The chancellor’s fatigue by Emma Schneider

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


#eMagazine Ovi Dark - Issue #02 - Phantom Tide

 

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

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

And we realized …the horror was never a metaphor.

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

Ovi Dark - Issue #02

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The drone at the Aegean’s edge by Melina Barnett

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Sceptic feathers #128 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

Cynicism with feathers on thin wires.

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Nigel’s routine of resentment reform by Thanos Kalamidas

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

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

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

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

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

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

And still, for many Britons, he remains hope.

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

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


Another Tomorrow #Poem #Painting by Nikos Laios

 

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

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

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

 *******************************
Check Nikos Laios' eBOOK, HERE!

Yellow wings, dark omens by Zakir Hall

Spirit Airlines did not simply go bankrupt. It became a flashing warning light on the dashboard of an economy being driven by impulse, vanity and ideological whiplash. When the discount carrier abruptly canceled all flights after failing to secure a federal rescue package, the collapse felt larger than aviation. It felt symbolic. A country that once celebrated stability now seems addicted to improvisation, and businesses are discovering that markets can survive many things except permanent uncertainty.

Donald Trump has always treated economics the way casino owners treat carpeting: loud patterns, distracting colors, and the assumption that people will not notice the structural cracks underneath. The sales pitch is always the same. Shake the table hard enough and call it strength. Threaten tariffs before breakfast, promise tax miracles by lunch and blame foreigners by dinner. The spectacle itself becomes the policy. Yet eventually the bill arrives, usually for someone else.

Spirit’s downfall carries a particular irony. The airline was practically built for the America Trump claims to champion: price sensitive workers, families hunting for cheap vacations, immigrants flying between cities without caring about luxury or prestige. Spirit democratized humiliation. The seats were cramped, the baggage fees absurd, and the fluorescent yellow branding looked like a warning sign from a chemical plant, but millions of Americans could suddenly afford to travel. That mattered.

Now one of the country’s most recognizable budget airlines is gone, and the timing is impossible to ignore. Fuel costs surged amid geopolitical instability. Consumer confidence weakened. Corporate borrowing became more painful. Investors stopped believing rescue narratives. And in the middle of all this stood a White House that governs the economy like a reality television cliffhanger, creating an atmosphere where businesses delay investment because nobody knows what fresh disruption may arrive tomorrow morning through a social media post.

The deeper problem is not one bankruptcy. Capitalism survives bankruptcies all the time. The danger is psychological contagion. Once creditors, executives and consumers begin to believe the ground beneath them is unstable, caution spreads quickly. Airlines cut routes. Retailers freeze hiring. Developers shelve projects. Banks tighten lending. The economy slows not because of one dramatic collapse but because fear becomes ambient, like humidity.

Trump’s defenders insist turbulence is the necessary price of bold leadership. But there is a difference between disruption and chaos. Franklin Roosevelt disrupted. Ronald Reagan disrupted. Even Barack Obama disrupted certain assumptions after the financial crisis. Yet those presidents still projected the sense that somebody inside the building was reading the spreadsheets. Trump often gives the opposite impression. His administration lurches between threats and reversals with the frantic energy of gamblers trying to recover losses before the casino closes.

Spirit Airlines may ultimately be remembered less as a failed company than as a mood. Americans are increasingly living inside an economy that feels emotionally exhausted. Prices swing wildly. Layoffs arrive suddenly. Markets react to presidential moods as though they are weather systems. Ordinary people sense that large institutions are no longer designed to protect stability, only to survive the next news cycle.

The yellow planes disappearing from the runway are therefore more than a corporate obituary. They are a reminder that economic confidence, once broken, is painfully difficult to rebuild. Nations can survive recessions. They can survive inflation. What becomes dangerous is when unpredictability itself becomes national policy.

Perhaps more bankruptcies will follow, perhaps not. But real bankruptcy is intellectual. An administration obsessed with spectacle has mistaken volatility for vigor. Spirit’s collapse is what happens when political theater collides with economic gravity. Eventually applause fades, lights dim, and somebody has to pay dearly.


