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Sports May 19, 2026

Wiegman Urges Mead to Make Crucial Transfer Decision for England's World Cup Chances

England manager Sarina Wiegman has emphasized that Beth Mead's next transfer move will be vital for…
Wiegman's Key Advice for Mead Sarina Wiegman has said Beth Mead's next transfer will be a "very important" factor in the England forward's chances of going to the 2027 Women's World Cup, as the outgoing Arsenal forward seeks more regular starts. Mead's Transfer Plans The 31-year-old is understood to be close to agreeing a move to Manchester City, after it was confirmed she will leave Arsenal at the end of her contract this summer after nine years. Mead, the star of England's 2022 European Championship triumph, played in 21 of Arsenal's 22 league fixtures this term but started only 12 of them. The Impact on England's World Cup Prospects "I think [it is] very important," Wiegman said, when asked about Mead's next steps. "She is still very ambitious and I think she still has the highest level. When you play at Arsenal, they have such a strong squad and they [play] so many games, so they split minutes in those games. She wants to get a good move and wants to compete for the World Cup and make the squad next year. Of course that's a long way out but you have to make the right decision." Squad Updates and World Cup Qualifiers Wiegman has recalled the Manchester United midfielder Ella Toone, the Chelsea forward Aggie Beever-Jones and the London City Lionesses winger Freya Godfrey after injuries for next month's two crucial World Cup qualifiers, with Mead also in the 25-player squad. The Lionesses will face Spain in Mallorca on 5 June before hosting Ukraine at Everton's Hill Dickinson Stadium four days later in their final fixture in this qualifying group. England are top with four wins from four, including a hugely valuable home victory over Spain at Wembley in April, which has put them in pole position to qualify automatically for next summer's finals in Brazil. Only the group winners will avoid the playoffs. England Squad for Upcoming Matches Goalkeepers: Hannah Hampton (Chelsea), Anna Moorhouse (Orlando Pride), Ellie Roebuck (Aston Villa) Defenders: Lucy Bronze (Chelsea), Jess Carter (Gotham), Niamh Charles (Chelsea), Alex Greenwood (Manchester City), Taylor Hinds (Arsenal), Maya Le Tissier (Manchester United), Esme Morgan (Washington Spirit), Leah Williamson (Arsenal), Lotte Wubben-Moy (Arsenal) Midfielders: Laura Blindkilde Brown (Manchester City), Lucia Kendall (Aston Villa), Jess Park (Manchester United), Georgia Stanway (Bayern Munich), Ella Toone (Manchester United), Keira Walsh (Chelsea) Forwards: Aggie Beever-Jones (Chelsea), Freya Godfrey (London City Lionesses), Lauren Hemp (Manchester City), Lauren James (Chelsea), Chloe Kelly (Arsenal), Beth Mead (Arsenal), Alessia Russo (Arsenal) Toone's Return and Squad Depth Wiegman said it was too soon to know whether Toone can play "90 minutes at the highest level" but added: "It's nice she's back. There are a couple of players that haven't played that many minutes. I still think they're the best players and they can make the chance of winning as high as possible, when they're in. But we have a squad of 25 so enough options that we can play." Omission of Young Player There is no place in the squad for the 18-year-old Erica Meg Parkinson, a surprise inclusion in April's squad. Discussing the omission of Parkinson, Wiegman said: "Erica came into the squad for the first time as a young player, turned 18 in our camp. We wanted to see her, she brought what we thought she would bring. I said in that [April] press conference that she would really surprise me if she would play straight away in a starting position, but she showed a couple of [good] things. There is still a gap for her to earn the minutes to compete with other players in the squad."
#Sarina Wiegman #Beth Mead #England Women's Football
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Tech May 19, 2026

South Asian Entrepreneurs Fueling UK Hate Speech with AI-Generated Content on Facebook

