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Politics May 23, 2026

Miliband Calls for National Consensus on UK Re‑joining the EU

Former foreign secretary David Miliband urged Britain to build a national consensus before any move…
Executive Summary: Miliband’s Call for a Broad‑Based EU DebateOn BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, David Miliband – former foreign secretary and president of the International Rescue Committee – argued that the United Kingdom must achieve a “national consensus” before pursuing any formal re‑entry into the European Union.Milestone Remarks on the Government’s Single‑Market PitchMiliband responded to recent revelations that the UK government has been pitching a single market for goods with the EU as part of a broader trade‑reintegration strategy. He described the current “reset” as insufficient, calling for a “much higher dosage” of engagement.Financial Snapshot: £9bn Reset vs. £3tn Economy£9bn – projected value of the government’s trade‑reset by 2040.£3tn – approximate size of the UK economy.Gap highlighted: the reset represents only about 0.3% of GDP, underscoring Miliband’s criticism of its scale.Strategic Implications for Britain and EuropeThe former minister stressed that security and prosperity hinge on an “institutionalised, deep and strong relationship” with Europe. He noted that the EU’s focus is shifting toward Ukraine’s potential membership, which could reshape the bloc’s dynamics and affect any future UK accession talks.He also warned that the pre‑2016 UK‑EU deal is no longer attainable, implying that any new agreement would need to reflect contemporary geopolitical realities.Looking Ahead: Pathways to Consensus and Possible Policy ShiftsMiliband suggested that the UK must engage in a nationwide debate on wealth creation, generational investment, and the role of government. He hinted that a shift in public opinion could eventually pressure policymakers to negotiate a more ambitious EU relationship, though no specific timeline was offered.
#David Miliband #European Union #UK
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Sports May 23, 2026

Championship playoff drama and Scottish Cup final buildup

The article discusses the buildup to the Championship playoff final, Scottish Cup final, and Women'…
Last Night's HeadlinesHere are some standout pieces from last night:Barney backs Tuchel’s squad: Tuchel has picked a good England squad and doesn’t care about the wider shout-verse | Barney RonayPep Guardiola turns on the charm as he waves goodbye to a dynasty: ‘My vibe and energy will be there for ever’: Guardiola turns on charm in City farewellSpygate looms over Championship play-off: Boro and Hull attempt to disregard ‘weird and crazy’ spygate noise in playoff finalToday's MatchesScottish Cup final: Celtic v Dunfermline @ Hampden Park @ 15:00Championship Play-off: Hull v Middlesbrough @ Wembley @ 15:30Women’s Champions League final: Barcelona v PSG @ Ullevaal Stadium, Oslo @ 17:00
#Championship #Scottish Cup #WCL
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World Wide May 23, 2026

Decades-Old Photos Reveal Gaza's Vibrant Past Before Conflict

Recently surfaced historical photographs from Gaza reveal a vibrant, joyful society before decades …
The Rediscovery of Gaza's Pre-Conflict EraDecades-old photographs have emerged, offering a rare glimpse into life in Gaza during happier times. These images, recently brought to light, showcase a vibrant community filled with laughter, cultural activities, and everyday joys that stand in stark contrast to the current reality in the region.A Visual Journey Through Gaza's HistoryThe collection of photographs spans several decades, capturing moments of celebration, family gatherings, and community life in Gaza. The images reveal a society rich in culture and social connections, with markets bustling, children playing in the streets, and families enjoying leisure time together.Documenting a Lost EraThese photographs hold significant historical value, documenting a period before the conflicts that have shaped Gaza's recent history. They serve as an important cultural record, preserving memories of a time when daily life was marked by normalcy rather than the challenges faced by residents today.Generational Impact of Historical ImagesThe circulation of these historical images has sparked conversations about Gaza's cultural heritage and the resilience of its people. For many, particularly younger generations who have only known life under conflict, these photographs provide a connection to a past that may seem almost foreign.Cultural Preservation Through PhotographyHistorians and cultural preservationists emphasize the importance of such visual documentation in maintaining collective memory. These photographs not only capture moments of joy but also serve as a testament to the rich social fabric of Gaza that continues to endure despite ongoing challenges.
#Gaza #Palestine #historical photos
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Sports May 22, 2026

