The mirage of momentum by Nadine Moreau

In politics momentum is often less a measurable force than a carefully curated illusion, a story parties tell themselves until voters either validate or puncture it. Marine Le Pen’s National Rally now finds itself clinging to such a story. Despite falling short in key urban battlegrounds like Marseille, Toulon and Nîmes, the party insists that the broader national current is flowing in its favour. But if momentum is revealed not in rhetoric but in results, then the recent local elections suggest something quite different, the ground beneath French politics is shifting and not in the direction Le Pen had hoped.

Cities, as ever, are the truest barometers of political change. They are dense with contradictions, diverse in composition and resistant to simplistic narratives. For years the National Rally has struggled to crack this urban code and these elections reaffirm that limitation. The failure to secure major cities is not a minor tactical setback; it is a structural weakness. Urban voters, confronted daily with the realities of multiculturalism and economic interdependence, appear less receptive to the party’s nationalist framing. In these environments, Le Pen’s message loses some of its sharpness, even its urgency.

Meanwhile the left, often dismissed as fragmented or ideologically exhausted, has demonstrated a surprising coherence. Under figures like Emmanuel Grégoire, a new kind of pragmatic socialism is emerging, one that blends traditional welfare concerns with a distinctly modern emphasis on inclusivity and urban governance. This is not the doctrinaire left of decades past but a recalibrated force that understands the symbolic and practical importance of cities. And in these elections it didn’t just compete, it dominated.

The significance of this cannot be overstated. Winning cities means shaping narratives. It means controlling the spaces where culture, media and political discourse intersect. The left’s victories are not merely administrative; they are psychological. They signal to voters that an alternative to both centrist technocracy and right-wing populism is not only viable but effective. In contrast, the National Rally’s claim to nationwide momentum begins to sound less like confidence and more like deflection.

Le Pen’s strategy has long relied on the idea of an inevitable ascent, a slow but steady normalization culminating in presidential victory. But inevitability is a fragile construct. It requires constant reinforcement through visible gains, particularly in places that matter symbolically. Losing major cities disrupts that narrative. It raises uncomfortable questions about the party’s ceiling and whether its appeal can truly broaden beyond its established base.

There is also a deeper irony at play. The National Rally has positioned itself as the voice of “the people,” yet it continues to falter where people gather most densely. The left, often caricatured as elitist or disconnected, is proving more adept at engaging with the complexities of modern urban life. This inversion should give Le Pen pause, though it likely won’t. Political movements rarely abandon their narratives willingly; they double down, hoping that repetition will substitute for reality.

But reality has a way of asserting itself, especially in democratic systems. The recent elections suggest that France is not moving in a single, predictable direction. Instead it is negotiating its future through a series of local decisions that, taken together, form a national picture. And in that picture, the momentum Le Pen claims to possess looks increasingly like a mirage visible from a distance but dissolving upon closer inspection.


The fog we’re told to breathe by Harry S. Taylor

There is something uniquely suffocating about a conflict where the loudest weapon is not a missile but a narrative. In the ongoing tensions surrounding Iran what has become most apparent is not simply the danger of escalation but the quiet, methodical erosion of truth. Not collateral damage, casualty.

We are told we live in an age of unprecedented access to information. And yet, paradoxically, it has never been easier to feel profoundly misinformed. The modern media ecosystem, once imagined as a sprawling marketplace of ideas, increasingly resembles a hall of mirrors, reflections curated, angles chosen, distortions intentional. Whether the voice originates in Washington, Tel Aviv or Tehran is almost beside the point. Each speaks with conviction. Each claims legitimacy. Each edits reality.

This is not a failure of journalism in the traditional sense. It is something more systemic, more insidious. It is the quiet understanding, shared across governments and, too often, echoed by media institutions, that information is not to be discovered but managed. That truth is not to be pursued but positioned.

In conflicts like this, facts do not disappear; they are buried under layers of selective emphasis. Civilian casualties are either highlighted or omitted depending on the flag attached to the narrative. Military actions are framed as defense or aggression based not on their nature, but on their authorship. Language itself becomes a weapon “retaliation,” “deterrence,” “security operation.” Words that obscure more than they reveal.

