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The Bitter Scent of Herbs

       
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The Incorruptible Voice: Why Radical Honesty Defines Leadership

And that, more than charisma or strategy, was what made him dangerous—and, perhaps, necessary.… They called him “the man who could not lie,” but no one agreed on what that meant anymore. In 2026, the world had grown suspicious of truth. Not because truth had disappeared—but because it had multiplied. Deepfakes circulated faster than official statements. AI-generated speeches could mimic any leader. Entire populations lived inside algorithmically tailored realities. A report circulating among policy circles warned that shared truth itself—the foundation of governance—was eroding under the pressure of digital systems that rewarded emotion over accuracy . And yet, in the small Baltic nation of Virelia, a former systems engineer named Elian Voss rose to power on a strange premise: He was incapable of lying. Not unwilling. Not principled. Incapable. ⸻ The Defect Voss had once worked in cognitive systems—models designed to sim...

The Auction

It’s the person who knows how it works.… The sheep pen sat on a slope where the mountains of Kurdistan Region folded into one another like worn fabric. It smelled of lanolin and damp earth, but for the two American airmen inside, it might as well have been a vault. Captain Elias Vance, the pilot, had already begun to detach himself from the situation—training, instinct, survival. Beside him, Chief Warrant Officer Daniel Reyes, a weapons systems officer, did the opposite. He watched everything. That difference would decide their price. Their aircraft, an export-modified variant of the F-15EX Eagle II, had gone down 36 hours earlier during a classified overwatch mission near the Iranian border. Officially, it never existed. Unofficially, it carried a sensor-fusion suite rumored to integrate AI-assisted targeting—something closer to what analysts had begun calling “edge autonomy” in modern warfare. Reyes had operated that system. Which meant Reyes was worth more...

The Last Laugh of the Dispossessed

But inside the house, for a moment, nothing else mattered.… The shared house stood a few kilometers inland from the neon shoreline of Phuket, where the illusion of cheap paradise had quietly collapsed. Six months earlier, the German couple—Lena and Markus—had arrived with a guidebook still recommending “$10-a-night bungalows.” What the guidebook hadn’t caught up with was the post-pandemic inversion of Southeast Asia’s economy: energy prices reshaped by the aftershocks of the war in Ukraine, supply chains rerouted, and a surge of digital nomads pushing up rents across tourist hubs like Phuket. Now they lay on thin mattresses, feet wrapped in gauze. Athlete’s foot had spread easily in the humid air, worsened by their refusal to spend money on proper medication. Markus had once calculated their daily budget down to the cent; now he calculated how long they could ignore hunger. In the next room, the Australian surfer, Dean, polish...

The Nation-State Blind Spot

if they were never contained by one to begin with.… The man from Sanandaj liked to say that maps were lies. Not because they were inaccurate—but because they were too precise. They drew lines where there were none. He worked in a government office now, a quiet analyst inside a system that officially believed in the indivisibility of the Iranian state. On paper, everything was simple: one country, one sovereignty, one flag. But he knew better. He had grown up in a place where identity did not obey borders. His grandmother spoke Kurdish, his father switched between Persian and Kurdish depending on who entered the room, and his uncle—who had once disappeared for six months—spoke only in silences. Outside observers called people like him a “minority.” Inside Iran, there were between 7 and 15 million Kurds—something closer to a parallel nation layered within the state, concentrated along the western frontier where mounta...