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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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.

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

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

The performance of isolation by Howard Morton

There is a persistent temptation, when observing Donald Trump, to search for a master plan, to assume that beneath the noise, the contradictions, the abrupt pivots and personal vendettas, there exists some coherent strategic logic. Perhaps, the thinking goes, his apparent isolation, from allies, from institutions, even from consistent ideology, is not a failure but a deliberate posture. A man apart, standing alone against enemies real and imagined, might seem, in certain narratives, like a figure of strength.

But that interpretation requires a level of discipline and foresight that his public life rarely sustains.

Trump’s political persona has long been defined by separation. He distances himself not only from opponents, which is expected in politics but also from those nominally on his side. Advisors are discarded with theatrical regularity. Loyalists become liabilities overnight. Institutions that might otherwise amplify his power, the judiciary, intelligence agencies, even elements of his own party, are recast as adversaries when they fail to align perfectly with his immediate needs.

This is not the isolation of a strategist tightening the circle. It is the isolation of erosion. There is a difference between choosing solitude as a tactic and ending up alone because one cannot maintain trust. The former suggests control; the latter suggests instability. Trump’s version of isolation feels less like a calculated stance and more like a pattern, one that repeats across contexts, from business to politics to personal relationships.

It is, at times, difficult to ignore the possibility that this pattern is not entirely intentional. Observers often debate whether Trump’s behavior reflects cunning or confusion. Is the chaos a smokescreen, or is it simply chaos? The answer may be less flattering than either extreme. What appears as strategy might, in fact, be improvisation elevated to a governing principle. Decisions emerge not from long-term planning but from impulse, grievance, and the immediate emotional landscape.

In such a framework, isolation is almost inevitable. If alliances are contingent on constant affirmation, they cannot endure disagreement. If criticism is always betrayal, then collaboration becomes impossible. Over time, the circle shrinks, not because it is meant to, but because nothing stable can exist within it.

There is also the more uncomfortable question, whether elements of decline, cognitive, physical or both, play a role in amplifying these tendencies. Age alone does not explain erratic behavior, but it can magnify existing traits. What might once have been dismissed as brashness or unconventional thinking can, over time, take on a sharper, more disjointed edge.

Still, reducing Trump to a figure of incapacity risks oversimplifying the phenomenon. His appeal has never depended on coherence. In fact, his unpredictability is part of the attraction. Supporters do not necessarily look for consistency; they look for disruption, for the sense that he operates outside the constraints that bind others.

Yet even disruption has limits. A political figure who cannot maintain durable alliances eventually confronts the structural realities of power. Governments are not built on singular will; they require networks of trust, however fragile. Isolation, when it becomes total, is not strength, it is confinement.

What remains striking about Trump is not merely that he isolates himself, but that he seems to return to that condition repeatedly, as if drawn to it. Whether by design or by default, he inhabits a space where foes are everywhere and allies are temporary. It is a posture that commands attention, certainly, but it also raises a quieter question.

Not whether he stands alone but whether he can stand with anyone at all.


Berserk Alert! #084 #Cartoon by Tony Zuvela

 

Tony Zuvela and his view of the world around us in a constant berserk alert!
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When Geography Breaks: GCC Aviation in an Era of Corridor Instability by Rehan van Tonder

 

For decades, the Gulf’s aviation success rested on a deceptively simple premise: geography is destiny. Positioned almost perfectly between Europe and Asia, Gulf carriers transformed location into strategy, and strategy into dominance. The hub model perfected in Dubai, Doha, and Abu Dhabi became one of the most efficient systems in modern aviation—built on predictability, connectivity, and scale.

That premise is now under strain.

The current wave of airspace disruptions across the Middle East does more than reroute aircraft. It challenges the foundational logic of the Gulf aviation model itself. When the “middle” of the world becomes operationally unstable, the system built around it begins to fragment.

The Illusion of Fixed Geography

Aviation planners have long relied on great-circle logic—the shortest distance between two points. The Gulf sits squarely on that arc between Europe and Asia. But airspace is not geography; it is permission. And permission is political.

