The day after the vote by Markus Gibbons

The most important question about the 2026 midterm elections is not simply who wins or loses. It is whether Americans will still accept elections as legitimate when the results disappoint them. That is the challenge hanging over the country, and it is impossible to ignore.

Donald Trump has transformed the Republican Party into a movement that often treats electoral defeat not as a normal feature of democracy but as evidence that something must have gone wrong. Whether that means alleging fraud, attacking election officials or insisting that unfavorable outcomes are inherently suspect, the political incentive has become clear: doubt can be more useful than concession.

The greater concern is not whether claims of misconduct will emerge, they almost certainly will from one side or another, as they often do in modern politics. The deeper concern is what happens if efforts are made to undermine confidence in legitimate election outcomes through misinformation, political pressure or attempts to overturn certified results. American democracy has survived fierce disagreements before, but it depends on a shared understanding that elections ultimately settle political disputes.

If Republicans perform poorly in 2026, will party leaders encourage acceptance of the verdict? Or will familiar narratives about stolen elections once again dominate headlines and fundraising appeals? Recent history gives many observers reason to worry. Once allegations become political currency, disproving them rarely restores public trust. Suspicion lingers long after court rulings, recounts and certifications have spoken.

But speculation about what politicians might do is only half the story. The more revealing question is how Americans would react if they believed democratic norms were being deliberately challenged. Public patience has limits. Election workers, judges, state officials, and local administrators have already endured years of threats and relentless scrutiny. Another cycle of widespread attempts to delegitimize certified results could provoke an even stronger institutional and civic response.

That response would not necessarily take the dramatic form imagined by political thrillers. Democracies rarely collapse or recover in cinematic fashion. Instead, they harden through ordinary acts: judges enforcing the law, governors resisting improper pressure, journalists separating evidence from rumor and citizens refusing to surrender their faith in constitutional processes. The quieter these defenses appear, the stronger they often prove to be.

Ironically, the greatest danger to democracy may not be a single disputed election but the gradual normalization of permanent distrust. A republic cannot function indefinitely if millions of voters conclude before ballots are even counted that only one outcome could possibly be legitimate. At that point, elections cease to resolve conflicts; they merely postpone them until the next accusation.

This is not a challenge unique to Republicans. Every political movement faces the temptation to question outcomes that disappoint its supporters. But because Donald Trump remains the dominant figure within today's Republican Party, the burden of demonstrating respect for democratic institutions falls especially heavily on the movement he leads. Leadership is measured not only by how victory is celebrated but by how defeat is accepted.

The 2026 midterms may therefore become something larger than a contest for congressional seats. They could become another referendum on whether the United States still possesses the civic habits necessary for constitutional democracy. The ballots themselves are only pieces of paper. What gives them power is the willingness of winners and losers alike to recognize their authority.

That willingness, more than any campaign slogan or electoral strategy, will determine whether America's democratic institutions emerge stronger or merely more exhausted, from another fiercely contested election.


Oviri (The Savage) #Poem by Strider Marcus Jones

 

woman,
wearing the conscience of the world-
you make me want
less civilisation
and more meaning.

drinking absinthe together,
hand rolling and smoking cigars-
being is, what it really is-
fucking on palm leaves
under tropical rain.
beauty and syphilis happily cohabit,
painting your colours
on a parallel canvas
to exhibit in Paris
the paradox of you.
somewhere in your arms-
i forget my savage self,
inseminating womb
selected by pheromones
at the pace of evolution.
later. I vomited arsenic on the mountain and returned
to sup morphine. spread ointments on the sores, and ask:
where do we come from.
what are we.
where are we going.


Strider Marcus Jones – is a poet, law graduate and former civil servant from Salford, England with proud Celtic roots in Ireland and Wales. He is the editor and publisher of Lothlorien Poetry Journal https://lothlorienpoetryjournal.blogspot.com/. A member of The Poetry Society, nominated for the Pushcart Prize x4 and Best of the Net x3, his five published books of poetry https://stridermarcusjonespoetry.wordpress.com/ reveal a maverick, moving between cities, playing his saxophone in smoky rooms.

#eBook: Mogadishu's dust by Lucas Durand

 

Mogadishu had fallen silent for only a moment. A brief, unnatural calm in the air, before the whole city erupted again. The sun had set, but the night was no quieter.

