Latest Story
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Leadership in science
Oula Ghannoum | February 13, 2026Science leaders must balance vision with empathy, ambition with fairness, and standards with restraint, while navigating uneven abilities, diverse roles, and the realities of personal lives.
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The power of the powerless
Darius von Guttner Sporzynski | February 13, 2026Czech dissident hero Václav Havel helped overthrow the Russian imposed communist regime of his country in 1989, but a decade before, in a famous essay, he noted how such oppression requires internal collaboration as well as external coercion.
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Will AI eat SaSS?
Ida Someh | February 13, 2026Software companies used to sell businesses software, but then hit on the idea of ‘software as a service’ (SaSS) allowing them to charge endless subscription fees for software in the cloud. Now the AI developed by other software companies is about to eat their lunch, with ‘vibe-coded’ solutions threatening the lucrative subscription model.
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Crisis? What crisis? A question of balance
Bernard Paul Corden | February 12, 2026Bernard Corden concludes his hard hitting three part series on the failures of neo-liberalism with a plea for a better future for us all.
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Call for crackdown on youth gambling
Open Forum | February 12, 2026Hundreds of international experts in gambling addiction are urging a more coordinated approach to enhance interventions and therapies, while aligning research priorities to tackle the escalating problem.
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It’s not dark yet, but is it getting there?
Michelle Spear | February 12, 2026Bob Dylan observed that “It’s not dark yet, but it’s getting there”, however there may be light at the end of the tunnel for middle aged people who feel they’re running out of steam.
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Opening the Epstein files
Lindsey Blumell | February 11, 2026“I know this is a lot to take in. The violence. The neglect. The bad decisions. The self-harm. Imagine if a trauma reel like this played in your head all the time, as it does mine … but please don’t stop reading.”
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Crisis? What crisis? Another brick in the wall
Bernard Paul Corden | February 11, 2026The rapid expansion of science and technology in the new millennium has radically transformed our social landscape with a foreboding trajectory and corrosive impact on democracy.
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The typing’s on the wall
Hayley Butler | February 11, 2026Young children starting school are increasingly using computers as well as the traditional pens and pencils so educators should teach them to use both.
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The Times They Are a-Changin’
Panizza Allmark | February 10, 2026Protest singers like Woody Guthrie and Bob Dylan drew popular attention to social issues and civil rights in the United States through their songs, so will a new generation of artists carry the torch against the appalling excesses of Donald Trump?
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Crisis? What crisis? Aristocratic terrorism
Bernard Paul Corden | February 10, 2026In a new 3-part series, Bernard Cordon argues the Chicago school of monetarist economics in the 1970s and the neo-liberal political movement which followed in the 1980s set the scene for Donald Trump’s thuggish dismantling of the USA today.
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The track through the scribbly gums
Roger Chao | February 10, 2026Your local track through the scribbly gums reminded us that a good society does not only build things that make money. It preserves things that make life bearable.

