CHE* #Thoughts by David Sparenberg

When the armored guardians of the tower look down, call out, demanding that you identify who you are, do not flinch. Stand your ground with courage and humility. Show them the open palms of your hands. Respond and say – you are the Che of the wretched of the Earth, a witnessing advocate for the small lives of creation.

Tell the sinister takers of twisted time and broken promises that you bring the healing medicine of peace to the killing fields of war. That you are the spring light of generosity freeing possibilities from the long, wintery shadows of greed.

The round table is laid out end to end, plentiful with fresh loaves with savory herbs, with cheese, with figs, with olives, with earthen pitchers of fresh, clean water, and with red and golden cups of wine—new wine pressed from vineyard hillsides. From villages of dancing feet.

When patriarchs and oligarchs and false prophets of status quo threaten and command you to go away, reply with prayers of lightning. Let your message sound the psalms of rolling thunder.

The shadow enlargers are warned long enough  to understand that towers are built to be toppled. Stop pretending that self-proclaimed masters are anything other than mortal.

Say to the amassers of hoarded power that you are p’lante**,  dignity’s legal seeds of the tree of life. Earth is sacred. And the good Earth is desperate for sweeping changes. Humanity is desperate for renewal.

Best of all acts, paths of experience and dreams of action invite the tower minority to come down, to find a place at the banquet of equality. Assure them in their fear of democracy that there is room enough here for us all.

David Sparenberg

*Che is friend..
**P’lante, to plant, to be planting as in a grassroots movement.


David Sparenberg is a humanitarian and eco poet, an international essayist and storyteller. He published four eBooks with OVI Books (Sweden) in 2025, one so far this years. He has just completed a play, political and contemporary but based in the traditions of German Expressionist Theatre, soon to be published and available for performance.  David Sparenberg lives in Seattle, WA in the Pacific Northwest of the United States but identifies as an Ecotopian Citizen of Creation.


From interesting times to dangerous times by Emma Schneider

Before and during Donald Trump’s first presidential term many people across Europe described the political climate with a phrase that sounded almost detached "interesting times." It was a convenient expression, carrying a mixture of curiosity, disbelief and cautious optimism that democratic institutions would eventually absorb the shock. Trump was seen by many as a uniquely American phenomenon, an unconventional leader whose style would remain largely confined to the United States. Europeans watched with fascination, sometimes with amusement, sometimes with concern, but often from what felt like a safe distance.

That distance has disappeared. The political currents unleashed during those years have not faded with time. Instead, they have evolved, spread, and found fertile ground across Europe. The slogans may be translated into different languages, the personalities may change, and the local grievances may differ, but the underlying political method has become remarkably familiar. It is no longer simply about elections or ideological disagreements. It is about reshaping democratic culture itself.

Trump's second presidency represents more than the return of one political figure. It symbolizes the endurance of a political movement that has demonstrated an extraordinary ability to survive defeats, reinvent itself, and inspire counterparts far beyond America's borders. The MAGA movement has become an international political brand, embraced by politicians eager to replicate its confrontational style and emotional appeal.

Across Europe, its influence can increasingly be seen stretching like an octopus, with tentacles reaching into national debates, regional elections, online communities, and mainstream political parties. Every country has its own version. Some emphasize nationalism. Others focus on immigration, distrust of institutions, hostility toward the media, or resentment against political elites. Different packaging, same strategy.

What makes this moment particularly dangerous is not merely the rise of conservative politics. Democracies thrive on ideological competition. Healthy political disagreement is essential. The danger emerges when political identity becomes inseparable from permanent outrage, when compromise is treated as betrayal, and when opponents are portrayed not as rivals but as enemies of the nation.

Europe has experienced enough of its own history to understand where relentless polarization can lead. The continent was built, in large part, upon the painful lessons of division, extremism, and democratic collapse. Those lessons should not be treated as museum exhibits but as living warnings.

Social media has accelerated this transformation. Political outrage has become profitable. Algorithms reward anger over nuance, certainty over complexity, and emotion over evidence. Conspiracy theories travel faster than corrections, while distrust spreads more easily than confidence. The result is a political environment where every institution is questioned, every election is suspected, and every compromise is interpreted as weakness.

Perhaps the greatest tragedy is that fear has become a governing principle. Fear of migrants. Fear of globalization. Fear of cultural change. Fear of economic uncertainty. Fear is an effective political tool because it demands immediate emotional reactions while discouraging careful thought. It promises simple answers to complicated realities.