Instead, it was alive with the shriek of mortar shells and the sharp staccato of gunfire. Every corner of the city seemed to pulse with tension, the smell of smoke and burning debris thick in the air. “Move, move!”

The order cut through the darkness like a knife. Hassan, barely sixteen, his young face streaked with dirt, clenched his teeth. His heart pounded in his chest, a deafening rhythm that drowned out everything else.

The heat was unbearable, the air thick with the stench of blood, oil, and gunpowder. He wiped the sweat from his eyes as he crouched behind a burnt-out car with the rest of the rebels. The streets were alive with death, the city they once called home reduced to a battle zone.

Historical Novel

Lucas Durand is a history enthusiast whose passion for the past fuels his work as a columnist and author. He delves into the rich tapestry of human events, exploring the triumphs and tragedies that have shaped our world. Lucas concentrates in the WWI era and loves bringing history and events vividly to life.

Ovi eBook Publishing 2026

Mogadishu's dust

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Screws & Chips #128 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

In a galaxy far, far away, intelligence demonstrated by screws and chips,
boldly gone where no robot has gone before!

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A Temple Built on Turmoil Faces a New Crisis of Trust By Habib Siddiqui

Few religious sites in contemporary India carry the political, cultural, and emotional weight of the Ram Mandir in Ayodhya. It stands on the ruins of the historic Babri Masjid, demolished in 1992 by Hindu nationalist groups, including affiliates of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the ideological parent of the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP). That demolition triggered nationwide riots that claimed nearly 2,000 lives, most of them Muslim. The long and turbulent history behind the temple continues to shape its meaning today. Readers interested in a fuller account of this transformation may consult my recent book, Modi‑fied India: The Transformation of a Nation (Peter Lang, June 2026).

The Ram Mandir has long served as a potent symbol of Hindu majoritarian politics and the BJP broader ideological project of Hindutva. The Supreme Court’s 2019 verdict awarding the disputed land to Hindu litigants cleared the way for construction, ending decades of legal and political contention. When Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurated the temple in January 2024, the event was framed as the culmination of a civilizational struggle — a triumph of faith, cultural identity, and national pride. Funded entirely through public donations estimated at roughly US$240 million, it became one of the largest religious crowdfunding efforts in India’s history.

Yet barely two years after its consecration by Modi, the Ram Mandir finds itself engulfed in a corruption scandal that has shaken public trust, triggered arrests, forced resignations, and ignited a political storm. Allegations of theft, embezzlement, mismanagement, and irregularities in donation handling have cast a long shadow over what was meant to be a sacred national monument.

This essay examines the scandal in depth — its origins, the allegations, the political implications, the institutional failures, and what it reveals about governance, accountability, and the weaponization of faith in contemporary ‘Modi-fied’ India.

The significance of this corruption scandal is profound, operating simultaneously on administrative, political, and moral levels.

Administratively, the Ram Mandir is not just a religious site; it is one of the richest and most visible religious institutions in India. The temple attracts nearly 50 million visitors annually, with 70,000–80,000 daily visitors — a number that triples on weekends and festivals. Offerings are placed in 35 donation boxes, generating an annual income of ₹3.27 billion (US$35 million) in 2024–25. This makes the Ram Mandir one of the wealthiest religious institutions in the country, yet it operates outside direct government oversight. It is managed instead by the Shri Ram Janmabhoomi Teerth Kshetra Trust, an independent body with deep political connections. The scale of donations demands robust financial governance; any irregularity therefore signals serious systemic weaknesses.

Politically, the Ram Mandir has been central to the ideological project of the ruling establishment. For more than three decades, it has shaped electoral narratives, mobilized voters, and served as a cornerstone of the BJP’s Hindutva agenda. It is not merely a temple but a powerful symbol of Hindu nationalism and political identity. Because of this deep political investment, any scandal associated with the temple inevitably carries political consequences. Allegations of mismanagement strike at the heart of a symbol that has been used to project moral authority and cultural triumph.

