The multi-billionaires’ spring by Emma Schneider

May Day has always carried a certain stubborn poetry, a day meant to honor workers that arrives wrapped in the optimism of spring. It promises renewal, collective strength, and the possibility, however faint, of fairness. But in the era shaped by Donald Trump and the ever-expanding gravitational pull of multi-billionaires, May Day feels less like a celebration and more like a question. Who, exactly, is this day for anymore?

The old imagery of International Workers’ Day, factory floors, union banners, the steady rhythm of solidarity, has been replaced by something sleeker and harder to grasp. Today’s worker is just as likely to be refreshing an app, chasing an algorithm, or stringing together freelance gigs that offer flexibility but little security. The billionaire, meanwhile, is no longer a distant industrialist hidden behind smokestacks. He is a brand, a personality, a constant presence. He tweets, he launches rockets, he buys platforms, he shapes narratives. He doesn’t just own capital, he occupies attention.

Trump didn’t invent this shift, but he accelerated its tone. He understood instinctively that politics had become theater and that wealth itself could be recast as proof of genius rather than privilege. In that framing, the billionaire is not a beneficiary of the system but its ultimate success story. The worker, by contrast, is encouraged to see struggle not as a structural condition but as a temporary personal setback. Try harder. Hustle more. Brand yourself better.

What gets lost in this arrangement is the quiet dignity that May Day once tried to foreground: the idea that labor, in all its forms, deserves stability, respect, and a share of the prosperity it creates. Instead, we’ve drifted into a culture that celebrates outsized winners while normalizing widespread precarity. The numbers tell a familiar story, astonishing concentrations of wealth at the top but the cultural shift is just as important. Inequality doesn’t just exist; it is narrated, justified, even admired.

There is something almost theatrical about the modern billionaire’s relationship to the public. Grand gestures, philanthropy, bold ventures, about saving humanity, investments in the future, create the impression of benevolence. And yet, these gestures often coexist with business models that depend on minimizing labor costs, avoiding regulation, or extracting value from systems that workers have little control over. It’s a paradox that feels increasingly unsustainable: a society that relies on workers while steadily eroding their leverage.

May Day, in this context, becomes less about nostalgia and more about clarity. It asks us to reconsider what work means in an age where productivity is high but security is low, where wealth is abundant but unevenly distributed. It invites a reevaluation of power, not just who has it, but how it is exercised and justified.

The irony is that the language of disruption, so beloved by billionaires, could just as easily apply to the workers themselves. The past decade has seen flickers of renewed labor organizing, from warehouses to digital platforms, from service industries to creative fields. These efforts are often fragmented, sometimes fragile, but they suggest that the story is not entirely one-sided. The same networks that enable billionaires to scale their influence can, under the right conditions, allow workers to find one another and push back.

Still, the imbalance remains stark. When wealth reaches into the tens or hundreds of billions, it doesn’t just buy comfort, it buys insulation. It creates a world where the consequences of economic policy, labor conditions, and social instability are experienced at a distance. For everyone else, those consequences are immediate and unavoidable.

So May Day arrives again, carrying its old message into a new landscape. It is less certain, perhaps, but no less necessary. In a time when the voices of the ultra-wealthy echo so loudly, the day serves as a reminder, quiet but persistent, that economies are not built by individuals alone. They are built by millions of workers whose contributions are easy to overlook but impossible to replace.

Spring, after all, does not belong to the billionaires. It belongs to everyone who keeps things growing.


The ocean is talking back by Maddison Pearce

For decades humans have comforted themselves with a quiet assumption that language, true, layered, expressive language, belongs to us. We’ve granted animals communication, of course. Signals, calls, instincts dressed in sound. But language? That was our crown. Now, the sperm whale is chipping at it, one click at a time.

