,News,News & Politics,dSvc6GCtC5o,UC0p5jTq6Xx_DosDFxVXnWaQ, Politics,Society, channel_UC0p5jTq6Xx_DosDFxVXnWaQ, video_dSvc6GCtC5o,America feared that letting Ukraine use US weapons (https://www.economist.com/topics/ukraine?utm_campaign=a.io&utm_medium=audio.podcast.np&utm_source=theintelligence&utm_content=discovery.content.anonymous.tr_shownotes_na-na_article&utm_term=sa.listeners) to attack far-off targets in Russia would escalate the conflict. Why has President Joe Biden finally changed his mind? Markets soared (https://www.economist.com/leaders/2024/11/14/whats-about-to-hit-the-world-economy?utm_campaign=a.io&utm_medium=audio.podcast.np&utm_source=theintelligence&utm_content=discovery.content.anonymous.tr_shownotes_na-na_article&utm_term=sa.listeners) when Donald Trump was elected, but the longer-term impact of Trumponomics may be less positive (9:42). And why airships are back (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2024/10/30/airships-may-finally-prove-useful-for-transporting-cargo?utm_campaign=a.io&utm_medium=audio.podcast.np&utm_source=theintelligence&utm_content=discovery.content.anonymous.tr_shownotes_na-na_article&utm_term=sa.listeners) in our skies (18:12).
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,1,Why are two old, unpopular men the main candidates for the world’s most demanding job? It’s the question John Prideaux, The Economist’s US editor, gets asked the most. And the answer lies in the peculiar politics of the baby boomers.
Since 1992, every American president bar one has been a white man born in the 1940s. That run looks likely to span 36 years - not far off the age of the median American. This cohort was born with aces in their pockets. Their parents defeated Nazism and won the cold war. They hit the jobs market at an unmatched period of wealth creation. They have benefitted from giant leaps in technology, and in racial and gender equality.
And yet, their last act in politics sees the two main parties accusing each other of wrecking American democracy. As the boomers near the end of their political journey, John Prideaux sets out to make sense of their inheritance and their legacy.
Launching July 2024.
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,1,On July 4th Britain will have a general election, one in which is widely expected to result in dramatic losses for the ruling Conservative party. If so, it would bring to an end 14 years of Tory rule. It’s been a turbulent period; the twin catastrophes of Brexit and Covid, set to the grinding and gloomy mood music of the 2008 financial crash. The Economist’s Andy Miller travels up and down the country, to the towns and cities shaped by these events, to get a sense of how Britain is feeling.
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,1,America’s president had one primary task at last night’s debate: to close down speculation about his mental faculties. It went so poorly (https://www.economist.com/united-states/2024/06/28/joe-bidens-horrific-debate-performance-casts-his-entire-candidacy-into-doubt?utm_campaign=a.io&utm_medium=audio.podcast.np&utm_source=theintelligence&utm_content=discovery.content.anonymous.tr_shownotes_na-na_article&utm_term=sa.listeners) his whole campaign is now in doubt. Tentative results from a newish instrument give tantalising hints (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2024/06/19/the-dominant-model-of-the-universe-is-creaking?utm_campaign=a.io&utm_medium=audio.podcast.np&utm_source=theintelligence&utm_content=discovery.content.anonymous.tr_shownotes_na-na_article&utm_term=sa.listeners) that the leading theory on the universe’s makeup might need reworking entirely (10:20). And bullfighting moves from literal arenas to the political arena (https://www.economist.com/culture/2024/05/29/bullfighting-is-under-attack?utm_campaign=a.io&utm_medium=audio.podcast.np&utm_source=theintelligence&utm_content=discovery.content.anonymous.tr_shownotes_na-na_article&utm_term=sa.listeners) (18:40).