Morally, the impact is perhaps the most profound. Millions of ordinary devotees — farmers, street vendors, taxi drivers — contributed their hard‑earned money believing they were participating in a sacred national cause. When allegations arise that donations may have been siphoned off, it is not just financial misconduct; it is a betrayal of devotion. Religious institutions depend fundamentally on trust. Once that trust is shaken, it affects not only the reputation of the Ram Mandir Trust but also the broader credibility of temple administration across India.

The Corruption Allegations: What Happened?

The scandal broke when Mahipal Singh, a former supervisor in the trust’s accounting team, publicly alleged serious irregularities in the handling of donations. His claims prompted scrutiny of how cash, gold, silver, and jewelry offerings were counted, stored, and recorded.

Police investigations escalated quickly.

  • Eight individuals, including temple employees, were arrested for theft and misappropriation.
  • An FIR named nine employees for systemic embezzlement of donation funds.
  • Police recovered ₹80 lakh from the homes of the accused.

Those arrested were directly involved in counting and managing offerings from devotees.

The government has not disclosed the full scale of the losses. Estimates vary widely: some opposition leaders and media outlets suggest more than US$20 million may be missing; other reports point to ₹7–7.5 crore (about US$1 million); and one former legislator alleged ₹70 million (US$739,550) in unaccounted funds. The wide range reflects the opacity of the trust’s financial operations.

Two senior trust members resigned: General Secretary Champat Rai and trustee Anil Mishra. Rai said he stepped down to “ensure a free and fair probe” and “protect the sanctity of Lord Ram,” while denying any wrongdoing.

On June 14, 2026, the Uttar Pradesh government under Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath — often referred to as “Bulldozer Yogi” for his administration’s use of demolition drives that critics say disproportionately targeted Muslim homes, shops, and religious sites — formed a three‑member Special Investigation Team (SIT) to probe the alleged scam. The SIT was instructed to submit a preliminary report within seven days and a final report within fifteen. It delivered its preliminary findings on June 23, flagging serious lapses in donation handling, weak CCTV surveillance, failures in employee verification, irregular fund transfers, and the need for structural reforms, including appointing a CEO.

Following the report, police filed FIRs naming eight accused, and arrests followed immediately.

Despite these actions, major questions remain: What is the actual value of missing donations? Were accounts properly audited? Is there CCTV or paper‑trail evidence? And could lower‑level employees have executed such a large‑scale operation without higher‑level complicity?

The absence of publicly available information has only deepened public suspicion.

Political Fallout: A Temple at the Center of India’s Culture Wars

Opposition parties, including the Congress and the Samajwadi Party, have accused the BJP of politicizing the Ram Mandir and enabling an environment in which corruption could flourish. Congress leader Jayvardhan Singh has called for temple management to be handed over to traditional Ayodhya saints, arguing that mismanagement is a direct consequence of political interference.

The BJP, meanwhile, has attempted to frame the scandal as a limited issue involving lower‑level employees, insisting that the government is acting swiftly and professionally. Party leaders have also accused the opposition of exploiting the controversy to tarnish Hindu faith and undermine a national symbol. However, the resignations of senior trust members complicate this narrative and raise questions about oversight at the highest levels.

The scandal comes just months before crucial state elections in Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous state. The Ram Mandir has been central to the BJP’s political messaging, symbolizing Hindutva, cultural nationalism and Hindu pride. Allegations of theft from the temple’s donation boxes threaten to erode that carefully cultivated narrative and provide ammunition to political rivals.

The controversy also underscores the urgent need for modern, transparent governance systems in religious institutions. The goal is not to interfere with religious autonomy but to ensure that sacred spaces are protected by strong financial safeguards. Several reforms are essential.

First, independent audits should be mandatory. Many temples rely on informal accounting practices; annual audits by accredited external firms would create a clear financial trail and reduce opportunities for misappropriation.

Second, digital donation systems must be expanded. Heavy reliance on cash increases vulnerability. Online payments, QR‑code donations, and electronic receipts would significantly reduce leakage.

Third, secure counting rooms with CCTV monitoring and dual‑control procedures should be standard. Cash and valuables should be counted in controlled environments with continuous video recording and at least two authorized individuals present — similar to banking protocols.

Fourth, governance structures need clearer separation of roles. Many religious trusts operate with overlapping responsibilities and informal hierarchies. Defining accountability, establishing ethics committees, and separating financial oversight from religious functions would strengthen integrity.