And the media? It oscillates between complicity and exhaustion. Some outlets align themselves, openly or subtly, with state perspectives, adopting the framing of power while maintaining the aesthetic of neutrality. Others attempt resistance, only to be drowned out by the sheer volume of coordinated messaging. Speed overtakes scrutiny. Access replaces independence. The result is not always outright falsehood but something perhaps more dangerous: curated truth.

The audience, meanwhile, is left to assemble a coherent picture from fragments that do not quite fit together. Trust erodes, not all at once but gradually like a shoreline losing ground to an indifferent tide. And when trust collapses, so too does the foundation of democratic discourse. Because democracy does not merely depend on the right to vote; it depends on the ability to know what one is voting about.

There is a temptation to treat this as inevitable, as the natural consequence of geopolitics in the digital age. But inevitability is often just a convenient disguise for resignation. The real danger lies not only in manipulation but in our growing tolerance for it. In the quiet shrug that follows each contradiction. In the acceptance that truth is always partisan, always negotiable.

What is at stake is not simply accurate reporting on a distant conflict. It is the integrity of perception itself. If every narrative is suspect, if every image is potentially staged, if every statement carries the weight of hidden intent, then reality becomes a matter of allegiance rather than evidence.

And in that world, democracy does not die in darkness. It fades in the glare of competing spotlights, each claiming to illuminate, all ensuring that we never quite see clearly.


The silence of a stolen mandate by Eze Ogbu

The re-election of Denis Sassou-Nguesso in the Republic of the Congo was not a victory in any meaningful democratic sense; it was a performance stage-managed, tightly controlled and conducted in near silence. The silence in this case was not metaphorical. It was literal, imposed through an internet blackout that severed citizens from one another and from the outside world, as though truth itself had been switched off at the source.

Elections are often described as the voice of the people. But what happens when the people are deliberately muted? What emerges is not a mandate but a void, filled conveniently by those already in power. Sassou-Nguesso, who has ruled for decades in one form or another, understands this dynamic intimately. Longevity in such systems is not sustained by popularity but by the careful management of dissent, its fragmentation, its exhaustion and when necessary, its outright erasure.

To call the election “farcical” is almost too gentle. Farce implies humour, even if dark. There is nothing humorous about a process that relies on suppressing opposition candidates, restricting press freedoms and ensuring that any challenge to authority never quite reaches critical mass. It is governance by suffocation, not persuasion.

The consequences of this are not confined to political theory or abstract notions of legitimacy. They are lived daily by millions. The Republic of the Congo remains a country where vast natural wealth coexists with entrenched poverty, where oil revenues rarely translate into public prosperity and where inequality is not just visible but structurally reinforced. The re-election signals continuity, not stability but stagnation.

More troubling still is the quiet normalization of conflict. While not always framed in headlines as a “civil war,” the persistent instability, regional tensions and cycles of violence function much the same way. They create a background hum of insecurity, where lives are disrupted, futures curtailed and deaths, often of the most vulnerable, become statistics rather than tragedies. When governance lacks accountability, conflict becomes less an anomaly and more an instrument or at the very least, an acceptable by-product.

What is perhaps most insidious is the erosion of expectation. In many democracies, flawed as they may be, elections still carry the possibility of change. In Congo, that possibility feels increasingly theoretical. Citizens are not merely denied a fair vote; they are denied the belief that a fair vote could matter. This psychological disenfranchisement is as damaging as any legal restriction. It breeds apathy, resignation and eventually a kind of quiet despair.

And yet, the international response often settles into a familiar pattern, muted concern, carefully worded statements and then a return to business as usual. There is a reluctance to confront the deeper implications of such elections, perhaps because doing so would require acknowledging the fragility of democratic norms more broadly.

Sassou-Nguesso’s continued rule is not just a local issue; it is a case study in how power sustains itself when scrutiny is limited and consequences are absent. The internet blackout may have been temporary, but the broader silencing it represents is enduring.

In the end, the tragedy is not simply that one man remains in power. It is that an entire political system has been engineered to ensure that he and others like him, never truly have to ask for it.

