The loud authoritarian and the quiet corrupt by Thanos Kalamidas

Power in the European Union does not always follow size, wealth or even formal influence. Sometimes it follows posture. Sometimes it follows noise. And sometimes, paradoxically, it hides behind obedience.

Viktor Orbán built his political identity on confrontation. He positioned himself as the dissenter-in-chief, the man willing to challenge Brussels openly, repeatedly and unapologetically. Coming from a relatively small and economically modest country, he understood early that visibility, not compliance, was his leverage. By clashing with EU institutions on migration, judiciary independence and media freedom, he forced the Union to pay attention. You cannot ignore someone who constantly disrupts the room.

That strategy worked. It gave him outsized influence and turned Hungary into a symbol, both for supporters who admire defiance and for critics who warn of democratic backsliding. More importantly, it triggered scrutiny. Investigations, funding freezes, rule-of-law mechanisms, these were not spontaneous acts of institutional vigilance. They were reactions to sustained, visible provocation.

Contrast this with Kyriakos Mitsotakis. Leading another small, financially constrained country, he has adopted the opposite strategy, alignment. Where Orbán resisted, Mitsotakis reassures. Where one provoked, the other complies. The tone is technocratic, cooperative and outwardly reformist. It is the language Brussels prefers to hear.

And that is precisely the point. In a system like the EU, perception matters as much as policy. A government that frames itself as cooperative and pro-European benefits from a kind of institutional goodwill. It is assumed to be “on track,” to be progressing, to be part of the solution rather than the problem. That assumption can become a shield, subtle but effective.

Because scrutiny is not evenly distributed. It is drawn to friction. Orbán generated friction by design; Mitsotakis minimizes it. One invited conflict; the other dissolves it before it surfaces. The result is not necessarily a difference in governance quality but a difference in visibility.

This creates an uncomfortable question, is the EU better at reacting to loud challenges than identifying quiet erosion?

When authoritarian tendencies or corruption are wrapped in open defiance, they become impossible to ignore. When they are embedded within a narrative of compliance and cooperation, they risk being overlooked or deprioritized. It is easier to confront a rebel than to question a partner.

This is not to equate the two leaders directly, nor to claim identical trajectories. It is to highlight a structural asymmetry. The Union’s mechanisms often depend on political will, and political will is influenced by optics. A government that appears aligned with European values is granted more trust upfront. Whether that trust is always warranted is another matter.

There is also a deeper irony. Orbán’s confrontational style, while damaging in many respects, has at least clarified the boundaries of acceptable behaviour within the EU. It has forced institutions to define red lines, to articulate principles, to act, however slowly, when those principles are challenged.

The quieter approach does the opposite. It blurs the lines. It operates within the system rather than against it, making it harder to distinguish between genuine reform and performative compliance. It is governance by presentation, where the image of alignment can overshadow the substance of policy.

For the EU, this presents a dilemma. If it only reacts to the loudest violations, it risks missing the more subtle ones. If it relies too heavily on political alignment as a proxy for democratic health, it may reward form over function.

Ultimately, the contrast between these two approaches is not just about Hungary and Greece. It is about how power works in a union built on both rules and relationships. Noise gets attention. Silence gets latitude.

And sometimes, the greater challenge is not the leader who shouts but the one who knows exactly when not to.


Reform who and what? By Yash Irwin

There is something almost theatrical about the branding of Reform UK, a name that promises renewal, reinvention, perhaps even a clean break from the habits that have worn thin in British politics. Yet scratch beneath the surface and what emerges feels less like reform and more like a repackaging of familiar populist tropes, sharpened not by new ideas but by old instincts.

At the center of it all stands Nigel Farage, a figure who has long mastered the art of channelling frustration into political energy. His appeal has never depended on detailed policy frameworks or coherent long-term strategies. Instead, it thrives on mood: discontent, distrust, and a sense that the system is rigged against “ordinary people.” That formula hasn’t changed. What has changed, perhaps, is the context, yet Reform UK appears uninterested in adapting to it in any meaningful way.

