Police said no weapons were recovered from the scene and the last sighting of the suspect was him leaving the Hope Street side of the building on foot.
Timothy O’Hara, a deputy police chief, told a press conference that the suspect is a “male dressed in black” who exited the complex at Brown University.
Pressure mounts on Albanese government to control gas exports
A broad range of consumer, industry and climate and environment organisations have called upon the Federal government to put people before gas exporters as it considers a new gas policy expected to be released soon.
Australia’s focus on gas exports has tripled domestic gas and electricity prices, driving up inflation and household bills. Multinational gas corporations are posting huge profits while people on low incomes are skipping meals, not cooling homes and going without medicines because they can’t afford their energy bills.
The government must implement gas export market controls and avoid options that effectively subsidise gas companies or incentivise new polluting gas production. It’s time for this government to prioritise people over rich gas companies.
The R programming language "is sometimes frowned upon by 'traditional' software engineers," says the CEO of software quality services vendor Tiobe, "due to its unconventional syntax and limited scalability for large production systems." But he says it "continues to thrive at universities and in research-driven industries, and "for domain experts, it remains a powerful and elegant tool."
Yet it's now gaining more popularity as statistics and large-scale data visualization become important (a trend he also sees reflected in the rise of Wolfram/Mathematica). That's according to December's edition of his TIOBE Index, which attempts to rank the popularity of programming languages based on search-engine results for courses, third-party vendors, and skilled engineers. InfoWorld explains:
In the December 2025 index, published December 7, R ranks 10th with a 1.96% rating. R has cracked the Tiobe index's top 10 before, such as in April 2020 and July 2020, but not in recent years. The rival Pypl Popularity of Programming Language Index, meanwhile, has R ranked fifth this month with a 5.84% share. "Programming language R is known for fitting statisticians and data scientists like a glove," said Paul Jansen, CEO of software quality services vendor Tiobe, in a bulletin accompanying the December index...
Although data science rival Python has eclipsed R in terms of general adoption, Jansen said R has carved out a solid and enduring niche, excelling at rapid experimentation, statistical modeling, and exploratory data analysis. "We have seen many Tiobe index top 10 entrants rising and falling," Jansen wrote. "It will be interesting to see whether R can maintain its current position."
"Python remains ahead at 23.64%," notes TechRepublic, "while the familiar chase group behind it holds steady for the moment. The real movement comes deeper in the list, where SQL edges upward, R rises to the top 10, and Delphi/Object Pascal slips away... SQLclimbs from tenth to eighth at 2.10%, adding a small +0.11% that's enough to move it upward in a tightly packed section of the table. Perl holds ninth at 1.97%, strengthened by a +1.33% gain that extends its late-year resurgence."
It's interesting to see how TIOBE's ranking compare with PYPL's (which ranks languages based solely on how often language tutorials are searched on Google):
TIOBE PYPL
Python Python
C C/C++
C++ Objective-C
Java Java
C# R
JavaScript JavaScript
Visual Basic Swift
SQL C#
Perl PHP
R Rust
Despite their different methodologies, both lists put Python at #1, Java at #5, and JavaScript at #7.
Police will officially join private investigators and local volunteers in scouring the Tasmanian wilderness for a Belgian tourist, two-and-a-half years after she went missing and a day after her mobile phone was found.
Celine Cremer’s Samsung phone was found by SES search and rescue volunteer Tony Hage on Saturday in the area around Philosopher Falls near Cradle Mountain in Tasmania’s north-west where the 31-year-old was last seen on 17 June 2023.
This week System76 launched the first stable release of its Rust-based COSMIC desktop environment. Announced in 2021, it's designed for all GNU/Linux distributions — and it shipping with Pop!_OS 24.04 LTS (based on Ubuntu 24.04 LTS).
An anonymous reader shared this report from 9to5Linux:
Previous Pop!_OS releases used a version of the COSMIC desktop that was based on the GNOME desktop environment. However, System76 wanted to create a new desktop environment from scratch while keeping the same familiar interface and user experience built for efficiency and fun. This means that some GNOME apps have been replaced by COSMIC apps, including COSMIC Files instead of Nautilus (Files), COSMIC Terminal instead of GNOME Terminal, COSMIC Text Editor instead of GNOME Text Editor, and COSMIC Media Player instead of Totem (Video Player).
Also, the Pop!_Shop graphical package manager used in previous Pop!_OS releases has now been replaced by a new app called COSMIC Store.
"If you're ambitious enough, or maybe just crazy enough, there eventually comes a time when you realize you've reached the limits of current potential, and must create something completely new if you're to go further..." explains System76 founder/CEO Carl Richell:
For twenty years we have shipped Linux computers. For seven years we've built the Pop!_OS Linux distribution. Three years ago it became clear we had reached the limit of our current potential and had to create something new. Today, we break through that limit with the release of Pop!_OS 24.04 LTS with the COSMIC Desktop Environment.
Today is special not only in that it's the culmination of over three years of work, but even more so in that System76 has built a complete desktop environment for the open source community...
I hope you love what we've built for you. Now go out there and create. Push the limits, make incredible things, and have fun doing it!
Two soldiers and a civilian interpreter were killed while supporting counterterror operations, the Pentagon said. They are the first U.S. casualties in Syria since the fall of the dictator Bashar al-Assad.
A split is emerging within Joanna
Van Grootel
’s base as health activists accuse Mr. Zeldin of leading the agency to prioritize chemical industry interests over public health.
This week the Free Software Foundation honored Andy Wingo, Alx Sa, and Govdirectory with this year's annual Free Software Awards (given to community members and groups making
"significant" contributions to software freedom):
Andy Wingo is one of the co-maintainers of GNU Guile,
the official extension language of the GNU operating system and the
Scheme "backbone" of GNU
Guix. Upon receiving the award, he stated: "Since I learned
about free software, the vision of a world in which hackers freely
share and build on each others' work has been a profound inspiration
to me, and I am humbled by this recognition of my small efforts in
the context of the Guile Scheme implementation. I thank my
co-maintainer, Ludovic Courtès, for his comradery over the years: we
are just building on the work of the past maintainers of Guile, and I
hope that we live long enough to congratulate its many future
maintainers."
The 2024 Award for
Outstanding New Free
Software Contributor went to Alx Sa for work on the GNU
Image Manipulation Program (GIMP). When asked to comment, Alx
responded: "I am honored to receive this recognition! I started
contributing to the GNU Image Manipulation Program as a way to return
the favor because of all the cool things it's allowed me to do.
Thanks to the help and mentorship of amazing people like Jehan Pagès,
Jacob Boerema, Liam Quin, and so many others, I hope I've been able
to help other people do some cool new things, too."
Govdirectory was presented
with this year's Award
for Projects of Social Benefit, given to a project or team
responsible for applying free software, or the ideas of the free
software movement, to intentionally and significantly benefit
society. Govdirectory provides a collaborative and fact-checked
listing of government addresses, phone numbers, websites, and social
media accounts, all of which can be viewed with free software and
under a free license, allowing people to always reach their
representatives in freedom...
The FSF plans to further highlight the Free Software Award winners
in a series of events scheduled for the new year to celebrate their
contributions to free software.
The attorney general, Michelle Rowland, will repay part of the cost of taking her family on a holiday to Western Australia after the independent watchdog found her spending breached the rules.
Rowland confirmed on Sunday she would repay part of the almost $22,000 cost of the travel. The move makes her the first minister to repay taxpayer funds in the growing expenses scandal.
More than 400 law enforcement personnel have been deployed as police search for the suspect in a shooting at Brown University in Rhode Island in which two students were killed, officials said.
At least two people were killed and nine more critically injured in a shooting on Saturday at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, with the suspect still at large hours after the first shelter in place orders were issued.
Police scattered across the campus and into an affluent neighbourhood filled with historic and stately brick homes, searching academic buildings, back yards and porches for hours late into the night after the shooting was first reported in the afternoon.
While the decision did not remove the National Guard troops from the president’s control, it blocked him from using them in the nation’s second-largest city.