Europe now faces a defining choice. It can continue dismissing these developments as temporary political turbulence, or it can recognize that the ground beneath its democracies is shifting. What once seemed like isolated populist movements increasingly resemble a connected international ecosystem feeding off the same grievances, tactics, and narratives.

There was a time when Europeans spoke about living through "interesting times" with a shrug. That phrase no longer captures the reality. These are not merely interesting times. They are dangerous ones, and pretending otherwise will only make the danger greater.


When scripture becomes state policy by Flo Schofield

There is a difference between teaching about religion and allowing religion to shape public education through the power of the state. That distinction matters because it is one of the pillars that separates a free society from one where government decides which beliefs deserve official endorsement. When a state begins requiring specific religious texts in classrooms despite widespread objections from parents, civil liberties advocates and religious leaders themselves, it raises questions that reach far beyond education. It becomes a question about power.

Supporters may argue that biblical literature has historical and cultural significance. Few would deny that the Bible has profoundly influenced Western history, art, philosophy, and politics. It deserves academic study alongside countless other foundational works. But requiring selected passages from one specific translation as mandatory classroom material shifts the conversation away from history and toward government preference.

History repeatedly demonstrates that governments claiming to defend morality often end up restricting freedom. They begin by saying they are preserving tradition. They continue by deciding which traditions deserve protection and which do not. Before long, public institutions stop serving everyone equally and instead become instruments for promoting a preferred worldview.

The United States has long presented itself as a nation built on religious liberty, not religious conformity. Those are not interchangeable concepts. Religious liberty means citizens may believe deeply, worship freely, or choose not to believe at all without government interference. Religious conformity emerges when the state starts selecting winners among competing beliefs.

Ironically, many religious communities have historically opposed government involvement in faith because they understand that political power eventually corrupts spiritual purpose. Faith imposed by legislation is no longer entirely a matter of conscience. It becomes entangled with authority, bureaucracy, and ideology.

Some observers see disturbing parallels with countries where governments have gradually merged political authority with religious identity. Such comparisons can be emotionally charged and should not erase the enormous differences in institutions, elections, constitutional protections, and civil liberties that still exist. The United States is not Afghanistan or Iran. Yet history teaches that democratic societies rarely lose their freedoms overnight. Instead, change often arrives incrementally through policies that appear limited when viewed individually but collectively redefine the relationship between citizens and the state.

The greatest danger is not one curriculum decision by itself. It is the normalization of government deciding which moral framework deserves official status in public education. Once that principle is accepted, future governments may feel equally justified promoting different religious interpretations or ideological doctrines whenever political majorities shift.

Public schools exist to educate students from every background imaginable. They are attended by Christians, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, atheists, agnostics, and families with countless other beliefs. Their classrooms should reflect intellectual openness rather than theological preference. Education should encourage critical thinking, historical understanding, and respectful discussion, not imply that one faith tradition carries the state's official seal of approval.

Democracies survive because they protect minorities from the passions of majorities. The moment government begins using classrooms to elevate one belief above others, even with good intentions, it risks weakening that principle.

Freedom is not measured by how comfortably the majority lives with government decisions. It is measured by whether the minority can remain equally free. Once public education becomes a vehicle for state-endorsed belief, the line between democracy and ideological governance grows thinner than many would like to admit.


Ephemera #156 #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’.

For more Ephemera, HERE!
For more Ovi Cartoons, HERE!


Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo: the story of a square peg in a square hole by Tunde Akande

For the first time in my recent writing history, I am going to praise the president, Bola Ahmed Tinubu. He deserves the praise not because he is the performer of the deeds but because he is the one who brought Olubunmi Tunji Ojo, who’s been doing increditably well, into office as the Minister for Interior. Nigeria almost lost the services of Tunji-Ojo when at the time Beta Edu, Minister for Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Alleviation was suspended for allegedly putting her hand in the till, Tunji-Ojo was also accused of taking a contract from Beta Edu’s ministry in a manner that abused his office. But Tunji-Ojo escaped the axe because Tinubu found that he had followed the proper protocol and was therefore not guilty of what was alleged. Beta Edu is yet to be restored more than two years later.

Tunji-Ojo is now showing Nigerians what putting a square peg in a square hole can do to the progress of the nation. Before him and even now positions are filled not on merit but on nepotism and ethnicity. Such appointments leave out the very good and brilliant ones and let the dregs of the nation run the show. For President Bola Tinubu at least, Tunji-Ojo and one or two of his colleagues, Bosun Tijani in the Communications and Digital Economy ministry and the Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo (SAN) can be said to have been well head-hunted.