The absence of Boris Johnson might suggest a shift away from the personality-driven chaos that defined recent Conservative politics. But that vacuum is quickly filled by figures like Suella Braverman and Nadhim Zahawi, whose political identities are hardly rooted in reformist thinking. Their presence signals continuity rather than change—a migration of tone and ideology rather than a departure from it.

Reform, in the true sense, requires more than dissatisfaction. It demands imagination, the willingness to confront complexity, and the discipline to propose solutions that extend beyond slogans. Yet what Reform UK offers instead is a familiar narrative: Britain is broken, elites are to blame, and salvation lies in reclaiming control, however vaguely defined that may be. It is a story that resonates emotionally but rarely survives scrutiny.

The reliance on cultural grievance and anti-establishment rhetoric may win attention, but it does little to address the structural challenges facing the country. Economic stagnation, public service strain, and geopolitical uncertainty are not problems that yield to rhetorical force alone. They require detailed thinking, compromise, and a recognition that governing is inherently more difficult than campaigning.

There is also a deeper contradiction at play. A party that claims to stand outside the political establishment increasingly draws from the very figures that have shaped it. This creates a tension that is hard to ignore. Can a movement genuinely claim to represent change when its leading voices are so closely tied to the systems they critique? Or does it simply recycle disillusionment into another form of political inertia?

Populism, at its core, is not inherently illegitimate. It can serve as a corrective, a way of forcing uncomfortable truths into public debate. But when it becomes an end in itself, when outrage replaces substance, it risks becoming hollow. Reform UK seems caught in that cycle, amplifying grievances without offering a credible path forward.

What is perhaps most striking is the missed opportunity. In a political landscape marked by fatigue and fragmentation, there is genuine space for a movement that offers thoughtful, pragmatic reform. One that acknowledges the frustrations of voters but refuses to reduce them to slogans. One that builds rather than merely criticizes.

Instead, Reform UK appears content to inhabit a space it already knows well. It speaks loudly, confidently, and often effectively to those who feel unheard. But volume is not vision, and confidence is not clarity. Without a willingness to move beyond its established playbook, the party risks becoming exactly what its name suggests it opposes: another static fixture in a political system crying out for genuine change.

In the end, reform is not a label, it is a process. And for all its rhetoric, Reform UK has yet to show that it is truly interested in undertaking it.


Oil, power and silence by Mia Rodríguez

Something deeply unsettling has happened in Venezuela and the world seems too distracted to fully process it. While headlines drift toward Iran, global tensions and the erratic online messaging of Donald Trump, a quieter but arguably more consequential event has unfolded in Latin America. The dramatic capture of Nicolás Maduro by U.S. forces in early 2026 was not just a geopolitical shock, it may have marked the beginning of a new kind of intervention, one that blurs the line between liberation and control.

Let’s call things by their name. A sitting head of state was forcibly removed and taken to another country to stand trial. Even critics of Maduro, of which there are many, have to admit this sets a dangerous precedent. Governments have been toppled before, yes, but rarely with such direct, unapologetic force in modern times.

What followed is even more ambiguous. Washington’s rhetoric leaned heavily on familiar themes, restoring democracy, fighting corruption, stabilizing a broken economy. But almost immediately, another narrative emerged, one centered on oil. The United States moved quickly to secure access to Venezuela’s vast reserves, discussing control over production and sales, even suggesting it would “run” the country during a transition.

That’s where the discomfort grows. Because when democracy arrives escorted by oil contracts, people start asking uncomfortable questions.

Today, Venezuela is officially under the leadership of interim president Delcy Rodríguez, a figure who has rapidly consolidated power while opening doors to foreign, particularly American economic involvement. Political opposition figures remain sidelined, elections are delayed, and the promised democratic transition feels increasingly abstract.

Meanwhile, the U.S. has eased certain sanctions and encouraged financial flows, signaling not just political influence but economic integration on its own terms.

So what exactly is Venezuela right now? Not quite liberated. Not quite sovereign either. Supporters of the intervention argue that removing Maduro was necessary. His government had long been accused of authoritarianism, economic mismanagement, and corruption. That argument carries weight. But removing a leader is one thing; shaping what comes next is another.