Ephemera #153 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

Ephemera: a word with ancient Greek roots meaning:
‘something that is produced or created that
is never meant to last or be remembered’.

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The emperor and the salesman by Markus Gibbons

Donald Trump is heading to China the way a casino owner walks into a card game he assumes was rigged in his favor before the first hand is even dealt. The act is already familiar, the inflated boasts, the theatrical insults softened later into “great respect,” the endless insistence that only he possesses the masculine toughness required to confront Beijing. He will arrive with tailored suits, grievance politics and a social-media instinct that treats diplomacy as a reality-show confessional. Yet beneath the noise lies a quieter truth. Xi Jinping is not merely receiving Trump. He is studying him, indulging him and most importantly, using him.

Trump approaches foreign policy as a personal chemistry test. He believes history bends around dominant personalities. Xi understands this weakness with the patience of a man who governs not by impulse but by endurance. China’s political culture prizes time in ways modern American politics no longer can. Washington thinks in election cycles; Beijing thinks in generations. Trump wants applause by the next news cycle. Xi wants leverage that compounds over decades.

That asymmetry matters. Trump often speaks about China the way a strongman in a nineteenth-century political cartoon might speak about an exotic rival civilization: with equal parts admiration and resentment. He envies centralized power even while condemning it. He praises Xi’s “strength” because Trump’s worldview has little room for democratic subtlety. To him, politics is dominance televised. Xi, meanwhile, recognizes in Trump something useful, a Western leader unusually vulnerable to flattery and unusually suspicious of the institutions meant to constrain him.

Henry Kissinger once described diplomacy as the art of restraint wrapped inside symbolism. Trump has reversed the formula. For him, symbolism is everything and restraint barely exists. He wants grand entrances, giant flags, choreographed handshakes and headlines declaring victory before negotiations have even begun. Xi’s government excels at this kind of imperial theater. Beijing knows how to stage magnificence. The long tables, the solemn processions, the carefully measured compliments, all of it becomes psychological architecture designed to make Trump feel historically important.

And that may be the most dangerous illusion of all: Trump’s apparent desire to see himself as Nixon returning to China. But Richard Nixon went to Beijing in 1972 carrying intellectual seriousness beneath the paranoia. He understood geopolitics deeply enough to recognize the Soviet-Chinese split as an opportunity to reorder the Cold War. Nixon’s visit was shocking because it emerged from strategy, not branding. Trump, by contrast, treats diplomacy less as statecraft than as self-mythology. He wants the cinematic image of the breakthrough without necessarily understanding the historical machinery underneath it.

Xi surely notices the difference. The Chinese leader does not need Trump to admire China. He merely needs Trump to remain predictable in his unpredictability. Every emotional outburst weakens America’s image of steadiness. Every public feud with allies quietly benefits Beijing. Every declaration that democratic institutions are corrupt or weak becomes useful propaganda for an authoritarian system eager to argue that liberal democracy is decadent and exhausted.

What makes this relationship fascinating is that both men see themselves as master negotiators while each is trapped by his own vanity. Trump mistakes attention for leverage. Xi mistakes control for permanence. Yet only one of them commands a political system designed to suppress embarrassment and absorb shocks indefinitely. Trump thrives on chaos; Xi harvests advantage from it.

The irony is almost literary. Trump believes he enters China as the dominant personality in the room, the dealmaker prepared to outwit communist technocrats through instinct alone. But Xi’s greatest advantage may simply be patience. Empires decline noisily. Rising powers often wait in silence.

And silence, unlike Trump, rarely needs to announce itself.


The price of Beijing’s friendship by Mathew Walls

Zambia’s reported cancellation of a digital rights conference after complaints from Chinese diplomats over the attendance of Taiwanese activists should surprise nobody. But it should alarm everyone.