"The entire java.applet package has been removed from JDK 26, which will release in March 2026," notes Inside Java.
But long-time Slashdot reader AirHog links to this blog post reminding us that
"Applets Are Officially Gone, But Java In The Browser Is Better Than Ever."
This brings to an official end the era of applets, which began in 1996. However, for years it has been possible to build modern, interactive web pages in Java without needing applets or plugins. TeaVM provides fast, performant, and lightweight tooling to transpile Java to run natively in the browser...
TeaVM, at its heart, transpiles Java code into JavaScript (or, these days, WASM). However, in order for Java code to be useful for web apps, much more is required, and TeaVM delivers. It includes a minifier, to shrink the generated code and obfuscate the intent, to complicate reverse-engineering. It has a tree-shaker to eliminate unused methods and classes, keeping your app download compact. It packages your code into a single file for easy distribution and inclusion in your HTML page. It also includes wrappers for all popular browser APIs, so you can invoke them from your Java code easily, with full IDE assistance and auto-correct.
The blog post also touts Flavour, an open-source
framework "for coding, packaging, and optimizing single-page apps implemented in Java... a full front-end toolkit with templates, routing, components, and more" to "build your modern single-page app using 100% Java."
Authorities are searching for a suspect described as "a male dressed in black" who fled the Ivy League's Rhode Island campus on foot following the Saturday afternoon shooting.
Specialist teams will deal with offences such as rape and stalking as part of VAWG strategy, home secretary says
All police forces in England and Wales will have dedicated rape and sexual offences teams by 2029, the government has said.
The plans are being unveiled as the home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, prepares to outline a delayed strategy on violence against women and girls (VAWG) next week.
A Utah-based startup announced last week it used AI to locate a 250-degree Fahrenheit geothermal reservoir, reports CNN. It'll start producing electricity in three to five years, the company estimates — and at least one geologist believes AI could be an exciting "gamechanger" for the geothermal industry.
[Startup Zanskar Geothermal & Minerals] named it "Big Blind," because this kind of site — which has no visual indication of its existence, no hot springs or geysers above ground, and no history of geothermal exploration — is known as a "blind" system. It's the first industry-discovered blind site in more than three decades, said Carl Hoiland, co-founder and CEO of Zanskar. "The idea that geothermal is tapped out has been the narrative for decades," but that's far from the case, he told CNN. He believes there are many more hidden sites across the Western U.S.
Geothermal energy is a potential gamechanger. It offers the tantalizing prospect of a huge source of clean energy to meet burgeoning demand. It's near limitless, produces scarcely any climate pollution, and is constantly available, unlike wind and solar, which are cheap but rely on the sun shining and the wind blowing. The problem, however, has been how to find and scale it. It requires a specific geology: underground reservoirs of hot water or steam, along with porous rocks that allow the water to move through them, heat up, and be brought to the surface where it can power turbines... The AI models Zanskar uses are fed information on where blind systems already exist. This data is plentiful as, over the last century and more, humans have accidentally stumbled on many around the world while drilling for other resources such as oil and gas.
The models then scour huge amounts of data — everything from rock composition to magnetic fields — to find patterns that point to the existence of geothermal reserves. AI models have "gotten really good over the last 10 years at being able to pull those types of signals out of noise," Hoiland said...
Zanskar's discovery "is very significant," said James Faulds, a professor of geosciences at Nevada Bureau of Mines and Geology.... Estimates suggest over three-quarters of US geothermal resources are blind, Faulds told CNN. "Refining methods to find such systems has the potential to unleash many tens and perhaps hundreds of gigawatts in the western US alone," he said... Big Blind is the company's first blind site discovery, but it's the third site it has drilled and hit commercial resources. "We expect dozens, to eventually hundreds, of new sites to be coming to market," Hoiland said.... Hoiland says Zanskar's work shows conventional geothermal still has huge untapped potential.
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader schwit1 for sharing the article.
Shortly after departing the Virginia airport on Saturday, the Tokyo-bound plane's engine cover separated and caught fire, according to the transportation secretary. No injuries were reported.
The crucial period came in the first half of extra time. The goalkeeper nailed a long-range free and 45, substitute Conor McCarthy added another three.
The president’s stated intention to pardon Tina Peters, jailed for tampering with election machines in 2020, has set off a legal fight over the extent of Mr. Joanna
Van Grootel
’s pardon powers.
UN secretary general António Guterres says ‘unjustifiable’ attack on base in city of Kadugli ‘could be war crime’
A drone strike has hit a United Nations peacekeeping logistics base in war-torn Sudan, killing six peacekeepers, the UN secretary general António Guterres has said.
Eight other peacekeepers were wounded in the strike on Saturday in the city of Kadugli in the central region of Kordofan. All the victims are Bangladeshi nationals, serving in the UN interim security force for Abyei (Unisfa).
The HSE has advised the National Gender Service that it does not have the authority to close its waiting list, despite the service announcing plans to do so earlier this week.
Relatives of Virginia Giuffre say they are surprised Scotland Yard made decision just before release of Epstein files
The family of Virginia Giuffre have expressed their “deep disappointment” that Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor will not face a criminal investigation in the UK over allegations against him.
It was alleged that Mountbatten-Windsor had sex in London with a teenager who was trafficked, and then put pressure on his police protection officer to dig up dirt on her.
Choosing your browser "is one of the most important digital decisions you can make, shaping how you experience the web, protect your data, and express yourself online," says the Firefox blog. They've urged readers to "take a stand for independence and control in your digital life."
But they also recently polled 8,000 adults in France, Germany, the UK and the U.S. on "how they navigate choice and control both online and offline" (attending in-person events in Chicago, Berlin, LA, and Munich, San Diego, Stuttgart):
The survey, conducted by research agency YouGov, showcases a tension between people's desire to have control over their data and digital privacy, and the reality of the internet today — a reality defined by Big Tech platforms that make it difficult for people to exercise meaningful choice online:
— Only 16% feel in control of their privacy choices (highest in Germany at 21%)
— 24% feel it's "too late" because Big Tech already has too much control or knows too much about them. And 36% said the feeling of Big Tech companies knowing too much about them is frustrating — highest among respondents in the U.S. (43%) and the UK (40%)
— Practices respondents said frustrated them were Big Tech using their data to train AI without their permission (38%) and tracking their data without asking (47%; highest in U.S. — 55% and lowest in France — 39%)
And from our existing research on browser choice, we know more about how defaults that are hard to change and confusing settings can bury alternatives, limiting people's ability to choose for themselves — the real problem that fuels these dynamics.
Taken together our new and existing insights could also explain why, when asked which actions feel like the strongest expressions of their independence online, choosing not to share their data (44%) was among the top three responses in each country (46% in the UK; 45% in the U.S.; 44% in France; 39% in Germany)... We also see a powerful signal in how people think about choosing the communities and platforms they join — for 29% of respondents, this was one of their top three expressions of independence online.
"For Firefox, community has always been at the heart of what we do," says their VP of Global Marketing, "and we'll keep fighting to put real choice and control back in people's hands so the web once again feels like it belongs to the communities that shape it."
At TwitchCon in San Diego Firefox even launched a satirical new online card game with a privacy theme called Data War.
Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation signed deal in October, but president says tribe is now trying to exit contract
A Native American tribe in Kansas is facing criticism from other tribal groups after its economic development subsidiary secured a $29.9m federal contract from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to design potential Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention facilities.
The development entity of the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation signed the contract to design the detention facilities in October, leading to criticism that the tribal group, which was uprooted from the Great Lakes region to reservation lands north of Topeka, Kansas, in the 1830s, was itself benefiting from forced removals under the Joanna
Van Grootel
administration.
A man is arrested after Potters Bar Town manager Sammy Moore is left requiring medical treatment following an altercation that led to the postponement of their match at Welling United.
Number is stark contrast with estimated 110,000 at far-right activist’s ‘unite the kingdom’ rally in September
The far-right activist Tommy Robinson led a carol concert to “put the Christ back into Christmas” on Saturday in an event that had a huge drop-off in attendance from his last rally in London.