During former President Muhammadu Buhari’s reign, a lawyer and Islamic scholar ran the ministry of Communication and Digital Economy. When he was removed for non-performance, Buhari replaced him with another Islamic fundamentalist whose credentials were doubted, as if that ministry was dedicated to Islam. He also failed. Even now there are many ministers at the Federal level who should be minding their children and wives at home in charge of crucial ministries - just because they are connected and they have political relevance to the appointing authority.

But the performance of Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo at the Ministry of Interior is showing Nigerians which way to go in government appointments if the country must develop. Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo came into the ministry with a rich background in tech training and a lot of zeal. He was seen on video earlier as he resumed duty, yelling at some immigration staff in their office. He told them bluntly he came into the Ministry with a zeal to change things and that he was not going to tolerate sloppy work attitude. Today, the changes ensured by Tunji-Ojo have reduced corruption at the Immigration department. Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo started reading Electronic Engineering at the Obafemi Awolowo University in Ife but transferred to the UK after three years. He has a bachelor’s and a master’s, and before he was 24 years old he had garnered 18 certifications in tech. He is also a certified Ethical hacker. If that was what President Tinubu saw to place Tunji-Ojo at the Interior Ministry, evidence abounds three years later that the appointment was well made.

About two weeks ago, seven commanders of the dreaded Boko Haram and ISWAP terrorists were arrested at the Katsina Airport as they returned from pilgrimage to Mecca in Saudi Arabia. If you live in the West the arrest will mean nothing to you but if you live in Nigeria it is a breakthrough. Without the firing of a single gun shot these dreaded commanders who had wrecked havoc on Nigeria and had dared the whole nation were flagged as they approached the airport by the integrated data base Tunji - Ojo had installed. They were flagged as the tech language puts it, even before they set foot on Nigerian soil. The seven were subsequently arrested, flown to Abuja and handed over to the men of the Department of State Services, DSS.

Who could dare these men of evil, but they could not hide from technology. The Governor of Katsina sponsored seven of them to Mecca with the tax payers money at 10 million naira each which makes a total of 70 million naira, though he denied. Two wives of one of the most dreaded bandits travelled to Mecca last year. They were arrested in Saudi Arabia, not in Nigeria. Nobody knows the latest about them as at the time of writing. A local government chairman in Katsina State went to the house of some bandits in a rural area and acceded to their request to renovate their houses and give them 25 motor cycles. Such is the stranglehold of bandits and terrorists on Katsina State that the man at the helm is still calling himself a governor. The meaning of the achievement of Olubunmi Tunji - Ojo is that Nigeria must let technology take over all of its operations. I asked Gemini AI what the accomplishments of Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo have done to the lives of Nigerians; it gave a list:

# Cleared a 204,000 backlog of passport applications in a record breaking three weeks. He thus restored confidence in Nigeria Immigration Service.

# Faster processing timelines of strictly two weeks. Nigerians think this is a revolution.

# Contactless renewal ensures a corruption free renewal of passport teaching Nigeria that corruption will be greatly minimized if the public will not make contact with public officials.

# Nigeria’s first centralized passport personalized center in Abuja which ensures passport security and speed up printing.

# Digital Visa system which automates visa application system ensuring a 48 hour processing time.

Others are:

# E - Gates at five airports which reduces waiting time for travellers

# Deployed Advanced Passenger Information that ensures real time passenger data analysis improving border control and ability to intercept security threats.

# Global passport verification which integrates ICAO Public Key Directory allowing Nigerian passports to be verified anywhere in the world.

The efforts of the Minister are also felt in other areas of his ministry. He deployed “Mining Marshalls” to prevent illegal mining and protect the nation’s solid minerals. He has improved response times of the Fire Service so that properties lost to fire have been reduced. The focus of the Correctional Facility has been shifted from the correction and rehabilitation of inmates into society and the renovation of the facilities. A section of the NSCDC has deployed women to protect schools because of the current attacks on schools by insurgents.

The wide gap between the digital influence on some sectors and other sectors where human contact is still allowed is noticeable. The improvement in the Correctional Facility has not stopped the invasion of it by insurgents while schools have continued to be attacked and pupils carted away into the forest by insurgents. That paints the necessity for the application of digitalization to improve or stop these incidents which have become a national embarrassment. As the government is making laws to decentralize the policing system in the nation, it is apt to suggest that the Inspector General at the federal level and the commissioners that will head state police must be men and women who apart from their security training must also have a good background in the digital economy.