The latest findings on sperm whale communication don’t just add another fascinating footnote to marine biology, they unsettle something deeper. These whales aren’t merely exchanging rhythmic clicks, as once thought. They’re shaping sound with variation, with frequency shifts that resemble vowels, even blending tones into diphthong-like structures. In other words, they are not just sending signals. They are sculpting them.

And that changes the conversation, literally. We’ve long relied on a convenient hierarchy: humans at the top, armed with syntax and nuance, while the rest of the animal kingdom operates on simpler channels. But what happens when those channels start to look less simple? When a whale’s “coda” begins to echo the fluidity of spoken language, even faintly resembling tonal systems found in human speech?

It forces an uncomfortable possibility: maybe language didn’t emerge as a singular human miracle. Maybe it evolved in parallel, in ways we’re only just beginning to recognize. Not identical, not interchangeable but complex enough to deserve respect, not reduction.

There’s also a humbling irony here. While we’ve been busy sending probes into deep space, searching for intelligent signals from distant civilizations, an intricate communication system has been resonating beneath our oceans all along. Not alien but foreign enough that we’ve struggled to understand it. Perhaps the real first contact isn’t out there. It’s down there.

Of course, it’s tempting to anthropomorphize. To rush toward conclusions that whales “have language like us.” That would be a mistake. Similarity is not equivalence. But dismissing these findings as merely “advanced animal noise” would be an even bigger one. The truth sits somewhere in between, a gray area that science is just beginning to illuminate.

What makes this discovery so compelling isn’t just the technical detail about frequencies or pitch variation. It’s what it implies about cognition. Producing structured, variable sound patterns suggests intention, flexibility, maybe even social complexity that we’ve underestimated. Communication systems don’t evolve in a vacuum; they reflect the minds behind them.

And so the question shifts. It’s no longer “Do whales communicate?” That’s settled. The real question is: how much meaning lives inside those clicks? Are we listening to something closer to conversation than we ever imagined?

There’s a philosophical edge to all this, too. If another species shares even fragments of what we consider linguistic ability, it challenges how we define intelligence, culture, even personhood. It nudges us to reconsider how we treat these creatures, not as distant curiosities, but as participants in a world of meaning we barely understand.

In the end, this isn’t just a story about whales. It’s a story about us, about how quickly our certainties can erode when confronted with new evidence. The ocean hasn’t suddenly become more complex. It always was. We’re just, finally, learning how to hear it.


Manish Zodiac Predictions for May 2026 #Horoscope by Manish Kumar Arora

Aries ( 21 March – 19 April ) –It is a time to focus on the elements of your personality that you are projecting to society and as a professional. Goals for self-mastery and self-discipline should be made at this time. You are more inclined to take pride in your intellectual accomplishments and your ability to socialize and make connections. The flowing, expressive, and spontaneous energy surrounding you attracts like-minded and hearted people. Your friends and romantic partner are best appreciated now if they are intellectual types.  Be sure to take time to enjoy yourself, preferably around others. Favorable Dates: May 1, 3, 10, 12, 19, 21 Favorable Colors: Grey & Yellow

Taurus ( 20 April – 20 May ) - This is a time of re-organization and heightened awareness of your roots, issues of intimacy and vulnerability, and it’s an excellent time to come in touch with your feelings and needs. Energies thrown toward recreation, travel, or just cooking up great new ideas are well spent and serve to refresh and renew your vitality. Creative projects can flourish with enlarged focus and redoubled efforts that somehow don’t tire you out. Your desire to “plump” your nest this month is strong, and impulsive spending should be watched for. Favorable Dates: May 5, 7, 14, 16, 23, 25 Favorable Colors: Red & Grey

Gemini ( 21 May – 20 June ) - You’re at your best when you are showing the world your practical, competent, and responsible side. Surprises surrounding long-term goals, friendships, and group affiliations may be in store. Something that has been “in hiding” or brewing under the surface of things comes to light, or there is a significant fruition or culmination. Communications, short trips, errand-running, and general busyness feature now. You could have a finger in many pies, so to speak, as your curiosity is piqued by a larger variety of things than usual. Favorable Dates: May 1, 4, 10, 13, 19, 22 Favorable Colors : Red & Yellow