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,1,Our correspondents were the first media to see the American-built JLOTS pier, intended for aid deliveries into Gaza. Things have not at all gone to plan. After years of slipping, house prices are on the rise (https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2024/06/16/why-house-prices-are-surging-once-again?utm_campaign=a.io&utm_medium=audio.podcast.np&utm_source=theintelligence&utm_content=discovery.content.anonymous.tr_shownotes_na-na_article&utm_term=sa.listeners) again; we ask why (16:51). And a trip to see the Savannah Bananas, a goofy exhibition-baseball team that has serious lessons (https://www.economist.com/culture/2024/05/31/the-savannah-bananas-a-baseball-team-for-the-tiktok-age?utm_campaign=a.io&utm_medium=audio.podcast.np&utm_source=theintelligence&utm_content=discovery.content.anonymous.tr_shownotes_na-na_article&utm_term=sa.listeners) for the major leagues (22:57).
Additional audio courtesy of the Savannah Bananas (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVMOQmAEqtzfBGV-_X6_zMw).
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,1,As Julian Assange is released from prison our correspondent reflects on how the work of Wikileaks changed whistleblowing in the internet era, for good and for ill. Meanwhile Peter Navarro, Donald Trump’s trade hawk, remains behind bars—but is plotting for a second Trump term (09:25). And the social-media trend changing tinned fish from frumpy to foodie fare (18:33).
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,1,After decades as a scientific also-ran, China is becoming a superpower (https://www.economist.com/leaders/2024/06/13/how-worrying-is-the-rapid-rise-of-chinese-science?utm_campaign=a.io&utm_medium=audio.podcast.np&utm_source=theintelligence&utm_content=discovery.content.anonymous.tr_shownotes_na-na_article&utm_term=sa.listeners) particularly in the physical sciences. We examine the risks and opportunities that poses for the West. Our correspondent looks into why denizens of the Mediterranean live so long (https://www.economist.com/europe/2024/06/20/why-southern-europeans-will-soon-be-the-longest-lived-people-in-the-world?utm_campaign=a.io&utm_medium=audio.podcast.np&utm_source=theintelligence&utm_content=discovery.content.anonymous.tr_shownotes_na-na_article&utm_term=sa.listeners) (10.32). And this year’s confluence of two broods makes for a rare preponderance of cicadas (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2024/05/28/hordes-of-cicadas-are-emerging-simultaneously-in-america?utm_campaign=a.io&utm_medium=audio.podcast.np&utm_source=theintelligence&utm_content=discovery.content.anonymous.tr_shownotes_na-na_article&utm_term=sa.listeners) (17.53).
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,1,Since his election last year, President Javier Milei has enjoyed some economic and political wins in Argentina. But his toughest fight (https://www.economist.com/leaders/2024/06/19/javier-mileis-next-move-could-make-his-presidency-or-break-it) is yet to come. On Britain’s general election trail, our correspondent found voters less keen on the prospect of a Labour victory than on punishing the Conservative party (https://www.economist.com/britain/2024/06/18/britains-conservatives-rule-the-thames-estuary-not-for-long) at the polls (10:00). And remembering Birubala Rabha (https://www.economist.com/obituary/2024/06/20/birubala-rabha-fought-to-end-the-stigmatisation-of-women), who campaigned against witch-hunting in India (18.35).
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,1,Both the left and right are likely to do well in France’s upcoming parliamentary poll, with President Emmanuel Macron’s party squeezed in the middle. The snap election could leave the country in chaos (https://www.economist.com/europe/2024/06/16/france-is-being-thrown-into-uncharted-territory). In America, recreational use of weed is now commonplace, but what impact does it have on users’ wellbeing (https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/2024/06/06/is-americas-weed-habit-dangerous) (10:06)? And the joy of short books (https://www.economist.com/the-economist-reads/2024/05/31/six-non-fiction-books-you-can-read-in-a-day): the intense pleasure of a quickie (17:40).
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,1,The post-war generation reaped the benefits of peace and prosperity. Yet rather than spend that bounty, retired boomers are hoarding their riches (https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2024/05/26/baby-boomers-are-loaded-why-are-they-so-stingy)–and upending economists’ expectations. The science of menstruation is baffling, partly because most animals don’t do it. Now clever innovations (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2024/05/29/progress-on-the-science-of-menstruation-at-last) may help improve women’s health (9:13). And how old-fashioned wind-power is blowing new life (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2024/05/21/a-new-age-of-sail-begins) into the shipping industry–and cutting its emissions (16:13).
