The corporate kingdom by Harry S. Taylor

For centuries, the modern state has operated on a simple assumption: governments write the rules, corporations follow them and the courts stand as the final guardians when power becomes excessive. But the rise of figures like Elon Musk has exposed an uncomfortable reality: the balance between political authority and corporate influence is becoming increasingly fragile. The question is no longer whether corporations can challenge governments, but whether governments still possess the ability to effectively challenge corporations that operate on a global scale.

Musk’s financial empire, stretching across electric vehicles, space technology, artificial intelligence, communications and social media, represents something far larger than the success of one entrepreneur. It symbolises a new era where private organisations can accumulate influence once reserved for nations. A single corporate decision, a market movement, or a public statement can create waves across economies, industries and political debates. The modern billionaire is no longer merely a business leader; he can become an unofficial geopolitical actor.

The problem is not wealth itself. Innovation has always been driven by ambitious individuals willing to take risks. The danger emerges when economic power becomes so concentrated that traditional democratic mechanisms struggle to respond. Laws, taxes and regulations were designed for companies operating within national borders. Today’s corporate giants operate in a borderless environment where capital, data and influence move faster than governments can legislate.

A state can impose a tax reform, create regulations or launch investigations, but a multinational corporation can shift operations, restructure assets or exploit legal differences between countries. The result is a constant game of catch-up, where governments often appear reactive rather than authoritative. The rules exist, but enforcing them against entities with enormous financial resources becomes increasingly complicated.

The deeper concern is the possibility of governments slowly becoming dependent on the very corporations they are supposed to oversee. When states rely on private companies for infrastructure, technology, communication networks or strategic industries, the relationship can quietly transform. The corporation stops being simply a participant in society and begins becoming a partner in governing it. History has repeatedly shown that when private power and public authority become too closely intertwined, accountability becomes dangerously blurred.

The dystopian nightmare is not necessarily a world where corporations openly replace governments. It is a more subtle reality where governments remain in place, elections continue and institutions still exist, but critical decisions are increasingly shaped by those who control resources rather than those who represent citizens.

The challenge facing democracies is not to attack successful entrepreneurs or punish innovation. It is to rebuild the systems that ensure economic power remains accountable. Stronger international cooperation, modern competition laws and clearer boundaries between private influence and public responsibility will be essential.

The future cannot be one where governments become customers, regulators and political dependants of corporate giants simultaneously. That arrangement creates a dangerous imbalance. A democracy where money can consistently overpower regulation risks becoming a marketplace of influence rather than a system of public choice.

Elon Musk’s rise is not the beginning of a corporate dystopia, but it is a warning sign. The lesson is not that successful companies should be feared; it is that no individual, company or financial empire should become so powerful that society must negotiate with it as though it were another sovereign state.

The ultimate question of the twenty-first century may not be who controls technology, but who controls those who control technology. If democracies fail to answer that question, the future may belong not to citizens and governments, but to corporate kingdoms without borders.


The quiet immunity by Edoardo Moretti

Another headline. Another person dead after an encounter connected to immigration enforcement. Another round of official statements, legal caveats, procedural reviews and political shouting. Then silence. The details change from case to case, but the pattern feels depressingly familiar: a life is lost, outrage flares for a few day and the machinery of the state rolls forward largely untouched.

For many Americans, the deepest frustration is not simply about immigration policy. It is about accountability. A government that possesses the power to detain, deport and separate families also carries an extraordinary responsibility to protect human life. When someone dies in custody, during an arrest, or in circumstances tied to federal enforcement operations, the public deserves more than bureaucratic language and delayed investigations. It deserves transparency, urgency and consequences when wrongdoing is found.

The problem is that accountability often appears to arrive wrapped in layers of legal insulation. Agencies investigate themselves. Prosecutors weigh institutional interests alongside public outrage. Courts move slowly. By the time reports are released, the national conversation has already moved on to the next crisis. Families are left grieving while officials speak in the sterile vocabulary of procedures and protocols.

This is not an argument against borders or against enforcing immigration law. Every sovereign nation has the right to regulate entry and residence. The real question is whether enforcement agencies are held to the same moral and legal standards that ordinary citizens are expected to meet. Power without scrutiny breeds impunity. And impunity, even when unintended, corrodes public trust far faster than any political slogan ever could.

What makes these cases especially unsettling is the growing sense that the burden of proof has been inverted. Instead of authorities having to demonstrate that force, detention conditions or operational decisions were justified, grieving families and activists often feel compelled to prove that a tragedy deserved national attention in the first place. That is a dangerous habit for a democracy. Human dignity should not depend on citizenship status, political popularity or the size of a protest crowd.