As corridors close or become contested, airlines are forced into longer, fragmented routings—north through Central Asia or south via the Indian Ocean. What was once a seamless transit system becomes a patchwork of contingencies. The result is not just longer flight times, but a fundamental erosion of network efficiency.

Geography, as it turns out, is only an advantage when it is accessible.

Let us also examine the Compounding Cost of Uncertainty: The immediate impacts are measurable: longer sectors, higher fuel burn, disrupted schedules. But the deeper issue is variability. Aviation systems are designed around precision—tight connection banks, optimized crew rotations, high aircraft utilization. Even small deviations cascade.

A two-hour extension on a long-haul sector is not just a cost increase; it is a scheduling disruption that ripples across the network. Aircraft arrive late, connections break, crews time out. What emerges is not a single inefficiency, but systemic friction.

And frictions, in aviation, are expensive – something every pilot or related company leader knows well.

For Gulf carriers—whose business models depend on maximizing connectivity through tightly coordinated hubs—this unpredictability strikes at the core of their operating philosophy. It also highlights the growing importance of efficiency-driven interventions, such as those advanced by Shift Aviation, where trajectory optimization and fuel-efficiency strategies are used to mitigate both cost escalation and environmental impact in increasingly constrained airspace.

More broadly, these dynamics extend beyond aviation alone. They sit at the intersection of global architecture, energy systems, and security considerations. Therefore, initiatives such as those convened by the Global Academy for Future Governance (GAFG) under the theme “Navigating an Unpredictable Future: Global Architecture, Energy, Security”(thanks to prof. Anis and dr. Philipe) are not only timely, but increasingly necessary to frame and address the systemic risks now shaping global connectivity.

The Fragility of the Hub

The Gulf hub model is one of aviation’s most elegant constructs. It aggregates global demand into a single node, redistributes it efficiently, and does so at scale. But it also depends on one critical assumption: stability.

Remove that, and the model begins to show its fragility.                   Passengers are highly sensitive to perceived risk and inconvenience. Faced with longer journeys, uncertain connections, or geopolitical concerns, they adapt quickly. Demand shifts. Alternatives emerge. What was once a default routing through the Gulf becomes just one option among many.

In the short term, this manifests as reduced traffic flows and weakened connectivity. In the long term, it risks something more structural: the gradual erosion of the Gulf’s centrality in global aviation.

Is the Rewiring of Asia–Europe Flows urgent? Disruption rarely leaves a vacuum. It redistributes.As Gulf corridors become less reliable, traffic begins to reconfigure. Asian hubs gain relevance. Ultra-long-haul flights—once niche—become more competitive. Airlines with access to alternative airspace gain structural advantages.

What we are witnessing is not just a temporary diversion of traffic, but the early stages of network rebalancing. The highly centralized model of east–west aviation, anchored in the Gulf, is being tested by a more distributed system.

This does not mean the Gulf disappears from the map. But it may no longer sit at its unquestioned center.

What, beyond given geography, would be the Next Strategic Phase? The critical question for Gulf carriers is whether their advantage is inherently geographic—or whether it can evolve beyond geography.

If access to airspace remains uncertain, then location alone is no longer sufficient. Competitive advantage must shift toward resilience, flexibility, and differentiation.

This could take several forms:

  • Greater investment in ultra-long-haul capabilities to bypass contested regions
  • Diversification toward origin-and-destination traffic, reducing reliance on transit flows
  • Network redesign that prioritizes adaptability over maximum efficiency
  • Strategic partnerships that extend reach beyond the Gulf’s immediate geography

In essence, the model must evolve from one optimized for stability to one designed for volatility.

A System in Transition

The Gulf aviation story has always been one of bold bets—on scale, on service, on the future of global connectivity. Those bets paid off in an era where the skies above the region were reliably open.