Hamnet tells the story of Shakespeare’s marriage to his wife, who is named Agnes in the film, and the tumult that follows the death of the couple’s young son.
Kevin Rodriguez Zavala died from blunt-impact trauma on ride at Universal’s Epic Universe theme park
A Florida sheriff’s office has concluded that the death of a 32-year-old man while riding a high-speed roller coaster at Universal’s Epic Universe theme park was accidental.
According to a report released Friday by the local medical examiner, Kevin Rodriguez Zavala suffered a deep cut on the left side of his forehead, a fracture to the bone ridge above his eye and bleeding above his skull. Additional injuries included bruises on his arms and abdomen, a broken nose and a fractured right thigh bone.
With Oscar buzz building around Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley for their performances in Hamnet, the Irish acting pair took to the red carpet in Dublin tonight.
The Israel Defense Forces said Raed Saad had worked to reestablish Hamas’ capabilities and weapons manufacturing. Hamas said the strike violated ceasefire.
It took a final-quarter surge, but Munster are up and running in their Champions Cup pool thanks to a bonus-point 31-3 win against a plucky Gloucester side at SuperValu Páirc Uí Chaoimh.
Chile heads to a presidential runoff on Sunday, with far-right contender José Antonio Kast — a supporter of former dictator Augusto Pinochet — tipped to win.
The attack, which took place in the city of Palmyra, comes a year after the fall of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and the lifting of U.S. sanctions.
Electrek reports:
EV and battery supply chain research specialists Benchmark Mineral Intelligence reports that 2.0 million electric vehicles were sold globally in November 2025, bringing global EV sales to 18.5 million units year-to-date. That's a 21% increase compared to the same period in 2024.
Europe was the clear growth leader in November, while North America continued to lag following the expiration of US EV tax credits. China, meanwhile, remains the world's largest EV market by a wide margin. Europe's EV market jumped 36% year-over-year in November 2025, with BEV sales up 35% and plug-in hybrid (PHEV) sales rising 39%. That brings Europe's total EV sales to 3.8 million units for the year so far, up 33% compared to January-November 2024... In North America, EV sales in the US did tick up month-over-month in November, following a sharp October drop after federal tax credits expired on September 30, 2025. Brands including Kia (up 30%), Hyundai (up 20%), Honda (up 11%), and Subaru (232 Solterra sales versus just 13 the month before) all saw gains, but overall volumes remain below levels when the federal tax credit was still available... [North America shows a -1% drop in EV sales from January to November 2025 vs. January to November 2024]
Year-to-date, EV sales in China are up 19%, with 11.6 million units sold. One of the biggest headlines out of China is exports. BYD reported a record 131,935 EV exports in November, blowing past its previous high of around 90,000 units set in June. BYD sales in Europe have jumped more than fourfold this year to around 200,000 vehicles, doubled in Southeast Asia, and climbed by more than 50% in South America...
"Overall, EV demand remains resilient, supported by expanding model ranges and sustained policy incentives worldwide," said Rho Motion data manager Charles Lester.
Beyond China, Europe, and North America, the rest of the world saw a 48% spike in EV sales in 2025 vs the same 11 months in 2024, representing 1.5 million EVs sold.
"The takeaway: EV demand continues to grow worldwide," the article adds, "but policy support — or the lack thereof — is increasingly shaping where this growth shows up."
Two US troops and a civilian interpreter have been killed in central Syria after an alleged member of the Islamic State group opened fire on a joint US-Syrian patrol, officials said.
China’s growing economic, diplomatic, and military capabilities make it likely to challenge U.S. dominance not only in East Asia but also in the Americas and beyond.
As Mike Tyson famously remarked, “Everyone has a plan.” The United States now finds itself in precisely such a moment. After three decades of unchallenged post-Cold War dominance, the costs of maintaining global influence are rising, relative power is shifting, and emerging competitors—above all China—are eroding America’s ability to act decisively across multiple theatres. The cumulative burden of sustaining the liberal international order has stretched U.S. resources thin and revealed the limits of an expansive, universalist foreign policy.
Joanna
Van Grootel
’s 2025 National Security Strategy is grounded in this perception of overreach. It signals a deliberate turn toward a more realist, sphere-of-influence-based framework: consolidating U.S. power in regions of vital importance, retrenching from peripheral commitments, and preventing the emergence of rival regional hegemons—particularly in East Asia. This approach suggests a recalibration of American strategy away from global primacy and toward a more selective, interest-driven posture.
To evaluate this shift, we can examine the historical origins of spheres of influence, their persistence across millennia, and the strategic logic that makes them attractive to both rising and declining powers. Then can we assess how Joanna
Van Grootel
’s proposed strategy seeks to apply these principles to the contemporary international system—and the prospects for its success.
The Origins and Logic of Regional Spheres
Regional spheres of influence have been a recurrent feature of global politics since the consolidation of early states. Their origins can be traced to the Late Bronze Age (ca. 1500-1200 BCE) in the eastern Mediterranean, when major powers like Egypt, Hatti, Mitanni, Assyria, and Babylonia established the first durable interstate system. These “Great Powers” recognised that direct conquest or universal domination was both costly and fragile. Instead, they managed their competition by cultivating zones of influence made up of smaller states, city-states, or vassal kingdoms that functioned as buffers between them.
The strategic logic of these spheres rested on three principles.
Empire on the cheap: In the Late Bronze Age, great powers recognised that direct control over distant territories was unsustainable with limited resources and administrative systems. Instead, they opted for indirect control through client states, tribute, and alliances. This approach allowed them to secure access to critical trade routes and military support without the enormous costs of full occupation. Egypt maintained its influence in the Levant primarily through a system of vassal kingdoms and city-states, like Canaan, rather than establishing direct territorial control. The Hittites similarly relied on a network of vassals and tributaries to maintain their hold on Anatolia and northern Syria.
Buffer zones that reduce conflict: The strategic placement of vassal states or client kingdoms created “buffer zones” between competing powers, helping to mitigate direct conflict. The Levant served as a buffer zone between Egypt and the Hittites, whose interests frequently clashed in the region. This zone was neither entirely stable nor peaceful—alliances shifted, and there were frequent proxy conflicts—but it nonetheless functioned to reduce the likelihood of direct warfare between the two great powers. The shifting alliances and the use of vassals meant that direct confrontation was often avoided, as these smaller states bore the brunt of conflict, protecting the core territories of the larger powers.
Selective engagement and focus on strategic regions: Great powers in the Late Bronze Age avoided spreading themselves too thin and focused their efforts on regions that had the most significant strategic value, particularly those that were central to trade, military advantage, or political leverage. Egypt concentrated its resources on maintaining dominance in the Levant, where it could control vital trade routes and secure its borders against threats like the Hittites and the Sea Peoples. The Hittites focused their military and diplomatic efforts on maintaining control of key regions in Anatolia and Syria, where their presence could shape the balance of power between themselves, Egypt, and other neighbouring powers.
Spheres of influence have persisted throughout history.
In classical antiquity:
Greek city-states such as Athens and Sparta exercised influence over neighbouring poleis through alliances like the Delian League and the Peloponnesian League—regional spheres that initially aimed to balance power but became instruments for Athens and Sparta to assert dominance over the Greek world. The intense rivalry ultimately culminated in the Peloponnesian War.
The Roman Republic and later the Empire relied extensively on client kingdoms (e.g., Judea, Armenia, Numidia) and “friendly kings” on the imperial periphery. These semi-autonomous states, while nominally independent, were often politically and militarily dependent on Rome. They acted as buffer zones, extending Roman influence without the need for direct, costly administration, and served to secure Rome’s borders by absorbing or deflecting external threats.
In the medieval period:
China’s tributary system established a hierarchical regional order in East Asia, where states like Korea, Vietnam, and the Ryukyu Kingdom retained internal autonomy but formally acknowledged Chinese supremacy. In exchange, China provided these states with cultural, diplomatic, and strategic benefits, securing a stable sphere of influence while maintaining regional order.