Cancer ( 21 June – 22 July ) - This is a period of easy creative energy. You are open to expanding your knowledge base during this cycle and communications from or with someone far away may be part of the picture. You are putting everything into perspective now, rather than compartmentalizing. For you, this is an especially strong period for personal magnetism and close partnering.  There  is strength in your feelings of love and the power of attraction, which may open the door to new romantic relationships. The role you play for other people in your life also becomes the focus. Favorable Dates: May 2, 3, 11, 12, 20, 21 Favorable Colors: White & Yellow

Leo (23 July – 22 August) - You may have more energy than usual to want to organize projects. Your humanitarian impulse may be stimulated. The role you play for other people in your life becomes the focus. Besides spending more time tending to domestic affairs, the focus can be on cultivating and nourishing your inner foundations that support you and your growth. Finding new ways to express yourself creatively figures now. It is a time when you will be more aware of your environment, and when you experience increased alertness.Favorable Dates: May 2, 3, 11, 12, 20, 21 Favorable Colors: Purple & Black

Virgo ( 23 August – 22 September ) - You may have more energy than usual to want to organize projects. You’re at your best when you are showing the world your practical, competent, and responsible side. You prefer to lead a group rather than follow during this period. Your adventurous side pushes up and out, demanding attention. Money issues pop up now—the discovery of a way to increase your income, an unexpected gift or reward, or a brief and tiny financial crisis that motivates you to find new ways to make money are possible. Favorable Dates: May 7, 8, 16, 17, 25, 26 Favorable Colors: Yellow & Blue

Libra ( 23 September – 22 October ) - It is a good time to focus on issues of intimacy as well as developing self-mastery skills. You may experience increased awareness of others—what makes them tick—as well as your own internal motivations during this period. The best way to achieve your goals is to work as a team, or to at least to do some networking. Career planning strategies or thinking of concrete ways to turn your dreams into realities as well as sharing your thoughts on these matters with a few significant others should be very fruitful now. Favorable Dates: May 2, 5, 11, 14, 20, 23 Favorable Colors: Red & Green

Scorpio ( 23 October – 21 November ) - Your vision is practical right now, and you want to see tangible results for your efforts. More contact with authority figures is likely during this period. Recognition is likely to come your way whether you ask for it or not, and the responsibility that comes right along with it.  This could be a period in which you come up with solutions to a number of problems. At this time, you have a greater need than usual to be with a partner. A partner provides a mirror for your own self-discovery. Favorable Dates: May 8, 9, 17, 18, 26, 27 Favorable Colors: Yellow & Black

Sagittarius ( 22 November -21 December ) – Your inclination during this cycle is to think about the “big picture” rather than the mundane circumstances and details of your life. Missing appointments and other forms of forgetfulness could be part of the picture now. You will be able to mingle and make new friends or connections. It will also be a great time to gain connections by networking with others. Strong energy for romance is also with you now. Your quirkiness and ability to come up with pleasant surprises for others is especially attractive and rewarding. Favorable Dates: May 2, 6, 11, 15, 20, 24 Favorable Colors: Blue & Green

Capricorn ( 22 December – 19 January ) - It’s time to put your best foot forward. A blast of personal energy comes your way, and showing your leadership skills works for you now. More opportunities to socialize and network could present themselves now, or circumstances are such that you need to draw upon your diplomacy skills in order to advance. The spotlight is on you and your ability to lead, so make it a good one. Take steps to improve how you come across to others.  Any love affair begun now will be characterized by good cheer. Favorable Dates: May 4, 7, 13, 16, 22, 25 Favorable Colors: Yellow & White