Finally, public reporting mechanisms — such as quarterly financial summaries posted on official websites — would build trust. Devotees give out of faith; transparency reassures them that their offerings are being used responsibly.

These reforms are not about questioning devotion. They are about protecting it. Strong financial safeguards enhance both institutional credibility and the confidence of millions of devotees.

Conclusion: A Scandal That Strikes at the Heart of Faith and Politics

The Ram Mandir corruption scandal is not simply about missing funds — it is about the breach of public trust, the politicization of a sacred institution, and the failure of systems meant to safeguard places of worship. A temple that was meant to embody righteousness, justice, and national unity has instead become a case study in how unchecked power and opaque financial practices can corrode even the holiest of sites.

As the investigation unfolds, one principle stands out: faith requires transparency, and devotion demands accountability. The millions who contributed in good faith deserve clear answers — not silence, not deflection, and certainly not political spin.

The scandal is a stark reminder that when religion and politics intertwine without oversight, corruption is not an anomaly; it becomes inevitable.

My hope is that this investigation delivers full clarity and helps restore public confidence. Devotees gave out of devotion, and they deserve complete transparency. Protecting the sanctity of the Ram Mandir now requires strong systems, honest leadership, and an unwavering commitment to accountability.

[This essay is based on the author’s interview with Asia One News TV on June 30, 2026.]


Dr. Habib Siddiqui is the author of several books, including Us and Them: State Power and Minority Lives in India and Bangladesh: The Politics of Protection, Exclusion, and Belonging in South Asia (Amazon, 2026).


Conversion is more than a label by Howard Morton

There is a significant difference between converting to a faith and convincing others that you understand its deepest demands. That distinction has become increasingly apparent in the public discussion surrounding JD Vance's embrace of Catholicism. His book describing his spiritual journey undoubtedly attracted attention but it was the interviews promoting it that raised more questions than they answered. Books can be carefully edited. Interviews reveal instincts.

The issue is not whether someone is a "good enough" Catholic. No public figure should be subjected to a theological purity test. Faith is personal, complicated and often imperfectly lived. Christianity itself is a religion built on flawed people seeking grace. The concern arises when someone presents himself as speaking from a Christian worldview while appearing to reduce that worldview into little more than a convenient political framework.

Catholicism is not simply another tribal identity to be adopted because it aligns with cultural conservatism. It is a demanding moral tradition stretching back two thousand years. It asks believers to wrestle with mercy as much as justice, humility as much as certainty and compassion as much as conviction. It consistently challenges its followers rather than merely affirming their political preferences.

That is why some of Vance's public explanations of his faith have struck many listeners as oddly incomplete. They often sound less like reflections on the Gospel and more like arguments constructed to justify existing political commitments. Christianity, however, is supposed to disrupt our certainties, not simply decorate them.

The teachings of Christ are remarkably inconvenient. Love your enemies. Pray for those who persecute you. Care for the stranger. Forgive seventy times seven. Judge yourself before judging others. These are not slogans that fit neatly into partisan talking points. They demand sacrifice, self-examination, and a willingness to place conscience above ideology.

Too often, contemporary political Christianity seems to invert that relationship. Politics becomes the foundation; religion becomes the supporting evidence. Scripture is mined selectively for passages that reinforce existing views while its more uncomfortable teachings quietly disappear from the conversation. When that happens, faith ceases to shape politics. Politics reshapes faith.

This is hardly a problem unique to JD Vance. American public life is crowded with politicians who invoke Christianity while displaying little interest in its central ethic of humility. The temptation is understandable. Religious identity remains politically powerful. Genuine discipleship is considerably harder.

Perhaps that is why interviews matter so much. They expose whether faith has become a living moral compass or merely an attractive biography. A polished memoir can narrate a conversion story. An unscripted conversation reveals the assumptions that truly guide a person.

None of this means anyone should question the sincerity of another person's conversion. Only God, according to Christian teaching, knows the human heart. But voters are entirely justified in evaluating how public officials explain the beliefs they claim inspire their leadership.