And that “next” looks murky. If a foreign power controls key economic arteries, especially oil, which is the lifeblood of Venezuela’s economy, can the country truly claim independence? If political leadership aligns closely with external interests while domestic opposition is frozen out, is this democracy in progress or something more transactional?

The timing adds another layer. With global attention fragmented by crises elsewhere, Venezuela’s transformation has unfolded without the level of scrutiny such a moment demands. It’s not that people don’t care, it’s that the noise of the world has drowned out the signal.

And perhaps that’s the most telling part. Because history has shown that when major powers intervene under the banner of freedom while securing strategic resources, the outcome is rarely simple. It’s messy, layered, and often leaves the local population caught between narratives.

So no, Venezuela has not clearly become a “colony.” That word carries legal and historical weight that doesn’t quite fit, yet.

But it also hasn’t clearly become free. Instead, it sits in a gray zone: a nation reshaped by external force, governed in uncertain partnership, and watched by a world too distracted to ask the hardest question... Who really owns Venezuela now?


Insert Brain Here: Mime #Cartoon by Paul Woods

 

Originally from Port Macquarie, Australia, Paul Woods is a Cartoonist and Illustrator based in South London who also plays drums, works as a Cameraman and likes bad horror films. His series of cartoons is entitled "Insert Brain Here"

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Sceptic feathers #127 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

Cynicism with feathers on thin wires.

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A turning audition behind doors by Markus Gibbons

In Washington, power rarely announces itself with a drumroll. More often, it slips through side doors, arranges private meetings, and leaves behind just enough of a paper trail to spark curiosity. The recent White House listening session that brought together disaffected “Make America Healthy Again” advocates with Donald Trump, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., and senior advisers fits neatly into that tradition. But the most intriguing figure in the room may not have been seated at the center of the table it may have been the one who helped set it.

Erika Kirk, as CEO and chair of Turning Point USA, is not new to influence. She represents a generation of conservative leadership that blends grassroots energy with institutional ambition. Organizing a meeting like this is not merely logistical work; it is political choreography. It requires knowing who matters, who feels ignored, and how to position oneself as the indispensable bridge between them. In a movement increasingly defined by factionalism, the ability to convene is the ability to lead.

That is why it’s worth asking a question that might have seemed premature a few years ago, what exactly are Kirk’s ambitions?

The conservative movement is entering a transitional phase. Donald Trump remains its gravitational center, but the conversation about what comes next is no longer hypothetical. Figures like JD Vance represent a potential evolution, less personality-driven, more ideologically structured, but still rooted in the populist currents Trump unleashed. In such a landscape, the vice presidency is not just a supporting role. It is a strategic foothold, a platform for shaping the next iteration of the movement.

Kirk’s recent maneuvering suggests an understanding of this reality. By facilitating dialogue between restless health-focused activists and the upper tiers of political power, she positions herself as both listener and broker. It’s a delicate balance, acknowledging dissatisfaction without amplifying dissent, offering access without surrendering control. Done well, it builds credibility across factions. Done poorly, it exposes weakness. Kirk appears intent on mastering the former.

Of course, ambition in politics is rarely declared outright, especially by those who are serious about achieving it. Instead, it reveals itself through patterns, through the rooms one enters, the alliances one cultivates, the risks one chooses to take. Kirk’s involvement in this meeting is a signal, not a conclusion. But it is a signal worth noting.

There is also a broader implication. The Republican Party, and the conservative movement more generally, is searching for figures who can translate energy into governance. Activism alone is no longer sufficient; nor is proximity to power. What is required is a hybrid skill set—part organizer, part strategist, part public face. Kirk’s trajectory suggests she is aiming squarely at that intersection.

Skeptics might argue that talk of a vice-presidential future is speculative at best. They are not wrong. Politics is littered with rising stars who never quite reached orbit. But speculation, when grounded in observable behavior, is not fantasy, it is analysis. And the fact remains: people who organize rooms like that White House session are not merely participants in the political process. They are shaping it.