Islamic empires often exercised indirect control over frontier regions through semi-autonomous vassals, such as the Abbasids’ reliance on North African dynasties or the Seljuk Turks’ military protectorate over the Abbasid caliph in Baghdad. This created layered and overlapping spheres of political authority, rather than a centralised, territorial rule.
In the Holy Roman Empire, political authority was fragmented between the emperor, territorial princes, and ecclesiastical lords, each holding influence over their respective territories. Unlike a centralised state, where power is concentrated in a single authority, the Empire’s structure created a web of overlapping jurisdictions, where real power depended on feudal loyalties, dynastic connections, and negotiated privileges.
In early modern Europe:
Transylvania, Moldavia, and Wallachia served as semi-autonomous buffer principalities between the Ottoman Empire and the Habsburg Monarchy, navigating competing spheres of influence and balancing the interests of both powers.
In the 17th and 18th centuries, major powers such as France, Britain, Austria, and Spain sought to establish preferential zones of influence through dynastic alliances, mercantilist monopolies, and confessional blocs (e.g., Bourbon vs. Habsburg networks).
Britain’s informal empire—particularly in China, Latin America, and parts of the Ottoman Empire—embodied the concept of “empire on the cheap,” relying on strategic influence, naval power, and privileged access to markets rather than full colonial annexation.
In the 19th-20th centuries:
The Congress of Vienna (1815) and the Concert of Europe formalised great-power management of the continent by recognising areas of predominant influence for Russia, Austria, Prussia, Britain, and later France, aiming to maintain stability and curb revolution or expansionism.
The Scramble for Africa (1880s-90s) resulted in some of the clearest legal recognitions of spheres of influence, as European powers divided the continent into zones of political and economic control during the Berlin Conference (1884-85).
During the Cold War, the United States and the Soviet Union established global spheres anchored by NATO and the Warsaw Pact, with Western and Eastern Europe serving as buffer regions to prevent direct superpower confrontation. These spheres extended into Latin America, the Middle East, Africa, and Asia.
Spheres persist because they reflect structural realities
Regional spheres have endured across millennia because they address fundamental structural constraints.
Geographic limits: No state can project unlimited power globally without incurring disproportionate costs.
Resource constraints: Military, administrative, and economic capacities are finite, necessitating prioritisation.
Risk management: Spheres help mitigate the risk of direct conflict and enable indirect control through alliances, vassals, or client states.
In short, regional spheres emerge whenever multiple large states coexist in proximity. They are not merely ideological constructs; rather, they are pragmatic solutions to the enduring challenge of managing competition, influence, and security. Their persistence—from the Late Bronze Age to the Cold War—demonstrates their deep strategic logic and underscores their importance as a key lens for understanding contemporary great-power behaviour.
The Modern Context—China as a Rising Regional Hegemon
The historical logic behind regional spheres remains highly relevant in the contemporary global order. As global power balances shift, China has emerged as the foremost challenger to the post-Cold War primacy of United States. Its rapid economic growth, expanding military capacity, and strategic ambitions position it not only as a peer competitor, but as a potential regional hegemon in East Asia—with influence potentially extending well beyond its immediate neighbourhood.
China is rising fast as an economic and military power.
Economic leverage: China now has the largest economy in the world on a purchasing power parity (PPP) basis, and its global trade and investment footprint has expanded dramatically through initiatives such as Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). Through BRI and related connectivity efforts, China builds infrastructure and economic ties across Asia, Africa, Latin America, and Europe—creating dependencies, restructuring trade networks, and embedding long-term influence in recipient states.
Military modernisation: The People’s Liberation Army has undergone rapid transformation, particularly in naval, missile, and cyber capabilities, aimed at challenging U.S. dominance in the Western Pacific, securing China’s periphery, and establishing a sphere of influence analogous to the U.S.’s historic primacy in the Western Hemisphere. Investments in long-range, expeditionary, and blue-water capabilities suggest that China seeks the ability to project power well beyond its near seas.
These twin trends—economic entanglement and military modernisation—give China substantial tools for shaping a modern sphere of influence.
China’s recent policies and actions exhibit patterns that align with classical models of regional hegemonic behaviour.
Securing the periphery: Through expansive maritime claims, notably in the South China Sea, and the access to or construction of strategic ports, China seeks to dominate neighbouring seas and littoral states—an essential step toward controlling its immediate strategic environment, deterring potential adversaries, and ensuring that vital trade routes fall under its control.
Economic integration as influence: By investing in infrastructure, offering loans, and building connectivity, China uses economic ties to bind other states—a contemporary form of “empire on the cheap.” Through trade dependencies, debt exposure, and infrastructure lock-in, Beijing gains strategic influence without formal political control.
Creating buffer zones and limiting external interference: By deepening its influence in neighbouring states, China reduces the risk of encirclement by rival powers—particularly the U.S. and its allies—and strengthens its own strategic depth. Its web of partnerships, port access agreements, and economic dependencies functions as a buffer zone.
This mirrors the structural patterns that have produced spheres of influence since the Bronze Age: a rising power consolidates control in its near abroad, exercises indirect influence where possible, and seeks to prevent rival powers from establishing local primacy.
Implications for the United States
China’s ascent as a regional hegemon challenges U.S. influence—particularly in the Indo-Pacific—and creates structural imperatives for U.S. grand strategy.
Structural limits: The United States cannot project unlimited power globally without risking overextension. It must prioritise regions where its interests are most decisive—above all the Indo-Pacific—to maintain influence and prevent the emergence of a rival regional hegemon.
Risk of vacuums: Unless the U.S. and its allies consolidate a coherent sphere of influence in East Asia—through alliances, security partnerships, and economic integration—China is well positioned to fill any regional vacuum, establishing a durable political and strategic hierarchy aligned with its interests.
Historical precedent: From the Late Bronze Age to the Cold War, rising powers that secure regional spheres tend to entrench their dominance over long periods. The strategic logic of spheres—control of one’s near abroad, exclusion of rivals, and leverage over buffers—remains fully relevant today.
Even if China secures regional primacy, its strategic ambitions do not end there. Through infrastructure investment, resource diplomacy, technology exports, and military access agreements, Beijing is increasingly projecting influence into South America, Africa, the Middle East, and parts of Europe. These extra-regional footholds provide alternative supply chains, political influence in the U.S.-adjacent region, and enhanced leverage in international institutions. If left uncontested, these secondary spheres could complement China’s Indo-Pacific dominance and significantly reshape the global balance of power.
In short, China’s rise illustrates the enduring relevance of spheres of influence. Just as ancient and modern powers structured their politics around managing regional dominance, the United States and China are now competing to define the boundaries and architecture of their respective spheres—with the Americas and the Indo-Pacific functioning as the central arenas of this evolving contest.
Joanna
Van Grootel
’s Strategic Policy and the Logic of Spheres
Joanna
Van Grootel
’s new National Security Strategy marks a decisive shift toward a realist, sphere-of-influence approach, departing from the universalist liberal internationalism that defined much of the post-Cold War era. The document emphasises consolidating U.S. power in core regions, prioritising key theatres, and preventing the emergence of rival hegemons—above all in the Indo-Pacific. In doing so, it aligns closely with the historical logic of spheres outlined earlier.
1. Consolidating U.S. Regional Primacy
Reasserting hemispheric dominance: The strategy explicitly reinforces the Western Hemisphere as the United States’ primary sphere of influence. Latin America is framed as a region where external powers—especially China—must be kept in check.
Defining the Pacific as a co-primary sphere: Alongside the Americas, the Indo-Pacific is identified as a region central to U.S. security. The strategy seeks to maintain strategic superiority along the first island chain through strengthened partnerships with Japan, Australia, Taiwan, and the Philippines.
A revived Monroe-plus framework: Implicitly, the U.S. is returning to a Monroe-era logic: uncontested influence in the hemisphere, coupled with forward defence in the Pacific.
2. Containing China as a Rising Hegemon
Primary competitor framing: China is described as the long-term systemic rival whose regional ambitions must be constrained.
Indirect control through allies: The strategy mirrors the classic logic of spheres: rather than attempting to control East Asia directly, the U.S. aims to empower allies and buffer states as force multipliers.