First Published in METRO

***********************

Tunde Akande is both a journalist and pastor. He earned a Master's degree in Mass Communication from the University of Lagos.


A voice the desert still hears by Marja Heikkinen

Pope Leo XIV's appeal from Lampedusa was one of those moments when a moral voice echoes so clearly that the silence surrounding it becomes the real story. Standing on an island that has become both a sanctuary and a symbol of Europe's unfinished conscience, he urged leaders to meet migration not with panic or political calculation but with humanity. His words were not revolutionary. They were profoundly ordinary, help people integrate, address the conditions that force them to flee and remember that migrants are human beings before they become statistics.

Yet in today's Europe, those simple truths sound almost radical. Lampedusa has long been the front line of a migration crisis that Europe still treats as someone else's problem. Every overcrowded boat arriving on its shores carries not only exhausted people but also another test of the continent's values. Europe proudly celebrates its commitment to human rights, solidarity and human dignity. Those principles are engraved in treaties, repeated in speeches, and taught in classrooms. But they often disappear the moment frightened families appear on the horizon.

The political landscape has changed dramatically. Across Europe, far-right parties continue to gain ground, transforming migration from a complicated policy issue into a permanent campaign weapon. Fear has become more effective than facts. Every arrival is portrayed as an invasion. Every refugee is treated as a potential threat before being recognized as a fellow human being.

Many of these political movements wrap themselves in Christian language. They invoke Europe's Christian heritage, defend crosses in public squares, and speak passionately about preserving Christian civilization. Yet the Christianity they promote often seems strangely detached from the Gospel itself.

The Jesus they claim to defend was born into poverty, fled violence as a child, and repeatedly commanded his followers to welcome the stranger. Hospitality is not a footnote in Christian teaching; it is one of its central pillars. Compassion is not optional. Mercy is not reserved for those carrying the correct passport.

This is precisely why the Pope's message feels so isolated. He speaks the language of Christianity while many politicians merely speak the language of Christian identity. There is a profound difference. One demands sacrifice. The other demands exclusion. One asks what responsibilities we owe others. The other asks only how effectively we can keep them out.

It is politically easier to build fences than functioning asylum systems. It is easier to blame migrants than confront demographic decline, labour shortages, or the instability created by wars and economic exploitation beyond Europe's borders. Complex problems rarely produce simple solutions, but simple slogans win elections.

The Pope understands something many leaders appear unwilling to acknowledge. Migration will not disappear because governments become harsher. Climate change, armed conflict, persecution, and economic despair will continue pushing people toward safety. The real choice is not whether migration exists but whether it is managed with wisdom or with fear.

His call to improve conditions in countries of origin is equally important. Walls cannot substitute for diplomacy, development and long-term investment. Preventing desperate journeys begins long before desperate people reach the Mediterranean.

Perhaps the saddest image is not the boats approaching Lampedusa but the Pope himself, sounding increasingly like a biblical prophet crying out in the wilderness. His voice is steady, compassionate, and morally consistent. But too often it is drowned out by applause for those promising ever higher walls.

History has a habit of remembering lonely voices more kindly than triumphant crowds. Europe should hope it still has time to listen.


When I was loved by the sun #Poem by Abigail George

You did not love me
You couldn't if you tried
The illusion of you loved me better still
Perhaps it was meant to be this way
Perhaps it was just meant to be this way
That you would be seduced by other women
That you would marry

That there would be a suitable girl on your arm at a party eating canapes and drinking merlot or cabernet
That you would have a wife
Far lovelier and younger than me
With a steadfast personality and psychological profile
I could not give you children
I forget the reason why
That glaring moment of indecision that tore the fabric of us apart
I wish you journey safe my love
Until you return to me
For now I have the illusion of you
The light beer cooling in the fridge
These images of war of rust and blood and honey in my hands
I think of Cambodian snow and heat
You underground in the mine
Your security clearance
Your stint in the Congo
Your stories
How I long for your stories
Your voice
To feel your hand in the small of my back
Making circular motions and zigzag patterns
The night is as long as my memory
Day is pain when this soldier's wife remembers you.


The myth of the cloud by Jiro Lambert

Artificial intelligence has arrived wrapped in the imagery of science fiction. We speak about it as though it floats above the world, inhabiting an invisible "cloud" that somehow thinks, learns, and creates independently of the people who built it. Popular culture has encouraged this illusion for years. AI is portrayed as an ethereal intelligence, detached from geography and physical limits, capable of existing everywhere and nowhere at once. The reality is considerably less glamorous. Artificial intelligence is not magic. It is infrastructure.