Walk the talk 26#005 #cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

The term “talk the talk, walk the walk” is a phrase in English
that means a person should support what they say, not just with words,
but also through action. Actions speak louder than words.

For more Walk the talk, HERE!
For more Ovi Cartoons, HERE!


The union and its uncomfortable mirror by Thanos Kalamidas

There is a peculiar tension at the heart of the European Union, one that grows more visible each time Hungary’s Prime Minister, Viktor Orbán, exercises his rights as a full member. To many across the continent Orbán represents a set of values that seem fundamentally at odds with the liberal democratic ideals the Union claims to embody. And yet, he is not an outsider. He is not an intruder. He is by design and by treaty an insider with all the privileges that status entails, including the power to obstruct, delay and veto.

This is not a glitch in the system. It is the system. The instinct in Brussels and among many Western European capitals has been to treat Orbán as a problem to be managed rather than a reality to be reckoned with. There is a tendency to frame his actions as aberrations, temporary deviations from an otherwise coherent moral and political project. But this framing is convenient, not accurate. Orbán is not breaking into the European Union; he is operating within it, using its mechanisms exactly as they were constructed.

That discomfort reveals something deeper, the EU’s foundational contradiction between values and sovereignty. The Union proclaims commitments to democracy, pluralism, minority rights and the rule of law. Yet it is also a coalition of nation-states, each with its own electorate, its own political trajectory and its own interpretation of those very principles. Hungary’s government, however illiberal it may appear to outsiders, was elected. Its mandate, however controversial, is domestic before it is European.

So when EU institutions seek to sidestep Hungary, whether through procedural innovations, financial pressure, or creative legal interpretations, they may believe they are defending the Union’s core values. But they are also stepping onto dangerous ground. Because in doing so, they risk undermining another foundational principle, that membership confers equal rights, not conditional privileges.

The temptation to “go around” Orbán is understandable. His vetoes can stall critical decisions, from foreign policy to budget allocations. His rhetoric often clashes sharply with the Union’s broader direction. But if the EU begins to treat treaty-based rights as inconveniences to be bypassed, it sets a precedent that extends far beyond Hungary. Today it may be Orbán; tomorrow it could be any member state whose politics fall out of favour.

This is the paradox the Union must confront; it cannot claim to be a rules-based order while selectively bending those rules to achieve desired outcomes. To do so would not only weaken its legal credibility but also fuel the very populist narratives it seeks to counter, those that portray Brussels as an overreaching, unaccountable authority.

None of this is to defend Orbán’s policies or rhetoric. Criticism of his government is both legitimate and necessary. But there is a difference between political opposition and institutional circumvention. The former strengthens democratic debate; the latter risks hollowing out the system itself.

In the end, Orbán serves as a kind of mirror for the European Union, an uncomfortable reflection of its limits and contradictions. The question is not whether the EU can outmanoeuvre him. It is whether it can uphold its own principles while confronting him. If it cannot, then the problem is no longer confined to Budapest. It resides, quietly but unmistakably, at the very core of the Union.


The Bunker #Poem & #Painting by Nikos Laios

 

He crumbled,
Body and mind,
His life built on delusion,
His nation followed his delusion,
And even in those final days
In the bunker he held on to
Ideas of imperialistic glory
Before shooting himself
In the head like a coward;

Would future generations
Even believe that such
Cruelty was possible?
Would they avoid the
Folly of his antisemitism?
Would they have
The courage to hold
Fast to their humanity?
Only time will tell.

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

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

Starving a nation into submission by Oli Chavez

There is a peculiar arrogance in believing that hardship can be engineered from afar and somehow yield obedience. The idea that tightening economic pressure on Cuba will provoke a popular uprising, one that conveniently aligns with the ideological preferences of an American president, belongs less to political strategy and more to a kind of wishful coercion. It assumes that people, when pushed to the brink, will direct their anger exactly where an external actor intends. History suggests otherwise.

Economic strangulation rarely produces clean political outcomes. More often, it deepens suffering while hardening the very systems it seeks to dismantle. In Cuba’s case, decades of sanctions have not toppled its leadership. Instead, they have become woven into the national narrative, a ready explanation for scarcity, a unifying grievance and, paradoxically, a source of resilience. To imagine that increasing this pressure will suddenly flip a switch in public consciousness is to misunderstand both human nature and Cuban society.