Nascar World Mourns: Kyle Busch Dies at 41

Kyle Busch, a two-time Nascar Cup Series champion and one of the sport's most successful drivers, h…
The Sudden Loss of a Racing Legend Longtime teammates, former rivals and others around the sports world have joined the wave of condolences over the sudden death of Nascar driver Kyle Busch on Thursday. Busch, a two-time Cup Series champion who was the winningest driver across the sport's three series in history, died at 41 after being hospitalized earlier Thursday with a severe illness. No cause of death has been announced. Tributes from the Racing Community "Absolutely cannot comprehend this news," Denny Hamlin, a 22-year Nascar veteran and Busch's former teammate, said on social media. "We just need to think of his family during this time. We love you KB." "There aren't really words for today. I've raced against Kyle for a long time, and anyone who's lined up next to him knows exactly what made him special, he gave you everything he had, every single lap, and he made all of us better for it," driver Ricky Stenhouse Jr said in a post. "But more than the wins and the records, I keep thinking about Samantha, Brexton, and Lennix, and the entire Busch family right now. That's where my heart is. Rest easy, Rowdy. The sport won't be the same without you." A Legendary Career Busch was in his fourth season at Richard Childress Racing. He ranked 24th in the Cup Series standings, with two top-10 finishes in 12 races this season, and had been the Cup Series champion in 2015 and 2019 with Joe Gibbs Racing. He won a Nascar Truck Series race at Dover International Speedway last week and was slated to compete in this weekend's Coca-Cola 600 in Charlotte, North Carolina, before his family announced on Thursday he had been hospitalized. The Impact on the Racing World Dale Earnhardt Jr, an on-track rival after he took over Busch's car after he departed Hendrick Motorsports in 2007 who later became a friend, called Busch one of the "greatest drivers in Nascar history". "Kyle and I had a really challenging existence for many years. But we luckily took the time to figure out our differences and that was something he instigated with a conversation in his bus around how we each managed our racing teams. I was super eager for us to get on better terms. But it was he who made the effort for that to be possible," Earnhardt said. "I will never be able to make sense of this loss but I am thankful that we had found a way to become friends."
#Kyle Busch #Nascar #Racing
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World Wide May 22, 2026

International Aid's Expensive Era: Why Charities Must Adapt or Die

The international aid system is at a breaking point as large charities fail to adapt to changing ti…
The Breaking Point in International AidAs the UK government-sponsored Global Partnerships conference convened in London this week, against a backdrop of high living costs, reduced aid budgets and oil tankers stranded in the strait of Hormuz, it is increasingly clear that the aid sector is nearing breaking point. The international charity network that props up the broken aid system is both under strain and part of the problem – unable to adapt to the times and increasingly unfit for purpose.The Structural Contradiction in Aid OrganizationsFor years, large international charities have championed localisation of aid, expressing their collective commitment to transformation and decolonisation. But they have not achieved it. Despite being some of the strongest voices calling for change, internally they remain structurally resistant to evolution. Not necessarily from bad intent, but because large institutions are designed to sustain themselves.The Financial Reality of Modern AidPower, funding and decision-making remain concentrated in the hands of staff and boards far removed from the grassroots. This creates a fundamental contradiction. The very organisations advocating for change are often the least able to deliver. For instance, is it morally right that a large charity based in the UK spends £120m a year on fundraising primarily on the business of generating and supporting jobs in the UK, instead of giving to organisations working in Sudan, Bangladesh and Myanmar that are under national leadership to resolve their own development challenges?The Shifting Landscape of Global DevelopmentAs resources shrink, more is absorbed by the overcrowded intermediary system formed by leading international charities, and less support reaches frontline communities. If we are serious about shifting power, we must stop defaulting to structures intent on hoarding it. Not all these organisations should continue to play the same role they do today. Some may transition, merge, shrink or step aside. Others could demonstrate real change and remain relevant. But the system cannot be preserved in its current form.The Future of Locally-Led DevelopmentWhat is needed is not just better aid charities, but a new model of giving, one that channels resources directly to local and national actors, builds trust and solidarity rather than control-heavy compliance and redefines accountability around communities, not intermediaries. Our big aid charities need to learn to let go and accept that those closest to a problem are often best placed to act towards effective resolution. The question is no longer whether change is needed, it is whether we are prepared to let go of the structures that prevent it.
#International Aid #Charity Organizations #Development
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Environment May 22, 2026