Young entrepreneurs from South Asia are creating and profiting from AI-generated hate speech target…
The Rise of AI-Generated Hate OperationsScroll through any Facebook feed in Britain and, between the baby announcements and petty neighbourhood beefs, you're likely to come across an account with a union jack profile picture and a vague, generic name like Britain Today. These accounts – and there are hundreds, possibly thousands of them – present themselves as the work of British patriots. In one typical, AI-generated video, a middle-aged man claims his local cafe "has stopped serving pork, bacon and sausages just to avoid offending people". Another post from the same account includes a sepia-tinted set of images of Victorian London, mourning a time when the city "was English, first-world and beautiful". Alongside this type of reactionary nostalgia, it's not unusual to see memes that call Islam a "cancer", decry Muslims praying in public as an "invasion of the west" or promote the "great replacement theory".The Financial Incentives Behind AI Hate ContentFor the past seven months, I have been investigating who is really behind pages like these. The answer, it turns out, is often young, entrepreneurial men from south Asia. They tend to have zero interest in UK politics, but the content they create often boosts far-right talking points in Britain and contributes to the increasingly hostile atmosphere for immigrants and British Muslims. They're part of a booming cottage industry producing commercial AI slop.The financial incentives for creating this kind of content are huge, particularly for creators in the global south. At the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, we looked in detail at two very successful "sloperations" targeting British audiences from Pakistan and Sri Lanka. They make money from the online ads that Meta places next to high-performing content. Meta shares a proportion of the ad revenue with the creators and also makes direct payments to creators to reward posts that receive a lot of engagement.Once you hone your algorithmic rage bait, there's very good money to be made from slop. The Pakistani creator, a devout Muslim who we are not naming for his own safety, told us he makes $1,500 (£1,119) a month from one of his pages alone; Geeth Sooriyapura, the Sri Lankan creator, claimed to have made $300,000 over the course of his Facebook career. We weren't able to verify these figures, but both men were certainly making many times the average income in their countries.The Economic Impact of AI-Generated PropagandaTheir success represents the seductive promise of "passive income" culture, a pervasive modern gospel that says you should quit your job and make easy money online. The proponents of this philosophy also often sell courses as an additional revenue stream: Sooriyapura claimed that 2,500 people, mainly other Sri Lankans, have graduated from his content academy.Rightwing propaganda and Islamophobia are, of course, not new. But two key structural factors have made it particularly pervasive on social media.The Technological and Policy EnablersFirst, the wide availability of generative AI tools. These are used at every stage of the content creation process: to brainstorm ideas, to write captions and, most importantly, to create compelling images and videos. This is particularly helpful if, like the Pakistani creator, you do not speak English well. In one video we reviewed from Sooriyapura's Facebook course, he told his students that AI-generated videos can help political content go viral up to 10 times faster.Second is Meta's retreat from content moderation. Over the past couple of years, the major social platforms have made mass redundancies on the trust and safety teams that monitored and took down harmful content. This was partly motivated by pressure from the Trump administration, which believed that platforms had engaged in heavy-handed censorship of content during the Biden presidency.Social media companies justify the moderation job cuts by pointing to their use of AI to find harmful content more efficiently. But our reporting shows there is masses of deeply offensive content on there which anyone could find in a few minutes, if they bothered to look.The Future of Online Hate Speech and Platform AccountabilityAfter we spoke to the Pakistani creator, he said it was a "good thing" we had informed him about the nature of his posts and he deleted many of them. Sooriyapura told us that he did not encourage his students to "spread violence" and that he just educates "people on Facebook monetisation and audience-targeting".The Pakistani creator didn't cover his tracks particularly well. It took me a couple of hours and a little help from Osint Industries, a platform that collates information on social media accounts, to definitively confirm that the person who ran the Islamophobic slop account also had personal accounts in his own name sharing verses from the Qur'an. These are actions that Meta easily could have taken itself. But why would it spend good money implementing its own policies when there is so little political or regulatory pressure to do so?When we contacted Meta in both these cases, it took down many of their pages and sent a one-line statement: "We have clear community standards that prohibit hate speech, harassment, harmful misinformation and inauthentic behaviour and we have removed these accounts for violating our policies." I've been a tech journalist long enough to have been through this process with Meta and other social platforms many times before. The Sri Lanka network is, depressingly, back up and running, having faced minimal consequences after a bit of downtime.Meta can, and should, be doing more to take these kinds of accounts down. But as long as its core product is an algorithmic feed that financially rewards content that provokes extreme emotions, others will always appear in its place.
#Facebook #Meta #AI
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Entertainment May 19, 2026

