Mexico’s gender revolution: when art becomes a political battleground Pieter Henket’s portrait series in Mexico City challenges norms—while the UK debates trust in media, Spain’s renewables cut bills, and Nigeria’s bats fight extinction.
AI vs extinction: when botany’s race becomes Britain’s wake-up call Britain’s botanists sound the alarm: AI could save vital plants from extinction—but only if the UK stops treating science as a cost centre. The race is on, and the clock is ticking.
Cape Verde’s World Cup draw exposes football’s geopolitical fault lines Cape Verde’s historic draw against Spain lays bare football’s hypocrisy—where underdogs rewrite rules while FIFA’s elite flaunt privilege. Infantino’s jet diplomacy and Iran’s protests reveal the tournament’s true battleground: power, not sport.
Britain’s care crisis: when kindness becomes a postcode lottery From mobility hoists to ovarian syndrome, Britain’s care system fails those it should protect—unless you’re lucky enough to find the rare firm that still treats patients like humans.
Thames Water’s £10bn rescue in doubt as Japan’s rate hike rattles UK markets Thames Water’s £10bn rescue plan faces collapse as Japan’s historic rate hike sends shockwaves through UK utilities—while EV prices resist Chinese competition.
Thames Water to public hands: when geopolitics meets the kitchen sink Britain’s water crisis forces nationalisation—while Tunisia’s World Cup chaos and Jo Cox’s legacy expose deeper fractures in politics, security, and public trust.
Char du futur, bac en crise : la France face à ses échecs industriels et éducatifs L’abandon du char franco-allemand et le chaos du bac 2026 révèlent une France incapable de mener ses projets stratégiques, entre divisions politiques et renoncements.