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,1,Prabowo Subianto, the frontrunner in Indonesia's election, hides a dark past. He has been accused of war crimes, overseeing the abduction of democracy activists and falsely declaring victory in two elections. Who is Prabowo and what does this election mean for the most powerful nation in South-East Asia?
00:00 - Who is Prabowo?
00:41 - Prabowo’s attitude to democracy
01:23 - What does this election mean for Indonesia?
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Who will be the next leader of Indonesia? - Indonesian election tracker: https://econ.st/3UBiBoW
A controversial general looks likely to be Indonesia’s next leader: https://econ.st/49ApJGB
Five reasons why Indonesia’s election matters: https://econ.st/48tN3F7
The favourite in Indonesia’s presidential election has a sordid past: https://econ.st/3SEYy6m
What Jokowi’s inglorious exit means for Indonesia: https://econ.st/49bQJw2
The false promise of Indonesia’s economy: https://econ.st/49cJggg
Why Indonesia matters: https://econ.st/49cJdkA
,1,What if text prompts enabled anyone to make a blockbuster movie, or even an entire box-set’s worth of TV? That is the promise of AI. This technology could one day prove as transformative to the movie business as sound, colour, or even the camera itself. Generative AI can already make videos in seconds which would normally take a visual-effects artist days to create. However it has yet to master photo-realistic video. The people at the forefront of this tech say it is only a matter of time.
00:29 How does AI-generated video work?
02:43 How long until feature films are generated by AI?
03:57 Can AI-generated videos be photorealistic?
04:36 How revolutionary is AI in film?
05:05 A dystopian threat to jobs or democratisation of the industry?
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3MkUK8f
Art made by artificial intelligence is developing a style of its own: https://econ.st/40n7Sj4
Watch our film about how AI is changing the entertainment industry: link to previous N&N AI and entertainment film
How AI image-generators work: https://econ.st/47dOw1T
Watch more of our Now & Next series https://econ.st/47ezw3E
A battle royal is brewing over copyright and AI: https://econ.st/3Qilzef
Disney’s troubles show how technology has changed the business of culture: https://econ.st/46SvmPq
,1,It’s really hard to kill cockroaches. Stamping on them, chopping off their head and even flushing them down the toilet won’t work. Much like cryptocurrency—an industry which, despite some recent setbacks, seems able to bounce back when you least expect it.
00:00 Why crypto is like cockroaches
00:25 Crypto is soaring
00:48 Why is crypto so hard to kill?
Sign up to our weekly finance newsletter to keep up to date: https://econ.st/3P3zTG8
Listen to our Money Talks podcast: https://econ.st/3Sa2gEY
Read more of our finance stories: https://econ.st/48PSZsP
More on our cockroach theory of crypto: https://econ.st/3OeZqxb
Decoding Sam Bankman-Fried: https://econ.st/3HwCzcP
More on the fall of crypto bosses: https://econ.st/3HyebHG
,1,Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, and Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft, speak to The Economist’s editor-in-chief, Zanny Minton Beddoes, about what the future of AI will really look like.
00:00 Sam Altman and Satya Nadella talk to The Economist
00:25 What’s next for ChatGPT?
1:33 How dangerous is AGI?
2:32 AI regulation
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Read more of our AI coverage: https://econ.st/3O9fK2v
Watch the full interview here: https://econ.st/3O7qXk5
Read our write up of the interview: https://econ.st/3HpwbUL
,1,Sam Altman, chief executive of OpenAI, talks to The Economist’s Editor-in-chief, Zanny Minton Beddoes, about how he navigates the risks raised by artificial intelligence.
Click here to view the full interview: https://econ.st/3RUSgzm
,1,Guam, an island in the northern Pacific, is just 48km long and has a population of about 170,000. So why is it so important to America’s strategy to defend Taiwan from a potential Chinese invasion?
00:00 - Where is Guam?
00:13 - Why is it so important?
01:00 - What makes it vulnerable?