Aquarius ( 20 January – 18 February ) - This is a time to start fresh in terms of how you arrange your life in order to feel a sense of value and worthiness. Heightened sensitivity to your physical environment, and to the security you gain from the solid ground you have built for yourself is in order. Attunement to, and appreciation of the physical world of the senses is the focus. Your self-mastery skills and psychological predisposition matter to you more than usual. This is the time when you are most desirous of change on a deep level. Favorable Dates: May 2, 6, 11, 15, 20, 24 Favorable Colors: Yellow & Red

Pisces ( 19 February – 20 March ) - This is a favorable time for learning something new, feeling at ease in social situations, taking care of the details of daily life, and developing a mental rapport with others. Your mind is brightand active during this cycle, and you have the ability to come up with unusual and inventive ideas. Sharing your thoughts with others is a prime interest. You are more inclined to want to smooth over differences in a partnership concerning the sharing of power, intimacy matters, finances and other emotionally-charged topics. Intimate relationships are intensified now. Favorable Dates: May 1, 7, 10, 15, 19, 25 Favorable Colors: Yellow &Blue


Walk the talk 26#007 #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.

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An unsteady shadow by Farida Iri

For generations Canada has lived beside a paradox: the world’s most powerful nation has also been its closest partner. Geography made the relationship inevitable; shared values made it functional. The United States has not merely been a neighbour but an amplifier of Canada’s economy, its security and even its global voice. That arrangement, while never perfectly balanced, has historically worked to Canada’s advantage.

But alliances, like markets, depend on predictability. And predictability is precisely what has eroded.

There was a time when proximity to Washington meant stability. Trade agreements, even when contentious, followed a recognizable logic. Disputes over lumber, dairy, or steel were handled within a framework both sides broadly respected. Canada could plan, invest, and negotiate knowing that, even amid friction, the rules of engagement would hold. American leadership, regardless of party, largely upheld a consensus: alliances mattered, and Canada was among the most reliable.

That assumption no longer feels safe. The shift is not merely political; it is structural. A more erratic, inward-looking United States has introduced a volatility that Canada cannot easily hedge against. Policies appear, disappear, and reappear under new justifications. Tariffs are imposed in the name of national security, then lifted, then threatened again. Agreements are renegotiated not as a matter of routine evolution but as leverage exercises. The result is not just disagreement, it is uncertainty.

And uncertainty, in economics and diplomacy alike, is corrosive. Canada’s strength has always been its ability to operate within stable systems. Its economy thrives on trade predictability; its foreign policy leans on multilateralism; its identity is partially defined in contrast to American turbulence. But when that turbulence becomes the defining feature of the relationship, Canada’s strategic calculus shifts. The neighbour that once reinforced Canadian resilience begins, instead, to test it.

This is not about personalities alone, though leadership styles matter. It is about the normalization of unpredictability as a governing approach. When decisions are driven less by institutional continuity and more by impulse or short-term optics, even the closest allies become collateral. Canada finds itself reacting rather than planning, adjusting rather than shaping outcomes.

The consequences ripple outward. Businesses hesitate before committing to cross-border investments. Policymakers divert attention from long-term initiatives to crisis management. Diplomatic energy is spent deciphering signals rather than advancing shared goals. In subtle but significant ways, Canada’s bandwidth is consumed not by global challenges but by managing the uncertainties of its most important bilateral relationship.

Yet this moment also exposes a deeper truth: dependence, even on a friendly giant, carries risks. Canada’s historical comfort in the shadow of American power may have delayed a more urgent diversification of trade partners, of strategic alliances, of economic pathways. The current strain is, in part, a reckoning with that reality.

Still, geography does not change. The United States will remain Canada’s neighbour, its largest trading partner, and an unavoidable influence. The question is not whether the relationship endures it will but what form it takes. Can it return to a foundation of mutual reliability or will it settle into something more transactional, more conditional, and less reassuring?