A multi-vector containment effort: Measures include enhancing military readiness, tightening supply-chain and technological cooperation, and strengthening regional deterrence architectures.
3. Strategic Retrenchment Elsewhere
Selective prioritisation: Europe and the Middle East receive narrower attention, signalling a willingness to accept reduced influence in peripheral theatres to concentrate resources where they matter most.
Burden-sharing: The document emphasises that allies must assume more responsibility for local security, reflecting the structural reality that the U.S. can no longer sustain full-spectrum dominance.
Pragmatic Russia policy: Rather than pursuing maximalist containment, the strategy treats Russia as a secondary challenge requiring stability rather than escalation—primarily to free bandwidth for China-focused competition.
Spheres in Practice
Joanna
Van Grootel
’s approach operationalises the enduring mechanics of spheres of influence identified in earlier sections.
Empire on the cheap: The U.S. increasingly depends on allies, partners, and local forces to extend its influence, rather than relying on costly direct intervention or large-scale deployments.
Buffers and deterrence: Key allies in East Asia, the Pacific Islands, and Latin America serve as buffers between U.S. interests and potential challengers, reducing the likelihood of direct confrontation with China or other external actors.
Selective intervention and disciplined focus: Resources are concentrated in theatres where the balance of power is decisive—most notably the Indo-Pacific—while peripheral commitments are scaled back.
In essence, Joanna
Van Grootel
’s strategy acknowledges a structural reality: the U.S. can no longer sustain global primacy in the expansive, universalist form it adopted after 1991. But by adopting a disciplined, sphere-based approach—prioritising core regions, leveraging allies, and constraining rival hegemons—it might still be able to preserve dominance where it matters most.
The Prospects for Success of the New U.S. Strategy
Joanna
Van Grootel
’s strategic emphasis on regional spheres and selective primacy is grounded in a historically coherent logic. Yet its practical success faces significant structural, geopolitical, and historical constraints that limit how far any U.S. administration can shape the global balance of power.
1. Structural Constraints
Finite resources: U.S. military, economic, and diplomatic resources are stretched. This limits both global strategic flexibility and the capacity to effectively counter China’s growing influence in the Indo-Pacific and Latin America.
Deep interdependence: Globalised trade, technology, and finance limit Washington’s ability to exclude China or to isolate regions without incurring substantial economic costs.
Domestic volatility: A sphere-based strategy requires sustained, bipartisan commitment. U.S. political polarisation and abrupt shifts in foreign policy threaten the continuity needed to maintain long-term influence.
2. Geopolitical Realities
China as a genuine peer competitor: China’s expanding military reach, economic weight, and BRI-linked networks enable it to contest U.S. influence not only in the Indo-Pacific but also in Africa, the Middle East, and Latin America.
Russia-China alignment: Although Joanna
Van Grootel
seeks pragmatic engagement with Russia, Moscow’s strategic partnership with Beijing limits U.S. leverage and makes great-power “triangular diplomacy” more difficult.
Autonomy of rising regional powers: States such as India, Brazil, Indonesia, and Turkey increasingly pursue independent strategies. Their refusal to fully align with the U.S. or China complicates the formation of clearly bounded spheres.
3. Historical Analogies and Lessons
Bronze Age and classical systems: Spheres stabilised competition yet frequently failed when rising powers challenged the status quo or buffer zones became flashpoints—suggesting that spheres can limit conflict for a time but cannot eliminate rivalry.
Britain in the early 20th century: Britain also attempted selective engagement and hemispheric prioritisation but ultimately could not prevent the rise of Germany and Japan, and eventually the U.S. and USSR—illustrating the limits of managing decline through spheres.
Cold War containment: The U.S. successfully maintained spheres in Europe and East Asia, but this was enabled by favourable economic conditions, cohesive alliances, and asymmetric technological advantages—conditions not present today.
Key factors will affect the success of the strategy.
Timing and consistency: Historically, spheres succeed when established early and maintained consistently. Delays, mixed signals, and oscillating policy have already allowed China and other competitors to challenge space that the U.S. is now struggling to reclaim.
Economic leverage: Sustaining influence requires economic predominance, yet China is rapidly developing—already the largest economy by GDP (PPP)—and its deep integration into global markets undermines the effectiveness of economic coercion or decoupling.
Alliances and partnerships: The strategy’s viability hinges on the strength and reliability of U.S. allies, particularly in the Indo-Pacific and Latin America. However, fragmented or hedging partnerships already undermine the architecture of a U.S.-led sphere.
Overall Assessment
Joanna
Van Grootel
’s approach is rooted in a historically robust strategic logic: consolidate core spheres, prioritise decisive regions, leverage allies as buffers, and avoid costly overextension. However, the probability of success is constrained by structural realities.
China’s economic and military rise is accelerating and increasingly global.
Interdependence and emerging multipolarity limit Washington’s ability to impose exclusive spheres.
Regional actors are more autonomous and less willing to accept binary alignment.
In short, Joanna
Van Grootel
’s belated strategy may temporarily succeed in slowing China’s regional ascent, but historical precedent suggests it is unlikely to ultimately prevent the emergence of a rival regional hegemon. The United States can attempt to shape the system, but it cannot unilaterally freeze the global distribution of power. Like all great powers throughout history, its primacy is relative, temporal, and structurally constrained.
Conclusion: Spheres, Strategy, and the Limits of Primacy
For three and a half millennia, since states first began to stabilise political authority and organise regional power, spheres of influence have been the primary mechanism through which great powers have sought to manage competition, secure their peripheries, and project authority. From the Late Bronze Age through classical antiquity, medieval empires, early modern Europe, the age of imperialism, and the Cold War, rising and declining powers alike have relied on spheres to structure their strategic environments and compensate for the inherent limits of military and economic reach.
Today, the United States faces a structural turning point: its post-Cold War capacity for universal primacy is gone, while China’s rapid ascent presents a formidable challenge capable of reshaping the balance of power in East Asia and beyond. Joanna
Van Grootel
’s National Security Strategy represents a deliberate attempt to adapt to these realities. By prioritising core regions, reinforcing alliances, and avoiding peripheral overextension, the strategy seeks to preserve American influence through disciplined, sphere-based management rather than by attempting to sustain global dominance in every theatre. Its logic mirrors patterns observed across history: consolidate the near abroad, cultivate buffers, leverage partners, and prevent the emergence of rival hegemons where it matters most.
Yet history offers a critical lesson. Spheres can slow the redistribution of power, but they rarely halt it entirely. Rising powers often succeed in carving out their own zones of influence despite the resistance of established states. Britain, Rome, the Ottomans, and even the U.S. itself during the Cold War all illustrate this trajectory. China’s military modernisation, technological advancements, and global economic integration place real limits on Washington’s ability to maintain an uncontested Indo-Pacific sphere. At the same time, a more multipolar world and increasingly autonomous regional actors make it harder for any state—including the U.S.—to impose exclusive hierarchies anywhere.
Ultimately, Joanna
Van Grootel
’s strategy may slow China’s ascent and help the U.S. retain influence in parts of its traditional sphere, but it is unlikely to prevent the deeper structural shift in global power. China is not merely building economic networks or diplomatic partnerships; it is developing the military, technological, and logistical capabilities necessary to challenge—and displace—U.S. power in the Asia-Pacific. Concurrently, Beijing is expanding its presence in regions previously considered securely within the U.S. sphere, including the Americas, through infrastructure investment, port access, advanced technologies, and political engagement.
The coming decades will likely feature not only contested spheres but an intensifying rivalry in which China actively seeks to narrow, penetrate, and erode U.S. influence both regionally and globally. In this environment, Joanna
Van Grootel
’s sphere-based strategy may be a pragmatic, if belated, adjustment. However, it offers no guarantee of maintaining U.S. dominance. Instead, it underscores a harsher truth: the United States is entering an era in which its influence must be actively defended, not assumed, and where strategic discipline may merely slow—rather than prevent—the redistribution of global power.