Tycoon: Charlotte Zhang's Dystopian Vision of Corporate-Controlled Los Angeles

Charlotte Zhang's debut film 'Tycoon' presents a dystopian vision of 2028 Los Angeles where a megac…
The Dystopian Vision of 2028 Los AngelesBrimming with indelible images, Charlotte Zhang's brilliant debut locates the roots of a dystopian future in the here and now. Set around the 2028 Summer Olympics, the film imagines a Los Angeles gripped by paranoia and conspiracies; and a livestock disease has led to a ban on all meat production, leaving the main source of protein distribution – powdered insects – in the control of a megacorporation called Ootheca Inc. Ironically enough, a cockroach infestation has taken over several local neighbourhoods, making Ootheca's monopolising greed even more insidious.A Human Story of Survival Amid Corporate ControlAll of this might sound pretty out there, yet the heart of Tycoon is a deeply human story of survival. Both hustlers up for any challenge, Lito (Miguel Padilla-Juarez) and Jay (Jon Lawrence Reyes) take advantage of the widespread chaos to embark on a series of petty crimes, including breaking into an Ootheca trailer to steal boxes of the precious protein powder. Their escapades are dynamically rendered on a variety of formats including handheld DV camera and Super 8, as well as Xerox art. But compared to other film-makers who favour this DIY style, Zhang is beautifully attentive to blocking and composition. Scenes of house parties, twilight rides against the setting sun, or high-rev street drifting harmonise into a stunning city symphony, in which a visual rhythm gradually emerges from disorder.Political Implications in a Corporate-Dominated WorldBeneath the seemingly casual tone of the visuals, there are also serious political implications. As Latino men living in a time of state-sanctioned racial violence, Lito and Jay are enfolded in economic precarity and constant surveillance. That they choose to game the system rather than waiting to be squashed by it – like Ootheca's crushed insects – is wonderfully empowering. Zhang occasionally makes explicit these political allusions by way of text intertitles, which sometimes feel a little awkward; still, when is a better time to deliver a manifesto than in one's first film?Where to Experience This Visionary DebutTycoon is at the ICA, London from 22 May.
#Charlotte Zhang #Tycoon film #dystopian
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Tech May 19, 2026

Third of University Students in Great Britain Fear AI Job Losses Will Trigger Social Unrest

