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ArtistPhotorealistic boxing match poster composition, dramatic and cinematic lighting, high contrast, ultra-sharp detail, shallow depth of field, glossy promotional finish. Split composition with two intense close-up portraits facing each other. On the left, a close-up of Donald Trump, stern expression, realistic skin texture and facial details, wearing a polished gold crown with subtle engravings, the crown catching strong highlights and reflections. On the right, a close-up of a woman with Mediterranean features, strong gaze directed forward, olive-toned skin with natural texture, wearing a fabric headband across her forehead displaying the blue field and yellow stars of the European Union flag, rendered with realistic fabric weave. Between the two faces, centered and dominant, a large bold “VS” in metallic lettering, slightly worn texture, dramatic rim lighting, giving the impression of impact and confrontation. Background is dark and atmospheric, with faint smoke, subtle sparks, and vignette shadows enhancing tension. Color palette dominated by deep blacks, steel grays, warm gold tones for the crown, rich blues and yellows for the headband, and natural skin tones. Professional sports-poster aesthetic, realistic optics, studio-quality lighting, high-resolution photorealism, visual intensity suitable for a major boxing event announcement.
Europe—and all countries that still like to think of themselves as civilized—are making a serious mistake by allowing Donald Trump to speak to a global audience from their territory.
What bullies have always wanted, without exception, is attention. Visibility. A spotlight. Granting Trump a stage in front of the world does exactly that. Worse, it lends him a veneer of legitimacy. It suggests that he is somehow entitled to do what he does best: lie shamelessly in order to justify incoherent, reckless, and deeply harmful policies.
Trump is a bully. Bullies do not need to be confronted with brute force; they need to be confronted with boundaries. Clear, firm, non-negotiable boundaries. Strength does not mean shouting louder or stooping to their level. It means standing your ground, being consistent, and making it unmistakably clear that there are consequences for unacceptable behavior.
Those tools already exist. Legal mechanisms exist. Economic pressure exists. And if action becomes necessary, it should target what bullies care about most: their money, their interests, their ability to profit from the very system they abuse.
It is time to stop behaving like naïve teenagers dazzled—or intimidated—by loud, aggressive personalities. It is time to act like adults. Calm, resolute adults who understand that indulging bullies never neutralizes them; it only empowers them.