For Canada, the answer lies partly in adaptation. Strengthening ties beyond North America, investing in domestic resilience, and reducing exposure to sudden policy swings are no longer optional, they are necessary. At the same time, there remains value in engagement, in maintaining channels that can outlast political cycles.

But there should be no illusion about the present moment. What was once a clear advantage has become, at least intermittently, a vulnerability. The neighbour that helped anchor Canada’s stability now introduces an element of risk that cannot be ignored.

Allies are not supposed to feel like variables. And yet, increasingly, that is exactly what the United States has become.


Ovi History #eMagazine #18: Saigon falls

 This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is cover18.jpg

On March 26, 1975, the fall of Saigon marked the decisive end of the Vietnam War, a conflict that had ravaged Southeast Asia for decades. While the city’s official collapse came on April 30, the March offensive signaled the beginning of the end.

North Vietnamese forces, under the direction of General Văn Tiến Dũng, launched a series of rapid, overwhelming attacks on South Vietnam’s central highlands and key coastal cities. The South Vietnamese army, weakened by years of attrition, declining U.S. support, and strategic blunders, crumbled in disarray.

The capture of Saigon, then the capital of South Vietnam, was the culmination of the Spring Offensive. As North Vietnamese tanks advanced, panic swept the city. Thousands of South Vietnamese civilians and remaining American personnel scrambled to evacuate. Iconic images of helicopters airlifting evacuees from the U.S. Embassy rooftop symbolized the chaotic withdrawal. On April 30, North Vietnamese forces raised their flag over the Independence Palace, forcing the South Vietnamese government to surrender unconditionally.

The fall of Saigon ended decades of direct U.S. military involvement and led to the reunification of Vietnam under communist control. It resulted in a profound humanitarian crisis, spurring a massive wave of refugees known as “boat people.” The war’s legacy—marked by immense loss of life, deep political division, and lasting physical and emotional scars—continues to shape Vietnam and American memory to this day.

For this issue of Ovi History, a historical fiction short story from Mike Nomads and a collection of autobiographic poems from Michael Lee Johnson.

So, turn the pages and ...take cover.

Read the Ovi History eMagazine online HERE!
View, read it online or download it in PDF/epub format HERE!
And enjoy viewing & reading it online or download in PDF format HERE!
All eMagazines and eBooks downloads are FREE!

You can find it in the Ovi Pedia pages, HERE!
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With the hope that you will read and learn from the articles,
so ...do read this historic chronicle

Thanos Kalamidas


A welcome that sounds like a warning by Kasie Hewitt

An 86-year-old widow, frail, grieving, pulled from her home in a nightgown and treated like a criminal. Not a threat, not a fugitive, just an elderly woman entangled in bureaucracy, family conflict, and a system that too often forgets its own humanity. Marie-Thérèse Ross-Mahé’s ordeal isn’t just a tragic anecdote; it feels like a warning sign flashing far beyond her individual case.

For sixteen days, she sat in immigration detention. Sixteen days at that age is not just an inconvenience; it’s a physical and emotional strain that can leave permanent scars. Handcuffed, processed, confined. The kind of treatment one might argue is necessary for dangerous individuals. But for an elderly widow whose greatest “offense” was a visa issue amid a complicated personal situation? It raises uncomfortable questions about priorities and proportionality.

What makes this story more troubling is how easily it seems the machinery was set in motion. A family dispute over a modest estate, $190,000, including the home she lived in, allegedly triggered a chain reaction that ended with immigration enforcement at her door. If true, it suggests a system that can be weaponized, where personal grievances can spill into state action with devastating consequences. That should concern anyone, regardless of their stance on immigration.

This isn’t about arguing against immigration laws. Every country has the right to enforce its borders and regulations. But enforcement without discretion becomes something else entirely. It becomes mechanical, indifferent and at times, cruel. Laws are meant to serve people not the other way around.

