Predator’s foreign policy by Emma Schneider

In Washington presidents often cloak their ambitions in the language of freedom, stability and national security. But sometimes the rhetoric slips, revealing something far more primal beneath it. In the case of Donald Trump’s foreign policy, especially in places like Venezuela and Iran, the mask barely holds. What emerges is not strategy rooted in diplomacy or humanitarian concern but the unmistakable logic of imperial appetite.

Again and again, Trump frames international crises not as human tragedies but as opportunities. Oil fields become “assets.” Governments become obstacles to be removed. Entire nations are reduced to chess pieces in a contest for power and resources. It is the worldview of a corporate raider projected onto global politics.

Look at Venezuela. In recent months, Washington has deepened its involvement in the country’s political and economic turmoil, while American officials openly discuss the restructuring of Venezuela’s oil and mineral sectors. The United States has already moved to assert influence over key resources and industries, including gold mining and petroleum infrastructure.

Supporters argue that these actions are about restoring democracy or countering geopolitical rivals. But the optics and the language tell a different story. When foreign policy revolves around who controls the oil, the gold and the pipelines, it begins to look less like liberation and more like acquisition.

The pattern extends far beyond Latin America. Trump’s confrontational approach to Iran follows a similar script, maximum pressure, economic strangulation and now direct military escalation. Intelligence analysts themselves warn that even massive military force is unlikely to topple Iran’s entrenched leadership.

Yet the administration continues to speak in sweeping terms about reshaping the Middle East, forcing surrender and remaking regimes. It’s a familiar imperial fantasy, the belief that overwhelming power can bend complex societies to Washington’s will.

What gets lost in this muscular rhetoric are the people who live inside these geopolitical experiments.

Economic sanctions aimed at governments rarely stay neatly confined to political elites. They ripple outward, landing hardest on ordinary citizens: families struggling with shortages, patients cut off from medicine, workers watching their economies collapse. In Iran, years of sanctions have contributed to severe economic hardship for civilians, even when humanitarian exemptions technically exist.

But human consequences rarely feature in Trump’s speeches. Instead, his worldview divides the planet into winners and losers, allies and adversaries, assets and obstacles. It is the language of dominance, not stewardship.

History should make Americans wary of this mindset. The United States has spent decades trying and failing to engineer political outcomes abroad through coercion. From Iraq to Afghanistan to countless smaller interventions, the lesson has been painfully consistent, power can destroy regimes but it cannot easily build stable societies.

Trump appears uninterested in that lesson. His instinct is not caution but escalation, not cooperation but confrontation. The world becomes a marketplace of leverage, where strength is measured by how forcefully America can impose its will.

There is a name for that approach. It is not diplomacy. It is not even traditional realism. It is imperialism dressed in modern clothing, transactional, extractive and indifferent to the lives caught in its path. And like every imperial project before it, it risks leaving devastation long after the headlines fade.


The quiet intelligence beneath the waves by Ilyas Wilkins

It is tempting, when staring at the long arc of evolution, to assume that humanity sits at its summit, the inevitable crown of Earth’s experiment with intelligence. But evolution has no summit, no final exam. It simply keeps trying things. And if there is a candidate quietly waiting in the wings for the planet’s next great act of intelligence, it might not walk on two legs at all. It might have eight.

The octopus has always been the ocean’s great eccentric. A creature with no bones, three hearts, blue blood, and a nervous system that seems to have been designed by a surrealist engineer. Roughly two-thirds of its neurons aren’t even in its brain but distributed through its arms, which can taste, touch, and explore almost independently. Each limb is a semi-autonomous investigator, gathering information about the world. Imagine if your hands could think for themselves.

Scientists often describe octopus intelligence with a mix of admiration and bewilderment. They solve puzzles. They escape aquariums. They open jars. Some appear to recognize individual humans. There are documented cases of octopuses deliberately squirting water at specific researchers they seem to dislike. This is not the dull reflex of a simple animal. It is something closer to personality.

Yet the most fascinating thing about octopus intelligence is how alien it feels. Human intelligence evolved along a social path, language, cooperation, culture. Octopuses on the other hand are largely solitary. They do not build cities or tribes. Their brilliance blooms in isolation, a private genius in a tide pool.

And that raises a strange question: what would intelligence look like if it evolved again from a completely different starting point?

Octopuses already possess several qualities that evolution tends to favor in complex thinkers: problem-solving ability, adaptable bodies, sensitive perception, and remarkable camouflage that allows them to interact dynamically with their surroundings. Their skin can change color and texture instantly, effectively turning their entire body into a display screen. It is a language of light and pattern we barely understand.