The legal system, meanwhile, projects an image of distance. Judges interpret statutes. Prosecutors evaluate evidence. Agencies cite regulations. Each step may be technically defensible, yet the cumulative effect can feel like a wall separating official responsibility from human suffering. Citizens watch repeated controversies unfold and conclude that there are two systems of accountability, one for ordinary people and another for institutions wearing federal badges.

That perception matters. Democracies survive not merely because laws exist, but because citizens believe those laws apply evenly. When deaths connected to state power appear to generate endless reviews but few meaningful consequences, cynicism becomes rational. People stop expecting justice and start expecting damage control.

America has spent generations telling the world that the rule of law is its defining principle. If that claim means anything, it must apply most rigorously when the government itself is under scrutiny. Investigations into deaths connected to immigration enforcement should be independent, public and swift. Findings should not disappear into administrative archives. Officials who violate the law should face the same legal standards that any civilian would face.

Otherwise the country risks normalising a grim routine, another death, another statement, another promise to review procedures, another news cycle forgotten. A society does not lose its conscience in one dramatic moment. It loses it gradually, each time a preventable tragedy is absorbed into the background noise of politics.

And that is the real danger here, not only the policies themselves, but the growing belief that when state power and human life collide, accountability has become optional.


#eMagazine Ovi Dark - Issue #03 - Forged alibi

 

This exploration of the narrative’s cutting edge draws from a long and rich tradition. The modern literary magazine owes a debt to the ‘pulp’ digest era, where publications first married mystery fiction with the gritty reality of true crime. This issue proudly continues that legacy, acknowledging that the most compelling fiction often hides in the shadows of the real world.

This commitment to truth is what led us to include a new, in-depth feature examining the anatomy of a recent, complex criminal case. We go beyond the headlines to dissect the investigation and the psychology of the perpetrator, holding a mirror up to the darkness that lurks within our own society.

It is a stark reminder that while our fiction may explore the supernatural, the ‘real crime’ section grounds us in the profound, and often terrifying, realities of human nature. Ovi Dark 3 is a journey to the edge of reason, we invite you to take the first step.

Ovi Dark - Issue 3
Pulp Fiction Short Stories
July 2026
Ovi eMagazines Publications 2026

Ovi Dark - Issue #03

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Puppi & Caesar #48 #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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The war inside the machine by Jiro Lambert

While headlines remain dominated by missiles, drones and explosions in the Middle East, another conflict is unfolding with far greater consequences for the twenty-first century. It is quieter, less visible and infinitely more strategic. It is the war over advanced semiconductor chips, and unlike conventional wars, this one is being fought in laboratories, clean rooms, trade ministries and artificial intelligence research centres. The battlefield may be microscopic, but the geopolitical stakes could hardly be larger.

Modern civilisation increasingly depends on tiny pieces of silicon that most people never see. They power smartphones, hospitals, satellites, financial markets, military equipment and, above all, artificial intelligence. Every leap in AI capability demands more sophisticated chips, making semiconductor production one of the world's most valuable strategic assets.

This is no ordinary commercial competition. Nations have realised that whoever controls the most advanced chips controls much of tomorrow's economy, military capability and technological innovation. Oil fuelled the twentieth century. Chips will define the twenty-first.

The irony is impossible to ignore. For decades, globalisation encouraged countries to spread manufacturing across continents in pursuit of efficiency and lower costs. That era is rapidly ending. Governments are pouring billions into domestic semiconductor production, subsidising factories, restricting exports and building technological alliances that increasingly resemble military coalitions.

Artificial intelligence has dramatically intensified this struggle. Training cutting-edge AI models requires extraordinary computing power, which in turn requires the world's most advanced processors. Without them, AI development slows dramatically. With them, entire industries and potentially entire militaries, gain enormous advantages.

This explains why semiconductor restrictions have become instruments of foreign policy. Export controls, investment bans and technology licensing are replacing tariffs as the preferred weapons of economic confrontation. Instead of bombing factories, governments attempt to deny rivals access to the machinery, software and expertise needed to manufacture the next generation of chips.

The remarkable aspect of this conflict is that almost nobody voted for it, yet everyone will live with its consequences. Consumers will pay more for electronics. Companies will redesign global supply chains. Universities will face tighter research restrictions. Even small nations suddenly find themselves strategically important if they possess critical manufacturing capacity or specialised engineering talent.