A King's College London poll reveals that one-third of university students in Great Britain believe…
The Growing Concern Over AI's Economic ImpactOne in three university students in Great Britain believe that artificial intelligence will eliminate jobs so rapidly that it will trigger civil unrest, according to a new survey by King's College London (KCL). This significant finding highlights the deep concerns among educated young people about the potential societal consequences of rapid technological advancement.The poll, conducted by the King's Institute for Artificial Intelligence and the KCL Policy Institute, represents the first major tracking study of attitudes toward AI across different segments of British society. It compares responses from university students, young people aged 16 to 29, employers, and the general public.Student Usage Patterns and PessimismUniversity students emerge as among the heaviest users of AI technology, with 77% reporting using it at least a few times a month—substantially higher than the 46% of workers who do so. Additionally, 27% of students use AI daily or almost daily, indicating deep integration of these tools into academic life.Despite their familiarity with AI, students express significant pessimism about its economic consequences. More than half are convinced that job losses resulting from AI will be more severe than those in a typical recession. This pessimism is particularly notable given that students generally hold more positive views about AI's overall impact on humanity compared to the general public.Key Statistics from the AI Attitudes Survey34% of university students believe AI will eliminate jobs fast enough to cause civil unrest (compared to 22% of the general public)77% of university students use AI at least a few times a month (compared to 46% of workers)27% of university students use AI daily or almost daily52% of male university students believe AI is positive for humanity (compared to 24% of the general public)9 out of 10 university students have encountered problems with AI, most commonly factual errors (37%) and made-up sources (31%)78% of students would still choose to attend university, though 30% would have selected a different subjectImplications for Education and the WorkforceThe survey reveals a significant gap between students' perceptions of their preparedness for an AI-shaped job market and their actual experiences. While 60% believe universities are capable of preparing them for this future, only 36% report actually receiving adequate preparation.This disconnect suggests that educational institutions may be struggling to adapt curricula and teaching methods to address the rapidly evolving technological landscape. The findings also highlight gender differences in how students perceive AI's impact on their cognitive abilities, with male students more likely to believe AI enhances their thinking skills while female students tend to hold the opposite view.Divergent Views on AI's FutureThe poll captures contrasting perspectives on AI's potential impact. Bobby Duffy, director of the KCL Policy Institute, emphasizes the widespread concern about AI's effect on employment, particularly at entry-level positions, and its broader implications for young people and the economy.In contrast, Bouke Klein Teeselink, a lecturer in philosophy, politics, and economics at KCL, offers a more optimistic outlook. He suggests that with appropriate training, policies, and institutional support, AI could lead to increased productivity, expanded opportunities, higher incomes, and accelerated scientific progress.These divergent views reflect the broader societal debate about artificial intelligence—balancing legitimate concerns about displacement and inequality against the potential benefits of technological advancement.
#King's College London #AI #Job Losses
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Politics May 19, 2026

Philadelphia Democratic Primary Highlights Tensions Within Progressive Movement

Voters in Pennsylvania’s 3rd congressional district will choose among four progressive Democrats, e…
The Primary Contest in Pennsylvania’s 3rd DistrictOn Tuesday, May 19, 2026, Philadelphia’s urban core will hold a Democratic primary to decide who will run for the U.S. House in a district that is 40 points more Democratic than the national average. With incumbent Dwight Evans retiring after a decade, the race is wide open and expected to determine the district’s representative for the 2026 midterms.Candidate Line‑up and Campaign ThemesFour candidates are on the ballot:Chris Rabb – State Representative, self‑described democratic socialist, champion of progressive policies.Sharif Street – State Senator, former chair of the Pennsylvania Democratic Party, positioned as the establishment choice.Ala Stanford – Pediatric surgeon, political outsider emphasizing public‑health leadership from the COVID‑19 pandemic.Shaun Griffith – Lawyer, also running on a progressive platform.All campaigns focus on expanding healthcare, affordable housing, and abolishing ICE, but they differ in tone and perceived pragmatism.Polling Snapshots Reveal a Fragmented FieldIndependent polling is absent; however, candidate‑sponsored surveys show a split electorate:April poll by 314 Action (Stanford‑backed) – Stanford 28%, Rabb 23%, Street 16%.November poll by Street’s campaign – Street 22%, Rabb 17%, Stanford 11%.These numbers suggest no clear front‑runner and indicate that a plurality of 35‑40% could win the nomination.What the Race Signals for the Democratic Party’s Left‑Right BalanceThe contest pits progressive firebrands against a candidate with deep party‑machine ties. Endorsements illustrate the divide:Rabb – Backed by Alexandria Ocasio‑Cortez, Ilhan Omar, and Sen. Chris Van Hollen.Street – Supported by local labor unions, city council members, and Mayor Cherelle Parker.Stanford – Endorsed by outgoing Congressman Dwight Evans.Governor Josh Shapiro reportedly warned unions that attacking Stanford could benefit Rabb, highlighting strategic calculations within the state’s Democratic establishment.Scenarios for the General Election and BeyondWith no Republican candidates announced, the Democratic nominee is poised to win the November general election. Victory will likely depend on turnout in North and West Philadelphia and the ability to consolidate fragmented support. Analysts suggest:If Street mobilizes labor‑aligned voters, he could edge out rivals.If Rabb captures the progressive base while Stanford and Street split centrist voters, he could win with a modest plurality.If Stanford emerges as a true middle‑ground, she could siphon enough votes to force a runoff‑style outcome.Regardless of the winner, the primary underscores the ongoing debate over how progressive ideals translate into electoral strategy within a pivotal swing state.
#Chris Rabb #Sharif Street #Ala Stanford
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Sports May 19, 2026