Of course, octopuses have one enormous evolutionary disadvantage. They die young. Most live only one to three years, which leaves little time for the accumulation of knowledge across generations. Human civilization exists largely because our species can learn slowly and pass information forward. An octopus society, if such a thing ever emerged, would require longer lives or some other method of storing knowledge outside the body.

Still, evolution is patient in ways humans struggle to imagine. The ancestors of mammals scurried in the shadows for tens of millions of years before getting their moment.

Picture Earth a few million years after humans are gone, whether through climate collapse, asteroid or the slow exhaustion of our own ambitions. The oceans remain, vast and ancient. In the reefs and rocky shelves, octopus descendants continue experimenting with intelligence, generation after generation.

Perhaps they grow slightly longer-lived. Perhaps they become more social. Perhaps they begin leaving marks or arranging objects in ways that persist beyond a single lifespan.

It may sound fanciful, but so would the idea of skyscrapers and satellites to a reptile living two hundred million years ago.

Evolution does not repeat itself exactly. But it does keep looking for new minds.

And somewhere beneath the waves, eight arms are already thinking.


The price of uncertainty by Zakir Hall

American stock markets, that barometer of confidence and greed, took a subtle hit this week, not catastrophic but enough to rattle the nerves of investors accustomed to short-term gains and long-term illusions of stability. The cause? A looming prospect that the current conflict overseas could stretch on indefinitely, offering no clear resolution in sight. The markets, like most humans, despise uncertainty. And yet, this is the kind of uncertainty that cannot be hedged away with options, futures, or glossy corporate earnings reports.

We are living in a moment where the market’s fickle temperament meets the sobering reality of war. A few points lost on the Dow or Nasdaq barely scratches the surface of the true cost. Investors glance nervously at portfolios, economists offer cautious optimism and pundits debate whether this is a “buy-the-dip” moment or a signal of worse to come. But let’s be honest: these metrics are only half the story. Stocks fluctuate, indices rise and fall, but the human toll, the one that truly matters, is measured in lives, not in dollars.

The markets are already signaling anxiety, and for good reason. Every day the war continues without a horizon of resolution, the stakes escalate, not just abroad, but here at home. Supply chains tremble, fuel costs rise, and uncertainty seeps into corporate boardrooms where decisions that affect millions are made. There is a creeping awareness that no portfolio, however diversified, can escape the ripple effects of a prolonged conflict. Investors know this intuitively; they just hope the damage can remain abstract, confined to spreadsheets and quarterly reports.

Yet there is a harsher truth that cannot be ignored, the situation will grow far grimmer if “body bags” start arriving. Markets can tolerate abstract risk, but human mortality is an unchangeable event. Once the war touches the doorsteps of families across America, not just in faraway lands but through sons, daughters and neighbors, the illusion of distance evaporates. Then, and only then, will the superficial tremors of the stock market transform into a full-blown reckoning. The human cost cannot be translated into market cap, and any attempt to do so is morally bankrupt.

It’s tempting to view the current dip as a technical hiccup, an opportunity to buy low before the eventual recovery. But framing war in terms of opportunity is precisely the type of thinking that allows nations and markets alike to grow numb to tragedy. True resilience isn’t measured by quarterly earnings or a rebound in investor confidence; it’s measured by our ability to reckon with the consequences of decisions that send people into harm’s way.

American markets will survive. They always do, finding new peaks, new instruments, new ways to extract profit from chaos. But the moral calculus is far more stubborn. Investors can recover; the families of fallen soldiers cannot. And as long as conflict drags on without clarity or end, both markets and society are left to wander in that uncomfortable gray space between the financial and the human, between speculation and reality.

Markets are fickle. Life is not. And sometimes, the prices we pay for uncertainty are too high to ever appear on a balance sheet.


Ian Glim #005 #cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

A bewildered soul navigating global complexities armed
only with earnestness and a sharp, sarcastic wit.

For more Ian Glim, HERE!
For more Ovi Cartoons, HERE!


The first crack in the mirror by Markus Gibbons

In Washington, scandals rarely arrive with the dramatic clarity of a thunderclap. They seep in slowly, like water through old stone, until one morning the public notices the wall has begun to crack. The current moment surrounding Kristi Noem feels suspiciously like that first fracture.