Artificial intelligence only raises the temperature further. Every breakthrough creates greater demand for computational power, reinforcing the value of semiconductor leadership. The race becomes self-perpetuating: better chips create better AI, which designs even better chips, accelerating innovation while widening the gap between technological leaders and followers.

This rivalry also carries uncomfortable risks. Fragmenting global technology into competing blocs may increase resilience for some countries, but it also reduces collaboration that has historically driven scientific progress. Innovation thrives when ideas cross borders. Suspicion builds walls where cooperation once built industries.

Meanwhile, ordinary citizens remain largely unaware that the devices in their pockets have become pieces on a geopolitical chessboard. A smartphone is no longer merely a consumer product; it is the visible end of an immensely complex chain involving rare minerals, precision engineering, advanced lithography, software design and strategic diplomacy.

History often teaches that great powers compete over resources that define their age. Once it was spices, then coal, then oil. Today, it is silicon measured in nanometres. The winners may never fire a shot, yet they could shape the global balance of power for generations.

The loudest wars dominate television screens. The most important ones often unfold silently inside machines. The chip war may lack dramatic footage, but its outcome will influence economies, national security, artificial intelligence and global leadership long after today's military conflicts have faded into history.


The locked front door by Polly Hobbs

Housing has quietly become the defining social crisis of our age. It is no longer merely about bricks, mortar and mortgages; it is about dignity, independence and the ability to imagine a future. Across wealthy and developing nations alike, home ownership has drifted from an achievable milestone into something resembling a luxury prize. Even renting has become an exhausting financial balancing act. The consequences are now impossible to ignore.

Perhaps the clearest sign of failure is the growing number of adults in their late twenties and thirties who remain living with their parents, not because they prefer multigenerational households, but because they have no realistic alternative. Many have stable jobs, university degrees and ambitions, yet the mathematics simply refuses to cooperate. Salaries crawl while housing costs sprint. Saving for a deposit feels like filling a bucket with a hole in its bottom.

This situation is quietly reshaping society. Young couples postpone marriage, delay having children or abandon the idea altogether because they cannot secure a place to call their own. Independence, once regarded as a normal step into adulthood, has become an expensive privilege. Parents, meanwhile, postpone their own retirement plans as they continue supporting adult children who are trapped by circumstances rather than laziness.

The popular narrative that younger generations simply spend too much on holidays or coffee has always been a convenient myth. No amount of skipped cappuccinos can compensate for house prices that have risen many times faster than incomes over decades. Blaming individuals is politically easier than confronting structural problems, but it solves absolutely nothing.

Meanwhile, renters increasingly find themselves living in permanent uncertainty. Rising rents consume ever larger portions of household income, leaving little room for savings or unexpected expenses. Entire careers are now built around surviving the next rent increase instead of planning for the future. A home has become less a sanctuary than a monthly financial gamble.

At the opposite end lies the harshest reality of all: homelessness. It is the most visible evidence that housing markets left entirely to speculation eventually stop serving society. A society cannot reasonably celebrate economic growth while thousands sleep in cars, temporary shelters or on pavements. Homelessness is rarely the result of one bad decision. More often, it emerges from a chain of unaffordable rents, stagnant wages, family breakdowns, illness and inadequate public support.

Governments cannot continue treating housing as though it were merely another investment sector. Homes are investments, certainly, but they are first and foremost places where people build lives. When property becomes primarily a financial asset traded for maximum returns, the human purpose of housing inevitably takes second place.

There are no miracle solutions, but there are obvious responsibilities. States need to encourage the construction of affordable housing, modernise planning systems, invest in public housing where markets fail, discourage speculative vacancies and ensure that ordinary working people are not permanently priced out of the communities they sustain. These are not radical ideas. They are practical necessities.

The housing crisis is ultimately a test of political priorities. Every generation expects to leave the next one with greater opportunities than it inherited. Today, many young adults are inheriting precisely the opposite: fewer choices, greater insecurity and shrinking hope.

A society where millions cannot afford a home is not merely experiencing a housing shortage. It is experiencing a shortage of political courage. Until that changes, the front door to independence will remain firmly locked for far too many people.


Bought history’s bones by Brea Willis

There is something profoundly unsettling about watching 67 million years of Earth's history disappear behind the gates of a billionaire's private estate. The record-breaking sale of a Tyrannosaurus rex for £37.4 million may have delighted auctioneers and investors, but it should leave the rest of us asking a far more important question, who exactly owns the past?