If Christianity becomes little more than a vocabulary for defending power, it loses the very qualities that made it transformative. The Gospel was never intended to be politically convenient. It was intended to be morally demanding. That remains the true test, not whether someone can claim the Christian label, but whether the label has genuinely changed the person wearing it.


Ovi History #eMagazine #21: Amelia Earhart disappearance

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is ovi-history-isssue-21-amelia-earhart-disappearance.jpg 

On July 2, 1937, Amelia Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, disappeared over the Pacific Ocean during their ambitious attempt to circumnavigate the globe.

They had departed Lae, New Guinea, earlier that day, heading for the tiny Howland Island, over 2,500 miles away. The U.S. Coast Guard cutter Itasca, stationed near Howland to guide them, received radio transmissions from Earhart as the flight neared its destination.

The messages indicated she was unsure of their position and that fuel was running low. Her final, fragmented transmissions included the cryptic phrase, "We are on the line 157 337… we are running on line north and south". This indicated she was following a navigational line that passed through Howland. No further contact was made, and the pair was never found, sparking a mystery that persists to this day.

For this issue of Ovi History, a historical fiction short story from Leni Korhonen and a new review.

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!
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With the hope that you will read and learn from the articles,
so ...do read this historic chronicle

Thanos Kalamidas


Puppi & Caesar #47 #cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

Another cartoon with a mean and know-all of a bully cat, Puppi and her intellectual, pompous companion categorically-I-know-all, Caesar the squirrel!  

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The perils of political hope by Yash Irwin

If Andy Burnham were to arrive at Downing Street, he would inherit something far heavier than the keys to Number 10. He would inherit expectations. In modern British politics, expectations have become the most dangerous currency of all. They lift leaders to improbable heights before pulling them back to earth with astonishing speed.

The temptation would be to believe that a fresh face means a fresh beginning. Every incoming leader is wrapped in a narrative of renewal. Every speech is scrutinized for signs of a new era. Every appointment is interpreted as evidence that politics has finally learned from its mistakes. It is an intoxicating cycle, one that repeats with almost ritualistic precision.

We have seen this movie before. Only two years ago, Keir Starmer entered government surrounded by a chorus of optimism. His supporters saw competence replacing chaos. His critics, while unconvinced, often admitted that stability itself would be an improvement. There was an unmistakable sense that Britain was about to turn a page after years of political turbulence.

Then governing began. Campaigns thrive on clarity; governments drown in complexity. Every promise collides with Treasury spreadsheets, civil service realities, international crises, economic uncertainty, and an electorate whose patience has grown remarkably thin. The distance between opposition and government is measured not in metres but in expectations.

That is why any future Burnham premiership would deserve measured optimism rather than unquestioning enthusiasm. Burnham has undeniable political strengths. He has cultivated an image of pragmatism rather than ideology, often appearing more comfortable solving practical problems than engaging in Westminster theatre. That reputation would serve him well. But reputations are easier to build outside Downing Street than inside it.

The office has a peculiar way of shrinking even talented politicians. Prime ministers discover that they command headlines more easily than outcomes. They become symbols onto which every national frustration is projected. Housing shortages, NHS waiting lists, immigration pressures, stagnant growth, crumbling infrastructure, none of these can be solved by charisma alone. Yet voters often expect precisely that.

British politics has become addicted to political saviours. We elevate individuals instead of confronting structural problems. Each new leader is marketed almost like a product launch, complete with branding, slogans, and carefully curated authenticity. When reality inevitably intrudes, disappointment follows with equal force.

Perhaps the lesson is not about Burnham or Starmer at all. Perhaps it is about us. Democracies function best when citizens demand competence instead of miracles. Effective government is usually incremental, occasionally frustrating, and rarely cinematic. The expectation of dramatic transformation is often the very thing that ensures widespread disillusionment.

If Andy Burnham ever walks through the famous black door of Number 10, he should certainly be judged. Every prime minister should be. But he should not be burdened with fantasies that no politician could possibly fulfil. Britain does not merely need another leader to believe in. It needs a public willing to replace hope without limits with expectations grounded in political reality. That would be a far more meaningful change than any change of occupant at Downing Street.