For months, critics have whispered about the ethical fog that seems to follow Noem wherever she governs. Travel questions, donor relationships, the curious blending of public office and personal promotion all hover around her political orbit. None alone appears catastrophic but together they form the unmistakable outline of something larger: the quiet normalization of behavior that once would have ended a career.

What makes this moment different is not merely the allegations themselves but the political climate that has allowed them to breathe. We are living through an era in which ethical gravity often feels suspended. The administration currently occupying Washington has turned scandal into background noise, a constant hum beneath the machinery of government. In such an environment, accountability begins to look almost antique.

Yet history suggests that systems built on brazenness eventually trip over their own confidence. The first figure to face real consequences is rarely the most powerful. Instead, it is often a prominent loyalist, someone visible enough to satisfy public outrage yet expendable enough to protect the larger structure. If the investigations circling Noem deepen, she could easily become that symbolic first reckoning.

This possibility explains the nervous choreography now visible among allies who once defended her without hesitation. Watch closely and you can see the subtle repositioning: statements that sound supportive but oddly conditional, praise followed by long pauses. Washington is fluent in the language of distance. When politicians begin speaking in careful half sentences, it usually means they are already measuring the door.

None of this proves guilt, and responsible observers should resist the temptation to declare verdicts before investigators finish their work. But journalism has another duty, to notice patterns of power and privilege before they harden into precedent. When public officials appear to treat government as a stage for personal brand building, skepticism is not cynicism. It is civic hygiene.

If Kristi Noem’s controversies ultimately fade, Washington will return to its familiar rhythm of shrugging endurance. But if they sharpen into genuine accountability, the episode may mark something more significant: the first visible crack in a political culture that has grown far too comfortable flirting with corruption. And once a crack appears, the public tends to look more closely at the entire wall.

The danger for any administration that tolerates ethical shortcuts is not merely legal exposure but narrative collapse. Voters are surprisingly patient with power, yet they are ruthless when a story suddenly makes sense. The moment citizens begin connecting scattered episodes into a single pattern, the political weather changes quickly. What once looked like partisan sniping starts to resemble documentation. What once sounded like rumor begins to echo like warning.

And so the question lingering over Noem is larger than one politician’s fate. It is whether the country has reached the point where fatigue with corruption finally outweighs the habit of tolerating it. If that shift arrives, the first consequence will not be subtle. It will be unmistakable, public, and politically contagious, the sort of reckoning that reminds Washington that impunity is never permanent. Ever.


Architectural Ballet #Poem & #Painting by Nikos Laios

 

Those nights spent walking
The streets of this metropolis
On an architectural journey,
Reading the poetry of this
City through its buildings

And structures alive with the
Pulsating beat of humanity,
And I walked through the
Alleyways threading
The glass and steel towers,
The music of Gershwin’s
‘Rhapsody in Blue’
Played in my head,
And the lights of the
City illuminated the night
Suspended in their air,
An architectural ballet.

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

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

The reason to fire a secretary by Timothy Davies

In Washington officials are rarely fired for what they do wrong. More often they are fired for whom they embarrass. The removal of Kristi Noem as Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security by Donald Trump is a perfect example of this unwritten rule of political survival.

On paper the dismissal followed a cascade of controversies, fatal shootings involving federal immigration agents in Minneapolis, escalating accusations of reckless enforcement policies, mounting allegations of corruption inside the Department of Homeland Security and a spectacularly tone-deaf public relations machine that seemed to function less like a government agency and more like a personal campaign operation. Two American citizens were killed by federal officers during an immigration enforcement operation, triggering protests and congressional outrage. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents became the center of a national debate about militarized policing and the limits of federal power.

But none of that, apparently, was the real breaking point. The moment that reportedly sealed Noem’s fate came not with the deaths in Minneapolis or the mounting ethical questions surrounding her department. It came during a Senate hearing when she claimed that the president had personally approved a roughly $220-million advertising campaign promoting immigration enforcement and incidentally, featuring her prominently.

The ads themselves were already controversial, taxpayer-funded television spots showcasing the secretary on horseback near Mount Rushmore, warning migrants that the United States would “find you” if you crossed the border illegally. The contract for the campaign had bypassed normal competitive bidding processes and was reportedly tied to political consultants with connections to Noem’s orbit.

But the real political sin was implicating the president. Trump quickly denied any knowledge of the advertising plan, leaving Noem in the awkward position of having publicly invoked his authority for a program he now insisted he never approved. In Washington’s hierarchy of mistakes, administrative incompetence ranks low. Embarrassing the president ranks very high.

