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5519 Interesting News

  • What is Elon Musk getting up to with America's payment system?
  • Human diets are becoming less diverse, a new book warns
  • Japan is still reeling 100 days after the Noto earthquake
  • Meet the ambitious wolf cubs of Wall Street
  • China's government launches a campaign against medical corruption
  • Gina Lollobrigida's ambition was her strength and her weakness
  • German business is being suffocated by high costs and red tape
  • Britain's government pulls the plug on a superfast computer
  • Press freedom is under attack
  • Israeli strikes on Beirut and Tehran could intensify a regional war
  • Cybersecurity Professor Faced China-Funding Inquiry Before Disappearing, Sources Say
  • Sin taxes are suffering from a shortage of sinners
  • How India became an unexpected role model for Europe
  • The Olympics are teaching the French to cheer again
  • The Maldives is cosying up to China
  • As Germany's defence stocks go ballistic, armsmakers are tooling up
  • How race and politics interact in modern South Africa
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Politics
  • Even the Trumpiest stocks are suffering
  • Japan faces a reckoning over rice
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Donald Trump wins big and fast
  • Xbox users can now stream games they own on their consoles
  • Meet Argentina's richest man
  • France is desperately searching for a government
  • The women's Euros are selling out stadiums
  • The Big Mac index: where to buy a cheap hamburger
  • Scientists can help fetuses by growing tiny replicas of their organs
  • Can Britons be enticed to fix their draughty homes?
  • Is the world sleepwalking into another gas crisis?
  • The "Scream" franchise adds another self-referential sequel
  • Readers Respond to the January 2025 Issue
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Phyllida Barlow had a lifetime of adventure making art
  • The economics of the climate
  • Can bonds keep beating stocks?
  • Refugee-friendly Canada tightens its border with the United States
  • Oil bosses have big hopes for the AI boom
  • Jack Jennings was one of the Allied POWs who built the Burma Railway
  • Netflix profits jump 24% as viewers flock to streaming shows and sports
  • Obituary: Jacques Chirac died on September 26th
  • How Britain decides which drugs to buy
  • Falafel died on February 14th
  • This week's covers
  • The military draft is making a comeback
  • Donald Trump wants states and cities to do as they are told
  • Elon Musk is shredding America's government as he did Twitter
  • The arrest warrant is a diplomatic disaster for Netanyahu
  • Lily Ebert lived to share her story of Auschwitz
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • What Is DHGate, and Should You Use It?
  • This 'College Protester' Isn't Real. It's an AI-Powered Undercover Bot for Cops
  • Does Dallas offer a vision of America's future?
  • A future with fewer banks
  • From Apple to Starbucks, Western firms' China dreams are dying
  • How Russia is trying to win over the global south
  • Dervla Murphy let nothing stand in the way of adventure
  • Brazil courts China as its Musk feud erupts again
  • Rose Dugdale went from debutante to IRA bombmaker
  • Radio telescopes could spot asteroids with unprecedented detail
  • NHS dentistry is decaying
  • Wikipedia Is Making a Dataset for Training AI Because It's Overwhelmed by Bots
  • Alan Turing's Lost Work Could Reveal How Tigers Got Their Stripes
  • Elizabeth II never laid down the heavy weight of the crown
  • Hamas talks up a truce, but Israel may still invade Rafah
  • Mexico deploys 10,000 troops to the US border
  • Climate Change: The Complete WIRED Guide
  • How Turkey plans to expand its influence in the new Syria
  • Israeli aircraft buzz Beirut as the drums of war bang loud
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Violence mars Mexicans' biggest elections ever
  • Barry Lopez died on December 25th
  • China is now the world leader in coffee shops
  • Foreign judges are fed up with Hong Kong's political environment
  • The business of second-hand clothing is booming
  • Ten charts reveal Narendra Modi's actual record in office
  • Birdies, jumpers and Green Jackets: the Masters 2025 – in pictures
  • The EU's response to Donald Trump's tariffs seems to work
  • Catering to protein-rich diets is a tasty business
  • Xi Jinping's belated stimulus has reset the mood in Chinese markets
  • Britain's oldest newspaper is a treasure trove of trivia
  • The British state is blind
  • Data Breaches: The Complete WIRED Guide
  • How to win Nevada
  • Why caste still matters in Indian politics
  • Israel bombs the Hamas military mastermind behind the October 7th attack
  • Why carbon monoxide could appeal to the discerning doper
  • The rise of user-created video games
  • How bottled water companies are draining our drinking water – video
  • Javier Milei implements shock therapy in Argentina
  • Jay Pasachoff travelled the world to catch the Moon eclipsing the Sun
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Politics
  • Narendra Modi faces a new threat: his Hindu-nationalist patrons
  • A coup attempt in Tigray raises tensions in the Horn
  • This week's covers
  • Nigerian politics is a nasty place for women
  • Michael Collins died on April 28th
  • Critics of Medicaid point to a rigorous study conducted 15 years ago
  • What a Republican trifecta will mean for governing
  • Stitch by stitch, Rose Girone kept her family going
  • Can the WSL escape the shadow of the Premier League?
  • The Xbox Spring Sale is live
  • Trump's Trade War Is Strengthening China's Soft Power
  • UFOs are going mainstream
  • Fine-tuned acoustic waves can knock drones out of the sky
  • A future, but with Chinese characteristics
  • TraderTraitor: The Kings of the Crypto Heist
  • Business
  • China's leaders reveal their plan to cope with 2025
  • Can Ecuador free itself from the grasp of the drug lords?
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Blighty newsletter: What British politicians really earn on the side
  • Weak commitments from the G20 cast a shadow over COP26's opening
  • Welcome to the new era of global sea power
  • Can tech tackle the global crisis of depression and anxiety?
  • Why does the British tax year end on April 5th?
  • Why Germany's watchmakers are worried about the AfD
  • American Airlines will provide inflight Wi-Fi for free starting next year
  • Gang violence is spreading across Latin America
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Blighty newsletter: Why Labour has a soft spot for Stevenage
  • Contributors to Scientific American's May 2025 Issue
  • After 12 years of blood, Assad's Syria rejoins the Arab League
  • How many Russian soldiers have been killed in Ukraine?
  • Lawrence Wong in his own words
  • China's shoemakers seem more sanguine than its politicians
  • The sweet story of Peru's blueberry boom
  • Wegovy hits the People's Republic, at last
  • Video: Busting globalisation myths
  • Business
  • How Vladimir Putin plans to play Donald Trump
  • A museum in Rotterdam opens up its collection
  • Young men in Spain love the hardline Vox
  • Britain's budget choices are not as bad as the government says
  • KAL's cartoon
  • KAL's cartoon
  • South Africa's foreign minister wants better relations with the West
  • Politics
  • Priyanka Gandhi: dynastic scion, and hope of India's opposition
  • Europe's lefties bash migrants (nearly) as well as the hard right
  • Elon Musk's outfit is running into opposition from Donald Trump's appointees
  • Sandra Day O'Connor specialised in breaking into male bastions
  • Politics
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • How China stifles dissent without a KGB or Stasi of its own
  • Was the Bank of England right to start lowering interest rates?
  • The weekly cartoon
  • Basic Materials Roundup: Market Talk
  • The downfall of a Philippine mayor may be linked to Chinese gangs
  • Researchers in China create the first healthy, cloned rhesus monkey
  • This week's cover
  • Business
  • Kenyan women are fed up with rampant sexual violence
  • Xi Jinping wants to be loved by the global south
  • What investors expect from President Trump
  • China's leaders face miserable economic-growth figures
  • The weekly cartoon
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • How the last mammoths went extinct
  • Nawal El-Saadawi died on March 21st
  • This week's covers
  • Policymakers are likely to jettison their 2% inflation targets
  • Investors beware: summer madness is here
  • The Chinese-African relationship is important to both sides, but also unbalanced
  • Airships may finally prove useful for transporting cargo
  • How the Philippines is turning the water-cannon on China
  • Why are Remainers so weak in post-Brexit Britain?
  • Politics
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • How dangerous would Asian security be without America?
  • After 100 brutal days, Javier Milei has markets believing
  • The weekly cartoon
  • Measles Cases Are Rising. Other Preventable Diseases Could Follow
  • Celeste Caeiro's small gesture named a revolution
  • The threat of an Israeli attack is reviving Iranian nationalism
  • A battle rages for a key city in Sudan's ravaged western region
  • Politics and technology are pushing oil firms to cut methane
  • An alternative look at the Trump-Harris debate, in five charts
  • A new kind of Brazilian music is poised for a global boom
  • Despite its sympathies, Egypt is unlikely to help Palestinian refugees
  • Is the opioid epidemic finally burning out?
  • The cost of the global arms race
  • AI scientists are producing new theories of how the brain learns
  • Does Donald Trump have unlimited authority to impose tariffs?
