Issue

Operation Blind Fury

Issue of March 21, 2026

View on economist.com

Headlines

CBeebies or barbarism!

Britain · CBeebies or barbarism!

Rosa Luxemburg’s “Socialism or barbarism!” reworked for the children’s TV funding crisis. The stakes have never been higher.

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Petrostates of America

Finance & Economics · America may be a petrostate. But the energy shock still hurts

Swaps “United” for “Petro” in the national name. Clean and carries real analytical weight.

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Terminal solution

Finance & Economics · What if Donald Trump decided to ban oil exports?

Oil terminals, a terminal outcome, and a grim historical echo. Triple duty.

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Collateral advantage

United States · A muddled war and rising prices are boosting Democrats’ midterm hopes

“Collateral damage” flipped — the war’s unintended consequences are, for Democrats, an unintended benefit.

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Lingering fumes

Leaders · Gas will not be killed off by renewables any time soon

Gas fumes that linger literally, and the fossil fuel industry that won’t go away.

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Lovers’ tiff

Europe · How Ukraine and Europe got caught in a geopolitical lovers’ tiff

The article commits fully — “conjugal bickering,” “fears of divorce.” The headline earned the metaphor.

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Shop till you don’t drop

Letters · Are data centres in space less crazy than we think?

Inverts the idiom for AI shopping agents who never impulse-buy. Retailers’ margins drop instead.

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Buried in the text

”why split hairs over splitting heads?”

Culture · Re-examining one of the world’s most notorious assassinations

On the ice pick vs. mountaineering axe distinction in Trotsky’s murder. Gruesome and irresistible.

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“animal spirits were on something of a safari”

Leaders · Africa after aid is more resilient than you might think

Keynes’s “animal spirits” sent on a literal safari across Africa. The metaphor finally gets to go on holiday.

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“an offer, surely, they can’t refuse”

Culture · It’s strictly business: the enduring allure of mafiosi in culture

The Mob Museum offering discounted admission to law enforcement. The Godfather’s most famous line earns its keep.

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“the Coca-Cola of shareholder activism”

Business · Elliott Management and the art of telling bosses they’re wrong

Elliott called this right after it nudged Pepsi to cut products. The rival-brand metaphor is doing overtime.

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“Dangote Cement became the (concrete) foundation of his fortune”

Middle East & Africa · Africa’s richest man has ambitious plans for the continent

A cement company providing a concrete foundation. The parenthetical wink makes the intent unmistakable.

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“a sign of a bubble in the sparkling-water business”

Culture · Which is the best sparkling water?

A financial bubble in a business literally defined by bubbles.

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