And so the lesson of this episode is almost too on-the-nose. A secretary presiding over fatal enforcement operations, internal dysfunction and questionable spending might survive. A secretary who drags the president into a potential scandal does not.

In the official narrative, Noem’s departure looks like accountability. The administration announced her replacement and quickly shifted attention to a new leadership chapter at the department. Yet the circumstances surrounding her removal suggest something else entirely: damage control, not reform.

Because if the Minneapolis tragedy, the corruption allegations, and the aggressive federal crackdown on protests were not enough to end her tenure, then the message to future officials is unmistakable. Failures of policy are manageable. Ethical gray zones are negotiable. Public outrage is survivable.

But implicating the boss? That is the one offense Washington will never forgive. In other words, Kristi Noem was not fired for what happened on the streets of Minneapolis. She was fired for what happened in a Senate hearing room, when a moment of careless testimony threatened to move responsibility up the chain of command.

And in this town, accountability is tolerated only as long as it never reaches the top.


Ant-sized Culinary #004 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

In the bustling undergrowth of Picante Hill, Anton the culinary ant dons his oversized toque and delivers deliciously chaotic cooking wisdom, one tiny misadventure at a time.

For more Ant-sized Culinary HERE!
For more Ovi Cartoons, HERE!


The return of obedience by Thanos Kalamidas

International Women’s Day in 2026 arrives with the usual speeches, social-media banners and polished declarations about equality. Yet beneath the ceremonial language lies a statistic that should give us pause, nearly a third of Generation Z men and boys around the world believe that a wife should obey her husband. It is the sort of finding that sounds like a relic from a mid-century sociology textbook, not a snapshot of the youngest adult generation in an era that prides itself on progress.

For decades, the narrative about social change moved in a comforting direction. Each generation, we were told, would be more open-minded than the last, less bound by tradition, less tolerant of hierarchy, more comfortable with equality. The arc bent naturally forward. But history rarely obeys such tidy expectations and culture, like fashion, has a habit of reviving ideas once thought outdated.

What makes this shift especially striking is that Generation Z grew up in a world saturated with the language of empowerment. These are young men who attended schools that taught gender equality as a civic virtue. They were raised in the aftermath of global conversations about harassment, discrimination, and representation. Their social feeds are filled with influencers discussing self-respect, autonomy and independence. In theory, they have been exposed to more progressive ideas than any generation before them.

And yet, a notable portion still gravitates toward the notion that marriage implies obedience. Part of the explanation may lie in the uneasy psychology of a generation coming of age during uncertainty. Economic instability, cultural fragmentation, and the relentless noise of digital life can create a hunger for clear rules and defined roles. Traditional gender hierarchies offer precisely that, a simple script in a complicated world. When everything feels unstable, some people retreat toward the comfort of old frameworks, even those that once constrained half the population.

There is also the strange influence of the internet itself. Social media has not merely democratized conversation; it has fragmented it. Algorithms are remarkably efficient at guiding people toward communities that reinforce their anxieties and frustrations. In certain corners of the online world, narratives about masculinity often revolve around grievance and control. The language is modern, the graphics sleek but the underlying message is unmistakably old, power must be reclaimed, and equality is framed as loss.

The result is a digital echo chamber where ideas that once existed on society’s margins can appear mainstream.

But the deeper issue may be cultural fatigue. Progress, after all, is rarely linear. Each advance produces its own backlash. Women’s increased autonomy in education, employment, and relationships has reshaped social life in profound ways. Many young men have grown up without the automatic privileges their grandfathers enjoyed, and some interpret this not as fairness but as displacement.

Equality, in this interpretation, becomes a threat rather than a principle. Yet obedience, when examined honestly, is a brittle foundation for any partnership. Marriage built on hierarchy tends to produce silence where there should be conversation, compliance where there should be trust. The ideal relationship of the twenty-first century is not one defined by command but by negotiation, two people constantly adjusting to one another in a shared project called life.

The irony is that Generation Z understands negotiation better than most. They grew up collaborating online, navigating diverse social circles, and questioning institutions with impressive fluency. The idea that a significant portion of them still entertains the language of obedience suggests not a generational failure but a cultural crossroads.

International Women’s Day is often framed as a celebration of victories already won. Perhaps it would be wiser to treat it as a reminder that social progress requires maintenance. Rights and norms do not simply lock into place once declared. They must be defended, argued for, and sometimes rediscovered by each generation.

The lesson of this year’s statistic is not despair but vigilance. Progress, it turns out, does not move forward automatically. Sometimes it needs to be pushed, firmly, patiently and without apology. And occasionally, it needs to be defended against the quiet return of ideas we thought we had already outgrown.