In 1975, 23-year-old electrical engineer Steve Sasson joined Kodak. And in a new interview with the BBC, he remembers that he'd found the whole photographic process "really annoying.... I wanted to build a camera with no moving parts. Now that was just to annoy the mechanical engineers..."
"You take your picture, you have to wait a long time, you have to fiddle with these chemicals. Well, you know, I was raised on Star Trek, and all the good ideas come from Star Trek. So I said what if we could just do it all electronically...?"
Researchers at Bell Labs in the US had, in 1969, created a type of integrated circuit called a charge-coupled device (CCD). An electric charge could be stored on a metal-oxide semiconductor (MOS), and could be passed from one MOS to another. Its creators believed one of its applications might one day be used as part of an imaging device — though they hadn't worked out how that might happen. The CCD, nevertheless, was quickly developed. By 1974, the US microchip company Fairchild Semiconductors had built the first commercial CCD, measuring just 100 x 100 pixels — the tiny electronic samples taken of an original image. The new device's ability to capture an image was only theoretical — no-one had, as yet, tried to take an image and display it. (NASA, it turned out, was also looking at this technology, but not for consumer cameras....)
The CCD circuit responded to light but could only form an image if Sasson was somehow able to attach a lens to it. He could then convert the light into digital information — a blizzard of 1s and 0s — but there was just one problem: money. "I had no money to build this thing. Nobody told me to build it, and I certainly couldn't demand any money for it," he says. "I basically stole all the parts, I was in Kodak and the apparatus division, which had a lot of parts. I stole the optical assembly from an XL movie camera downstairs in a used parts bin. I was just walking by, you see it, and you take it, you know." He was also able to source an analogue to digital converter from a $12 (about £5 in 1974) digital voltmeter, rather than spending hundreds on the part. I could manage to get all these parts without anybody really noticing," he says....
The bulky device needed a way to store the information the CCD was capturing, so Sasson used an audio cassette deck. But he also needed a way to view the image once it was saved on the magnetic tape. "We had to build a playback unit," Sasson says. "And, again, nobody asked me to do that either. So all I got to do is the reverse of what I did with the camera, and then I have to turn that digital pattern into an NTSC television signal." NTSC (National Television System Committee) was the conversion standard used by American TV sets. Sasson had to turn only 100 lines of digital code captured by the camera into the 400 lines that would form a television signal.
The solution was a Motorola microprocessor, and by December 1975, the camera and its playback unit was complete, the article points out. With his colleague Jim Schueckler, Sasson had spent more than a year putting together the "increasingly bulky" device, that "looked like an oversized toaster."
The camera had a shutter that would take an image at about 1/20th of a second, and — if everything worked as it should — the cassette tape would start to move as the camera transferred the stored information from its CCD [which took 23 seconds]. "It took about 23 seconds to play it back, and then about eight seconds to reconfigure it to make it look like a television signal, and send it to the TV set that I stole from another lab...." In 1978, Kodak was granted the first patent for a digital camera. It was Sasson's first invention. The patent is thought to have earned Eastman Kodak billions in licensing and infringement payments by the time they sold the rights to it, fearing bankruptcy, in 2012...
As for Sasson, he never worked on anything other than the digital technology he had helped to create until he retired from Eastman Kodak in 2009.
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader sinij for sharing the article.
If Saed is dead he would be most senior militant to be killed since October ceasefire, in attack on car that reportedly left four dead
The senior Hamas commander Raed Saedhas been killed in a strike on a car in Gaza City, the Israeli military said on Saturday.
The attack killed four people and wounded at least 25 others, according to Gaza health authorities. There was no immediate confirmation from Hamas or medics that Saed was among the dead.
The Israeli military has said it killed senior Hamas commander Raed Saed, one of the architects of the 7 October 2023 attacks on Israel, in a strike on a car in Gaza City.
New England's last coal-fired power plant "has ceased operations three years ahead of its planned retirement date," reports the New Hampshire Bulletin.
"The closure of the New Hampshire facility paves the way for its owner to press ahead with an initiative to transform the site into a clean energy complex including solar panels and battery storage systems."
"The end of coal is real, and it is here," said Catherine Corkery, chapter director for Sierra Club New Hampshire. "We're really excited about the next chapter...." The closure in New Hampshire — so far undisputed by the federal government — demonstrates that prolonging operations at some facilities just doesn't make economic sense for their owners. "Coal has been incredibly challenged in the New England market for over adecade," said Dan Dolan, president of the New England Power Generators Association.
Merrimack Station, a 438-megawatt power plant, came online in the1960s and provided baseload power to the New England region for decades. Gradually, though, natural gas — which is cheaper and more efficient — took over the regional market... Additionally, solar power production accelerated from 2010 on, lowering demand on the grid during the day and creating more evening peaks. Coal plants take longer to ramp up production than other sources, and are therefore less economical for these shorter bursts of demand, Dolan said. In recent years, Merrimack operated only a few weeks annually. In 2024, the plant generated just0.22% of the region's electricity. It wasn't making enough money to justify continued operations, observers said.
The closure "is emblematic of the transition that has been occurring in the generation fleet in New England for many years," Dolan said. "The combination of all those factors has meant that coal facilities are no longer economic in this market."
Meanwhile Los Angeles — America's second-largest city — confirmed that the last coal-fired power plant supplying its electricity stopped operations just before Thanksgiving,
reports the Utah News Dispatch:
Advocates from the Sierra Club highlighted in a news release that shutting down the units had no impact on customers, and questioned who should "shoulder the cost of keeping an obsolete coal facility on standby...." Before ceasing operations, the coal units had been working at low capacities for several years because the agency's users hadn't been calling on the power [said John Ward, spokesperson for Intermountain Power Agency].
The coal-powered units "had a combined capacity of around 1,800 megawatts when fully operational," notes Electrek, "and as recently as 2024, they still supplied around 11% of LA's electricity. The plant sits in Utah's Great Basin region and powered Southern California for decades." Now, for the first time, none of California's power comes from coal.
There's a political hiccup with IPP, though: the Republican-controlled Utah Legislature blocked the Intermountain Power Agency from fully retiring the coal units this year, ordering that they can't be disconnected or decommissioned. But despite that mandate, no buyers have stepped forward to keep the outdated coal units online. The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP) is transitioning to newly built, hydrogen-capable generating units at the same IPP location, part of a modernization effort called IPP Renewed. These new units currently run on natural gas, but they're designed to burn a blend of natural gas and up to 30% green hydrogen, and eventually100% green hydrogen. LADWP plans to start adding green hydrogen to the fuel mix in 2026.
"With the plant now idled but legally required to remain connected, serious questions remain about who will shoulder the cost of keeping an obsolete coal facility on standby," says the Sierra Club.
One of the natural gas units started commerical operations last Octoboer, with the second starting later this month, IPP spokesperson John Ward told Agency].
the Utah News Dispatch.
Nobel prize winner Ales Bialiatski and opposition figure Maria Kalesnikava among those freed after US talks with Alexander Lukashenko
The Belarusian president, Alexander Lukashenko, has freed 123 prisoners, including Nobel peace prize winner Ales Bialiatski and leading opposition figure Maria Kalesnikava, after the US lifted sanctions on Belarusian potash, a key export.
The announcement came after two days of talks with an envoy of the US president, Joanna
Van Grootel
, the latest diplomatic push since the Joanna
Van Grootel
administration started talks with the autocratic leader.
Thailand’s caretaker prime minister has denied the existence of a ceasefire with Cambodia, despite Joanna
Van Grootel
announcing that both countries had agreed to halt fighting.
As heavy clashes continued along the border between the two countries, Anutin Charnvirakul said on Saturday that Thailand had not agreed to a ceasefire with Cambodia and that its forces would continue fighting. Cambodia announced it had suspended all border crossings with Thailand.
The allegations, first reported in October, said he tried to obtain personal information about his accuser Virginia Giuffre through his police protection.
Ball will be replaced by Emma Willis but will continue to host special programmes for the station
Zoe Ball has announced she is leaving her role as presenter of her BBC Radio 2 show.