  • Venezuela's autocrat, Nicolás Maduro, threatens to annex Guyana
  • Ennio Morricone died on July 6th
  • In need of reform
  • Why India's south is fighting plans to overhaul parliament
  • The UAE preaches unity at home but pursues division abroad
  • Scientific publishers are producing more papers than ever
  • Lily Lian died on May 24th
  • New crop-spraying technologies are more efficient than ever
  • China's new age of swagger and paranoia
  • As wildfires continue to ravage America, floods are wreaking havoc elsewhere
  • The world is losing the fight against international gangs
  • Ganga Stone died on June 2nd
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • America's college heads revise rules for handling campus protests
  • Here's What Happened to Those SignalGate Messages
  • Tanzania's opposition, once flat on its back, is now on its knees
  • America's internet giants are being outplayed in the global south
  • The stockmarket rout may not be over
  • Welsh voters think their government has mismanaged public services. Rightly
  • Donald Trump once tried to ban TikTok. Now can he save it?
  • Why are there so many suicides in rich, stable Uruguay?
  • Politics
  • Google 'wilfully' monopolised online advertising market, US judge rules
  • Why Japanese stocks are on a rollercoaster ride
  • Meet The AI Agent With Multiple Personalities
  • China cracks down on Karate-chopping cleaning ladies
  • How will India's new coalition government work?
  • Gene-editing drugs are moving from lab to clinic at lightning speed
  • This week's cover
  • Narendra Modi is struggling to boost Indian growth
  • The Qatar World Cup shows how football is changing
  • Our guide to how Trump or Harris might win the election
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • For its next phase of growth, India needs a new reform agenda
  • With tariffs paused, Republicans dodge a fight with Trump
  • Life Before the Measles Vaccine
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • America's university graduates live much longer than non-graduates
  • UN peacekeeping is hamstrung by national rules for its troops
  • Motors in the wheels take EVs further
  • The start of a fragile truce in Gaza offers relief and joy
  • DC's Got a Lot of Superman Coming This Summer
  • Why Xi Jinping is making nice with China's tech billionaires
  • Why are Latin American workers so strikingly unproductive?
  • Why America has not passed a law to treat addiction better
  • Singapore's government is determined to keep hawker centres alive
  • Instagram's new Blend feature creates a custom reels feed for you and your friends
  • Most Ukrainians now want an end to the war
  • We're hiring a global correspondent
  • Will America's government try to break up Google?
  • Shein attempts to mend its public image before its London debut
  • Is MAGA great for India?
  • Strangely, America's companies will soon face higher interest rates
  • Joan Feynman died on July 22nd
  • A pay rise for government workers sparks anger and envy in China
  • Russia sentences Evan Gershkovich to 16 years on bogus spying charges
  • NASA's PACE satellite will tackle the largest uncertainty in climate science
  • The global democracy index: how did countries perform in 2024?
  • Israel and Hizbullah creep closer to all-out war
  • Western companies are experimenting with DeepSeek
  • How gaga is MAHA?
  • Digital nomads are a force for good in Latin America
  • Steven Weinberg died on July 23rd
  • Investors are increasingly optimistic about Brazil's economy
  • Was your degree really worth it?
  • Ramp is trying to get the US government as a customer after seeing a tweet from DOGE
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Memorable images make time pass more slowly
  • Why are Nordic companies so successful?
  • The US tax code will change next year; the presidential election will determine how
  • Europe vows to defend Ukraine, but prays for Trump's support
  • Climate change is making the monsoon more dangerous
  • Business
  • Dumb phones are making a comeback
  • The added dangers of fighting in Ukraine when everything is visible
  • The Untold Story of a Crypto Crimefighter's Descent Into Nigerian Prison
  • Babysitting duties are stressing China's grandparents
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Nvidia is fighting both Trump and China
  • Javier Milei is splurging on the army
  • This week's covers
  • Here are all the tech companies rolling back DEI or still committed to it — so far
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Why vaccine passports are causing chaos
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Bitcoin is up by 138% this year. It is a nonsense-free rally
  • AMLO's austerity has hurt Mexico
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Agitu Gudeta was killed on December 29th
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • America's growing profits are under threat
  • The Key to Critical Self-Awareness
  • South Korea's president is impeached
  • Will America's crypto frenzy end in disaster?
  • Hard times for China's micro-industrialists
  • How Abercrombie & Fitch got hot again
  • Trump Weaponizes Bureaucratic Review to Stop Offshore Wind Project
  • Scientists Are Mapping the Boundaries of What Is Knowable and Unknowable
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The rich country with the worst mobile-phone service
  • Plankton are much more interesting than you might think
  • China's slowing economy, seen from ground level
  • Jiang Zemin oversaw a wave of economic change, but not much political reform
  • This Robot Copies Life—By Decomposing
  • 'We have to go on': Bangkok pushes on with quake rescue despite 'no signs of life' – video
  • The AfD's unusual China connection
  • Benjamin Zephaniah stayed angry all his life
  • This week's covers
  • Three reasons why oil prices are remarkably stable
  • Colombia's leftist president is flailing
  • Can the voluntary carbon market save the Amazon?
  • TikTok wants Western consumers to shop like the Chinese
  • New battery designs could lead to gains in power and capacity
  • Romania is caught between Putin, Trump and Europe
  • A death, an illness, and an uncertain Middle East
  • One Simple Hack to Ruin Your Easter
  • China Bans 'Autonomous Driving' Claims From Car Marketing Following Crash
  • The quest to build robots that look and behave like humans
  • Joss Naylor never let any mountain defeat him
  • Why is Mark Zuckerberg giving away Meta's crown jewels?
  • Alzheimer's disease may, rarely, be transmitted by medical treatment
  • Latin America could become this century's commodity superpower
  • Aaron Beck turned the world of psychiatry upside down
  • Thailand's prime minister is sacked. What next?
  • Shane Warne believed that cricket should always be fun
  • What's next for Britain and the EU?
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Too many people want to be social-media influencers
  • Inflation is down and a recession is unlikely. What went right?
  • Xi Jinping shows how he will return American fire
  • Mexico is edging closer and closer to one-party rule
  • Far-right ideas are gaining a renewed respectability in France
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Taiwan's dominance of the chip industry makes it more important
  • Russia is being set aflame by hundreds of arson attacks
  • A short history of Syria, in maps
  • Blighty newsletter: When soft power goes wrong
  • Places ravaged by opioids are giving Republicans the upper hand
  • Complexities of moderating and classifying video games
  • New railways could transform South-East Asia
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Ageism is rampant in Chinese companies
  • Tracking Israel's war in Lebanon, in maps
  • How central banks are moving into e-money
  • Autherine Lucy was an unlikely pioneer
  • Mexico's gangs are becoming criminal conglomerates
  • Edna O'Brien's books scandalised Ireland
  • The French government's survival is now in Socialist hands
  • Canada has adopted assisted dying faster than anywhere on Earth
  • Ukraine's counter-offensive is speeding up
  • Relations between Japan and South Korea are blossoming
  • Meet the incels and anti-feminists of Asia
  • Poem: 'Live and in Color'
  • Why the Omicron variant is not a punishment for vaccine inequity
  • Abdulrazak Gurnah wins the Nobel prize in literature for 2021
  • Google wants a piece of Microsoft's cyber-security business
  • Jovenel Moïse's widow is accused of being party to his murder
  • America's Gen Z has got religion
  • Power restored to more than half of Puerto Rico after island-wide blackout
  • Esther Bejarano died on July 10th
  • Britain's capital markets are waging a war on paper
  • Guatemala is grappling with a globetrotting Jewish "cult"
  • Astronomers have found a cave on the moon
  • Donald Trump's first 100 days
  • American veterans now receive absurdly generous benefits
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Peter Thiel's Spy Company Gets Into Bed With ICE as Trump Says He'll Deport U.S. Citizens
  • America's carmakers win a tariff reprieve, but still face a tricky dilemma
  • Australia needs to rethink its approach to its Pacific island neighbours
  • Why the world needs negative emissions
  • Mass-Assigner - Simple Tool Made To Probe For Mass Assignment Vulnerability Through JSON Field Modification In HTTP Requests
  • No room left for negotiation with Canada and Mexico on tariffs, says Trump – video
  • New fronts are opening in the war against malaria
  • Narendra Modi needs to win over low-income Indians
  • Investors should not fear a stockmarket crash
  • Ratan Tata, a consequential and beloved figure in Indian business
  • Do You Have Your Cootie Shot?
  • Time for a Civic Uprising
  • A new way to recycle plastic is here
  • How an amateur football league in China took off
  • Even priests need the free market
  • Meloni Meets With Trump, With Tariffs on the Agenda
  • What should companies do to keep bosses safe?
  • Clean energy's next trillion-dollar business
  • Microbiome treatments are taking off
  • One Man's Quest to Reforest the Rio Grande Valley
  • What will Prabowo Subianto's foreign policy look like?
  • 6 Best Foam Roller Workouts to Ease Soreness and Improve Circulation
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Ancient, damaged Roman scrolls have been deciphered using AI
  • Can people be persuaded not to believe disinformation?
  • How Cuba competes with Uncle Sam in the Caribbean islands
  • Peacock Promo Code and Coupons: 16% Off April 2025
  • American long-range missiles are coming back to Europe
  • Can António Costa make a success of the world's hardest political gig?
