Greece 13.0 —Running overtime
While northern Europe experiments with shorter weeks and better balance, Greece tests the limits of endurance, with the newcome 13-hour workday-and calls it modernization.
Balkan communities reclaim the energy future
Across the Balkans, citizens are reclaiming energy from old monopolies and building it locally. Community cooperatives are reshaping the grid from the ground up. A new, democratic Balkan energy future is already taking shape.
1,700 years later: Nicaea as the stage for the new geopolitics of christianity
In Nicaea, Pope Leo XIV and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew stood together on the ruins of the ancient basilica of St. Neophytos, reviving a moment of unity.
“A healthy society is one that is aware of what’s going on” – Interview
Tamar (name changed) is a young student from Georgia. She talked about cultural differences and the political situation in her country, as well as what gives her hope for bringing about positive change.
What Makes Me Frustrated as a Student
Read about Kaya's frustrations as a student in this essay about her experience as a student.
Ernest Hemingway: “The old man and the sea”
This analysis of a timeless classic interprets Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea through the lens of Existentialism and Nietzschean philosophy.
Place yourself in other people’s polygonal shoes
Read about the event that brought together participants with varying levels of experience, all interested in exploring the potential of games beyond entertainment.
Why we shouldn’t care about Hitler’s anatomy
Hitler’s DNA analysis promises a scientific reckoning but ends up reviving the very logic it claims to unmask: the idea that nazism can be decoded in flesh. By reducing Nazism to hormones, syndromes, and anatomical trivia, the documentary shifts responsibility from society to biology, letting structures of power slip quietly out of frame.