The broader implication is hard to ignore. Stories like this travel. They shape perception. They influence decisions. For millions of people around the world, the United States has long been seen as a destination, sometimes aspirational, sometimes symbolic. But when the headlines show an elderly woman detained under harsh conditions, it chips away at that image.

And timing matters. With major international events like the World Cup on the horizon, countries are not just hosting matches, they are showcasing themselves to the world. They are inviting visitors, building goodwill and reinforcing their global identity. Tourism, after all, runs on trust as much as logistics. People want to feel safe, respected, and welcome.

Incidents like this do the opposite. They create hesitation. They plant doubt. If an 86-year-old widow can be treated this way, what might others expect? That question, fair or not, lingers.

It’s easy to dismiss one case as an exception. But exceptions are often what define perception. They are the stories that get told, retold, and remembered. And in an age where narratives travel faster than facts, perception can quickly become reality.

The United States faces a choice, not just in policy, but in tone. Enforcement can coexist with compassion. Security can coexist with dignity. The real test of a system isn’t how it treats the powerful or the compliant, but how it treats the vulnerable.

Marie-Thérèse Ross-Mahé’s experience should not be brushed aside as an unfortunate anomaly. It should prompt reflection. Because if a nation wants to welcome the world—whether for tourism, events, or simply human connection, it must first ensure that its doors don’t feel like traps.

Otherwise, the message being sent is clear, even if unintended, enter at your own risk.


Maples & Oranges #064 #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!
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Complicity in Plain Sight: Europe’s Moral Credibility Laid Bare by Javed Akbar

“A civilization that uses its principles for trickery and deceit is a dying civilization.”
Expecting otherwise, however, is to ask a leopard to change its spots.
(The emphasis, though, is mine)
-    Attributed to Aimé Césaire¹

The Donald Trump horror show continues—not merely as political theatre in Washington, but as a governing ethos that normalizes impunity, erodes accountability, and emboldens allies to act without consequence. Its most dangerous expression now extends beyond Gaza to the unprovoked US–Zionist war on Iran, a reckless escalation that has further shredded the already fragile fabric of international law.

What began as a rupture in norms has hardened into policy: a system in which US abuse of power and an Israeli government’s genocidal zeal for destruction are not restrained, but effectively enabled by Western institutions—none more so than the European Union.

By refusing to suspend even part of the EU–Israel Association Agreement, the European Union has, in effect, shielded the Israeli state despite mounting allegations of war crimes and genocide. Rather than invoking the very mechanisms designed to uphold international law—sanctions, trade restrictions, or even symbolic censure—it has chosen to preserve normal relations, signalling continuity over accountability. This is not neutrality; it is calibrated protection. Principles are proclaimed with solemnity, yet withheld in practice—revealing not a failure of capacity, but a failure of will.

The contrast with Europe’s response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is stark. Then came swift, coordinated sanctions—decisive, unambiguous, and morally framed. Now, in the face of Gaza’s devastation, the European Union has neither sanctioned Israel nor imposed trade restrictions, nor even offered symbolic gestures of censure. This is not mere inconsistency; it is selective enforcement— duplicity and deception, where principles are invoked as instruments rather than upheld as commitments. International law invoked with urgency against adversaries, yet diluted, deferred, or quietly discarded when allies stand accused.

Jerusalem Patriarch Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa so aptly declared; “In Gaza, our brothers are plunged into extreme tribulation, They have lived for years under the bombs, without water, without food, without medicine. And now they live in rubble.” ²

And how did Europe respond  to an unprovoked US – Zionist regime's attack on Iran – and to the bombing of a primary school in Minab that reportedly killed 170 children, an act that would constitute a grave war crime. With silence, or at best, evasive restraint – an unsettling reflection of a moral hierarchy in which power dictates whose lives matter and whose suffering is deemed tolerable.  