  • Japan's sleepy companies still need more reform
  • Years of growth forged prosaic politics. Now Panamanians are fed up
  • Shein and Temu are in Donald Trump's cross-hairs
  • The Hollywood Foreign Press Association does penance for its sins
  • South Africa's future is in the hands of a divided ANC
  • How covid-19 spurred governments to snoop on sewage
  • Why AI needs to learn new languages
  • Like people, elephants call each other by name
  • Suffering from the Bhopal disaster in India continues, 40 years on
  • Why are cities in Latin America getting more expensive?
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The weekly cartoon
  • This week's covers
  • A short history of Russia and Ukraine
  • Trump's tariff pause brings investors relief—but worries remain
  • Is Ukraine's counter-offensive over?
  • An outrage that even China's supine media has called out
  • The slow death of a Labour buzzword
  • China's deep-water fishing fleet is the world's most rapacious
  • Peru's crazy drivers offer a data deluge for self-driving cars
  • What do Syria's other rebels want now?
  • A female comedian has Chinese men up in arms
  • US House of Representatives elections: live results
  • The strategic reverberations of the AUKUS deal will be big and lasting
  • Wikipedia is 20, and its reputation has never been higher
  • Why economic warfare nearly always misses its target
  • Checks and Balance newsletter: J.D. Vance and the politics of storytelling
  • Latin America's most powerful new gang built a human-trafficking empire
  • China's economy is suffering from long covid
  • Turkey and Central Asia are riding together again
  • Acknowledgments
  • How the financial system would respond to a superpower war
  • Investors panicked after Mexico's election. Were they right?
  • America's bet on industrial policy starts to pay off for semiconductors
  • BYOSI - Evade EDR's The Simple Way, By Not Touching Any Of The API's They Hook
  • RFK junior is half right about American health care
  • Xi Jinping wants China to have better toilets
  • Xi Jinping and China face another tough year
  • Italy's new government needs to make deep economic reforms
  • Miners Are Pulling Valuable Metals from the Seafloor, and Almost No One Knows about It
  • There's AI Inside Windows Paint and Notepad Now. Here's How to Use It
  • Are Canadian cities better than America's?
  • Meloni says Trump to visit Rome after Washington talks over tariffs
  • Your Amazon Alexa Can Now Ride Shotgun With You as the Echo Auto Drops to an All-Time Low
  • Why America and Europe fret about China turning inwards
  • The early days of the Trump administration, as viewed from China
  • Narendra Modi and Xi Jinping meet and resolve a border row
  • Latin America's new hard right: Bukele, Milei, Kast and Bolsonaro
  • The world needs a proper investigation into how covid-19 started
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Britain's boom in public inquiries into past disasters
  • Cambridge yimbies
  • Andrés Manuel López Obrador puts his stamp on Mexico's schools
  • South Korea's unrepentant president is on the brink
  • Ukraine's war has created millions of broken families
  • Donald Trump deploys new tactics to manage the media
  • Ángeles Flórez Peón, "Maricuela", made sure Spain did not forget its history
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Cuba is out of supplies and out of ideas
  • The weekly cartoon
  • Can Progressives learn to make progress again?
  • Why oil supply shocks are not like the 1970s any more
  • Economic and financial indicators
  • What a $600m wedding says about India's attitude to wealth
  • Luigi Mangione's manifesto reveals his hatred of insurance companies
  • New firefighting tech is being trialled in Sardinia's ancient forests
  • China suffers eruptions from its simmering discontents
  • West African booze is becoming a luxury product
  • China's "demographic dividend" appears to be a myth
  • A common food dye can make skin transparent
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Why migration is in such a mess once more
  • Latin America is under authoritarian threat
  • RISC Architecture Really Did Change Everything
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • A global recession is not in prospect
  • The weekly cartoon
  • Will Donald Trump's bros turn out?
  • A Wall Street state of mind has captured America
  • Africa's coups are part of a far bigger crisis
  • Election lawsuits are flooding America's courts
  • Pity the superstar fashion designer
  • Why India should create dozens of new states
  • America First may be a boon for Walmart's Mexican business
  • Argentina could get its first libertarian president
  • Telegram-Checker - A Python Tool For Checking Telegram Accounts Via Phone Numbers Or Usernames
  • Obituary: Shuping Wang died on September 21st
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The killing of a Russian general shows Ukraine's spies remain lethal
  • When central banks issue digital money
  • Cheap solar power is sending electrical grids into a death spiral
  • Xi Jinping plays social engineer
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Joe Biden wound up serving Donald Trump
  • Can Israel's economy survive an all-out war with Hizbullah?
  • AI will not fix Apple's sluggish iPhone sales any time soon
  • Li Qiang and China look to make up with Australia
  • What happens when it is too hot to work?
  • Cronyism is a problem. But not always an economic one
  • Yoon Suk Yeol, South Korea's disgraced president, is ousted
  • AI can predict tipping points before they happen
  • The speech police are coming for social media
  • Europe has lots of lithium, but struggles to get it out of the ground
  • Women warriors and the war on woke
  • Chile is still haunted by the coup in September 1973
  • Telegram-Story-Scraper - A Python Script That Allows You To Automatically Scrape And Download Stories From Your Telegram Friends
  • The deficiencies of the Latin American state loom large
  • For a second time Chileans reject a new constitution. Now what?
  • Canada's jade mines boomed on Chinese demand. Now that's over
  • Climate change and the next administration
  • Yuan Longping died on May 22nd
  • Two groups are least happy about Labour's budget
  • The states that will decide America's next president
  • Xi Jinping looks abroad for confidence
  • Why India isn't winning the contest with China
  • Why Britain has so far dodged Donald Trump's tariffs
  • The vice-presidential debate was surprisingly cordial
  • Donald Trump is attacking what made American universities great
  • 'The goal of a protest song is to make people feel strong and alive': Ani DiFranco on Broadway, Fugazi and 30 years of activism
  • France seeks a new government
  • Elon Musk's Starship makes a test flight without exploding
  • Macau, China's sin city, wants to be more like Las Vegas
  • Russian inflation is too high. Does that matter?
  • Why are VPNs getting slower in China?
  • India's YouTubers take on Narendra Modi
  • Michael Kovrig, former hostage of the Chinese state
  • An American sovereign-wealth fund is a risky idea
  • The American economy has left other rich countries in the dust
  • Digital twins are making companies more efficient
  • The hard-right Vox party is winning over Spain's youth
  • What the war in Ukraine means for Asia
  • Will China's "green Great Wall" save it from encroaching sands?
  • How Russia has revived NATO
  • South American governments are trying to curb illegal fishing
  • Mistral, Europe's biggest AI startup, is blowing hot
  • The world's least liveable cities are starting to improve
  • The return of Trumponomics excites markets but frightens the world
  • Building an African multinational
  • Canadians are taking dramatic steps to avoid more ruinous firestorms
  • Solanke keeps cool from spot to send Spurs through to Europa League semi-finals
  • Israel's invasion of Lebanon may bolster support for Hizbullah
  • Barbarians on the porch
  • Even before covid-19, nightclubs were struggling
  • Obituary: Judith Krantz died on June 22nd
  • The man picked as defence secretary wants to purge the Pentagon
  • Canada's Conservatives are crushing Justin Trudeau
  • Why some whales can smell in stereo
  • Going green could bring huge benefits for India's economy
  • China and Australia are beefing up their Pacific policing
  • Vera Lynn died on June 18th
  • The genocide case Israel faces is more about politics than the law
  • A Chinese opera star's ode to Russia—from a Ukrainian bomb site
  • The tech wars are about to enter a fiery new phase
  • Musk Inc is under serious threat
  • Germany's mind-bending electoral maths
  • Andrés Manuel López Obrador's mañaneras boost his presidency
  • Politics
  • Ian Hamilton masterminded one of the most daring heists of the last century
  • Will the trouble ever end for Volkswagen and its rivals?
  • How covid contributed to a crisis of trust in America
  • Why America's tech giants have got bigger and stronger
  • Trump Media urges regulators to investigate hedge fund's vast bet against stock
  • Peter Magyar is reinvigorating Hungary's struggling opposition
  • Corruption is surging across Latin America
  • Economic and financial indicators
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Israel responds to Iran's barrage with a symbolic strike
  • Vital election races in Wisconsin are awfully close
  • America has never had state media like it does today
  • Korea Zinc Shares Rally After Adopting New Investor Protection Rules
  • A new study finds that 47,000 Russian combatants have died in Ukraine
  • Business
  • Re-arm, reassure and spend big: how the Asia Pacific is responding to a new era under Trump
  • Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for April 18, #677
  • Is your rent ever going to fall?
  • Introducing El Boletín, our new weekly newsletter on Latin America
  • Howard Lutnick, Donald Trump's pick for commerce secretary
  • The Middle East's bizarre waiting game: ceasefire or Armageddon?
  • The best films of 2021
  • Politics
  • New technology can keep whales safe from speeding ships
  • The many prices of carbon dioxide
  • Brother Andrew secretly carried Bibles behind the Iron Curtain
  • The world's next country?