Tuition of privilege by Jennifer Stephenson

A university degree was once sold as the great equalizer, a passport stamped not by inheritance but by effort. The promise, however imperfect, was that talent could outrun circumstance. That promise has always been fragile, but it now feels increasingly endangered by a political movement that treats higher education not as a public investment but as a cultural enemy. In my view, one of the most damaging consequences of the Trump era and the politicians who embraced its approach has been accelerating the transformation of a college education into an even sharper marker of class, where money determines opportunity more than merit.

The irony is difficult to ignore. The loudest rhetoric celebrates opportunity while policies and priorities often make opportunity more expensive, more exclusive, and more uncertain. When public universities receive less support, tuition rarely stands still. When student aid becomes politically suspect, families with limited means absorb the shock. Wealthy households adapt. Middle-class families stretch themselves thin. Working-class students postpone their dreams or abandon them altogether.

This is not merely an economic problem. It is a cultural one. Education becomes less about expanding horizons and more about protecting privilege. The wealthy continue to send their children to prestigious universities, graduate with manageable debt or none at all, and inherit professional networks that compound their advantages. Everyone else is told to work harder while climbing a ladder whose rungs are quietly being removed.

There is a peculiar contradiction in attacking universities as elitist while simultaneously making them accessible primarily to those with financial privilege. If higher education truly is disconnected from ordinary Americans, then the answer should be broadening access, not shrinking it. Starving institutions of public support does not democratize education; it privatizes opportunity.

The consequences extend beyond individual students. A society that prices talented people out of education loses future teachers, engineers, scientists, nurses, entrepreneurs, and artists. Innovation slows because brilliance is not distributed according to wealth, even if opportunity increasingly is. The next groundbreaking researcher may be stocking grocery shelves instead of conducting laboratory experiments simply because tuition bills arrived before scholarships did.

None of this suggests universities are beyond criticism. They are imperfect institutions with bloated administrations, rising costs, and ideological blind spots. Reform is necessary. But reform should lower barriers, not reinforce them. It should invite more people into classrooms, not quietly reserve those seats for families who can write larger checks.

The measure of a democracy is not how comfortably the privileged remain privileged. It is whether an ambitious teenager from an ordinary neighborhood has a genuine chance to compete with someone born into abundance. When higher education becomes another luxury good, democracy itself grows a little thinner. A diploma should represent curiosity, perseverance, and achievement, not simply the size of a family's bank account. If we accept that education belongs primarily to those who can afford it, we are no longer rewarding merit. We are simply institutionalizing inheritance under a different name.


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

Aries ( 21 March – 19 April )  - You begin this month with a strong, adventurous spirit, but you should watch that you don’t overdo. You would focus on areas of wealth that you can build on in the future and make sure that you sort out any budgeting or planning.  Make the best of your energy in the first two weeks of the  month, especially regarding professional matters, after which the need to rethink your plans becomes apparent. It’s time to prioritize. Favorable Dates : July 2, 8, 11, 17, 20, 26 Favorable Colors : Yellow & Blue

Taurus ( 20 April – 20 May ) - This period in your life is generally dedicated to self-improvement. You are developing your ideals and your commitments. Ideals and spiritual goals that you may have worked with earlier, seem not particularly useful to you now.You benefit from more attention to practical matters as well as re-organization of important structures in your life.  A partner or love interest may take special notice again, and singles could meet someone new. Romantic charm runs exceptionally high this month.  Favorable Dates : July 4, 6, 13, 15, 22, 24 Favorable Colors : Grey & Red

Gemini ( 21May – 20 June ) – This can be an intense period. You may slowly uncover a new direction in your career–one that reflects more of the true you. You may also experience tangles in your close personal relationships, perhaps more so with males.You may find yourself taking on the role of consultant or advisor, or you could benefit through help from same. Good publicity may come your way. If your work takes you before the public, you can safely expect popularity. Favorable Dates : July 6, 7, 15, 16, 24, 25 Favorable Colors : Blue & White

Cancer( 21 June – 22 July )  -You would be keen to make the connection between your own feelings of self-worth and what you produce in the real world and get back from the real world. You are apt to review how effective you have been on a financial level to date, and find some dissatisfaction with your progress. Many of you will be feeling pressure to organize your lives. You are likely to have new or increased responsibilities, and it might take some time to get adjusted to them. Favorable Dates : July 4, 9, 13, 18, 22, 27 Favorable Colors : Blue & Yellow