Italy’s posture under Giorgia Meloni illustrates this duplicity. The much-publicized suspension of a defense memorandum with Israel proved largely cosmetic—no contracts canceled, no arms halted, no meaningful reduction in cooperation. Symbolism substituted for substance, calibrated to ease domestic pressure while preserving the status quo.

Germany’s role is pivotal. Its unwavering support for Israel, rooted in historical responsibility, has hardened into unconditional political cover. Calls to suspend the agreement are dismissed as “inappropriate,” replaced with appeals for “critical dialogue,” even as arms exports continue and Berlin blocks collective EU action. Responsibility has been reinterpreted as immunity—transforming moral obligation into a strategic shield.

Nowhere is this moral inversion clearer than in the EU’s broader regional posture. While escalating sanctions on Iran and echoing Washington’s priorities, Europe avoids meaningful pressure on Israel. The asymmetry is unmistakable: accountability is geopolitical, not universal. Grand designs flourish while civilians remain displaced, infrastructure shattered, and aid insufficient. This is the convergence of US abuse of power and an Israeli government’s enthusiasm for genocide—enabled, excused, and effectively underwritten by those who claim to defend international law.

Europe now stands at odds with its own narrative. It cannot invoke international law selectively and expect legitimacy. It cannot punish one violation while subsidizing another. The question is no longer whether Europe understands what is unfolding in Gaza; it is whether it possesses the will to act against it.

If principles are only applied when convenient, they are not principles at all—they are instruments of power. And when power is exercised without conscience, it ceases to be order and becomes something far more dangerous: a sanctioned injustice that history will record not as failure, but as willing complicity in the face of human suffering.


¹Aimé Césaire is a Francophone poet, author, and politician. Césaire's work is    deeply rooted in post-colonialism and critiques European colonialism. His quote    highlights the dangers of hypocrisy and moral decay in societies that claim to    uphold certain values but fail to practice them.

² In a sweeping pastoral letter on Saturday (Apr 25, 2026), addressing the war in     Gaza and the wider crisis in the Holy Land, Jerusalem Patriarch Cardinal     Pierbattista Pizzaballa wrote: “Jerusalem does not belong to anyone     exclusively, not spoils, (of war) but a gift, a heritage of humanity.


Javed Akbar is a freelance writer whose opinion columns have appeared in Toronto Star and numerous digital platforms. He can be reached at: mjavedakbar@gmail.com


Accountability deferred by Marja Heikkinen

There is a certain kind of political fatigue that sets in when standards appear optional, when the rules seem to bend not according to principle, but proximity to power. In today’s United States, that fatigue is no longer subtle. It hums beneath headlines, pulses through partisan debates, and shapes a growing sense that accountability is less a cornerstone of democracy than a selectively enforced ideal.

At the center of this unease stands Donald Trump, a figure whose political resilience has redefined what consequences in public life actually look like. Over the years, allegations of sexual misconduct, ethical breaches, and his documented association with Jeffrey Epstein have formed a cloud that, for many observers, would have ended another political career several times over. Yet Trump remains not only relevant but dominant within his political sphere. That reality forces an uncomfortable question, if accountability does not apply at the top, does it meaningfully apply anywhere?

This is not merely about one individual. It is about precedent. Democracies depend less on written laws than on shared expectations, norms that guide behaviour when enforcement falters. When those norms erode, the system does not collapse overnight. Instead, it warps. The public begins to internalize a different standard, that power shields, that loyalty outweighs evidence, that survival is victory enough.

Consider the recurring spectacle of congressional controversies, where figures like Eric Swalwell become lightning rods for scrutiny, calls for resignation, or political theater. Whether those calls are justified or opportunistic often depends on who is making them. But the broader pattern is unmistakable. Accountability has become a partisan instrument rather than a universal expectation. One side demands it fiercely until it becomes inconvenient. The other dismisses it entirely until it becomes useful.