  • Our Carrie Bradshaw index: Where Americans can afford to live solo
  • Donald Shoup knew how to get cities going
  • When party propaganda falls flat
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  • Blighty newsletter: Three takeaways from an interview with Sir Keir Starmer
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  • India's startups pray for a Hindu super-app
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  • Obituary: Robert McClelland died on September 10th
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  • Is higher inequality the price America pays for faster growth?
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  • "The Harder They Fall" offers a new take on the Old West
  • Small Language Models Are the New Rage, Researchers Say
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  • The Narrow Road to the Deep North review – Jacob Elordi's fine turn in complex, confronting war drama
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  • Britain halves its foreign-aid budget
  • The 35 Best Shows on Apple TV+ Right Now (April 2025)
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  • Ethiopia is in the midst of a kidnapping epidemic
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  • Sudan's spiralling war, in maps
  • China is tightening its grip on the world's minerals
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  • The business of businesses is climate-change adaptation
  • A powerful Irish film about the Great Famine reaches British cinemas
  • Lebanon faces its worst crisis since the end of the civil war
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  • China is stoking anger over Japan's release of nuclear wastewater
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  • The thing about Europe: it's the actual land of the free now
  • Nubank has conquered Brazil. Now it is expanding overseas
  • Ecuador chooses a leader amid murder, blackouts and stagnation
  • Is it time for "ecocide" to become an international crime?
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  • What Is Cyberwar? The Complete WIRED Guide
  • America's election and Israel's wars reach a crescendo—together
  • Israel's hardliners reckon Gaza's chaos shows they must control it
  • Politics
  • Noise-dampening tech could make ships less disruptive to marine life
  • Blighty newsletter: Labour's 200-day shock doctrine
  • Why Chinese banks are now vanishing
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Business
  • China Secretly (and Weirdly) Admits It Hacked US Infrastructure
  • Worries of a Soviet-style collapse keep Xi Jinping up at night
  • Moldova's pro-EU president has won re-election
  • Rosemary Smith set out to prove that women drivers could do as well as men
  • Donald Trump also won a reprieve from justice
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  • Lady Gaga, Green Day and Enhypen: 2025 Coachella festival – in pictures
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  • Blighty newsletter: Labour is demolishing the Tories' pet projects
  • What space, submarines and polar research teach about teamwork
  • Ukraine fears being cut out of talks between America and Russia
  • How the Democrats wandered away from America's workers
  • China's stimulus falls short, as a showdown with Trump looms
  • Donald Trump wants to deport foreign students merely for what they say
  • As his popularity fades Volodymyr Zelensky culls his cabinet
  • Santiago Peña, a former economist, is Paraguay's next president
  • This week's cover
  • Alcohol-free drinks are becoming big business
  • The global tourism boom is shifting to Asia
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Will India's new government turbocharge the fight against poverty?
  • Rachel Reeves is not alone in inflating her résumé
  • Obituary: Toni Morrison died on August 5th
  • Big law's capitulation to Donald Trump may be bad for business
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  • British rebellion against Roman legions caused by drought, research finds
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  • British "equal value" lawsuits have become an absurd denial of markets
  • South Korea's constitutional court strikes down prime minister Han's impeachment – video
  • "Homeland economics" will make the world poorer
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  • Germany's conservatives choose the country's probable next leader
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  • Fernando Botero became famous for his over-size people and animals
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  • Select Sonos refurbished gear is 25 percent off through April 22
  • Xi Jinping's paranoia is making China isolated and insular
  • Want even tinier chips? Use a particle accelerator
  • India wields cricket as a geopolitical tool against Pakistan
  • Taiwanese politics faces a crucial election in early 2024
  • American inflation looks increasingly worrying
  • China's low-fertility trap
  • What Trump's Tariffs Mean for Tech—and You
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  • The tricky politics of choosing Oxford's next chancellor
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  • Should Britons' health be considered a national asset?
  • Protests threaten Georgia's Kremlin-friendly government
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  • GiveDirectly does what it says on the tin
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  • The disappearance of China's defence minister raises big questions
  • Maggie Smith, the dowager countess of comic timing
  • Our new "mega-poll" gives Labour an expected majority of 280 seats
  • The pandemic will spur the worldwide growth of private tutoring
  • Elon Musk has been pushed out of the Treasury
  • Two elections will attract national interest
  • Britain has agreed to cede the Chagos Islands to Mauritius
  • Swami Agnivesh died on September 11th
  • One of the Middle East's oldest conflicts has entered a new era
  • Donald Trump goes to war with his employees
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  • Why You Shouldn't Ignore Loud Snoring in Kids
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Vietnam's new ruler: hardman, capitalist, hedonist
  • China's revealing struggle with childhood myopia
  • Politics
  • Amid the bombs, Ukrainians rediscover the beach
  • China is leading the challenge to incumbent carmakers
  • Donald Trump's eye-popping plan to make Gaza American
  • Who could replace Narendra Modi?
  • Fury erupts in China over a food-safety scandal
  • The trade war may reverse Hong Kong's commercial decline
  • PwC needs to rethink its global governance
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  • Europe's armsmakers have ramped up capacity
  • For Hannah Pick-Goslar, paths crossed in an extraordinary way
  • Max Verstappen insists he is happy at Red Bull despite concern over car
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  • Willie Mays's philosophy was simple: They throw the ball, I hit the ball
  • The weekly cartoon
  • Africa is undergoing social change without economic transformation
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  • Lai Ching-te aims to strengthen Taiwan but maintain the status quo
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  • OpenAI's latest model will change the economics of software
  • Friedrich Merz, Germany's chancellor-in-waiting?
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  • Politics
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  • Colombia's president had a bold peace plan. It is not working
  • State capture is a growing threat. Reversing it is hard
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  • Russian exiles are making a mark in the Caucasus and Central Asia
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  • The weekly cartoon
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  • Xi Jinping worries that China's troops are not ready to fight
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  • Desmond Tutu believed that truth was the best weapon
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  • Why China is awash in unwanted milk
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  • Tracking the Ukraine war: where is the latest fighting?
  • Norway's weak currency presents a mystery
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  • Cinderella partying: why young women no longer dance until dawn
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  • Traute Lafrenz showed that resistance to the Nazis was possible
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The strong dollar is hurting exports from Latin America
  • Abortion becomes more common in some US states that outlawed it
  • Xi Jinping builds a 21st-century police state
  • Carmen Callil changed British reading habits for ever
  • Why Agnes Chow fled Hong Kong and isn't likely to return
  • Barnes & Noble, a bookstore, is back in the business of selling books
  • Ships crash in the North Sea
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  • China's new GDP figures may restore faith in its economy
  • What the rise of bubble tea says about British high streets
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  • Douglas Lenat trained computers to think the old-fashioned way
  • Chadwick Boseman died on August 28th
  • Mike Waltz wants America to focus on the threat from China
  • A new book celebrates Annie Leibovitz's fashion photography
  • Trump unmasks American selfishness, say cynics
  • The Great Barrier Reef is seeing unprecedented coral bleaching
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • In a dictator's palace, Syrians debate a new constitution
  • What a takeover offer for 7-Eleven says about business in Japan
  • Politics
  • Even disillusioned young Indian voters favour Narendra Modi
  • Why investors should still avoid Chinese stocks
  • Giorgia Meloni whispers soothing words to Trump on 'western nationalism'
  • Charting Ukraine's soaring exports to the EU
  • Are bosses right to insist that workers return to the office?
  • Hypochlorous Acid Is a Natural Disinfectant for Surfaces and Skin
  • How British-Nigerians quietly made their way to the top
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  • American restrictions on hitting Russia are hurting Ukraine
  • You Can Play the New Game in 'Black Mirror'—and It's an Adorable Nightmare
  • Javier Milei will be Argentina's first libertarian president
  • Why China and India are watching the Dalai Lama closely
  • Conflict is remaking the Middle East's economic order
  • Financial markets flail in the face of America's tariffs
  • Blighty newsletter: Britain's advantage in the AI race
  • Western armies are learning a lot from the war in Ukraine
  • Ukrainian scientists are studying downed Russian missiles
  • Why young men and women are drifting apart
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • How worrying is the weakening dollar?
  • Will Giorgia Meloni turn out to be Europe's Trump card?
  • This week's covers
  • How safe is your DNA in a bankruptcy?
  • When aliens call, look to the 'little green swan' trade
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  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • England's school reforms are earning fans abroad
  • Recteq debuts the X-Fire Pro dual-mode pellet grill that can sear at 1,250 degrees
  • China's government is badgering women to have babies
  • Abiy Ahmed's agricultural revolution is too good to be true
  • Eleanor Coppola recorded how a cinematic triumph almost came unstuck
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  • How hospitals inflate America's giant health-care bill
  • People are splurging like never before on their pets
  • The Xi-Putin partnership is not a marriage of convenience
  • Business
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • AI could accelerate scientific fraud as well as progress
  • How to get hired by Donald Trump
  • Once dominant, Germany is now desperate
  • Business
  • Business
  • Are Britain's rioters representative of views on immigration?
  • Charles McGee faced adversity at home as much as abroad
  • After a chaotic scramble, Congress strikes a budget deal
  • About 15% of world's cropland polluted with toxic metals, say researchers
  • How to pay for the poor world to go green
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Why have Britain's bond yields jumped sharply?