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Guam, where America’s next war may begin: https://econ.st/47lP9WN
America is lavishing attention on Pacific island states: https://econ.st/47of0xd
How the Pentagon thinks about America’s strategy in the Pacific: https://econ.st/3tG49RG
Read more of our US coverage: https://econ.st/4aRvOj4
Read more of our China coverage: https://econ.st/3S9G6nC
,1,Ethiopia’s president, Abiy Ahmed, has signed a deal with Somaliland to get his landlocked country direct access to the sea. Abiy hails this as an act of diplomacy, but could it destabilise an already volatile part of the world?
00:00 - a new dispute in the Horn of Africa
01:00 - the historical context
01:29 - the implications of the new deal
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Read more about the region: https://econ.st/4b1lIwv
Ethiopia’s deal with Somaliland: https://econ.st/3tJGQGB
Why does Ethiopia want access to a seaport?: https://econ.st/3H9RA45
Why Somaliland isn’t a recognised state: https://econ.st/48pfwMY
Conflict in the Horn of Africa: https://econ.st/48mt7of
,1,A new wave of artificial intelligence is starting to transform the way the entertainment industry operates. Who will be the winners and losers?
01:07 AI is changing the music business
04:09 How big data revolutionised entertainment industries
05:20 Can AI predict a film’s success?
09:26 How generative AI is creating new opportunities
12:36 What are the risks of generative AI?
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/45PGz1H
The world wants to regulate AI, but does not quite know how: https://econ.st/477Qb98
Watch our previous film about how AI is transforming the creative industries: https://econ.st/45VBnJU
A battle royal is brewing over copyright and AI: https://econ.st/3QgM5EZ
How AI could change computing, culture and the course of history https://econ.st/3Qng9Pc
The widespread adoption of AI by companies will take a while https://econ.st/3QilF5B
Watch more of our Now & Next series https://econ.st/3QiyPQ8
,1,As 2024 begins President Volodymyr Zelensky speaks to The Economist’s Editor-in-chief, Zanny Minton Beddoes, about his political and military goals for the coming year and why he won’t compromise with Vladimir Putin.
00:00 - 2024 military goals
01:35 - Why he won’t negotiate
A New Year’s interview with Volodymyr Zelensky: https://econ.st/48A4Nim
Read our coverage from the war in Ukraine: https://econ.st/41MgGjc
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Russia tries to overwhelm Ukraine with missiles: https://econ.st/41PnIni
How five Ukrainian cities are coping, despite Putin’s war: https://econ.st/41MgJLU
A majority of congressmen want more military aid for Ukraine: https://econ.st/3tuWKVl
Ukraine’s army is struggling to find good recruits: https://econ.st/3vsViDd
Vladimir Putin is running Russia’s economy dangerously hot: https://econ.st/3H5uviU
Could China, Russia’s “no-limits” friend, help rebuild Ukraine?: https://econ.st/48fMi2R
“Grief camps” help Ukrainian children face the loss of parents: https://econ.st/3viainw
Putin seems to be winning the war in Ukraine—for now: https://econ.st/41MLgcf
As Ukrainian men head off to fight, women take up their jobs: https://econ.st/3NRHo3Z
Ukraine’s new enemy: war fatigue in the West: https://econ.st/41JvDlZ
,1,More than half the people on the planet live in countries that will hold nationwide elections in 2024. In theory it should be a triumphant year for democracy. In practice it will be the opposite
,1,What are the stories set to shape 2024? From the biggest election year in history, to how to control AI and even taxis that fly, The Economist offers its annual look at the world ahead.
00:00 - The World Ahead 2024
00:33 - Vital votes
03:34 - Taxis take off
07:10 - AI rules
10:19 - Industry cleans up?
13:48 - BRICS build
Read more on The World Ahead 2024: https://www.economist.com/the-world-ahead-2024
Read Tom Standage’s editor’s note on The World Ahead 2024: https://econ.st/3ROGB69
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Europe, a laggard in AI, seizes the lead in its regulation: https://econ.st/3GNsYOD
Taiwan’s presidential election will be a three-way race after all: https://econ.st/41ukOnz
China is watching closely who will be Taiwan’s next president: https://econ.st/4apC55B
Decarbonisation of industrial activities is beginning: https://econ.st/41C8D8n
The BRICS are expanding: https://econ.st/3RPV16j
A global agency to oversee AI is a tall order: https://econ.st/3v7PgrP
China approves the world’s first flying taxi: https://econ.st/3TwhxlW
The world wants to regulate AI, but does not quite know how: https://econ.st/3GQB2hu
Flying taxis could soon be a booming business: https://econ.st/41ulb1r
The BRICS bloc is riven with tensions: https://econ.st/48aEorO
A Finnish firm thinks it can cut industrial carbon emissions by a third: https://econ.st/3v6zjSB
,1,Sleep patterns differ across the world. From early-to-bed South Africans to Russians who hit the sack around midnight, we reveal the cultural nuances that shape global sleep schedules. Watch the film to find out where your country ranks in the lie-in-dex, and why it matters.
