed to bypass the intellect and strike somewhere deeper. There is almost no irony in his music, no distance between feeling and expression. In a cultural landscape that increasingly values detachment, that kind of sincerity can feel either refreshing or excessive.

That excess is one of the central criticisms levelled against him. Rachmaninoff does not do restraint. His music swells, lingers, insists. It risks sentimentality and sometimes crosses into it. There are moments when the emotional weight feels almost too carefully engineered, as if he knows exactly how to pull the listener’s heartstrings and does so without hesitation. For some, this is manipulation. For others, it’s mastery.

But reducing his work to mere emotional indulgence misses something crucial. Beneath the surface beauty lies a deep structural intelligence. His compositions are meticulously crafted, his harmonic language rich and distinctive, his sense of pacing remarkably controlled. Even in his most expansive passages, there is discipline. The architecture holds.

What sets Rachmaninoff apart is not just his technical command but his emotional worldview. His music is saturated with longing, nostalgia for a lost Russia, for a vanished cultural identity, for something permanently out of reach. After fleeing his homeland following the Russian Revolution, he became a man in exile and that sense of displacement never left his work. You can hear it in the melancholy that underpins even his most triumphant moments.

This is where his contribution to global culture becomes undeniable. Rachmaninoff didn’t just compose music; he preserved a sensibility. At a time when Europe was reinventing itself through fragmentation and abstraction, he carried forward a lineage of emotional expression that might otherwise have faded. He became a bridge between eras, proving that romanticism still had something to say, even in a century that often tried to silence it.

And yet, his influence is complicated. While many composers pushed music into new territories, Rachmaninoff looked backward. This has led some to argue that his legacy is one of preservation rather than innovation. He didn’t redefine the language of music; he refined an existing one to its highest polish. Whether that is enough depends on what you value. If progress is the only metric, he falls short. If depth, beauty, and emotional resonance matter, he stands among the giants.

In today’s world, where music often leans toward minimalism or conceptual experimentation, Rachmaninoff’s work can feel almost radical in its openness. It demands that listeners feel fully, unapologetically. There is no protective layer of irony, no intellectual puzzle to solve. Just sound and the raw humanity within it.

Perhaps that is why he endures. Not because he followed the future, but because he refused to abandon the past. Not because he changed the course of music but because he reminded it of its soul.


AntySaurus Prick #127 #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!

For more AntySaurus Prick, HERE!
For more Ovi Cartoons, HERE!


Ruin while avoid responsibility by Edoardo Moretti

There is a peculiar moral loophole that powerful nations sometimes slip through, the belief that if a crisis is born out of security necessity, then its consequences belong to history, not to them. It is a convenient fiction; one that dissolves responsibility the moment destruction is rationalized. But rubble does not forget who made it, and neither do the people forced to live among it.

Across Gaza, and in the anxious spillover felt in Lebanon and Iran, the scale of human displacement is no abstraction. Families uprooted, infrastructure flattened, entire neighborhoods turned into maps of absence, these are not side effects; they are central outcomes. And yet, the question of what comes next is treated as an afterthought, as though the act of creating instability carries no binding obligation to repair it.

The argument often presented is one of necessity, that security threats demand decisive, even overwhelming, responses. Perhaps. But necessity, if it is to mean anything ethically, cannot be selective. It cannot justify action while excusing aftermath. If a state asserts the right to dismantle, it inherits the duty to rebuild or at the very least, to ensure that survival is possible for those caught beneath the weight of its decisions.

What would responsibility look like in this context? Not rhetoric, not carefully worded acknowledgments of “regret,” but material commitment. Food corridors that function not as temporary concessions but as sustained lifelines. Medical aid that reaches beyond headlines. Housing solutions that acknowledge the long arc of displacement, not just its immediate shock. These are not acts of generosity; they are the minimum requirements of accountability.

Instead what we often see is a distancing. The crisis becomes internationalized, handed off to aid organizations, debated in diplomatic chambers, diluted into a shared problem where responsibility becomes so diffuse that it effectively disappears. The logic is subtle but powerful, once everyone is responsible, no one truly is.

But this diffusion ignores a fundamental truth. Cause and consequence are not interchangeable currencies. The fact that others step in to help does not erase the origin of the need. If anything, it sharpens the contrast between those who mitigate suffering and those who move on from it.

There is also a deeper, more uncomfortable question at play, whether acknowledging responsibility is seen as a form of weakness. In many political frameworks, to admit obligation is to concede fault and to concede fault is to undermine legitimacy. So the safer path is denial, or at least minimization. Yet this instinct, while politically expedient, corrodes the very idea of moral authority. Strength that refuses accountability is not strength, it is avoidance dressed in the language of necessity.

None of this is simple. The region’s history is layered, its conflicts deeply entrenched, its fears not imagined. But complexity cannot become an alibi for inaction. If anything, it demands a higher standard, not a lower one.

The creation of refugees is not a temporary event; it is the beginning of a prolonged human story. And those who play a decisive role in its opening chapters cannot credibly claim disinterest in how it unfolds. Responsibility does not end when the bombs stop. That, in many ways, is where it begins.


Red hats and Union Jacks by Yash Irwin

There is something deeply unsettling about watching a political culture with centuries of its own identity begin to cosplay another nation’...