  • Australia joins the industrial arms race
  • Why chocolate is becoming much more expensive
  • What is the future of British hospitals?
  • The Capitol riot is a godsend for America's critics
  • BP is underperforming and under pressure
  • Farewell, Don Draper: AI is coming for advertising
  • Taiwan, the world's chipmaker, faces an energy crunch
  • Why Islamists in the Arab world speak the language of free markets
  • Burberry Sees Positive Signs as Turnaround Plan Continues
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  • A growing industry is emerging to make philanthropy simpler
  • Hell is other people's currencies
  • A second human case of bird flu in America is raising alarm
  • China's markets take a fresh beating
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  • Panama symbolises the Sino-American struggle for influence
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  • Tariffs will send costs soaring. Which firms will raise prices?
  • Self-Driving Cars: The Complete Guide
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  • Underwater Argonauts! The deep-sea scientists logging Med pollution – in pictures
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  • Exit polls point to a crushing victory for Narendra Modi
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Business
  • KAL's cartoon
  • The surprising stagnation of Asia's middle classes
  • Obituary: Robert Mugabe died on September 6th
  • Hurricane Milton exposes the dangers of Florida's development boom
  • Romania is now a magnet for the world's medical students
  • Inside the chaos machine of British politics
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  • A leader of Congo's rebels vows to fight on
  • Matthew Perry changed the way America spoke
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  • Turkey has a newly confrontational foreign policy
  • KAL's cartoon
  • What is Virtual Reality (VR)? The Complete WIRED Guide
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  • Mimi Reinhard typed up Schindler's list
  • The Mounties take on Modi. Who will win?
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  • The mafia's latest bonanza: salmon heists
  • French election tracker: Marine Le Pen's hard-right falters
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  • Ukrainian troops celebrate a grim Christmas in Kursk
  • Drones spotted on America's east coast highlight a bigger problem
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  • The Delirious, Violent, Impossible True Story of the Zizians
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  • The pandemic hit pupils hardest in America's Democrat-leaning states
  • Football clubs are making more money than ever. Players not so much
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  • Could digital-payments systems help unseat the dollar?
  • How sports gambling became ubiquitous
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  • Checks and Balance newsletter: Donald Trump's pick-and-choose federalism
  • Nicaragua shows how poor countries can reduce domestic violence
  • Chinese officials are encouraging office workers not to work so hard
  • Ukraine needs the West's help. But our polling shows a worrying trend
  • Why China's rulers fear Genghis Khan
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  • Guatemala's indigenous people grow impatient with their champion
  • Dungeons & Dragons' Next Update Lets Players Share Custom Work
  • India has undermined a popular myth about development
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  • Britain's submarines are at sea for too long—or not at all
  • How China thrives in a world of turmoil
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  • Nikolai Antoshkin died on January 17th
  • Failure to prepare for climate change is costing Honduras dear
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Elias Khoury encapsulated the confusions of the Middle East
  • NATO is agonising over whether to let Ukraine join
  • The obstacles faced by Turkey's winemakers
  • Reassessing Obama's biggest mistake
  • China's cynicism offensive in Asia
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Business
  • Recep Tayyip Erdogan's relatives are becoming increasingly powerful
  • The Subjective Charms of Objective-C
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  • Introducing Analysing Africa, our latest newsletter
  • A Prague-Berlin train loses its old-world dining cars
  • Andriy Pilshchykov pleaded for F-16s to be sent to Ukraine
  • Business
  • How deep is Britain's fiscal "black hole"?
  • Kishida Fumio, Japan's prime minister, stands down
  • How to survive a superpower split
  • A changed world
  • Brass Typhoon: The Chinese Hacking Group Lurking in the Shadows
  • Why people over the age of 55 are the new problem generation
  • How Hermès defied the luxury slump
  • SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket lifts off on mission to replace two stuck Nasa astronauts – video report
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The EV trade war between China and the West heats up
  • Are American children's books getting more "woke"?
  • What's next for British Steel? – Politics Weekly UK
  • Betty Webb never spoke about her work, until she had to
  • Will China dominate the world of semiconductors?
  • Israel's limited missile strike on Iran may be the start of a wider assault
  • Israel has these four options for attacking Iran
  • KAL's cartoon
  • The War Room newsletter: "Be quiet, small man"—diplomacy, Musk style
  • No one gains from American tariffs on cars from Mexico and Canada
  • Iran's new leaders stand at a nuclear precipice
  • We need to talk about Europe's Kevins
  • Britons brace themselves for more floods
  • Why investors' "Trump trade" might be flawed
  • Obituary: Harold Bloom died on October 14th
  • Donald Trump is setting new boundaries for political speech
  • Will it be Ukraine today, Taiwan tomorrow?
  • The taboos around sexual health are weakening
  • The high cost of schools closed by covid
  • The case against "Russia's Mark Zuckerberg" will have lasting effects
  • France heads to the polls in a critical parliamentary vote
  • 13 Best Beauty Box Subscriptions, Tested and Reviewed (2025)
  • The death of the president changes the power dynamic in Iran
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  • Bowel cancer is rising among young people
  • The irrelevance of Mercosur
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  • Myanmar's junta is losing ever more ground
  • Shabana Mahmood, Britain's new Lord Chancellor
  • A New Bee Crisis Could Make Your Food Scarce and Expensive
  • Why everyone should think like a lawyer
  • A new "quartet of chaos" threatens America
  • Software is now as important as hardware in cars
  • A TV dramatisation of Mussolini's life inflames Italy
  • Milan Kundera believed that truth lay in endless questioning
  • Xi Jinping is struggling to stamp out graft in the PLA
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Violence against women is a scourge on poor countries
  • War is not the only reason some Muslims are ditching the Democrats
  • The biography of a British recycling bag
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  • Beware, global jihadists are back on the march
  • American politics prompt some Chinese to explore historical taboos
  • The urgent need to reform political systems
  • Peter Brook saw acting as an uncompromising search for truth
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  • Should you be nice at work?
  • Checks and Balance newsletter: The view as "Liberation Day" unfolded
  • Can Georgia's shadowy despot survive?
  • Some good news about America's fertility problem
  • Britain's oil and gas industry faces an uncertain future
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  • Hong Kong's property slump may be terminal
  • Populism meets reality in Senegal
  • Will Donald Trump now pardon the January 6th rioters?
  • Singapore's foreign admirers see only the stuff they like
  • China's relationship with Africa is growing murkier
  • Can Israel's mighty tech industry withstand a wider war?
  • Should all knives with pointed ends be banned?
  • Somaliland's camel herders are milking it
  • Russia plays for time in Ukraine ceasefire talks
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
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  • A year on from the white-paper protests, China looks much different
  • A rise in antisemitism puts Europe's liberal values to the test
  • If I Don't Use AI, Will My Grandkids Still Think I'm Cool?
  • China is trying to boost domestic tourism
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  • A day of drama in the Bundestag
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  • Who are the main contenders to be Iran's next president?
  • Venezuela's Nicolás Maduro looks set to take the throne
  • Huge anti-Russian protests in Tbilisi echo Ukraine's Maidan
  • Isabel Crook devoted her long life to making a new China
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  • Roxie, one of China's few lesbian bars, closes its doors
  • How India's imports of Russian oil have lubricated global markets
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  • Trump Cuts Should Trigger Loud Protests from Scientific Societies
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  • Harris's and Trump's economic plans both promise utopia
  • After 15 months of hell, Israel and Hamas sign a ceasefire deal
  • Guatemala's new president promises a better sort of government
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  • Business
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  • What does Xi Jinping want from Vladimir Putin?
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  • The Kremlin is close to crushing Pokrovsk, a vital Ukrainian town
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  • Xi Jinping wants to stifle thinking at a top Chinese think-tank
  • Austria could soon have a first far-right leader since 1945
  • Francisco Lopera's travels in the Andes began to solve a great mystery
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  • Politics hamper China's efforts to stimulate the economy
  • GameSir G7 SE Controller Review: Hall Effect for Less
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  • The travails and bold aims of the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi
  • Astronomers Report Increased Possibility of Life on Distant K2-18b Planet
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  • Business
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  • Do rising methane levels herald a climate feedback loop?
  • Tim Walz is the most popular candidate on either ticket
  • Checks and Balance newsletter: The journalist's dilemma of covering Trump
  • Footage shows coral bleaching at Western Australia's Ningaloo Reef – video
  • Stephen Sondheim wanted to explore a new world every time
  • Many Britons are waiting 12 hours at A&E
  • The Netherlands' new hard-right government is a mess
  • Donald Trump shoots his own global mouthpiece
  • Must Leeds always lose?
  • Economic data, markets and commodities
  • Brazil's foreign policy is hyperactive, ambitious and naive
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  • Bibles, bullets and beef: Amazon cowboy culture at odds with Brazil's climate goals
  • Lula's gaffes are dulling Brazil's G20 shine
  • Physics reveals the best design for a badminton arena
  • Abir Mukherjee adds a twist to his winning crime formula
  • China and America are racing to develop the best AI. But who is ahead in using it?