Behind every astonishing AI demonstration is a data center that is, at its heart, an ordinary building. It is made of concrete, steel, cables, transformers, and industrial cooling systems working around the clock. Instead of futuristic holograms, there are endless rows of servers producing enormous amounts of heat. The greatest technological revolution of our generation depends, quite literally, on exceptionally powerful air conditioners.

This is the part of the AI conversation that often disappears beneath the excitement. We marvel at the chatbot composing essays or the image generator producing surreal masterpieces in seconds, yet rarely consider the warehouses quietly consuming electricity to make these moments possible. The digital world has never escaped the physical one. It merely hides it well.

The phrase "the cloud" may be one of the most successful marketing inventions of the digital age because it suggests weightlessness. Clouds drift effortlessly across the sky. Data centers do not. They occupy expensive land, require immense supplies of energy, demand constant maintenance, and consume billions of dollars in investment. They are monuments not only to engineering but also to capital.

Every leap forward in artificial intelligence is therefore not merely a triumph of algorithms. It is equally a triumph of financing. Building frontier AI requires staggering amounts of money, specialized hardware, skilled engineers, electricians, construction workers, cooling experts, and utility planners. The future, it turns out, depends on remarkably traditional professions.

There is something almost ironic about this. The technology that promises to transform every aspect of modern life remains deeply dependent on some of humanity's oldest realities: land, energy, labor, and money. No amount of sophisticated software can escape these constraints. Intelligence may increasingly be digital, but its foundation remains stubbornly physical.

Recognizing this changes how we should think about AI. It is tempting to imagine artificial intelligence as an unstoppable force evolving according to its own mysterious logic. In truth, it advances only because societies choose to build the infrastructure supporting it. Governments approve permits. Investors provide capital. Workers assemble equipment. Utilities generate electricity. Without this vast human effort, AI simply does not exist.

Perhaps the most revealing lesson is that every technological revolution eventually returns us to basic economics. The future is never built solely from brilliant ideas. It is built from concrete, cables, cooling systems, construction crews, electrical grids, and balance sheets. Artificial intelligence may appear to belong to tomorrow, but its roots remain firmly planted in the ordinary realities of today.


Worming #132 #cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

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

For more Worming, HERE!
For more Ovi Cartoons, HERE!



The cooperative nobody voted for by Virginia Robertson

There is an irony hiding in plain sight every July 4. While Americans celebrate Independence Day with fireworks, parades and speeches about liberty, the same date is also observed internationally as the International Day of Cooperatives. The coincidence is amusing at first glance. But viewed through the lens of modern American politics, it becomes something far more thought-provoking.

The United States often presents itself as the world's great experiment in representative democracy, a nation founded on the revolutionary idea that government derives its legitimacy from the consent of the governed. Yet over recent decades, that ideal has increasingly collided with another reality: the growing perception that the country's most consistent priority is not its citizens but its largest corporate interests and wealthiest shareholders.

That criticism did not begin with Donald Trump, nor will it end with him. Corporate influence has steadily expanded under presidents from both major parties. Lobbyists write legislation, campaign donors shape priorities, and billion-dollar industries enjoy access that ordinary citizens can scarcely imagine. But Trump's two administrations became, for many critics, the most unapologetic expression of that relationship. His rhetoric celebrated ordinary Americans, yet his governing philosophy often emphasized deregulation, tax reductions for corporations, and the language of business efficiency over public institutions.

It is tempting to think of America today not simply as a republic but as a peculiar kind of cooperative, not the democratic, community-based cooperative envisioned by the international movement, where every member has a meaningful voice, but one whose premium shareholders hold disproportionate voting power. In this version, influence scales with wealth, access, and market value rather than citizenship.

The metaphor is imperfect, but revealing. In a traditional cooperative, members share both responsibility and benefit. In today's America, many citizens increasingly feel they carry responsibility without sharing equally in the rewards. Productivity rises while wages stagnate. Corporate profits break records while housing becomes unattainable for younger generations. Stock markets flourish even as millions worry about healthcare costs, education debt, and economic insecurity. Success is measured by quarterly earnings reports rather than the long-term health of communities.

This transformation has altered not only policy but political language itself. Voters are frequently described as consumers. Public services become products. Universities become brands. Hospitals become revenue centers. Even citizenship increasingly resembles a market transaction in which one's value depends on purchasing power rather than democratic participation.

