David Hockney’s Smoke and Mirrors: When Art Defies Mortality—and the Rules David Hockney’s death at 88 reveals how his rebellious love of smoking became a metaphor for art’s defiance—of health, norms, and even mortality. A legacy in embers.
Britain’s digital divide: when innovation becomes a generational battleground Parents back an under-16 social media ban, but teens see it as censorship. As the UK debates online safety, innovation risks deepening the rift between protection and freedom.
World Cup 2026: When Football’s Glitz Masks Its Grit—and Who Pays the Price From stolen boots to IOC hypocrisy, the 2026 World Cup exposes football’s contradictions—where spectacle hides exploitation and privilege silences pain.
Shark attacks and systemic failures: When safety becomes a privilege A Sydney shark attack exposes global safety gaps—while aid workers exploit refugees and UK suncream myths fuel a cancer crisis. Who really gets protected?
World Cup economics: when football dictates Britain’s energy and office rules The 2026 World Cup is rewriting UK energy tariffs and Wall Street office policies—how sport became an economic lever overnight.
Burnham’s utilities plan: when public control becomes a geopolitical gamble Andy Burnham’s push to nationalise water and energy could reshape UK politics—but risks alienating investors and Brussels as Starmer’s defence cuts spark backlash.
Assurance-auto, canicule, Brésil : la France face à ses angles morts Entre contrats opaques, chaleur extrême et sport en crise, la France révèle ses failles systémiques. Analyse des choix qui coûtent cher.