Wayúu Communities Fear Colombia’s Green Energy Boom Echoes Coal Mining Past

Indigenous Wayúu leaders in Colombia’s La Guajira warn that a surge in wind‑farm projects threatens…
The Lead: Indigenous Voices Warn of a New Extraction EraIn the arid dry‑tropical forest of La Guajira, Maria Elena Aguilar Uriana points to a dried‑up watering hole and describes how mining has already devastated her community. Now she and other Wayúu leaders fear that the country’s push for wind‑energy is creating a second wave of exploitation.Coal Mining Legacy and Emerging Renewable Projects in La GuajiraFor decades the region has been dominated by Cerrejón, one of the world’s largest open‑pit coal mines, operated by UK‑listed Glencore. The mine has polluted water, spread coal dust over pastures and forced families to relocate. Today, national and corporate plans aim to replace that extractive model with large‑scale wind farms, but Wayúu representatives say the same top‑down approach is being repeated.Scale of the Cerrejón Mine and Planned Wind InfrastructureCerrejón is among the biggest open‑pit coal mines globally, covering thousands of hectares.Renewable‑energy developers are proposing dozens of wind turbines across Wayúu territory, though exact capacity figures have not been disclosed publicly.The projects are promoted as “green” solutions for Colombia’s energy transition, yet community consent processes remain limited.Health, Water Scarcity and Displacement Impacts on Wayúu CommunitiesWayúu testimonies describe chronic respiratory illness, malnutrition and the loss of livestock due to coal dust and dwindling water supplies. José Silva Duarte, president of Nación Wayúu, notes that water is already scarce, and mining consumes vast quantities, forcing families to rely on state‑provided water deliveries or travel long distances to unsafe wells. The combined stress of past mining and looming wind projects has spurred migration to urban centres and across borders, eroding cultural practices built over centuries.Outlook: Negotiating Consent and Sustainable DevelopmentWhile Glencore asserts it monitors air quality and follows Colombian law in land purchases, Wayúu leaders demand genuine participation, protection of water resources and health safeguards before any renewable infrastructure proceeds. The coming months will test whether Colombia can balance its climate ambitions with the rights and wellbeing of its largest Indigenous group.
#Wayúu #Cerrejón #Glencore
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Entertainment May 22, 2026

Miles Davis's 'Ascenseur pour l'Échafaud': A Timeless Soundtrack Rediscovered for Centenary