Read more about which countries get the best night's sleep: https://econ.st/3GTRxt8
Find out why chinstrap penguins sleep thousands of times a day: https://econ.st/48pow45
Find out why people sleep at all: https://econ.st/3RSTTyw
Subscribe to The Economist: https://econ.st/3uwzp5y
What actually happens when we sleep? https://www.economist.com/films/2023/09/08/what-happens-when-we-sleep
Why sleep and songwriting make one of the greatest partnerships: https://econ.st/3GOigaB
,1,In the days before the October 7th attack short selling of Israeli stocks spiked in New York, making someone a lot of money. How likely is it that a Hamas insider was behind it?
00:00 - Pre-war stock market changes
00:33 - What happened to the stocks?
01:03 - Who was behind it?
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Read our coverage on Israel and Hamas: https://econ.st/46Ka8Cy
Did Hamas make millions trading the October 7th attacks?: https://econ.st/4822Zyd
Inside Hamas’s sprawling financial empire: https://econ.st/483x94b
,1,As global warming makes weather more extreme and deadly, accurate and accessible weather forecasting has never been more needed.
00:00 - Hurricane Otis
00:40 - Extreme weather
01:33 - Democratic Republic of Congo
02:38 - Problems with forecasting
04:25 - Innovative solutions
05:41 - Arrival of AI
07:30 - Smallholder farmers
09:30 - Early warning systems
Read about the high-tech race to improve weather forecasting: https://econ.st/4a1pqpo
Listen to how new technology will make weather forecasting fit for the 21st century: https://econ.st/3uLWXDu
Why the world’s poor need to know about weather disasters ahead of time: https://econ.st/3QZkaJV
Will global average temperatures pass a threshold in 2024? https://econ.st/46EP0xn
Subscribe to The Economist: https://econ.st/3uwzp5y
How to predict record-shattering weather events: https://econ.st/46CGAq7
What can be done to adapt farming to climate change?: https://econ.st/3N6cLax
,1,We hear a lot about the need to get off fossil fuels. How is the energy transition really going and how fast is the world moving towards a green future?
00:51 How did the war in Ukraine impact the green revolution?
05:50 Why is green energy booming in unlikely places?
08:31 Rewiring the world for net zero
11:40 Is nuclear energy making a comeback?
14:20 Texas: the anti-green future of clean energy
18:09 Do environmentalists need to change?
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3s9WjPB
Read our quarterly report on electric grids: https://econ.st/3SnGejK
War and subsidies have turbocharged the green transition: https://econ.st/47h2vnO
Renewable energy has hidden costs: https://econ.st/3SlLww7
Listen to our podcast about whether the energy crisis could fuel the green transition:
https://econ.st/47gBX5X
Watch our film about heatwaves: https://econ.st/3u4qqbr
Can Europe’s power grid cope with the green transition? https://econ.st/46Vp4yy
Watch more of our Now & Next series: https://econ.st/46TXWjv
,1,To teach students how to protect themselves from an active shooter most American schools run lockdown drills – but could they do more harm than good?
00:00 - What are lockdown drills?
00:43 - When did lockdowns become widespread?
01:25 - What are the national guidelines?