Aaron Rai's Historic US PGA Win Ignites Golf Inspiration in Wolverhampton

Aaron Rai became the first Englishman since 1919 to win the US PGA Championship, inspiring a new ge…
The Historic VictoryThere was a real buzz and sense of pride at the 3 Hammers golf complex in Wolverhampton, the old stomping grounds of Aaron Rai, who on Sunday became the first Englishman since 1919 to win the US PGA Championship. It was the first major title of the 31-year-old's career and Rai described it as "truly a dream come true." "It's phenomenal to think of how many things have gone into it and extremely rewarding to be stood here," he told Sky Sports.The Journey to GreatnessFor Rai's childhood coach Darren Prosser, who taught Rai for about two years, it was a proud moment. "Very proud," he said. "Very pleased for him and his family and it's great for golf to get one of the nice guys winning it." Prosser, who teaches at his own academy in Kingswinford, recalled spotting Rai's talent early and said his dedication and hand-eye coordination was beyond his years. "When he went up playing on the golf course, he could play all the shots around the green," he said. "His work ethic, how hard he worked, and guided strongly by his father, Amrik."Family Sacrifices and SupportRai's golfing passion appears to have started almost by accident when he suffered a nasty bruise on his head after playing with his older brother's hockey sticks. In search for a safer alternative, his mother, Dalvir, bought him plastic golf clubs. Rai paid credit to his parents and wife in a press conference after his win, describing how is father had quit his job to support his golfing career and been with him "every day that I went to practice from the age of four to five". "My mum has been absolutely incredible as well. She worked extremely long hours to just provide for the house," he said. "I can't put into words how much they've done in terms of support, the care and love. I wouldn't be here without them."The Financial RewardIn addition to becoming the first non-American to win the Wanamaker trophy on Sunday, Rai landed a $3.69m (£2.76m) prize. This significant victory not only marks a personal achievement but also represents a substantial financial reward that will further support his career and family.Inspiring the Next GenerationHis journey from Wolverhampton to golfing history has already inspired six-year-old Adam Rai Jr, a keen golfer who started training at the 3 Hammers from the age of 18 months. Adam attends the golf club around three times a week and was lucky enough to meet Rai in November 2025. During the visit, Adam's dad cheekily told Rai's team they were related, because of their shared surname, and the family were able to meet the golfer and his family. Adam Sr said: "He's probably the most genuinely nice, calm very pleasant [person] to be around. Very welcoming."The Ripple Effect of SuccessFive months later, Adam Sr received a phone call out of the blue from Rai's father inviting the family to attend the Masters tournament in the US. "It [was] like winning the lottery," Adam Sr said. Describing his reaction to Rai's historic win, he said it was "really emotional". Adam Jr's mother, Emma Blower, said Rai's win showed success was obtainable. "So we're saying: 'If Aaron can do it, you can do it,'" she said. Asked what impact Rai's win would have on him, Adam Jr said: "Do more golf!"The Future of Golf in WolverhamptonProsser and Adam Jr's trainer, Jess Warren, said Rai's win would encourage more people, from a diverse range of backgrounds, to consider taking part in the sport. "Seeing someone from the same training ground reach the top of world golf proves to young golfers that with dedication and practice, anything is possible," Warren said. Prosser added: "[Rai] has been mega dedicated and come through the ranks, [and] it's nice to see that it can actually be done." This victory is expected to have a lasting impact on golf participation in the Wolverhampton area, potentially creating a new generation of dedicated players inspired by Rai's success story.
#Aaron Rai #US PGA Championship #Wolverhampton
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World Wide May 18, 2026