Whether Erika Kirk ultimately seeks or secures a place on a national ticket is an open question. But her recent actions make one thing clear: she is no longer content to operate on the sidelines. In a movement preparing for its next chapter, she appears determined to audition for a leading role.

 

After the glow by Brea Willis

The shadow cast by Chernobyl has proven far longer than the plume that drifted across Europe in 1986. It lingers not only in exclusion zones and abandoned cities, but in the public imagination, shaping how entire generations think about nuclear power. What was once marketed as a triumph of modern engineering became, almost overnight, a symbol of human fallibility on a catastrophic scale. And while the world has spent decades refining reactor design and safety protocols, the emotional residue of that disaster has proven stubbornly resistant to revision.

For many, nuclear energy never fully recovered its moral footing. Even in countries with strong regulatory frameworks and advanced technologies, the word “nuclear” still carries an undercurrent of dread. It suggests something uncontrollable, invisible, and irreversible. This perception has slowed investment, fueled political opposition, and complicated efforts to include nuclear power as part of a cleaner energy future. Ironically, at a time when climate change demands low-carbon solutions at scale, one of the most efficient options remains politically radioactive.

But the legacy of Chernobyl has evolved in ways that extend beyond environmental anxiety. In today’s geopolitical climate, nuclear power plants are no longer seen solely as potential accident sites, they are also viewed as strategic vulnerabilities. The war in Ukraine has made this painfully clear. Civilian nuclear facilities, once thought to be insulated from the theater of war, now sit uncomfortably close to the front lines of modern conflict. The idea that a reactor could become collateral damage or worse, a deliberate target, has transformed them into something more ominous than power stations. They are, in effect, dormant threats embedded within national infrastructure.

This dual identity, clean energy source and potential catastrophe, has complicated the global conversation around nuclear power. It is no longer just a question of safety engineering or waste management. It is also about security, resilience, and the unsettling realization that even peaceful technologies can be weaponized by circumstance. The same containment structures designed to prevent meltdown now double as shields against artillery. The same cooling systems that regulate temperature must also withstand the chaos of war.

And yet, abandoning nuclear power altogether is not a simple solution. Renewable energy sources, while essential, are not always sufficient on their own to meet the demands of modern economies. Nuclear energy offers reliability and scale that few alternatives can match. The challenge, then, is not whether to use nuclear power, but how to reconcile its benefits with its risks, both old and new.

Chernobyl taught the world that technological confidence must be tempered with humility. Ukraine is teaching us something else, that even the safest systems are vulnerable in an unstable world. Together, these lessons demand a more nuanced approach, one that acknowledges fear without being governed by it.

In the end, the true legacy of Chernobyl may not be the disaster itself, but the enduring tension it created. Nuclear power exists in a paradox: it is both a solution and a risk, a promise and a warning. And in an era defined by uncertainty, that paradox feels more relevant than ever we can afford. It is a structure, a system, a presence. And like all presences, it leaves a mark.

#eBook The maples of Hollow Brook by Anya Tiosa

It was a cold January evening when Eli Tannen walked down the worn-out dirt road that led to the edge of the Hollow Brook forest, where the maples stood in their quiet, eternal rows.

His boots crunched against the frost as the wind cut through his threadbare coat. He hadn't been down this path in over a year, not since his father passed and left him the family business.

And even then, Eli had never been keen on leaving the warmth of the stove or the comforting hum of his maple syrup boiling away in the barn.

But the rumors had begun again. Worse this time. And his father’s old warnings rang in his ears.
"You let them see your hands, Eli, and they'll take them."

Anya Tiosa. By day, she wrangles the minds of unsuspecting pre-teens, armed only with patience (mostly) and a healthy supply of caffeine. By night, she transforms into a secret agent of the mundane, infiltrating the lives of ordinary folks and documenting their hilarious, heartbreaking, and utterly bizarre quirks.

Ovi eBook Publishing 2026

The maples of Hollow Brook

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Read it online & downloading it as PDF HERE!
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All downloads are FREE!


