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The Price of Oil, the Cost of Water

       
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The Limits of State Intervention in International Projects

Dangerous if they never detached.… In the winter of 2028, the wind blowing across the reclaimed industrial coast of Yokohama smelled faintly of salt, machine oil, and overheated lithium batteries. The enormous hangar of the state-backed aerospace consortium glowed under floodlights even at midnight. Inside, engineers in flame-resistant suits moved around the partially assembled hypersonic cargo aircraft designated Kirin-X. The aircraft was intended to become Japan’s first commercially exported autonomous suborbital logistics platform — capable of transporting semiconductor components from East Asia to Europe in under three hours. At the center observation deck stood Kazuma Natori, a former bureaucrat from Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry. Ten years earlier, he had been one of the architects of the project’s public funding framework. At the beginning, the logic had seemed flawless. Private corporations alone could never have financed the infrastr...

The Clash of Logics

And each person returned to their own world.… The first thing Kenji noticed was that nobody in the room trusted the same words anymore. “Justice,” said the activist from the university collective, leaning forward over the scratched café table in Yokohama. “Justice means restructuring society before ecological collapse restructures it for us.” “Justice,” replied the elderly assemblyman from the conservative bloc, “means preserving the continuity that keeps people alive in the first place.” The Buddhist priest seated between them stirred his tea without drinking it. “And salvation?” he asked quietly. “What does that mean now?” Outside the café, rain crawled down the glass like nervous handwriting. Election trucks moved through the streets broadcasting promises nobody fully believed. A nearby digital billboard flashed alternating advertisements for AI tutoring systems, anti-anxiety medication, and political candidates. Kenji sat silentl...

The Silent Cross

Then she stood up and prepared for the next patient.… The rain had stopped an hour before dawn, leaving the camp wrapped in wet heat and the smell of chlorine, mud, diesel fuel, and human waste. From the observation tower near the perimeter fence, the refugee settlement looked almost infinite. Tens of thousands of white tarpaulin shelters spread across the volcanic plain beside the border, stitched together by narrow drainage ditches and corridors of trampled red earth. Aid agencies called it a “transitional humanitarian zone.” The soldiers guarding the access road called it “Sector Nine.” The people living inside it called it nothing at all. Most had stopped naming places after the third displacement. Tess van der Meer adjusted the elastic band of her KN95 mask and pushed aside the flap of the oncology tent. Inside, the heat was worse. The solar batteries had failed again overnight. The oxygen concentrator stood silent besid...