As we celebrate Miles Davis's centenary, his 1957 film soundtrack 'Ascenseur pour l'Échafaud' is be…
The LeadAs we celebrate Miles Davis's centenary, his 1957 film soundtrack "Ascenseur pour l'Échafaud" is being repackaged with restored audio, offering a fresh look at the jazz legend's innovative approach to film scoring and improvisation. This mostly improvised soundtrack, created over one night in a Paris studio, showcases Davis's unique harmonic openness that would later influence his masterpiece "Kind of Blue."The Creative Process Behind the SoundtrackComposed by Davis from little more than a handful of chords, this music was mostly improvised straight to a screen showing budding New Wave director Louis Malle's crime thriller "Ascenseur pour l'Échafaud" (Lift to the Scaffold), over one long night in a Paris studio in December 1957. His fine local quartet included expat New York bebop drummer Kenny Clarke, and their harmonic openness created a spacey, ethereal soundworld for a story following two lovers who think they've committed the perfect murder of an inconvenient husband, and the mishaps, farces, ecstasies and fears that populate the long night of their undoing.The Musical Landscape of NoirDreamily sensual sounds mirror misplaced hopes; there are car-chase scurries (Miles's fast-bop horn virtuosity was formidable in this period), desolately bluesy accompaniments to actor Jeanne Moreau's confused wandering in search of her partner, bar-room clamour in the trumpet/tenor-sax counterpoint between Miles and saxist Barney Wilen – but all the music stands alone, without images. A quiet slow-burn, but simmering with all of Miles Davis's timelessly extraordinary light and heat.Jazz Tributes and Contemporary ConnectionsThis month marks Miles's centenary, and a clamour of celebrations of a musical life that led him to be dubbed (by Duke Ellington, allegedly) the "Picasso of jazz" for the many styles he explored. Alongside the reissue of "Ascenseur pour l'Échafaud," other artists are paying tribute: Norwegian guitarist Hedvig Mollestad's power-trio Weejuns nods to Miles Davis' 1969 "Bitches Brew" with "Bitches Blues"; guitarist Jeff Parker unveils fascinating ways of emerging from minimalism to lyricism; and Jason Miles, a former Miles Davis keyboardist, revisits that groove-centric era in his own personal way.The Legacy of ImprovisationWhen Miles Davis was dying in September 1991, an invisible, neighbouring trumpet player began playing homages to Miles' voice-like, blues-inflected melodies instead. It was a poignant personal tribute to a unique instrumental sound, and a unique imagination, that had profoundly enriched 20th-century music. The reissue of "Ascenseur pour l'Échafaud" continues this legacy, showing how Davis's approach to improvisation and harmonic openness continues to influence musicians today.
#Miles Davis #Louis Malle #Jazz
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Sports May 22, 2026

Bayer Uerdingen's Historic Cup Triumph Over Bayern Munich: The 'Miracle of Berlin'

Bayer Uerdingen achieved a historic upset by defeating Bayern Munich 2-1 in the 1985 German Cup fin…
The LeadIn the stolid world of German football, few moments have been as seismic as Bayer Uerdingen's 2-1 victory over Bayern Munich in the 1985 German Cup final. This giant-killing act, now celebrated as the 'Miracle of Berlin,' represented a rare inversion of the natural order in a nation dominated by football's traditional powerhouses.The Historic UpsetOn May 26, 1985, at Berlin's Olympic Stadium, Uerdingen—then a modest club from Krefeld with a population of around 300,000—defeated the seven-time cup holders Bayern Munich. The Bavarians, who had also won three consecutive European Cups between 1974-1976, were considered football aristocracy. Horst Feilzer and Wolfgang Schäfer scored for Uerdingen, while Dieter Hoeness netted Bayern's only goal. The victory was particularly significant as it was the first time the DFB-Pokal final had been staged in the former German capital.Under coach Kalli Feldkamp and chairman Arno Eschler, Uerdingen had only been promoted to the Bundesliga a couple of years earlier. Their team was devoid of household names, featuring the Funkel brothers (Friedhelm and Wolfgang) in midfield, while Bayern boasted stars like a young Lothar Matthäus and Klaus Augenthaler.The Rise and FallThe cup victory was not a one-off for Uerdingen. The following season, they reached the European Cup-Winners' Cup semi-finals, with their quarter-final tie against East Germany's Dynamo Dresden becoming club lore as the 'Miracle of the Grotenburg' after an improbable second-leg comeback. That match attracted 18 million television viewers, and the club finished third in the Bundesliga in the season after their cup triumph.Despite this brief period of success, Uerdingen's star faded. The club, backed by chemicals giant Bayer AG, could not sustain their upward trajectory. Today, they remain a distant memory in German football, their moment of glory a footnote in the sport's history.The LegacyUerdingen's victory remains one of the greatest cup shocks in German football history. It demonstrated that even in a sport dominated by established powerhouses, underdogs could occasionally triumph. As chairman Arno Eschler famously hoped after the victory: 'Ich hoffe dass dies keine einmmailie' [I hope this is not a one-off]. While Uerdingen couldn't build on their success, their 'Miracle of Berlin' continues to be celebrated as one of football's great fairy tales.
#Bayer Uerdingen #Bayern Munich #German Cup
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Environment May 22, 2026