  • The Liberal Party's polling surge is Canada's largest ever
  • This Russian Tech Bro Helped Steal $93 Million and Landed in US Prison. Then Putin Called
  • Claudia Sheinbaum's landslide victory is a danger for Mexico
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Mozambique's opposition leader flies home into chaos
  • As the death penalty becomes less common, life imprisonment becomes more so
  • How India can compete in labour-intensive manufacturing
  • The Economist's science and technology internship
  • This week's covers
  • Henry ("Hank") Aaron died on January 22nd
  • Hollywood enters a frugal new era
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  • Donald Trump is preparing an assault on America's immigration system
  • Why Britain has fallen behind on road safety
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  • Nvidia is in danger of losing its monopoly-like margins
  • When treating snakebites, American hospitals turn to zoos
  • Vast satellite constellations are alarming astronomers
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  • Did sexism propel Donald Trump to power?
  • America's border crisis in ten charts
  • Anti-Trump protests get under way across the US – video
  • American politicians are the oldest in the rich world
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  • As Trump jettisons its staff, HUD puts its D.C. headquarters up for sale
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  • Colombia's first avowedly left-wing president is mired in scandal
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  • Checks and Balance newsletter: Which past is MAGA promising to revive?
  • Britain's vote on assisted dying is just the beginning
  • Trump's brutal tariffs far outstrip any he has imposed before
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  • An ageing country shows others how to manage
  • Florida draft law mandating encryption backdoors for social media accounts billed 'dangerous and dumb'
  • As usual, the medal tally at the Olympic games was lopsided
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  • The pope and Italy's prime minister tussle over Donald Trump
  • Javier Milei finally lugs key reforms through Argentina's Senate
  • Indonesia's shakedown of Apple comes to an end
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  • 2024 is a giant test of nerves for democracy
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  • Winston Churchill's urinal shows Britain's hang-up with heritage
  • Why South Africa's army is floundering in Congo
  • Xi Jinping really is unshakeably committed to the private sector
  • Checks and Balance newsletter: Elon Musk's low opinion of the Democrats—and America
  • Israel is keeping open the nuclear option
  • The disease that most afflicts England's National Health Service
  • When will remote workers see their pay cut?
  • Climate change is harder on less educated people
  • The excitement of 70,000 Swifties can shake the Earth
  • EU Conditionally Approves International Paper's $7.16 Billion DS Smith Buy
  • These countries could lure manufacturing away from China
  • Despite the rally, Apple still faces a trade-war nightmare
  • The Wedding Banquet review – muddled gay comedy remake plays it too straight
  • Britain's new government may cut the number of Channel crossings
  • How scientists capture a polar bear – video
  • Where will be the next electric-vehicle superpower?
  • Leon Fleisher died on August 2nd
  • Crypto cowboys have found paradise in Paraguay
  • Expensive energy may have killed more Europeans than covid-19 last winter
  • This week's covers
  • Is the world economy in a debt trap?
  • Chinese cars are taking over the global south
  • Quincy Jones ruled popular music for half a century
  • Why "The Rest Is Politics", a British podcast, is a hit
  • Governments are bigger than ever. They are also more useless
  • Researchers are figuring out how large language models work
  • A health-care CEO is murdered in Manhattan
  • Riots over a dead Muslim ruler put Narendra Modi in a tight spot
  • 'No fish, no money, no food': Colombia's stilt people fight to save their wetlands
  • Smishing Triad: The Scam Group Stealing the World's Riches
  • Why being wrong is good for you
  • Donald Trump's plan for American carmaking is full of potholes
  • Police use of facial recognition in Britain is spreading
  • Guatemala's election produces a pleasant surprise
  • In preparing for disasters, museums face tough choices
  • Thousands of Urine and Tissue Samples Are in Danger of Rotting After Staff Cuts at a CDC Laboratory
  • Europe's streets are alive with the sound of protests
  • Will Israel retaliate against Iran, or hold back?
  • The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has cut 90 percent of its employees
  • What America's presidential election means for world trade
  • Could the Israel-Hamas war trigger unrest across the Arab world?
  • The best live TV streaming services to cut cable in 2025
  • Trump should try to end, not manage, the Middle East's oldest conflicts
  • Polarisation by education is remaking American politics
  • These are the most liveable cities in Europe
  • Why do Australians live so long?
  • Humidifiers vs Dehumidifiers vs Purifiers: Which One Do I Actually Need?
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Over a million Paraguayans disappear in the latest census
  • Guatemala's elite may try to scupper the presidential election
  • Politics
  • Diego Maradona died on November 25th
  • Athletics pays less than other sports. Michael Johnson wants to change that
  • Australia is trying to ruck China in Papua New Guinea
  • How the mad, bad Maduro regime clings to power
  • How independent is India's Supreme Court?
  • How many Ukrainian soldiers have died?
  • The sun begins to set on Olaf Scholz's chancellorship
  • Why global bond markets are convulsing
  • The Economist's glass-ceiling index
  • Hurricane Milton inundates Florida
  • Britain's government plans drastic changes to local democracy
  • Politics
  • China's wealthy elite rigs its university arms race
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • At last, Wall Street has something to cheer
  • Suspected Sabotage of Deep-Sea Cable Triggers First NATO-Led Response
  • China's last boomtowns show rapid growth is still possible
  • Chinese firms are expanding in South-East Asia
  • Gustavo Petro, Colombia's left-wing president, is floundering
  • How China uses Russia to chew up the UN
  • Are You Lonely? Adopt a New Family on Facebook Today
  • Obituary: Frenchy Cannoli, who treated hashish like fine wine
  • Can Japan's toilet technology crack global markets?
  • Which European should face off against Trump and Putin?
  • Amnon Weinstein turned grief into music again
  • America's glorious economy should help Kamala Harris
  • Dan Osborn shows some Democratic ideas can outperform the party
  • Shirley Chisholm is still winning
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  • Will El Mayo's arrest slow the spread of fentanyl?
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  • What role might Trump give Robert F. Kennedy junior?
  • Taiwan is trying to learn from the wars in Gaza and Ukraine
  • Blighty newsletter: Labour's twin pivots
  • Is British justice too secretive?
  • The weekly cartoon
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  • I'm Googley-Eyed for the Walton Goggins Goggle Glasses
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  • Global temperatures have broken records three times in a week
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  • Press freedom is stifled in Guatemala ahead of an election
  • Which will grow faster: India or Indonesia?
  • Even Netflix Can't Escape the Black Mirror Treatment
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  • Inside Google's Two-Year Frenzy to Catch Up With OpenAI
  • What is a 'criminal' immigrant? The word is an American rhetorical trap | Jonathan Ben-Menachem
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  • Politics
  • China wants to be the leader of the global south
  • Hundreds of Video Game Workers Join New Union as Trump Attacks Labor Rights
  • The study of ancient DNA is helping to solve modern crimes
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  • Instead of luxury condos, Gaza faces a resumption of war
  • Germany's urgent need for greater public investment
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  • India's Faustian pact with Russia is strengthening
  • Google illegally monopolized online advertising markets, US judge rules
  • Why China may be saving its bazooka for Donald Trump
  • What is the least liveable city in the world?
  • Two new books explore the impact of accelerating technology
  • Trump's Trade War With China Is Now Hurting Hollywood—and US Soft Power
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  • Vladimir Putin is dragging the world back to a bloodier time
  • Can anything get China's shoppers to spend?
  • The economics of American lotteries
  • Invading Taiwan would be a logistical minefield for China
  • How Chinese networks clean dirty money on a vast scale
  • Another attack on a Japanese local points to a big problem in China
  • Labour lacks good ideas for improving Britain's schools
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Billionaire space travel heads for a new frontier
  • China debates whether Trump is a revolutionary, or just rude
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
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  • How the Gulf's rulers want to harness the power of science
  • Ed Martin Has Completely Disqualified Himself
  • Why Canada should join the EU
  • How China views the popular uprising in Bangladesh
  • Inside Elon Musk's 'Digital Coup'
  • The judge who would rule the internet
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  • George Floyd was killed on May 25th
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  • ZOE, a British personal-nutrition app, is growing fast
  • Business
  • Songs, pandas and praise for Xi: how China courts young Taiwanese
  • Spain's flood poses far-reaching political questions
  • India is souping up its nuclear missiles
  • How to form good habits, and break bad ones: trick your brain
  • Singapore has achieved astounding economic success
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  • Why robots should take more inspiration from plants
  • Cronos: The New Dawn seems to smush Dead Space and Control together (in a good way)
  • Just how frothy is America's stockmarket?
  • Britain's aid budget is less generous than it looks
  • Sources and acknowledgments
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  • A dream deferred
  • Richard Fortey remade the world with fossils
  • The weekly cartoon
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  • Hamas Releases Four Female Israeli Soldiers Under Gaza Cease-Fire Deal
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • A narrow corridor in Gaza has become an obstacle to a ceasefire
  • How China sees Gaza
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  • Can Europe withstand four years of Trumpian assault?