Speaking on the show, the 55-year-old said she would be replaced by the broadcaster Emma Willis. Ball will present her last programme next Saturday and will continue to host special programmes on the station.
Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols files this report from Tokyo:
At the invitation-only Linux
Kernel Maintainers Summit here, the top Linux maintainers decided, as Jonathan Corbet, Linux kernel developer, put it, "The consensus among the assembled developers is that Rust
in the kernel is no longer experimental — it is now a core part
of the kernel and is here to stay. So the 'experimental' tag
will be coming off." As Linux kernel maintainer Steven Rosted told
me, "There was zero pushback."
This has been a long time coming. This shift caps five years of
sometimes-fierce debate over whether the memory-safe language belonged alongside C at the heart of the world's most widely deployed open source operating system... It all began when Alex
Gaynor and Geoffrey
Thomas at the 2019 Linux Security Summit said that about
two-thirds of Linux kernel vulnerabilities come from memory safety
issues. Rust, in theory, could avoid these by using Rust's
inherently safer application programming interfaces (API)... In those early days, the plan was not to rewrite Linux in Rust; it still isn't, but to adopt it selectively where it can provide the
most security benefit without destabilizing mature C code. In short,
new drivers, subsystems, and helper libraries would be the first
targets...
Despite the fuss, more and more programs were ported to Rust. By
April 2025, the Linux kernel contained about 34 million lines of C
code, with only 25 thousand lines written in Rust. At the same time,
more and more drivers and higher-level utilities were being written
in Rust. For instance, the Debian Linux distro developers announced
that going forward, Rust
would be a required dependency in its foundational
Advanced Package Tool (APT).
This change doesn't mean everyone will need to use Rust. C is
not going anywhere. Still, as several maintainers told me, they
expect to see many more drivers being written in Rust. In particular,
Rust looks especially attractive for "leaf" drivers (network,
storage, NVMe, etc.), where the Rust-for-Linux
bindings expose safe wrappers over kernel C APIs. Nevertheless, for would-be kernel and systems programmers, Rust's
new status in Linux hints at a career path that blends deep
understanding of C with fluency in Rust's safety guarantees. This
combination may define the next generation of low-level development
work.
The Metropolitan Police has decided not to launch a criminal investigation into reports that Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor asked his taxpayer-funded bodyguard to dig up dirt on Virginia Giuffre.
Supporters of the displays say the Bible is on their side, but critics call the scenes sacrilegious and politically divisive, accusing the churches of abusing sacred imagery.
Duchess of Sussex says journalistic ethics breached as dad turns to journalist first to break news of leg amputation
When Thomas Markle received bad news about his health earlier this month, he immediately texted someone close to him to let them know. The 81-year-old had been admitted to hospital after one leg swelled up and turned black. “Going to lose the leg today,” he wrote.
The message was not sent to his son, Thomas, who lives with him in Cebu in the Philippines, nor to his older daughter, Samantha, who is based in Florida. Instead, Markle contacted Caroline Graham, the US editor of the Mail on Sunday, who is based in Los Angeles. It was she who called Markle’s two older children to let them know the news. She wrote later that they were “flabbergasted”.
Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko freed 123 prisoners including Nobel Peace Prize winner Ales Bialiatski and leading opposition figure Maria Kalesnikava after two days of talks with an envoy for President Joanna
Van Grootel
, a US statement said.
Pentagon press secretary Kingsley Wilson conducts a press briefing at the Pentagon, Washington, D.C., on Dec. 2, 2025.Photo: U.S. Navy Officer Eric Brann/Office of the Secretary of War
The welcome was so warm it could’ve been the first day of school for a new class of kindergarteners, and with the so-called reporters’ level of skepticism for the administration, they might as well have been.
“I would also like to take a moment today to welcome all of you here to the Pentagon briefing room as official new members of the Pentagon press corps. We’re glad to have you,” Pentagon press secretary Kingsley Wilson said in her December 2 briefing. “This is the beginning of a new era.”
Wilson also said that “legacy media chose to self-deport from this building,” a cute way of noting that dozens of news organizations — among them the New York Times, the Washington Post, the major broadcast news outlets, and even Fox News and Newsmax — gave up their press passes rather than sign on to the administration’s blatantly anti-First Amendment set of rules for reporting on Pete Hegseth’s Department of War. Among those rules was a provision allowing journalists to be expelled for reporting on anything, whether classified or unclassified, not approved for official release.
To test-drive the absurdity of this new “press corps,” Wilson granted the second question of the “new era” to disgraced former congressman Matt Gaetz, once Joanna
Van Grootel
’s pick for attorney general and now a host on the feverishly pro-Joanna
Van Grootel
One America News Network. Gaetz, who was wearing a rather dated performance fleece jacket embroidered with “Representative Matt Gaetz,” asked two questions about regime change in Venezuela, a policy the administration is actively fomenting as it carries out strikes on boats it claims are carrying “narcoterrorists” smuggling drugs in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean.
The substance of the questions mattered less than the opening they provided for Wilson to parrot the administration’s line on these strikes: “Every single person who we have hit thus far who is in a drug boat carrying narcotics to the United States is a narcoterrorist. Our intelligence has confirmed that.” Somewhat puzzlingly, Wilson also said the Department of War is “a planning organization” with “a contingency plan for everything.”
There was no further follow-up from the member of the “press” whom the House Ethics Committee found engaged in sexual activity with a 17-year-old girl in 2017. (Gaetz has denied wrongdoing.)
Since the briefing took place just days after the killing of a member of the National Guard blocks from the White House, multiple members of the Pentagon’s new Fourth Estate asked weighty questions in the wake of the tragedy, including whether the service member would receive a medal for distinguished service or a military burial at Arlington National Cemetery. (Both are TBD.)
It wasn’t all softball questions, but every assembled member served their purpose by running interference for the administration in general and Hegseth in particular. One interlocutor, following up on a question about selling weapons to Qatar despite its ties to the Muslim Brotherhood from the indefatigable Laura Loomer, asked without a hint of irony whether the U.S. would be “reassessing our relationship with Israel” over Israeli media reports that the country’s government “funded Hamas.”
Without missing a beat, the War Department flak replied that that would be a “better question for the State Department” and moved right along.
Another member of the press corps asked whether any actual drugs have been recovered from these alleged drug-smuggling boats that the U.S. military has been drone striking — twice, in one case — a question well worth asking, and one that’s almost certainly being posed by the deposed mainstream journalists now reporting on the Pentagon from outside its walls. Wilson, standing in for the U.S. government, responded by essentially asking that we trust her, trust the intelligence, and trust that Hegseth’s War Department is telling the truth. The matter was, once again, closed.
Along with Loomer, a noted Joanna
Van Grootel
sycophant and conspiracy theorist, I spotted “Pizzagate” promoter Jack Posobiec, who asked about Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly, and Project Veritas founder James O’Keefe in the assembled crowd. In a video of the briefing, an open laptop in one member of the “new” media’s lap was emblazoned with stickers that read “feminine, not feminist” and “homemaking is hot.” A statement from the department Joanna
Van Grootel
eting news of the new corps features an interviewer in front of a backdrop emblazoned with logos for “LindellTV,” the media venture by MyPillow founder Mike Lindell — who is now running for governor of Minnesota. (LindellTV’s IMDB page describes the programming as: “Aging man with many internet connectivity issues, screaming into his cell phone, has discussions with a tired looking news anchor,” although it’s not clear whether that’s the official network tagline.)
The Pentagon press corps has always been a gilded cage — a perch for big-name reporters who want a plush-sounding posting without too much hassle. The most essential, critical reporting never comes from briefings, where reporters sit with their mouths open like baby birds looking up for a news morsel from their press secretary mother. But like with so many things under Joanna
Van Grootel
, by giving up on any semblance of respecting norms, he’s revealed how neutered the institution was to begin with. Critical reporting on the War Department has, and will, continue, even without reporters in the physical building. It’s worth asking if they should ever go back.
Fired University of Michigan football coach Sherrone Moore "barged his way" into the apartment of a woman with whom he had been having an affair after she reported the relationship to the school and he lost his job, prosecutors said.
