The Third Pillar of Security: Why Food Belongs Beside Energy and Defence in Danish Strategy

The New Danish government's ministerial appointments announced by the Prime Minister's Office as based on the coalition parties: Socialdemokratiet (S), Socialistisk Folkeparti (SF), Moderaterne (M), and Radikale Venstre (RV)

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The EU AI ACT (emdash) Article 50: The Last Refuge of Mediocre Journalism?

A satirical essay that critiques the EU’s recent AI regulatory push and the media panic surrounding artificial intelligence in journalism. It argues that much of the fear is exaggerated and rooted in unfamiliarity with newsroom realities, suggesting that AI is less a disruptive force than an evolution of long-standing editorial processes traditionally handled by copy editors and institutional gatekeepers.

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Who Owns the Orchard?

As Denmark's international population continues to grow, so does the debate over who should have a voice in shaping the country's future. This article examines the arguments for and against extending voting rights to long-term foreign residents, exploring the complex relationship between contribution, citizenship, belonging, and democratic responsibility.

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Europe’s Great Miscalculation: How a Continent Turned Every Power into an Adversary

The EU’s April 2026 ban on Chinese solar inverters highlights a far greater problem within the European project itself. Beneath the language of cybersecurity and strategic autonomy lies a continent increasingly reacting to fear, isolation, and geopolitical decline rather than adapting intelligently to a rapidly changing multipolar world

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The AI Reckoning Facing Journalism

Using a line from Fyodor Dostoevsky’s The House of the Dead, the article explores how AI is forcing a reckoning in journalism by replacing routine writing while leaving truly original voices standing.

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Europe’s Green Transition and the Forgotten Resource: Trust

The article examines Europe’s green energy transition through the eyes of ordinary citizens who increasingly feel overwhelmed by the complexity of modern energy policy.

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Caligula’s Horse and the Quiet Collapse of Democracy

Using the metaphor of Caligula’s horse to examine how cronyism and nepotism can quietly undermine democratic societies from within, this article argues that democracy cannot rely on its label alone and must actively confront networks of privilege if it is to remain credible and functional.

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The Great White-Collar Extinction

A provocative examination of how AI is exposing the fragility of the white-collar economy, and ushering in a new era where adaptability, innovation, and real value matter more than titles or office politics.

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The Pillow Over the Press: How Journalism May Be Suffocating the Newspapers It Was Meant to Protect

A provocative examination of whether newspapers are being undermined less by technology and market forces than by an editorial culture that has elevated journalistic identity above the commercial realities necessary for institutional survival.

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Finland Draws a Hard Line on China, but at What Cost for Europe?

Will Finland’s decision to block EU–China trade talks risk weakening Europe’s influence and diplomatic credibility?

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Denmark’s Newspaper Debate Is Focused on the Wrong Problem

Sphere Magazine examines how Denmark’s newspaper industry has become shaped less by technological disruption and more by structural dependence on state subsidies.

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Among Dinosaurs on Election Night

Sphere Magazine explores a changing media landscape through the lens of election night at the Danish Parliament, where journalists and influencers appear less like rivals and more like relics.

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