In that environment, resignation itself begins to feel symbolic rather than substantive. A lawmaker stepping down no longer signals a system working as intended. Instead, it can feel like a minor correction within a much larger imbalance, one where consequences are unevenly distributed, often landing hardest on those with the least political insulation.

The danger here is not just hypocrisy. It is normalization. When voters see high-profile figures weather scandals that would have once been disqualifying, expectations shift. The threshold for outrage rises. What was once shocking becomes routine; what was once disqualifying becomes survivable. Over time, the very idea of accountability loses its clarity. It becomes negotiable, then optional, and eventually irrelevant.

None of this suggests that American democracy is uniquely broken. Every political system wrestles with the tension between power and principle. But the visibility of these contradictions in the United States, long a country that has framed itself as a model of democratic norms, makes the current moment particularly stark.

The real question is not whether one politician resigns or another survives scandal. It is whether the public still believes that accountability exists as a consistent force at all. Because once that belief fades, cynicism fills the vacuum. And cynicism, unlike outrage, does not demand change. It expects failure.

If accountability is to mean anything, it cannot depend on party, personality, or polling. It must be predictable, even when inconvenient. Otherwise, it ceases to function as a principle and becomes just another talking point, invoked loudly, applied selectively and ultimately trusted by no one.


When policy collides identity by Paula Bartlett

Caitlyn Jenner, long a vocal backer of Donald Trump, now finds herself entangled in the real-world consequences of a policy aligned with his administration’s approach to gender identity. The reported issue, her passport gender marker reverting to her sex assigned at birth, might seem bureaucratic on the surface, but it cuts into something far deeper, the uneasy intersection of politics, identity and personal reality.

For years, debates about gender markers on official documents have been framed as abstract culture war issues. They’ve been discussed in legislative halls and cable news panels as if they exist in a vacuum, detached from the lived experiences of individuals. But moments like this expose the truth, policies are not theoretical. They reach into people’s lives, sometimes in ways that are inconvenient, sometimes in ways that are deeply disruptive.

Jenner’s situation underscores a contradiction that has simmered beneath the surface of political discourse for some time. Supporting a political ideology often means accepting broad policy directions but those policies don’t come with personalized exemptions. When rules are written in sweeping terms, such as requiring identification to reflect sex at birth, they don’t pause to consider personal histories, transitions, or individual journeys. They apply universally, and that universality can produce unexpected outcomes, even for allies.

There’s also a deeper question here about the nature of political alignment. Jenner’s support for Trump has often been framed as prioritizing certain values, economic policy, governance style, or broader conservative principles, over others, including issues directly affecting transgender individuals. That’s a legitimate political choice; people are rarely single-issue voters. But when a policy directly impacts one’s own identity, it forces a reckoning. It asks whether abstract agreement still holds when faced with concrete consequences.

What makes this moment particularly striking is not just the policy itself, but the reaction it provokes. Some observers respond with schadenfreude, seeing it as poetic justice. Others view it as a cautionary tale about the dangers of policies that fail to account for human complexity. But reducing it to either reaction misses the larger point. This isn’t just about one person’s passport, it’s about how governments define identity and whether those definitions can or should be rigid.

Documentation has always been a powerful tool of the state. A passport is more than a travel document; it’s a declaration of who you are in the eyes of your government. Changing that declaration isn’t a trivial matter, especially when it conflicts with how someone has lived and been recognized for years. It creates friction not just at borders but in daily life, from banking to employment to personal dignity.

In the end, Jenner’s appeal for help highlights something fundamental, policies don’t exist in isolation from the people they affect. When they collide with lived experience, they reveal their strengths, their flaws, and their unintended consequences. Whether one agrees with the policy or not, this situation serves as a reminder that identity is not easily reduced to a checkbox and attempts to do so will inevitably run into the messy, complicated reality of human lives.


The multi-billionaires’ spring by Emma Schneider

May Day has always carried a certain stubborn poetry, a day meant to honor workers that arrives wrapped in the optimism of spring. It promi...