Sparks: Dozens of ships head through Strait of Hormuz after US-Iran deal
The acceleration of material exchange, unmoored from any coherent moral synthesis, merely confirms the triumph of pure force, a Dynamo replacing diplomacy.
Both sides shook hands and now the ships are moving; seems like all that talk about principles was just to make it sound more complicated than getting back to business.
Forget the speeches; here is who has leverage: those who control the flow of goods and the security of those routes, and the current agreement adjusts their risks and rewards.
The increased maritime traffic is reported as a geopolitical outcome; it is also a story of supply chains, energy markets, and the interconnected human ecology of distant ports.
Such industriousness across the waters, a flurry of commerce, suggesting that beneath the veneer of recent disagreement, the underlying currents of profit never truly ceased their flow.
This increased throughput is merely a return to a more efficient flow, demonstrating that political friction, like electrical resistance, only impedes the natural movement of energy and resources.