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What We Cover in This ePublication
Our e-magazine, 51勛圖 Monthly, enables you to take stock of our ever-changing world one month at a time. We compile 15 of our best original articles from the past month for you. In keeping with our ethos, we bring you insights from diverse voices around the world on a multitude of subjects. Our goal is to give our FO簞 Community a snapshot of the past month. The perspectives in our monthly will inform and educate you. They will take you away from echo chambers, and you will disagree with some. For the discerning reader, 51勛圖 Monthly is a good way to make sense of the world at a time of polarization, sensationalism and fake news. So, download our monthly now.
The October 2025 51勛圖 Monthly maps a fractured international order shaped by power, symbolism and institutional decay. In the US, Chief Strategy Officer Peter Isackson questions whether President Donald Trump is a monster more than a metaphysical devil, while Assistant Editor Elliott Frey traces how Trumps second administration uses memes and virality to energize the Make America Great Again base and obscure quietly destructive policies. Assistant Editor Liam Roman highlights how the Epstein files continue to pressure Trump, revealing cracks in elite accountability. Rising human rights expert Cathleen Jeanty critiques the UNs 80th anniversary in New York as a display of hypocrisy and declining credibility.
Global perspectives on political and economic dynamics
Regional and global tensions compound these domestic pressures. Indian Lieutenant General Shokin Chauhan and Editor-in-Chief Atul Singh analyze Bangladeshs deepening ties to China, signaling a strategic pivot with long-term consequences. Volunteer Research Associate Amirah Darwisyah Hamita examines Indonesian President Prabowo Subiantos reshaped populist appeal, and Brazilian journalist Luiz Cesar Pimentel chronicles former President Jair Bolsonaros failed amnesty campaign in Brazil. Communications Officer Roberta Campani explores how political narratives frame the October 7, 2023, Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and Sweden-based academic Nathaniel Handy situates European recognition of Palestinian statehood as symbolic yet geopolitically telling. Chinese economist Jiahao Yuan details Chinas September 3 military parade. Japanese economist Masaaki Yoshimori analyzes Argentinas recurring sovereign debt crises and the precarious effects of international interventions, while German economist Alex Gloy examines the US-Korea standoff over tariffs and labor raids at Hyundai-LGs Georgia plant. Spanish academic Laura Pavon highlights how Washingtons revocation of Colombian President Gustavo Petros visa underscores ideological tensions that continue to shape inter-American relations.
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Content of Publication
What Chinas Lavish Military Parade Revealed to the World – Jiahao Yuan
Western Recognition of Palestine Challenges US-Israel Position – Nathaniel Handy
Beyond October 7: Memory, Mourning and the Need for Collective Healing – Roberta Artemisia Campani
The Epstein Files: A Political Ticking Time Bomb – Liam Roman
Brazil at a Crossroads: The Farce of Amnesty and the Battle for Democracy – Luiz Cesar Pimentel
Nuclear War Only Happens Once – Farhang Faraydoon Namdar
Chiles Indigenous Rapa Nui Wants Its Stolen Moai Back – Priya Acharya
Argentinas Endless Cycle: Why Sovereign Debt Crises Keep Returning – Masaaki Yoshimori
Chaebol Versus Capitol: Shaking Down Seoul for Dollars – Alex Gloy
US Revokes Colombian Presidents Visa: The Volatile Relationship Between North and South America – Laura Pavon
Why the Success of Prabowos 2024 Presidential Campaign Strategy Matters – Amirah Darwisyah Hamita
The UN at 80: The Superpowers Have No Clothes – Cathleen Jeanty
Bangladesh Now Aligns With China, India Worries – Shokin Chauhan, Atul Singh
Which way, American man?: The Utility of Memes for the Trump Administration – Elliott Frey
Halloween Special: Is Trump a Devil Masquerading as a Monster? – Peter Isackson