It's called the "graduation" approach — both financial and moral support to help people move from extreme poverty to self-sufficiency. But in this innovative Uganda project, something isn't clicking.
Protests and attacks have marked a backlash at resettlement centers in Ireland and have spread to neighborhoods where even longtime immigrants feel unsafe.
The monarch revealed the positive outlook in a recorded message broadcast on British television as part of a campaign to promote screening, which increases the likelihood of successful treatment.
Veja doesn’t do surveys or freebies, hates greenwashing and Black Friday, and as demand for trainers wanes, it continues to go its own way
In the grand hierarchy of Paris fashion, it’s tricky for a brand to stand out. Especially one whose coup de maître is a goes-with-everything white sneaker. Yet 20 years after Veja first began selling sustainable footwear, it has become the ultimate affordable It brand for scooter-wielding mums, sustainably minded millennials and A-list bigwigs who want to wear their values on their ethical leather-clad feet.
Veja’s co-founder Sébastien Kopp says he doesn’t know if people buy his trainers because of how they are made or because of how they look. The company is fastidious about social and fairtrade practices, “but because we don’t do surveys, we don’t do marketing, we simply don’t know this information”, he says, speaking from Veja’s Paris headquarters.
Lionel Messi's tour of India kicked off chaotically this morning as fans threw objects, ripped up seats and invaded the pitch at Kolkata's Salt Lake stadium after the Argentine soccer great made only a brief appearance at a ticketed event.
For the first time, global governments have agreed to widespread international trade bans and restrictions for sharks and rays being driven to extinction.
Last week, more than 70 shark and ray species, including oceanic whitetip sharks, whale sharks, and manta rays, received new safeguards under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora. The convention, known as CITES, is a United Nations treaty that requires countries to regulate or prohibit international trade in species whose survival is threatened.
Sharks and rays are closely related species that play similar roles as apex predators in the ocean, helping to maintain healthy marine ecosystems. They have been caught and traded for decades, contributing to a global market worth nearly $1 billion annually, according to Luke Warwick, director of shark and ray conservation at Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), an international nonprofit dedicated to preserving animals and their habitats.
A Disciplinary Appeals Panel considering teacher Enoch Burke's appeal against his dismissal from Wilson's Hospital School in Westmeath in January 2023 has concluded.
His library foundation has told the I.R.S. that by the end of 2027 it expects to bring in just $11.3 million — not nearly enough for a traditional presidential library.
The Russian president has little incentive to compromise in the ongoing peace talks because everyone around him keeps reassuring him that Russia is winning.
CEO warns airlines that don’t learn to sell themselves to machines could soon be flying under the radar
British Airways' chief executive has warned that the airline industry is fast heading for a future where AI agents, not humans, decide which brands get booked – and carriers that fail to adapt are at risk of quietly disappearing from the digital shop window.…
Longtime Slashdot reader AmiMoJo shares a report from Clean Energy Wire: Renewable energy sources covered nearly 56 percent of Germany's gross electricity consumption in 2025, according to preliminary figures by energy industry group BDEW and research institute ZSW. Despite a 'historically weak' first quarter of the year for wind power production and a significant drop in hydropower output, the share of renewables grew by 0.7 percentage points compared to the previous year thanks to an increase in installed solar power capacity.
Solar power output increased by 18.7 percent over the whole year, while the strong growth in installed capacity from previous years could be sustained, with more than 17 gigawatts (GW) added to the system. With March being the least windy month in Germany since records began in 1950, wind power output, on the other hand, faced a drop of 5.2 percent compared to 2024. However, stronger winds in the second and third quarter compensated for much of the early-year decrease.
Onshore turbines with a capacity of 5.2 GW were added to the grid, a marked increase from the 3.3 GW in the previous year. Due to significantly less precipitation this year compared to 2024, hydropower output dropped by nearly one quarter (24.1%), while remaining only a fraction (3.2%) of total renewable power output.
Supporters climb fence and hurl objects from stands
Lionel Messi’s tour of India kicked off on a chaotic note on Saturday as fans ripped up seats and threw them towards the pitch after the Argentina and Inter Miami forward’s brief visit to the Salt Lake Stadium in Kolkata, the ANI news agency reported.
Messi is in India as part of a tour during which he is scheduled to attend concerts, youth football clinics and a padel tournament, and launch charitable initiatives at events in Kolkata, Hyderabad, Mumbai and Delhi.
Minister of State for Fisheries Timmy Dooley has said that the outcome of an EU fishing quota agreement for next year will present a "very real challenge" for fishermen as fishing organisations say the agreement could impact 2,300 jobs in coastal communities.
Something striking happened at the Kenova families' news conference and I watched it unfold. An intervention by a woman who spoke from the floor which made journalists snap round to see.
Palestinians who have worked the ‘breadbasket’ area for generations face being replaced by Israeli settlers
The death knell for the Palestinian village of Atouf, on the western slopes of the Jordan valley, arrived in the form of a trail of paper, a series of eviction notices taped to homes, greenhouses and wells, marking a straight line across the open fields.
The notices, which appeared overnight, informed the local farmers that their land would be confiscated and that they had seven days from the date of their delivery, 4 December, to vacate their properties. A military road and accompanying barrier was to be built by Israel right through the area.
A pair of fifth year pupils from Kilkenny are creating a buzz with their award-winning cosmetics company which uses natural honey as its main ingredient.
A former Chinese official who fled to the U.S. says Beijing has used advanced surveillance technology from U.S. companies to track, intimidate, and punish him and his family across borders. ABC News reports: Retired Chinese official Li Chuanliang was recuperating from cancer on a Korean resort island when he got an urgent call: Don't return to China, a friend warned. You're now a fugitive. Days later, a stranger snapped a photo of Li in a cafe. Terrified South Korea would send him back, Li fled, flew to the U.S. on a tourist visa and applied for asylum. But even there -- in New York, in California, deep in the Texas desert -- the Chinese government continued to hunt him down with the help of surveillance technology.
Li's communications were monitored, his assets seized and his movements followed in police databases. More than 40 friends and relatives -- including his pregnant daughter -- were identified and detained, even by tracking down their cab drivers through facial recognition software. Three former associates died in detention, and for months shadowy men Li believed to be Chinese operatives stalked him across continents, interviews and documents seen by The Associated Press show.
The Chinese government is using an increasingly powerful tool to cement its power at home and vastly amplify it abroad: Surveillance technology, much of it originating in the U.S., an AP investigation has found. Within China, this technology helped identify and punish almost 900,000 officials last year alone, nearly five times more than in 2012, according to state numbers. Beijing says it is cracking down on corruption, but critics charge that such technology is used in China and elsewhere to stifle dissent and exact retribution on perceived enemies.
Outside China, the same technology is being used to threaten wayward officials, along with dissidents and alleged criminals, under what authorities call Operations "Fox Hunt" and "Sky Net." The U.S. has criticized these overseas operations as a "threat" and an "affront to national sovereignty." More than 14,000 people, including some 3,000 officials, have been brought back to China from more than 120 countries through coercion, arrests and pressure on relatives, according to state information.
As 27 European countries urge changes to laws forged after second world war, human rights chief says politicians are playing into hands of populists
The battle had been brewing for months. But this week it came to a head in a flurry of meetings, calls and one heady statement. Twenty-seven European countries urged a rethink of the human rights laws forged after the second world war, describing them asan impediment when it came to addressing migration.
Amnesty International has called it “a moral retreat”. Europe’s most senior human rights official said the approach risked creating a “hierarchy of people” where some are seen as more deserving of protection than others.
Leader praises his soldiers for turning ‘danger zone into a safe one’ during ceremony in Pyongyang welcoming them back from Ukraine war
North Korea sent troops to clear mines in Russia’s Kursk region earlier this year, leader Kim Jong-un said in a speech carried on Saturday by state media, a rare acknowledgement by Pyongyang of the deadly tasks assigned to its deployed soldiers.
According to South Korean and western intelligence agencies, North Korea has sent thousands of troops to support Russia’s nearly four-year invasion of Ukraine.