UAE's Barakah Nuclear Plant Targeted by Drone Attack

A drone attack on the UAE's Barakah Nuclear Energy Plant has raised concerns about nuclear security…
The Barakah Nuclear Energy Plant: A Vital Component of the UAE's Energy Infrastructure The Barakah Nuclear Energy Plant, located in Al Dhafra, one of Abu Dhabi's seven emirates, is the UAE's only nuclear power plant. Construction of the plant began in 2012, and its first reactor became commercially operational in 2021. The plant features four pressurised water reactors, each with a capacity to produce 1,400 megawatts (MW) of electricity, enough to power roughly 1 million homes. The Drone Attack: A Threat to Nuclear Security A drone attack on Sunday caused a fire at an electrical generator outside the Barakah plant's inner perimeter. The UAE's nuclear regulator confirmed that operations at the Barakah facility were not affected, and radiation levels remained normal. The incident has raised concerns about nuclear security and military escalation in the Gulf, particularly with discussions of peace between Iran and the United States hanging in the balance. The Implications of a Nuclear Facility Under Attack Attacks on nuclear power plants are especially worrying because they can risk damaging critical safety systems or reactors, which could release radioactive material into the atmosphere. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) expressed 'grave concern' over the incident, warning that military activity threatening nuclear facilities is 'unacceptable.' The IAEA reported that one reactor had to rely temporarily on emergency diesel generators following the attack. Regional Reactions and Condemnations The UAE's Ministry of Foreign Affairs condemned the 'unprovoked terrorist attack' in the 'strongest terms,' emphasising that the country will not tolerate any threat to its security and sovereignty. Neighbouring Gulf states, including Saudi Arabia and Qatar, also condemned the attack. The Indian Ministry of External Affairs described the attack as 'unacceptable' and urged a return to diplomacy. Iran's Response: A Deliberate Ambiguity Iran has not claimed responsibility for the drone attacks, and there has been no public statement from Iran about the incident at Barakah. However, Iranian Ministry of Defence spokesperson Reza Talaei-Nik stated that the military is 'fully prepared' to confront any new aggression from the US and Israel. The incident has heightened tensions in the region, with the US and Israel reportedly bolstering their military presence.
#UAE #Barakah Nuclear Plant #Drone Attack
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Tech May 18, 2026

LetinAR's PinTILT Optics Poised to Power the Next Wave of AI Glasses

South Korean startup LetinAR raised $18.5 million to scale its PinTILT optical module, a thin, ligh…
LetinAR announced a fresh $18.5 million financing round backed by Korea Development Bank and Lotte Ventures, bringing its total capital to $41.7 million. The cash will accelerate production of its proprietary PinTILT optical module, a technology that could solve the weight, thickness and battery‑life challenges that have held back AI‑powered smart glasses. PinTILT: Redefining the Optical Module for AI‑Enabled Smart Glasses Founded in 2016 by high‑school friends Jaehyeok Kim (CEO) and Jeonghun Ha (CTO), LetinAR focuses exclusively on the lens component that projects images into a wearer’s field of view. Their PinTILT approach arranges microscopic optical elements to direct light precisely into the eye, avoiding the wasteful scattering of traditional waveguide designs and the bulk of mirror‑based “birdbath” systems. Thin, lightweight lens suitable for normal‑looking frames Higher brightness with up to 30% less power consumption Compatible with existing smart‑glass form factors Funding Surge and Market Forecasts Signal Rapid Scale‑Up The new round adds $18.5 million to LetinAR’s balance sheet, earmarked for scaling manufacturing ahead of a planned 2027 IPO. The timing aligns with a booming market: global AI‑glass shipments jumped to 8.7 million units in 2025, a 300% year‑over‑year increase, and analysts expect shipments to top 15 million units in 2026. 2025 shipments: 8.7 million units (+300% YoY) 2026 forecast: >15 million units Total capital raised by LetinAR: $41.7 million Why LetinAR’s Lens Could Accelerate Mass Adoption of AI Glasses Industry players—from Meta and Google to Apple, Samsung, and Chinese giants like Huawei and Xiaomi—are racing to launch AI‑enabled eyewear. The limiting factor has been a lens that is both thin enough for everyday wear and efficient enough to preserve battery life. LetinAR’s customers, including Japan’s NTT QONOQ Devices and Dynabook, already ship modules at scale, and Swiss deep‑tech firm Aegis Rider is integrating the technology into an AR motorcycle helmet slated for EU and Swiss launch in 2026. Road Ahead: From Prototype Helmets to Consumer‑Ready AI Glasses by 2027 With the funding secured, LetinAR will expand its production lines to meet the anticipated shift from early adopters to mass‑market devices. The company’s IPO target in 2027 signals confidence in a market that could see AI glasses become a mainstream platform for navigation, safety alerts, and contextual information. Partnerships with major OEMs and continued R&D; with Big‑Tech firms are likely to cement LetinAR’s role as the go‑to optics supplier as the industry moves toward widespread consumer adoption.
#LetinAR #LG Electronics #PinTILT
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Environment May 18, 2026

