Art as rebellion, rubber from weeds: when culture and climate fight back From the Jarman Award’s radical filmmakers to dandelions replacing rubber trees, Britain’s cultural and environmental battles expose a system pushing back—on its own terms.
When innovation forgets its purpose: goats, AI, and the quiet betrayal of progress From goats following human voices to AI generating disturbing images, innovation’s promise is fraying—who benefits, and who pays the price?
World Cup 2026: When Football’s Diversity Becomes Its Sharpest Political Edge From Australia’s refugee-born stars to Messi’s milestone, football’s global stage exposes who gets to belong—and who still doesn’t.
Britain’s education divide: when a haircut becomes a postcode lottery A neurodivergent child’s haircut reveals Britain’s systemic failures—while ministers propose GCSE thresholds to bar thousands from university loans.
UK inflation stalls at 2.8%: when tax cuts become a hospitality scam Inflation holds at 2.8% as transport costs offset food price slowdown. Meanwhile, VAT cuts on children’s meals spark exploitation fears—and Lidl’s pub experiment redefines retail.
UK’s inflation hold: when economic relief masks a deeper political crisis UK inflation stalls at 2.8%, defying forecasts—but the VAT cut on children’s meals and Melbourne’s freebirth tragedy reveal a government out of touch with reality.
Justice en faillite, IA militaire, bac sous tension : la France qui trébuche sur ses urgences La mort de Lyhanna relance le débat sur une justice exsangue, tandis que l’IA d’Elon Musk cible l’Iran et les boulangers obtiennent le droit de travailler le 1er Mai. Trois fronts où l’État recule.