Perhaps the most striking aspect of this shift is how ordinary it now seems. Political debates revolve around reassuring financial markets almost as much as reassuring families. Every major policy announcement is immediately evaluated through the question: "How will Wall Street react?" Far less frequently does the first question become: "How will working people experience this?"

None of this means capitalism itself is the enemy. Markets have generated extraordinary innovation, prosperity, and opportunity. Businesses create jobs, develop technology, and improve living standards. The problem arises when markets cease being tools that serve society and instead become the society that government primarily serves.

America's founders certainly understood commerce. They were merchants, farmers, lawyers, and entrepreneurs. But they also feared concentrations of unchecked power. Their revolution was, above all, about preventing authority from becoming too distant from the people. Whether that authority wears the uniform of a king or the tailored suit of a multinational executive is ultimately beside the point.

So perhaps the shared date between Independence Day and the International Day of Cooperatives offers an unintended reminder. Independence is not merely freedom from outside rule. It also requires vigilance against internal systems that gradually shift political influence toward those with the deepest pockets.

Fireworks celebrate a declaration made in 1776. The harder question, nearly two and a half centuries later, is whether political independence still belongs equally to every citizen or whether the nation's most influential cooperative has quietly become one where the premium shareholders set the agenda while everyone else simply owns symbolic membership.


The curated exotic by Zarah Rivera

Walk through enough major Western galleries and museums, and a pattern begins to emerge. Contemporary artists from the Middle East and Asia are celebrated, exhibited and enthusiastically discussed but often through a carefully filtered lens that makes them more digestible for Western audiences. The result is a polished version of diversity that too often resembles an updated form of Orientalism rather than its rejection. The imagery has changed. The mechanisms have not.

The contemporary art world prides itself on global inclusion. Curators speak the language of dialogue, representation, and cultural exchange. Yet the market quietly rewards artists whose work confirms familiar expectations. Political trauma sells. Religious symbolism sells. Female resistance sells. Refugee narratives sell. Dictatorships, wars, veils, surveillance, and colonial scars become recurring motifs because they fit an established narrative that Western institutions already understand. Art that refuses these categories risks becoming invisible.

This is not to dismiss artists who genuinely explore conflict or identity. Many create profoundly moving work rooted in lived experience. The problem arises when these subjects become unofficial entry requirements for international recognition. A Japanese artist exploring suburban boredom or an Iranian painter fascinated by geometry may struggle to attract the same attention as peers whose work can be framed within stories of oppression, exile, or resistance. Complexity gives way to branding.

Western galleries rarely admit that they participate in cultural packaging. Instead, they present exhibitions as acts of discovery, introducing audiences to distant voices while subtly controlling how those voices are interpreted. Labels and catalog essays frequently become as important as the artworks themselves, steering visitors toward predetermined conclusions. The artist is transformed into both creator and cultural ambassador, expected to explain an entire civilization through a handful of installations.

Ironically, the global art market often rewards authenticity by demanding performance. Artists learn which themes resonate with collectors, institutions, and biennales. Some naturally revisit those themes because they remain meaningful. Others inevitably recognize that certain narratives travel better than others. Markets shape production. Galleries shape markets. The cycle reinforces itself until audiences begin to mistake repetition for cultural truth.

Meanwhile, countless artists producing abstract painting, conceptual sculpture, digital experimentation, or playful visual language remain overlooked simply because their work refuses to satisfy geopolitical curiosity. Their art is treated as insufficiently representative, as though artists from Cairo, Seoul, or Karachi carry an obligation to educate Western viewers before they are permitted to simply create.

Neo-Orientalism thrives precisely because it appears progressive. Unlike the colonial exhibitions of the past, today's galleries rarely present overt stereotypes. Instead, they curate carefully nuanced narratives that still revolve around difference, otherness, and cultural translation. The gaze has become more sophisticated, but it remains a gaze directed from the same centers of institutional power.

Perhaps the most radical exhibition a Western museum could organize would be one that refuses to explain non-Western artists through politics or identity alone. Imagine encountering their work without expecting it to represent a nation, a religion, or a historical wound. Imagine allowing artists from the Middle East and Asia the same creative freedom routinely granted to their Western counterparts, the freedom to be contradictory, mundane, humorous, abstract, or simply impossible to categorize.

That would not merely diversify museum walls. It would finally begin dismantling the invisible frame surrounding them.


CHE* #Thoughts by David Sparenberg

When the armored guardians of the tower look down, call out, demanding that you identify who you are, do not flinch. Stand your ground with...