For years, China’s expanding influence in Africa has been discussed mainly through the language of economics, roads, railways, ports, loans, minerals and infrastructure. Beijing presented itself as the pragmatic partner willing to build what Western powers only promised. African leaders, understandably frustrated with decades of lectures from Europe and the United States, often welcomed the relationship. China arrived with cash, speed and few questions.

But influence rarely stops at economics. It eventually seeks political obedience. What happened in Zambia is not simply about Taiwan. It is about whether African nations can independently decide who attends a civil society conference within their own borders without foreign pressure dictating the guest list. A government does not need to formally censor speech if it becomes conditioned to anticipate what an influential power might dislike. That is how soft coercion works. Quietly. Efficiently. Without tanks or threats.

China’s strategy toward Taiwan has long depended on making the island diplomatically invisible. Countries are pressured to avoid official recognition, international organizations are pushed to exclude Taiwanese representatives, and even private companies are expected to comply with Beijing’s political vocabulary. What is changing now is the sheer geographic reach of this pressure. Africa has become one of the clearest examples of how China exports not only investment, but political expectations.

And African governments increasingly appear willing to accommodate them. This should concern Africans most of all. The continent fought too hard to escape colonial systems of external control to casually normalize a new era in which foreign capitals influence domestic civic life. The irony is impossible to ignore, nations that proudly defend sovereignty are now, in some cases, outsourcing parts of that sovereignty to preserve strategic relationships with Beijing.

China understands something many democracies forgot long ago: influence is cumulative. You build a highway today and shape a diplomatic decision tomorrow. You finance a parliament building and eventually gain quiet leverage over what conversations occur inside it. Debt matters, but dependency matters more.

None of this means Africa should reject China. That would be simplistic and dishonest. China has undeniably financed infrastructure projects many Western governments ignored for decades. African leaders are right to seek partnerships that advance development. But partnerships become dangerous when they discourage independence of thought, expression or association.

The Zambia episode also exposes a broader global trend. Authoritarian powers no longer confine censorship within their borders. They increasingly export it. The target is not merely governments but institutions, universities, conferences, media platforms and NGOs. The message is subtle but unmistakable: access to our market and our money comes with political conditions.

Africa now stands at an uncomfortable crossroads. It can engage China as a partner while fiercely protecting its civic autonomy. Or it can gradually drift into a model where criticism becomes diplomatically inconvenient and certain conversations disappear before they even begin.

History shows that foreign influence is rarely most dangerous when it arrives loudly. It becomes dangerous when it starts feeling normal.


#eBook Ghosts in the hard rain by Mike Nomads

 

The rain came down like a baptism, washing the dust and blood from Sergeant First Class John “Jo” North’s hands. He knelt in the mud of a foreign land, the acrid smoke of a burning Toyota Hilux stinging his eyes.

The fire painted the night in shades of hellish orange. In the back of the truck, four men lay still. Bad men. The kind who beheaded aid workers and sold children.

Jo wasn’t thinking about them. His world had narrowed to the man in front of him.

Captain Marcus Thorne lay on his back, his breath coming in wet, ragged gasps. A piece of shrapnel from the IED they’d tripped had found the gap between his body armour and his hip. Jo had his field dressing pressed against the wound, his other hand gripping Marcus’s shoulder.

“Stay with me, Captain,” Jo said, his voice a low growl over the drumming rain. “That’s an order.”

Mike Nomads, an ugly divorcee middle-aged adventurer navigating the treacherous waters of family law, spending his days wrestling with legal briefs, his weekends bicycling and mountain climbing and his nights wrestling with existential dread in the form of action-packed short stories. His protagonists, thankfully fictional, never file for alimony and always manage to escape explosive situations with a witty one-liner and a perfectly timed headbutt.

Ovi eBook Publishing 2026

Ghosts in the hard rain

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The chancellor’s fatigue by Emma Schneider

Friedrich Merz increasingly looks like a man who arrived at the summit of German politics only to discover that the mountain itself had alr...