Big Oil's War Profits May Have a Silver Lining After All

Fossil fuel companies are reaping massive profits from the Iran conflict while ordinary consumers f…
The LeadA friend of mine was recently left in tears after filling up the car she relies on to drive to work. Thanks to the US-Israeli attacks on Iran, prices at the pumps have soared. She wasn't sure how her family was going to make it to the next paycheck.It is a personal story and a distressing one, but the big picture is truly obscene. Fossil fuel companies are raking in monstrous, unearned war profits taken from the pockets of people like you, me, my friend, and any of us who fills up a vehicle or pays an energy bill.The War-Profits Bonanza$30m an hour: that's the pure, unearned profits banked by the world's top 100 oil and gas companies in the first month of the conflict in Iran, purely due to the spike in the oil price. Now the first numbers are in, and that $30m may have been a major underestimate.Shell's profit for the first three months of 2026 more than doubled to $6.9bn, as did BP's, to $3.2bn. TotalEnergies profits also surged by more than 50%, up to $5.8bn. Even in the Gulf itself, where the flow of oil through the strait of Hormuz has been heavily restricted, some companies have still flourished. Aramco, the state oil company of Saudi Arabia, saw its profits soar by 26% to $33.6bn in the first quarter.The Financial Impact on ConsumersThose four companies alone, benefiting not just from the oil price hike but also bumper oil-trading profits, made $23m an hour for the whole of January, February and March. And the Iran conflict only started on 28 February.To get some idea of the scale of this, imagine I gave you $6,200. What would you do? Pay off a loan? Book a fancy holiday? A second later, I give you another $6,200; then again, for hours, weeks and months. That is the rate of profit of just those four companies.There is plenty more to come for the industry. Oil and gas supplies will take months to return to prewar levels, and reserves are getting dangerously low. Even if the oil price remains at today's level of about $100 a barrel, those 100 companies will make $234bn by the end of the year. Remember, the companies, and petrostates such as Russia, have done no extra work for this, just ridden a soaring oil price. Also remember, you are paying for this. Where I live in the UK, household energy bills are about to jump by £209 ($280) a year for the average home.The Industry's Climate ObstructionThe profits are extreme, but not new: big oil and gas has been wildly profitable for decades. It has made an average $1tn a year in pure profit for about 50 years. The fossil fuel sector also benefits from explicit subsidies that totalled $1.3tn in 2022, according to the International Monetary Fund.These riches have funded the lobbying and campaigns that block climate action and have done so for years, long after the science became crystal clear. As an example of the consequences, the UK's official climate advisers said on Tuesday that all care homes and hospitals will need air conditioning within the coming 10 years, to stop the heat killing people.The Green Transition AccelerationBut here's that silver lining I promised: these peak profits contain the seeds of their own downfall. Sky-high fossil fuel prices are pushing people, companies and nations to supercharge their rush towards green power for the simple reason that it is now cheaper and more reliable. Solar power does not need to transit through the strait of Hormuz, as Bill McKibben has observed.The numbers on the surge in renewable energy deployment, already exponential, are not yet in, but they will almost certainly be huge. Green funds are already attracting billions of dollars in new investments and one consultancy estimates that an oil price of $100 a barrel will drive $4tn of extra green investment by 2030.Big oil remains a formidable political force but, on the ground, people are already voting with their feet. Sales of new electric cars in the UK leapt by 59% in April, for example. The pain and anger of today's energy crisis may yet become a critical turning point in confronting the climate crisis.
#Big Oil #Iran Conflict #Renewable Energy
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