The Iran War and the Imperative for Renewable Energy Independence

The article argues that true energy security and independence can only be achieved through decarbon…
The LeadDonald Trump's unjustified war on Iran and the resulting global fuel crisis is a continuing reminder that true energy security and independence will continue to elude us so long as we remain dependent on fossil fuels. Whether it's wars over oil and gas resource access or attacks on fossil fuel power plants and energy grids, this reliance on finite resources only worsens a country's threat profile.The Geopolitical Energy CrisisNews this month of Russia's deadly attacks on Ukraine's energy infrastructure, Russian drones swarming Ukrainian power stations, and Kyiv running out of time to prepare for another winter of attacks on its energy grid illustrates this urgency. No country will be energy-secure or independent as long as its fuel supply remains finite and fossilized and its power plants and energy grids centralized and fossil fuel-dependent. Those are sitting ducks, targets very vulnerable to attack by adversaries.The Renewable TransitionThere is another way to bolster energy security and independence: decarbonized and decentralized energy. Using local, renewable resources to power, heat and cool a community, with battery storage for backup, provides immediate relief from being precariously power plant-dependent or grid-dependent. With the Iran war accelerating the transition to renewable energy, the gains from energy transition are obvious: countries like Spain are rapidly transitioning to renewables – better insulating themselves from gas price shocks and better protecting themselves from future grid-wide blackouts.The Ukrainian ModelThat's what Ukrainian communities are increasingly doing in response to Russian attacks on their fossil-fueled power plants and energy grids. In direct response to Russia's war, municipalities all across Ukraine are making the switch fast. Many Ukrainians who were fortunate enough to have heat this past winter had already made the switch to solar power, heat pumps and battery storage backup, thanks to the help of local non-profit organizations like EcoAction and Ecoclub, and donors abroad.The Policy DivideEfforts like the Hromada Project, which is named after the Ukrainian term for 'community', will be essential in helping Ukrainians weather the war by connecting local nongovernmental organizations in Ukraine to public- and private-sector support from around the world. Instead, Trump and his Republican followers seek to keep the US addicted to fossilized thinking. Weaponizing the Department of Defense to stall onshore wind development, repealing tax incentives for renewable energy development and using taxpayer dollars to bribe clean energy developers to abandon projects endangers our ability to adopt secure, affordable and clean energy technologies now.The Path ForwardBefore another war is waged, and American defense budgets doubled, now is the time to double down on what will make us truly secure and independent. Transitioning off the fuels that start wars, and transitioning on to the energies that are decentralized, infinite and available in every community and country on this planet: that's what real freedom looks like – and it's all within our grasp.
#Iran #Renewable Energy #Ukraine
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