The invisible shift by Virginia Robertson

On International Women’s Day, speeches bloom like carefully arranged bouquets. There are panels about empowerment, glossy corporate campaigns about leadership and hashtags celebrating progress. But somewhere between the congratulatory tone and the inspirational quotes, a particular group of women quietly disappears from the conversation, American women in their fifties and sixties who are working themselves to exhaustion simply to survive.

They are not the women on magazine covers. They are not the keynote speakers at leadership conferences. They are the cashier who scans groceries at ten at night with tired wrists. The hotel housekeeper whose knees ache after decades of scrubbing bathrooms that are never her own. The home health aide who lifts patients heavier than herself for wages that barely cover rent.

These women have done everything they were told to do. They worked. They raised children. They cared for aging parents. Many sacrificed their own careers to support families that eventually moved on without them. Yet now, at the stage of life when stability should finally arrive, they find themselves trapped in a brutal economic balancing act, work endlessly or risk falling into poverty.

The cruel irony is that this struggle intensifies precisely when the body begins to slow down.

For millions of American women in their fifties and sixties, health insurance is not guaranteed. Prescription medications become financial calculations. A doctor’s visit can feel like a luxury. Blood pressure pills, insulin, or arthritis treatments are weighed against groceries and rent. The choice is not abstract; it is painfully practical.

Take the wrong step, lose a job, get sick, need surgery and the thin thread holding their lives together can snap.

What makes this reality particularly stark is how invisible it remains in national conversations about aging and gender equality. We often celebrate the success stories: the entrepreneur starting a second career at sixty, the executive thriving in the boardroom, the inspirational grandmother running marathons. These stories are uplifting, but they also mask a harsher truth. For every celebrated success, there are thousands of women standing behind a retail counter for nine hours straight, hoping their shift gets extended because the extra hours might mean they can pay the heating bill.

Retirement, for many of them, is not a phase of life but a distant fantasy. Pensions have evaporated. Savings are minimal or nonexistent. Divorce, caregiving interruptions and wage inequality have hollowed out their financial security over decades. Social Security alone rarely stretches far enough to cover rent, utilities, and medical costs.

So they keep working.

They work through back pain and swollen feet. They work while hiding the quiet fear that one medical emergency could push them into homelessness. They work because stopping is not an option.

International Women’s Day tends to celebrate the future: the girls who will lead, innovate, and shatter ceilings. That vision is important. But progress cannot only look forward. It must also look around.

Because dignity in old age should not be a reward reserved for the lucky few.

The women stocking shelves at midnight, cleaning offices before dawn, or answering phones in call centers are not symbols of resilience for motivational speeches. They are citizens who have carried families, communities, and entire sectors of the economy on their backs for decades.

And if equality means anything at all, it must mean that these women are allowed to grow older without fear that one missed paycheck, one broken bone or one unexpected prescription could unravel their lives.

International Women’s Day should not only celebrate women who break glass ceilings.

It should also ask why so many are still trapped on the ground floor, working the night shift just to keep a roof over their heads.


#eBook Unfinished symphony by Matilde Oliveira

 

Sebastian Rook had spent a lifetime perfecting the art of music, honing every stroke of the bow, every delicate curve of his fingers on the strings. Music was his language.

It was the air he breathed, the pulse that kept him alive. The violin wasn’t just an instrument. It was a lover, a confidante, a sacred space where he could lose himself, and the world could do nothing but listen.

His music had made him a legend. A god, even. Audiences waited with bated breath for his every note, his every performance. And when he played, they knew it was more than just sound. It was an experience, every note aching with passion, every crescendo building to something untouchable. He was a master. A symphony in motion.

Matilde Oliveira, a South American spitfire with a heart of gold and a drill bit for a tongue, juggles assisting at the local dentist's office with a burgeoning career as a romance novelist. Her short stories, filled with more cavities than a teenage sugar rush, explore the sweet and sometimes tooth-achingly painful world of love, romance and South American passion.

Ovi eBook Publishing 2026

Unfinished symphony

Read it online or download HERE!
Read it online & downloading it as PDF HERE!
Or enjoy reading it online & downloading it as PDF HERE!
All downloads are FREE!


For more eBooks check Ovi eBookshelves HERE!

Predator’s foreign policy by Emma Schneider

In Washington presidents often cloak their ambitions in the language of freedom, stability and national security. But sometimes the rhetori...