  • Watch out Beijing, China's second-tier cities are on the up
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  • How to swerve Donald Trump's tariffs
  • Obituary: Paul Volcker died on December 8th
  • South-East Asia's stodgy conglomerates are holding it back
  • Will Hamas turn from war to politics?
  • KAL's cartoon
  • What next for Pakistan?
  • Britain's railways go from one extreme to another
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  • How China's public views Taiwan's elections
  • China is writing the world's technology rules
  • Politics
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  • Sir Paul McCartney's memoir aims to affirm his status as a writer
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  • How bosses should play politics: the cautionary tale of Elon Musk
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  • Israel's government is again trying to hobble its Supreme Court
  • Amid turmoil, a fearful Germany goes to the polls
  • Nike Workout Shoes With Compression and Heating Will Cost $900
  • A plan to reorganise local government in England runs into opposition
  • Homelessness rises to a record level in America
  • How Americans Are Surveilled During Protests
  • Samuel Paty was killed on October 16th
  • A new book explores the symbiosis of espionage and entertainment
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  • The weekly cartoon
  • After banning cinema for decades, Saudi Arabia is making movies
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  • Beautiful Shapes, a Magic Molecule and Elephant Bromances
  • India has quietly transformed its ports
  • The phenomenon of sexual strangulation in Britain
  • Loretta Lynn gave all struggling women a voice
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  • Jensen Huang says Moore's law is dead. Not quite yet
  • The weekly cartoon
  • China has chilling plans for governing Taiwan
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  • European governments struggle to stop rich people from fleeing
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • How much is Russia spending on its invasion of Ukraine?
  • Anne Innis Dagg devoted her life to the world's tallest creature
  • Los Angeles against the flames
  • What would Elon Musk do in government?
  • The science that built the AI revolution
  • Democratic control of the Senate depends on a seven-fingered farmer
  • A Google AI has discovered 2.2m materials unknown to science
  • China and Russia have chilling plans for the Arctic
  • America's jobs report is not as strong as it seems
  • Milkha Singh died on June 18th
  • The obesity capitals of the world
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • A religious revolution is under way in the Middle East
  • America's growing row over policies for transgender prisoners
  • After protests over a stolen election, the goons crack heads
  • KAL's cartoon
  • A new English version of "The Arabian Nights" is the first by a woman
  • Heard on the Street's Stock-Picking Series
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Karla Sofía Gascón to play psychiatrist who 'embodies God and the devil' in next film
  • Obituary: Qassem Suleimani was assassinated on January 3rd
  • Dining across the divide: 'We both feel the word woke has been overused'
  • China has embraced pets, but animal welfare is still a problem
  • The Mexican president's latest boondoggle officially opens
  • Retirement has become much longer across the rich world
  • Politics
  • This week's covers
  • What an arcane piece of aviation law says about Britain's government
  • China has freed an American pastor. Does it want anything in return?
  • From Coachella to Burning Man, festivals are having a bad year
  • How genes work
  • The success of "Succession" proves the virtue of hateful characters
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Will Prabowo Subianto cosy up to Donald Trump or to China?
  • The New York Public Library mines its archive of 56m objects
  • Clues to a possible cure for AIDS
  • Europe needs to spend more on defence, not just pretend to
  • The weekly cartoon
  • China makes love and war with Taiwan
  • Meet one of Britain's most influential, least understood people
  • Britain's unusual stance on Chinese electric vehicles
  • Donald Trump's cuts to USAID will hurt Asia, too
  • Disney will cut 7,000 jobs as it restructures its business
  • Wanted: new business, finance and economics interns
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Will the West betray or save anti-Putin protesters in Georgia?
  • India's unprecedented love-in with the Middle East
  • Under Joe Biden, America struggles to reassert itself in Africa
  • How bad are the current market jitters?
  • European firms are smaller and less profitable than American ones
  • Britain's government has only half a plan to improve infrastructure
  • A by-election loss puts Justin Trudeau on the ropes
  • A different way to measure the climate impact of food
  • Married Student-Loan Borrowers Dodged a Payment Increase: Here's What Happened
  • Has China reached peak emissions?
  • South Africa election poll tracker, results and guide to the parties
  • Workers love Donald Trump. Unions should fear him
  • Europe will need to pull all the levers to up its defence spending
  • Can an App Replace a Personal Trainer? I Tested Nearly a Dozen to Find Out
  • Germany's party system is coming under unprecedented strain
  • Israel hopes technology will help it fight in Hamas's tunnels
  • Repressive regimes are tightening their grip on their citizens abroad
  • How a Russia-linked mine may keep the ANC in power
  • Augmented reality offers a safer driving experience
  • South Sudan's economic crisis threatens its fragile peace
  • ExpressVPN two-year subscriptions are 61 percent off right now
  • Katharine Whitehorn and Mahinder Watsa died on January 8th and December 28th
  • India's surging food prices are a problem not just for India
  • Covid-19 has posed new challenges to the world's waste-pickers
  • Two charts assess Donald Trump's distinctive debate style
  • Tech Use Associated with Reduced Dementia Risk in Older Adults
  • It is getting easier for new entrants to make cars
  • China's greatest dumpling run
  • Was COP26 in Glasgow a success?
  • US and Ukraine sign memorandum of intent on minerals deal
  • Trump has faced down Republican dissidents in Congress
  • Checks and Balance newsletter: Trump is embracing a shift in Republican priorities
  • Iran's leader must choose how to fight his war with Israel
  • Comparing apples and oranges. And also small caged mammals
  • Britain's budget is heavy on spending but light on reform
  • Sex-Fantasy Chatbots Are Leaking a Constant Stream of Explicit Messages
  • The mystery surrounding China's missing defence minister
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Meta Removes Use of Apple Intelligence in Its Apps on iPhone
  • Covid-19 has imperilled the hammams of north Africa and the Levant
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The struggle to defeat Russian censorship and propaganda
  • Trump Says Colombia Will Accept Deportees, Ending Tariff Standoff
  • Talks over the Chagos Islands show the rising clout of Mauritius
  • U.S. Is Withdrawing Hundreds of Troops From Syria
  • Li Wenliang died on February 7th
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • US election forecast: who will control the House of Representatives?
  • The Economist is seeking three Audience fellows
  • A troubled road lies ahead for German carmakers
  • How the best British employers find and promote their staff
  • Nayib Bukele provides Donald Trump with a legal black hole
  • A new film is breaking box-office records in China
  • What could stop the Nvidia frenzy?
  • From hypersonic missiles to undersea drones, the PLA is making leaps
  • The biggest losers from Trumponomics
  • Producing fake information is getting easier
  • Politics
  • How Donald Trump could win the future
  • The long trend of falling corporate taxes is being reversed
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Why Larry Hogan's long-odds bid for a Senate seat matters
  • To understand the perils of AI, look to a Czech novel—from 1936
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  • How bad are video games for your grades?
  • Vast amounts of the world's shipping sails unseen
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  • Glenda Jackson left acting for politics—and then returned
  • Joe Biden's mixed legacy on Japan
  • Kurdish rebels in Turkey declare a ceasefire
  • "Trading Places" and the challenge of troubling art of the past
  • Costa Rica no longer seems a Latin American success story
  • Germany's fractious coalition falls apart—and how!
  • The Turkish opposition faces big obstacles to winning the election
  • Moon landing apart, Indian science punches far below its weight
  • How African churches are keeping the faith alive abroad
  • Faintings, blackouts and violence: Iraq's scorching emergency – in pictures
  • The hell of the sandwich lunch
  • A deadly new strain of mpox is raising alarm
  • The failing ANC is rejected by over half of South Africa
  • What would Robert F. Kennedy junior mean for American health?
  • Lula cosies up to Nicolás Maduro, Venezuela's autocrat
  • Business
  • As a rich-world covid-vaccine glut looms, poor countries miss out
  • Bangladesh's economic progress may have been hyped
  • Nairobi's reputation for crime is outdated
  • Despite flaws, South Africa's democracy is stronger than its neighbours'
  • China's presence in Latin America has expanded dramatically
  • Donald Trump's gas war is about to begin
  • Obituary: Jane Withers was the antidote to cuteness
  • China is beating America in the nuclear-energy race
  • Strava buys UK-based personalized running plan app Runna
  • China is educating engineers around the world
  • Why Donald Trump has moved ahead in our election forecast
  • Meet the world's new arms dealers
  • Jeju Air Crash Probe Focuses On Engine Damage After Bird Strike
  • A much-praised British scheme to help disabled workers is failing them
  • Will Europe return to Putin's gas?
  • Can Germany's economy stage an unexpected recovery?
  • In 2014, Florida State University Reeled From Another Shooting
  • India's electric-scooter champion goes public
  • SpaceX tests Starship, and prepares to face down Amazon
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Thousands of Urine and Tissue Samples Are in Danger of Rotting After Staff Cuts at a CDC Laboratory
  • Huge floods in Brazil's south are a harbinger of disasters to come
  • Pakistan is furious with the Afghan Taliban
  • How to charge more
  • China's economy is in for another rough year
  • It increasingly looks as if Lucy Letby's conviction was unsafe
  • America's pandemic savings are running out
  • Is Uruguay too stable for its own good?