There is also a moral blindness embedded in such thinking. Policies designed to “punish” a government inevitably punish its people first and most severely. It is not the leadership that waits in long lines for food, that struggles to find medicine, that watches opportunities shrink to nothing. It is ordinary citizens, whose daily lives become quieter, harder and more constrained. To treat that suffering as a strategic lever is to reduce human beings to instruments.

What makes this approach particularly flawed is its assumption about perception. The belief seems to be that Cubans, faced with worsening conditions, will look outward and blame their own government while viewing the United States as a distant, benevolent force. But this is not how people tend to interpret pain imposed from abroad. External pressure often breeds resentment toward its source, not gratitude. It can reinforce nationalism, even among those who are privately critical of their leaders.

There is a deeper contradiction at play. A “Trumpian-style democracy,” however one defines it, cannot be imposed through deprivation. Democracy, in its most meaningful sense, depends on legitimacy, on the consent and participation of the governed. It is built through institutions, civic trust and the slow, uneven process of political evolution. It does not emerge from hunger or desperation. If anything, extreme hardship can make democratic transition more fragile, not more likely.

Moreover, the strategy underestimates the adaptability of entrenched systems. Governments under pressure do not simply collapse; they adjust. They tighten control, recalibrate messaging and find ways, often at great cost to their citizens, to endure. The result is frequently a prolonged stalemate, where suffering becomes normalized and change recedes further into the distance.

None of this is to romanticize Cuba’s leadership or dismiss the legitimate frustrations of its people. It is to question the logic of a policy that claims to support them while exacerbating their hardships. If the goal is to encourage openness, reform, or democratic development, then engagement, not isolation, has historically shown more promise. Dialogue, cultural exchange, and economic interaction can create spaces for change that coercion cannot.

In the end, the belief that you can starve a nation into choosing your preferred version of freedom reveals more about the imposer than the imposed upon. It reflects a confidence that power can dictate outcomes, even in the most intimate spheres of human life. But people are not equations to be solved under pressure. They endure, they adapt, and they remember who made their lives harder and why.


Me My Mind & I #11: Trumpoleon #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!
For more Ovi Cartoons, HERE!


Maples & Oranges #062 #cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

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

For more Maples & Oranges, HERE!
For more Ovi Cartoons, HERE!


The war beneath the war by Marja Heikkinen

There is the war we see in fragments; burned-out buildings, dust-covered children, the stunned gaze of a man who has lost everything but breath. And then there is the war we consume: curated, captioned, sharpened for engagement. The first destroys lives. The second shapes how those lives are remembered, interpreted and too often dismissed.

From Iran’s shadow conflicts across the Middle East, to the brittle hostility between Pakistan and Afghanistan, to the grinding, mechanized devastation in Ukraine, the pattern is now familiar. The physical battlefield is only one theater. The digital one, fought across timelines, comment sections and algorithmic currents, has become just as consequential. Perhaps more so.

Social media does not merely report war; it rearranges it. It compresses complexity into slogans, edits suffering into digestible clips and assigns moral clarity where none cleanly exists. A bombed hospital becomes a trending hashtag. A grieving mother becomes a symbol, then an argument, then, within hours, yesterday’s content. Tragedy is not just witnessed, it is processed, packaged and deployed.

What’s unsettling is not only the speed but the certainty. Everyone seems to know exactly what is happening, who is to blame and why. Nuance, the first casualty of any conflict, does not stand a chance against the velocity of outrage. In this environment, the truth is not discovered; it is selected. Users scroll not for understanding but for confirmation, gathering fragments that reinforce what they already believe.

This is not to say that social media is inherently malicious. It has exposed atrocities that might otherwise remain hidden. It has given voice to those historically silenced. But it has also flattened the hierarchy of credibility. A seasoned journalist, an eyewitness and an anonymous account with a flag emoji in its bio now compete on equal footing. The result is a strange democracy of information where accuracy is optional but virality is everything.

