Japanese Cars, Desert Dreams, and the Tiny Inconvenience of Regional Warfare
There’s something darkly hilarious about modern civilization relying on the smooth transportation of shiny metal rectangles across oceans while simultaneously pretending geopolitics is just background noise for cable news addicts and retired generals on podcasts. One minute, executives are giving TED Talk-style presentations about “supply chain resilience,” laser-pointing graphs about “global demand optimization,” and congratulating themselves for reducing shipping times by 0.8%. The next minute, missiles start flying around the Middle East and suddenly thousands of Japanese vehicles are sitting motionless at ports like confused tourists whose connecting flight got canceled because civilization temporarily malfunctioned. And there it is again: the fragile little heartbeat of globalization. Japanese auto exports to the Middle East plunged in April because war disrupted shipping routes. Which sounds sterile and technical when written in economic reports. Very neat. Very corporate. Ver...