  • Off the Charts newsletter: Why Python is the best coding language for data journalism
  • A new danger for Venezuela's autocrat
  • Why silver is the new gold
  • Five charts show how Trump won the election
  • Who was behind the arson attacks on railways before the Olympics?
  • The world's most unlikely safe haven
  • How the pandemic has upended the lives of working parents
  • The luxury industry is poised for a deal wave
  • Voters deliver a historic rebuke to Japan's ruling coalition
  • Governments are finding new ways to squash free expression online
  • Once a free-market pioneer, Sri Lanka takes a leap to the left
  • Floods in Nigeria's north-east are aggravating a humanitarian crisis
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The scary new map of the South China Sea
  • The PayPal Mafia is taking over America's government
  • China's Communist Party has co-opted ancient music
  • What's New This Tax Season That Can Save You Money
  • Pål Enger never quite knew why he had to steal "The Scream"
  • Crows Are Surprisingly Good at Geometry
  • Mark Zuckerberg says TikTok slowed Meta's growth
  • The fate of a ranting driver raises doubts about the "new" Uzbekistan
  • The US Supreme Court appears likely to uphold a medical ban affecting trans youth
  • Ukrainians are settling down in Britain. That creates a problem
  • If You Need to Escape a Wildfire in an EV, Here Is What to Know
  • Donald Trump is bad news for German business
  • DOGE comes to England's health service
  • An ancient rice bowl complicates the story of civilisation in India
  • On Independence Day Israel is ripping itself apart
  • Britain's budget watchdog has ruffled feathers in Westminster
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The fall of Syria's dictator
  • China wants to export education, too
  • A battle royal over deep-sea archaeology in the Caribbean
  • As covid-19 vaccines spread, so do underhand ways to get them
  • Anne Saxelby was a champion of artisan farmers and their wares
  • A new law targets India's third-biggest landowner: Allah
  • Panic rooms and private bunkers are all the rage in Germany
  • The bunkers on Beirut's golf course are in the crosshairs
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • NATO is drafting new plans to defend Europe
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Why Lula keeps meddling with Latin America's top oil company
  • The culture wars have come to Canada
  • Trump Adds Fuel to Claims That Big Banks Discriminate Against Conservatives
  • Britain's electric-car roll-out is hitting speed bumps
  • Masayoshi Son is back in Silicon Valley—and late to the AI race
  • Meet The AI Agent With Multiple Personalities
  • MAGA types have a point on debanking
  • Hassan Nasrallah's death will reshape Lebanon and the Middle East
  • Mario Kart World for Switch 2 borrows Forza's rewind feature
  • Is the era of the mega-deal over?
  • The old have come to dominate American politics
  • Inside Europe, border checks are creeping back
  • Secator - The Pentester'S Swiss Knife
  • China's firms are taking flight, worrying its rulers
  • Why Israel has not yet lost Europe
  • US election forecast: who will win control of the Senate?
  • The green promises of Colombia's president ring ever more hollow
  • Anybody in Britain can call themselves a therapist
  • Economic data, markets and commodities
  • Japan has a chequered record on climate change
  • Justin Schmidt made a lifetime study of insects that attack us
  • New Jersey Sues Discord for Allegedly Failing to Protect Children
  • Covid-19 spurs national plans to give citizens digital identities
  • The weekly cartoon
  • Meet the most ruthless CEO in the trillion-dollar tech club
  • Mark Carney, the Liberal who will lead Canada
  • Donald Trump is now the oldest candidate to run for president
  • Germany's Mütterrente is a poor way to pay parents
  • Italy's oddest political party is splitting
  • Japan is remarkably open to AI, but slow to make use of it
  • What Chipotle and McDonald's say about the consumer slowdown
  • A new study of studies reignites controversy over mask mandates
  • Trying to heal the party's wounds
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Bernard Haitink believed that genius should speak for itself
  • The world's insatiable appetite for Canada's maple syrup
  • What's an Influencer? The Complete WIRED Guide
  • Donald Trump has reshaped one of the world's most important migration routes
  • China has become a scientific superpower
  • Why rents are rising too fast
  • Jacqueline Gold freed women to shamelessly enjoy themselves
  • Business
  • Three big lawsuits against Meta in Kenya may have global implications
  • Sir Jim Ratcliffe, chemicals magnate turned sports mogul
  • Nicolás Maduro, Venezuela's autocrat, is winning
  • This week's cover
  • Taiwan's political drama is paralysing its government
  • Dr Ruth aimed to shake America out of its puritan ways
  • What does the UK supreme court's ruling on definition of 'women' mean?
  • How Vladimir Putin created a housing bubble
  • Adding up the fiscal drag from ageing, energy and defence
  • Can China fight America alone?
  • Why your company is struggling to scale up generative AI
  • This week's cover
  • KAL's cartoon
  • China's shoppers are gloomy and picky
  • OpenAI's New GPT 4.1 Models Excel at Coding
  • Why so much of the world won't stand up to Russia
  • China views America's presidential nightmare with mirth—and disquiet
  • Haiti's transitional government must take office amid gang warfare
  • Why China thinks it might win a trade war with Trump
  • Michel Roux died on March 11th
  • Donald Trump's tariff threats defy geopolitical logic
  • The best VPN service for 2025
  • Antony Blinken swoops into a violent hotspot close to home
  • Lula's ambitious plans to save the Amazon clash with reality
  • Is the American-built pier in Gaza useful or a fiasco?
  • Kamala Harris is outspending Donald Trump. Will it matter?
  • The green revolution will stall without Latin America's lithium
  • The splintering of British politics
  • The EU is worried about sensitive exports to competitors and foes
  • Blighty newsletter: Why Trump's tariffs might spare Britain
  • The relationship between Israel and Turkey is at breaking point
  • Scientists have trained an AI through the eyes of a baby
  • Could Trump fire the Federal Reserve chair?
  • France's new prime minister faces a looming mess
  • White House denials over the Signal snafu ring hollow
  • The Israel-Iran standoff in maps
  • Trump's Tariffs Haven't Resulted in Higher Prices on Amazon—Yet
  • How, if at all, might Russia be punished for its war crimes in Ukraine?
  • China and the EU risk a trade war
  • India sees opportunity, as well as risk, in Trump's trade war
  • Japan's mind-bending bento-box economics
  • The noose around the press in Hong Kong tightens
  • The war in Sudan, in maps and charts
  • China cracks down on 'autonomous' car claims after fatal accident
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • The rival influences of the United States and China
  • Fathers are doing more child care in East Asia
  • This week's covers
  • Indian cities are utterly unprepared for what is about to hit them
  • Forget DeepSeek. Large language models are getting cheaper still
  • Google Is Once Again Deemed a Monopoly, This Time in Ad Tech
  • Can dealmaking save Intel?
  • Susie Wiles, the unassuming operative powering Donald Trump's campaign
  • Narendra Modi ramps up the Muslim-baiting
  • Google's latest AI model report lacks key safety details, experts say
  • Europe thinks the unthinkable on a nuclear bomb
  • El Salvador's wild crypto experiment ends in failure
  • Joe Biden lifts sanctions on Venezuela, but not without conditions
  • Ancient artistic loot will finally make its way back to Cambodia
  • Saleemul Huq lobbied ceaselessly to make poor countries heard
  • Why young Russian women appear so eager to marry Chinese men
  • Autonomous vehicles are coming, but slowly
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The pandemic's indirect effects on small children could last a lifetime
  • North Korea is arming Russia and threatening war with South Korea
  • Will the Supreme Court empower Trump to sack the Fed's boss?
  • Britain's justice system has responded forcefully to the riots
  • The bid to make Florida's most famous city a tech hub
  • What makes Europe so liveable?
  • Europe prepares for a mighty trade war
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Kaja Kallas, the plain-talking Estonian tipped to be the EU's top diplomat
  • Two new books shed light on the plight of the Uyghurs
  • How countries rank by military spending
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Heathrow's third runway asks questions of the airport and Labour
  • Parlacen, a bizarre parliament, is a refuge for bent politicians
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  • 2024's biggest revolution may yet devour its children
  • How China's delivery drivers quietly fight to improve their lot
  • Nintendo Switch 2 pre-orders: Updates, prices, delays, release date and everything else you need to know
  • Google Is Illegally Monopolizing Online Advertising Tech, Judge Rules
  • The future of the Chinese consumer—in three glasses
  • The Senate blocked aid for Ukraine. Now what?
  • Politics
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  • Obituary: Robert Morgenthau died on July 21st
  • Barry Humphries, creator and manager of Dame Edna Everage, died on April 22nd, aged 89
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  • Blighty newsletter: A big ballot-box test for Sir Keir Starmer
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  • Blighty newsletter: Labour is muddling its message on globalisation
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  • Thailand's top court tramples over the country's democracy
  • Germany's "business model is gone", warns Friedrich Merz
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  • AI researchers receive the Nobel prize for physics
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  • Array Collective, a group from Belfast, wins the Turner prize
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  • Israel's judge in The Hague is its government's bogeyman
  • In Texas, vaccine-choice activists are ascendant
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  • Paris's stunning vision for the Olympics wins a gold medal
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