Today’s environment is different. Airspace is contested. Predictability is diminished. And the cost of disruption is rising.What hereby emerges is not necessarily decline, but transition.

The next phase of global aviation may be defined less by who sits in the middle of the map, and more by who can navigate its uncertainties. In that world, resilience becomes as valuable as efficiency—and adaptability as important as scale.

The Gulf carriers have rewritten the rules of aviation once before. The question now is whether they can do it again—this time, without relying on geography as their primary advantage.As the founding father of the EU, Jean Monnet used to say, “when you have an unsolvable dilemma, enlarge the context.” Certainly, GAFG and ShiftAviation are part of that context.


Rehan van Tonder, ShiftAviationCEO  (GAFG Director)

Worming #128 #cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

A family of worms and all their worm friends worming in new adventures.

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JD Vance's quiet campaign by Kingsley Cobb

There’s something almost too neat about JD Vance suddenly becoming the face of America’s most fragile diplomatic file. A vice president once cast as a reluctant defender of foreign wars now finds himself leading negotiations with Iran, long hours, high stakes and no clear victories. If you’re looking for the early scaffolding of a presidential campaign, this is exactly what it looks like.

But let’s not pretend this is purely about statesmanship. Vance’s role in the Iran talks is not accidental. It’s political positioning under the cover of diplomacy. While Donald Trump oscillates between threats, boasts and contradictory messaging about the conflict, Vance occupies a different lane, calmer, quieter and more measured. That contrast matters. It’s not just stylistic; it’s strategic.

Reports suggest Vance was never the loudest cheerleader for the war in the first place. In fact, he was seen as one of the more skeptical voices about deeper U.S. involvement. That skepticism hasn’t disappeared, it’s simply been repackaged. Instead of open dissent, what we’re seeing now is something more subtle,  participation without ownership.

That’s a delicate balancing act. Vance is inside the room, leading negotiations, absorbing the credibility that comes with it. But he’s also not the one who launched the conflict, escalated tensions, or made maximalist demands. That distinction could prove invaluable later.

Because let’s be honest, these talks are not going well. The negotiations have so far produced “goodwill” but no deal, despite marathon sessions and heavy diplomatic investment. Iran remains resistant, the ceasefire is shaky, and the broader regional situation is volatile. Even the messaging from Washington has been muddled, with conflicting statements about participation and progress.

In political terms, this is a risky assignment. But it’s also a calculated one. If the talks fail, Vance can point to structural obstacles, Iran’s intransigence, the complexity of the conflict, or even mixed signals from the administration itself. If they succeed, even partially, he can claim credit as the man who stabilized a crisis others inflamed. It’s a classic “heads I win, tails I don’t lose much” scenario.

More interesting, though, is what Vance isn’t saying. There’s been no dramatic break with Trump, no headline-grabbing criticism of the administration’s Iran strategy. Instead, there’s a kind of disciplined silence. And silence, in politics, is rarely neutral. It allows Vance to maintain loyalty while quietly differentiating himself. He doesn’t need to attack Trump’s approach outright, he just needs to embody an alternative.

And that alternative is already taking shape: less bombast, more restraint; less improvisation, more deliberation. The contrast becomes sharper when Trump publicly floats military threats or claims that a deal is practically done, only for reality to say otherwise. In that environment, Vance’s more cautious tone starts to look not just different, but presidential.

Of course, there’s a danger here. Vance could end up owning a failed process, especially if the administration decides to escalate militarily after talks collapse. He’s close enough to be implicated, even if he wasn’t the architect.

But that risk may be precisely the point. Presidential campaigns are rarely built on safe bets. They’re built on visibility, on moments where a politician can step onto the world stage and be seen handling pressure.

That’s what this is. Vance is not openly running, at least not yet. But he’s building a narrative, the skeptic who became the negotiator, the insider who understands the costs of war, the steady hand in a volatile administration.

Whether that narrative holds depends on how this crisis ends. But one thing is already clear: this isn’t just diplomacy. It’s audition.


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 leave...