Leo  ( 23 July – 22 August ) - It’s an excellent time for self-confidence and discovery. You would have plenty of time ahead of you to enjoy the bounties, which include new opportunities to advance your interests and express yourself more freely. You will be working on perfecting your professional skills.  Receiving good news about your career can lift your spirits this month–things are moving forward now. Friendships could become complicated. Be very clear in your communications in order to avoid misunderstandings.Favorable Dates : July 2, 9, 11, 18, 20, 27 Favorable Colors : Blue &White

Virgo( 23 August – 22 September ) - This is a beautiful time for discovering people and projects you love, or for moving a relationship or endeavor to a new level. Good energy is with you for getting close to someone, negotiating, and connecting. You are receiving a cosmic push to make necessary financial changes in your life. Pleasure-seeking activities, recreation, and amusement are increased. You are far less inhibited when it comes to expressing yourself creatively, and you are a lot more fun to be around.Favorable Dates : July 3, 10, 12, 19, 21, 30 Favorable Colors : Red & Yellow

Libra ( 23 September – 22 October ) - You’re bringing increased personal appeal to your communications and you’re also feeling quite a bit of passion about a particular project, learning endeavor, or person! Conversations can be stimulating, and ideas are uniquely creative.A spirit of altruism and generosity, making connections with others from a different background, widening your mind through unusual or different experiences, expanded faith are themes now. There could be some ambiguities surrounding money that are part of your life. Favorable Dates : July6, 9, 15, 18, 24, 27 Favorable Colors : Purple & Grey

Scorpio ( 23 October – 21 November ) –You’re focused on serious subjects, have an obsessive personality, and are good at research. You will take your time to process and digest new information coming your way.  It would be wise to find work that offers you not only variety and stimulation, but also the chance to invent.It’s a time of great ideas and increased enjoyment of your domestic life. Positive action or support can come from behind the scenes or unexpected sources.Favorable Dates : July 2, 4, 11, 13, 20, 22 Favorable Colors : White &Blue

Sagittarius ( 22 November -21 December ) - You may look at the path your life is taking and think you should go down a different path, but now isn’t the best time to make that decision.It is a good time to revise your plans, or to try old plans that you gave up on in the past. While you are in the need of some down time, your charm isn’t! Others are continuing to take note of you.Being with people and enjoying good times, especially with beautiful, charming, light hearted people is really what you want now.Favorable Dates : July 2, 7, 11, 16, 20, 25 Favorable Colors : White &Yellow

Capricorn ( 22 December – 19 January ) – In this month, career matters bring some level of pressure, as the cosmos are asking you to structure your professional life in a strategic way.  Personal changes run deep as you explore your ambitions and need for control over your life. If in a relationship, you can become closer with your partner, strengthening your bond and increasing the passion. If single, you want a partner who will be intense, loyal, and have incredible depth to them.Favorable Dates : July 4, 7, 13, 16, 22, 25 Favorable Colors : Red & Purple

Aquarius ( 20 January – 18 February ) – This month urges you to explore your true priorities in life and requires that you be sure that you are not the one blocking your own success by stretching yourself too thin. A warm, pleasant, affectionate, friendly, or courteous attitude eases your interactions now. For a romantic opportunity, it is a good time to wait on an opportunity that arises, stating that with patience you will see a better one down the road that will pan out more fruitfully for you.You have the chance to shine, largely because you are projecting yourself with self-respect and modesty at once.Favorable Dates :July 3, 10, 12, 19, 21, 30 Favorable Colors : Red &White

Pisces ( 19 February – 20 March ) - You’re driven to get lots of work done.. You can take on more at work as well, and are productive and efficient, and expect the best out of yourself.A fresh start may arise from a feeling of being stuck or blocked by others now, necessitating a new approach.You are in or headed towards a lasting relationship worth developing and committing to.Just make sure you’re willing to share as much of yourself as you want them to share with you, otherwise it won’t last.Favorable Dates :July 6, 8, 15, 17, 24, 26  Favorable Colors : Red &Grey


The day after the vote by Markus Gibbons

The most important question about the 2026 midterm elections is not simply who wins or loses. It is whether Americans will still accept ele...