A dinosaur is not a luxury handbag, a sports car or another trophy to park in a climate-controlled mansion. A Tyrannosaurus rex is part of humanity's shared story, a survivor from an unimaginably distant age that belongs intellectually and culturally to every child who has ever stood wide-eyed before a museum skeleton dreaming about prehistoric worlds.

Yet modern capitalism has developed a disturbing habit of putting price tags on everything. If something is rare enough, eventually it becomes another asset class. Today it is dinosaur fossils. Tomorrow it may be entire archaeological sites if someone finds a legal loophole large enough.

Supporters of private ownership insist wealthy collectors often preserve fossils beautifully and occasionally lend them to museums. That may be true in individual cases, but it completely misses the point. Public access should never depend upon the generosity of private owners. History should not survive through philanthropy when it ought to be protected through principle.

Museums exist precisely because civilisation decided centuries ago that certain objects possess value beyond money. We do not preserve ancient manuscripts, Roman sculptures or Egyptian artefacts merely because they are expensive. We preserve them because they connect us to who we are. Dinosaurs perform the same function on an even grander timescale. They remind us that humanity occupies only the final seconds of Earth's vast geological clock.

Once a scientifically important fossil enters a private collection, researchers may lose reliable access to it. Students cannot study it. Families cannot marvel at it. Future generations may never even know where it is. Instead of inspiring millions behind museum glass, it risks becoming little more than the world's most expensive conversation piece in someone's drawing room.

There is also something morally uncomfortable about the symbolism. While museums across the world struggle with shrinking budgets, ageing facilities and difficult conservation work, individuals can casually outbid institutions because they possess fortunes measured in billions rather than millions. The market decides not what benefits science or education, but what satisfies private desire.

Of course, private collectors are not villains by definition. Many have donated extraordinary discoveries to museums and funded valuable scientific work. They deserve recognition when they do. But a society should never rely on acts of personal generosity where public responsibility ought to exist.

Perhaps fossils of exceptional scientific or historical importance should receive legal protections similar to those afforded to great works of cultural heritage. Some treasures are simply too significant to become commodities. Their value cannot be measured by the final hammer price because their real worth lies in the curiosity they ignite and the knowledge they preserve.

A Tyrannosaurus rex survived asteroid impacts, continental drift and sixty-seven million years beneath the Earth. It seems a rather depressing ending to that extraordinary journey if its final resting place is not a museum filled with excited schoolchildren but the private gallery of someone wealthy enough to purchase a piece of prehistory.

Some things should never be bought because they already belong to everyone.


Me My Mind & I #16: Heat killing me #Cartoon by Patrick McWade

 

A different way to check internal and external ...thoughts!
'Me My Mind & I' is a cartoon series by Patrick McWade.
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2nd opinion! 26#12 #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 Texan politics of phantom threats by John Reid

Politics has always had a weakness for imaginary enemies. They are convenient because they never quite disappear, never fully answer back, and can always be reshaped to fit the next campaign speech. In Texas, Governor Greg Abbott's focus on alleged "sharia cities" increasingly looks less like a response to a genuine public policy problem and more like a political strategy built around fear of an already marginalised minority.

The language itself is revealing. "Sharia cities" conjures images of parallel societies replacing American law, yet there is little evidence that such places exist in the form often described by political rhetoric. American constitutional law already governs every city, county and state. Courts, legislatures and law enforcement operate under federal and state constitutions, not religious codes. The spectre being raised is therefore less a legal reality than a powerful campaign symbol.

That matters because symbols have consequences. When elected officials repeatedly single out Muslims as a unique source of suspicion, they risk transforming ordinary religious identity into something portrayed as inherently political or dangerous. Millions of Muslim Americans work, vote, pay taxes, serve in the armed forces, teach in schools and run businesses. They are not outsiders testing the limits of American democracy; they are participants in it. Reducing an entire faith community to a security concern distorts reality while deepening social division.

Fear-based politics follows a familiar script. First, identify an invisible threat. Then insist that only extraordinary vigilance can defeat it. Finally, portray critics as naïve or even sympathetic to the supposed danger. It is an old political formula because it works. Complex issues such as healthcare, infrastructure, education or housing rarely generate the emotional intensity that cultural anxiety can produce.

This is not unique to Texas, nor is it confined to one political movement. Across democratic societies, leaders have periodically discovered that cultural panic often attracts more attention than practical governance. The target changes with time, immigrants, refugees, minorities, intellectuals or religious communities but the mechanism remains remarkably consistent.

The tragedy is that genuine public safety concerns become harder to address when politics depends upon exaggerated ones. Resources and public attention drift toward symbolic battles instead of measurable challenges. Communities become more polarised, while trust between citizens steadily erodes.

