The Nirvik Bureau, Bhubaneswar, 12 April 2026
Democracy died, but the ratings were terrific.
Tonight’s Episode: Civilization May or May Not Die
The year is 2026, and Donald Trump has become what philosophers feared and reality TV producers dreamed – the first ruler to treat nuclear deterrence as cliff‑hanger entertainment. “A whole civilization will die tonight!” he thunders, eyes gleaming with primetime glory. Twenty minutes and one commercial break later, the annihilation is postponed – allegedly for “strategic emotional suspense.”
America, that one‑time exporter of freedom and jazz, now ships chaos in branded boxes labeled Make Apocalypse Again™. Even his moon mission sounds less like exploration and more like celestial real estate speculation: rumor has it NASA’s newest shuttle is called Trump Tower Lunar Vista, pending zoning approval from Mars.
When Gods Wear Red Ties and Tweet Tariffs
India once watched this spectacle from afar, clutching miniature flags and chanting hymns to our orange-tinted deity. For a fleeting moment, he was our spiritual cousin in intolerance – a man who banned more Muslims than we could even fit in a WhatsApp group.
Then came betrayal. Trump, in a divine act of diplomatic confusion, placed Pakistan on speed dial and congratulated them for “fixing the Middle East.” Overnight, the temple in Varanasi bearing his portrait was quietly repurposed into a shrine for “That Other Guy Who Hates CNN.”
It’s hard to keep track of our divine favorites when our geopolitics resemble cricket commentary: everyone batting until the world explodes.
The Strait of Hormuz and Other Tourist Attractions
Somewhere between Iran and Israel, the Strait of Hormuz now functions as the world’s most dangerous toll booth. Tariffs, oil, drones – you must pay at least one before crossing. The U.S. Navy patrols it like a bouncer at a nightclub called War Is Coming.
Iran plays the role of the drunken poet who insists on reciting history while missiles whistle overhead. Israel handles marketing. The United States handles merch – “I Survived the Next U.S. War™” T‑shirts retail for $19.99.
Back home, America watches its own empire twitch between evangelism and algorithm. Every foreign body counts as either a “threat” or a “business opportunity.” Sometimes, both.
Moonlight, Fast Food, and Fallen Ideals
The lunar expedition, we’re told, “represents the true America.” Which checks out – it’s expensive, confusing, and mostly white. Astronauts plant flags not for peace but for branding deals: Pepsi on one crater, Fox News on another. Somewhere in the control room, a man whispers, “We’ve colonized outrage itself.”
The world sighs, tweets, and moves on, because absurdity is now the global language of diplomacy. Nations don’t exchange notes – they trade hashtags. And in the shimmering chaos, President Trump continues his sermon: half messiah, half marketer, fully meme.
Once upon a time, the U.S. was a “shining city on a hill.” Now it’s a theme park at the end of history, selling lifetime passes at a discount – terms and conditions may include annihilation delays