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Ephemera #152 #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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A victory that solves the wrong problem by Thanos Kalamidas

In politics victories are often mistaken for solutions. The hypothetical rise of Péter Magyar as Hungary’s anti-Orbán prime minister would, at first glance, appear to be one such triumph, an overdue correction in a country long defined by democratic erosion and illiberal swagger. But beneath the celebratory headlines lies a more complicated and less comforting truth, not all political change is structural change and not all opposition is transformative.

Magyar’s ascent has already been read, especially in Brussels, as a symbolic turning point, a sign that the European project still possesses self-correcting instincts. The narrative writes itself easily, voters reject authoritarian drift, restore balance, and realign with European norms. Yet symbolism is a fragile currency in governance. It can soothe anxieties without addressing the underlying conditions that produced them.

Hungary’s political system under Orbán did not emerge overnight, nor did it thrive solely because of one man’s ambitions. It was cultivated through years of institutional weakening, media consolidation and a careful reshaping of public expectations. Reversing that trajectory requires more than electoral victory; it demands a deliberate, sustained reconstruction of democratic culture. There is little evidence to suggest that Magyar, however well-intentioned, would possess either the political capital or the strategic clarity to undertake such a project at scale.

Instead, his leadership risks becoming a transitional spectacle, a change in tone rather than a change in substance. The danger here is not overt authoritarianism but something subtler, democratic stagnation dressed up as renewal. Hungary could drift into a kind of political limbo, where the most egregious excesses are curbed but the deeper distortions remain intact. Institutions might function but not flourish. Public trust might stabilize but not recover.

Meanwhile, beyond Hungary’s borders, the implications would ripple in less obvious ways. Within the European Union, Magyar’s victory would likely be interpreted as validation, not of democratic resilience in Hungary but of the EU’s existing approach to dealing with internal dissent. For years, the bloc has oscillated between mild reprimands and bureaucratic pressure, often appearing reactive rather than strategic. A post-Orbán Hungary would allow EU leadership to claim success without having fundamentally changed its methods.

This is where the political calculus becomes more revealing. Rather than sparking a broader reckoning with the rise of far-right movements across Europe, Hungary’s shift could paradoxically deflate the urgency of that conversation. If one of the most prominent “problem states” appears to self-correct, the systemic nature of the issue becomes easier to ignore. The far right elsewhere remains but the sense of crisis fades just enough to avoid uncomfortable reforms.

At the center of this dynamic stands the EU’s executive leadership, mainly Ursula von der Leyen and her ideological lackeys in the Commission, who would almost certainly emerge strengthened, not because she has solved Europe’s democratic challenges but because she can plausibly claim progress. This is the quiet irony of such a political transition, a national shift framed as democratic renewal ends up reinforcing the very structures that have struggled to confront democratic backsliding effectively.

None of this is to suggest that change in Hungary would be meaningless. The removal of an entrenched leader carries its own significance, particularly for civil society and political opposition within the country. But meaning is not the same as impact. Without a deeper transformation, one that addresses institutional integrity, media independence and political accountability, the broader European landscape remains largely unchanged.

In the end, Magyar’s victory would reveal something uncomfortable about contemporary European politics, that it is often more adept at managing appearances than resolving contradictions. A new leader in Budapest might close one chapter but it would not rewrite the book.


The Song Of Reverie #Poem #Painting by Nikos Laios

 

They sang of heroes
And Gods in tribal days,
The decadent elegant ways,
The empires that rose and fell,
The kingdom of God and
Loud clanging bells

That tolled for them
And tolls for us,
That prophesied
The end of days
And golden ways,
They sang and
Danced in reverie,
Celebrations of spring,
Of delicate gentle things,
Andwith the falling of thesun,
They held each other tenderly.

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With a digital painting from Nikos Laios

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Check Nikos Laios' eBOOK, HERE!

The loud authoritarian and the quiet corrupt by Thanos Kalamidas

Power in the European Union does not always follow size, wealth or even formal influence. Sometimes it follows posture. Sometimes it follow...