In such a landscape, innocent lives risk becoming secondary not in reality but in perception. Their suffering is undeniable, yet it is often refracted through layers of narrative before it reaches us. We are not just seeing war; we are seeing interpretations of war, each one shaped by ideology, allegiance, or the simple desire to be heard above the noise.

And there is so much noise. The algorithms, indifferent to human cost, reward what provokes. Anger travels faster than empathy. Certainty outpaces doubt. A measured, careful analysis, one that acknowledges ambiguity and resists easy conclusions, rarely stands a chance against a punchy, emotionally charged post. In this sense, the system does not just reflect our instincts; it amplifies our worst ones.

What emerges is a kind of moral exhaustion. Faced with an endless stream of crises, each framed as urgent and definitive, people begin to disengage. Not because they do not care, but because caring becomes unsustainable. The tragedies blur together. The names and places lose their specificity. War, in all its horror, becomes just another item in the feed.

And yet, beneath all the narratives, the reality persists. People are still dying. Families are still being torn apart. The physical consequences of these conflicts remain stubbornly real, no matter how they are framed online.

Perhaps the most uncomfortable truth is this: while wars are fought with weapons, their meanings are increasingly fought with words and we are all, willingly or not, participants in that second battle.


The costume of innocence by Maddalena Conti

There is a peculiar uniform that seems to surface whenever the orbit of Jeffrey Epstein is revisited, a carefully tailored narrative of distance regret, and belated realization. “I was manipulated,” “I was deceived,” “I didn’t understand who he really was.” The phrasing changes slightly, the cadence varies but the structure remains intact, a kind of reputational hazmat suit donned after the fact. It is a language of insulation, designed less to clarify than to contain.

The recent remarks attributed to Norway’s Crown Princess Mette-Marit fall squarely into this familiar pattern. Her assertion that she was “manipulated and deceived” by Epstein does not stand alone; it joins a growing archive of similarly phrased reckonings from figures who once moved comfortably within the same social constellations. The repetition is what makes it striking. It suggests not merely coincidence but a script, one that has become culturally recognizable, even predictable.

Of course, proximity to Epstein was for many a matter of social osmosis. He cultivated an image of legitimacy with unsettling effectiveness, embedding himself among philanthropists, royals, financiers and celebrities. To acknowledge that he deceived people is not controversial; it is in fact, demonstrably true. The more difficult question is not whether deception occurred but how long it persisted and what, if anything, interrupted it.

This is where the narrative begins to strain. When powerful, well-connected individuals describe themselves as unwitting participants in Epstein’s orbit, the claim invites scrutiny not because it is impossible but because it feels incomplete. Influence and privilege are not merely ornamental; they confer access to information, to counsel, to warning signals that are often unavailable to others. To say “I didn’t know” from such a position carries a different weight than the same claim uttered from the margins.

The issue, then, is not one of guilt by association. It is one of accountability by awareness. Public figures, particularly those who embody institutions, as members of royal families inevitably do, are not simply private individuals with elevated titles. They are symbols, custodians of trust, representatives of continuity. Their associations, past and present, resonate beyond personal biography. They shape perception and perception, in turn, shapes legitimacy.

In this light, Mette-Marit’s statement feels less like closure and more like an opening, a moment that calls for something deeper than the now-familiar language of manipulation. It calls for reflection that is not only personal but institutional. What does it mean for a modern monarchy to reckon with such proximity? What standard of responsibility should apply when the stakes are not merely reputational but symbolic?

To suggest resignation, as some have, may strike others as excessive, even theatrical. Yet the instinct behind the suggestion is worth examining. It reflects a broader unease with the gap between the gravity of Epstein’s crimes and the relative lightness with which association is sometimes addressed. It is not necessarily a demand for punishment but for proportion, a recalibration of response that matches the moral weight of the context.

Ultimately, the recurring refrain of “I was deceived” risks becoming less a revelation than a reflex. And reflex, in matters of public trust, is rarely sufficient. What is required instead is a language and an action that breaks from the pattern. Not a costume of innocence, but a demonstration of responsibility that feels as substantial as the institutions it seeks to protect.


The mirage of momentum by Nadine Moreau

In politics momentum is often less a measurable force than a carefully curated illusion, a story parties tell themselves until voters eithe...