Supporters may argue that raising questions about foreign influence or religious extremism is legitimate. Of course it is. Governments have every right to confront genuine criminal activity or violent extremism regardless of ideology or religion. But that requires evidence, precision and equal application of the  law. It does not require broad insinuations directed at an entire religious community.

A democracy should be confident enough to distinguish between individual wrongdoing and collective suspicion. Once that distinction is abandoned, today's exceptional target can easily become tomorrow's.

Political careers built around cultural fear often enjoy short-term rewards because outrage mobilises voters more effectively than compromise. Yet history repeatedly demonstrates that campaigns fuelled by suspicion leave lasting scars long after elections end. Communities remember who was treated as a neighbour and who was treated as a convenient symbol.

The real strength of American democracy has never been its ability to invent enemies within its own borders. It has been its capacity, however imperfectly realised, to protect pluralism under one shared constitutional framework. When political rhetoric begins elevating imagined threats above documented realities, the greatest casualty is not merely one minority community. It is the public's confidence that leadership is guided by evidence rather than anxiety, and by inclusion rather than exclusion.


The arithmetic of war by Dmitri Kovalev

Every long war eventually collides with mathematics. Flags, speeches and patriotic slogans can delay that collision but they cannot prevent it. Numbers have a stubborn habit of stripping away illusions. During the Iraq War, Americans watched casualty figures rise with growing unease. Every announcement of fallen soldiers chipped away at public confidence, until questions about strategy became impossible to silence. Wars may begin with confidence, but they often end with exhaustion.

Russia now faces a far harsher version of that same equation. The scale of casualties in the war against Ukraine has reached levels that dwarf what most Western societies experienced in Iraq. Thousands upon thousands of Russian soldiers have been killed, wounded or permanently disabled. Entire communities have seen sons, husbands and fathers disappear into a conflict that was originally presented as something swift, decisive and necessary. Instead, it has become an open-ended war with no convincing finish line.

History repeatedly demonstrates that governments can manage public opinion for only so long before reality begins to speak louder than propaganda. Television broadcasts can celebrate isolated victories. Official statements can insist that objectives are being achieved. Yet families understand absence better than political rhetoric. Empty chairs at dinner tables are persuasive in ways no televised speech can ever be.

Unlike short military operations, prolonged wars gradually consume a nation's emotional reserves. The first casualties are mourned as heroes. Later casualties become statistics. Eventually, even statistics become background noise, and that numbness represents a dangerous stage for any society. It signals not acceptance but fatigue.

One striking difference between democratic societies and more authoritarian systems lies in how dissatisfaction becomes visible. In democracies, criticism often appears openly through elections, newspapers and public demonstrations. In more tightly controlled political environments, frustration tends to accumulate beneath the surface. It becomes quieter, less visible and therefore more unpredictable.

No government, however powerful, possesses unlimited political capital. Every mobilisation creates another family directly connected to the battlefield. Every funeral expands the circle of people asking whether the sacrifice still serves a meaningful purpose. Every returning wounded veteran becomes a living reminder that wars continue long after politicians finish making speeches.

Military campaigns also possess their own cruel momentum. Once enormous sacrifices have already been made, leaders often convince themselves that stopping would render those sacrifices meaningless. This creates a vicious cycle. More losses justify continuing the war rather than ending it. The war begins serving itself rather than any clearly defined strategic objective.

The longer such conflicts persist, the harder it becomes to articulate what victory even looks like. Objectives evolve, narratives shift and definitions of success quietly shrink. What once required decisive triumph eventually settles for avoiding obvious defeat. That is rarely the language used when wars begin.

Meanwhile, the economic consequences quietly deepen the crisis. Resources devoted to sustaining the battlefield are resources unavailable for hospitals, schools, infrastructure and long-term economic growth. Citizens may tolerate hardship for a limited period, but perpetual sacrifice gradually erodes national confidence regardless of ideology.

History rarely remembers wars kindly when their costs vastly outweigh their achievements. It remembers exhausted populations, grieving families and generations left to rebuild lives interrupted by decisions made far above them.

Numbers alone do not end wars. But eventually they reshape politics, public opinion and history itself. Casualty lists grow longer, hopes grow smaller and patience grows thinner. In every nation, regardless of its political system, there comes a point where the arithmetic of war overwhelms the promises that began it. That moment may arrive slowly, but it has a habit of arriving all the same.


The corporate kingdom by Harry S. Taylor

For centuries, the modern state has operated on a simple assumption: governments write the rules, corporations follow them and the courts s...