01:47 - The impact on children
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Read our full investigation: https://econ.st/477yzLd
Inside America’s hoax school shootings epidemic: https://youtu.be/NPlLrBN48kQ?si=b3bVneE00kFdHT62
Why some teachers in America are learning how to fire guns: https://youtu.be/0PtJ45jHing?si=Xb9ckrwvhgNOiIDb
One response to school shootings in America: arm the teachers: https://econ.st/3u1KzPm
A report sheds light on the deadliest school shooting in Texas’s history: https://econ.st/3FWoe8Z
The AR-15 is a symbol of liberty or loss, depending on whom you ask: https://econ.st/4783G8X
Guns are the things most likely to kill young people in America: https://econ.st/479FrXN
The spate of gun violence shows American exceptionalism at its worst: https://econ.st/49bZPJL
Why America spends so little on research into gun violence: https://econ.st/47cdheT
A year after the massacre of 14 high-school students, what has changed?: https://econ.st/3tXcSPb
Can school design help prevent school shootings?: https://econ.st/46V7Xwy
,1,Gun crime in American schools is increasing–but does training teachers how to shoot make classrooms any safer?
00:00 - Is arming teachers the solution?
00:50 - Meet the teachers learning to shoot
01:55 - Why they want to learn
03:17 - How effective is the training?
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Read our full investigation: https://econ.st/477yzLd
Inside America’s hoax school shootings epidemic: https://youtu.be/NPlLrBN48kQ?si=L8F1fnhkcR7jAHlE
One response to school shootings in America: arm the teachers: https://econ.st/3u1KzPm
A report sheds light on the deadliest school shooting in Texas’s history: https://econ.st/3FWoe8Z
Guns are the things most likely to kill young people in America: https://econ.st/479FrXN
The spate of gun violence shows American exceptionalism at its worst: https://econ.st/49bZPJL
Why America should make it harder to buy guns: https://econ.st/3QfeaMN
Why America spends so little on research into gun violence: https://econ.st/47cdheT
A year after the massacre of 14 high-school students, what has changed?: https://econ.st/3tXcSPb
Can school design help prevent school shootings?: https://econ.st/46V7Xwy
1843: Stage fright: a play about a school shooting becomes too real: https://econ.st/3tVmNVp
,1,In America the fear of gun crime in schools is being weaponised. More and more SWAT teams are having to respond to hoax calls about school shootings.
00:00 - America’s hoax school shooting crisis
01:07 - Hoax calls are becoming more commonplace
02:00 - Aspen Elementary School
03:29 - What happened on February 22nd 2023?
05:10 - Who was behind it?
07:35 - The fight against SWAT hoax calls
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Read our full investigation: https://econ.st/477yzLd
One response to school shootings in America: arm the teachers: https://econ.st/3u1KzPm
A report sheds light on the deadliest school shooting in Texas’s history: https://econ.st/3FWoe8Z
The AR-15 is a symbol of liberty or loss, depending on whom you ask: https://econ.st/4783G8X
Guns are the things most likely to kill young people in America: https://econ.st/479FrXN
The spate of gun violence shows American exceptionalism at its worst: https://econ.st/49bZPJL
Why America should make it harder to buy guns: https://econ.st/3QfeaMN
Why America spends so little on research into gun violence: https://econ.st/47cdheT
A year after the massacre of 14 high-school students, what has changed?: https://econ.st/3tXcSPb
Can school design help prevent school shootings?: https://econ.st/46V7Xwy
1843: Stage fright: a play about a school shooting becomes too real: https://econ.st/3tVmNVp
,1,Accusations of election manipulation and the mishandling of classified documents are just a few of the criminal charges former President Donald Trump faces across four criminal trials as the race for the White House gets underway. But is he really in jeopardy or will he succeed in turning his legal woes to his political advantage?
00:00 - How much jeopardy is Trump really in?
00:31 - The cases
03:05 - The risks
04:02 - Trump’s campaign
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Donald Trump’s second term would be a protectionist nightmare: https://econ.st/45RSnR7
Part of Donald Trump’s base thinks he is fighting a spiritual war: https://econ.st/45URg31
A Trump Party in the Reagan Library: https://econ.st/3tWB2cv
Donald Trump is found liable for fraud in his real-estate dealings: https://econ.st/3tU6zvI
Why some GOP candidates don’t act as aggrieved as Donald Trump: https://econ.st/3SlWZf8
A primer on Trump’s criminal trials: https://econ.st/47bCWnW
Donald Trump’s racketeering indictment is the most sweeping yet: https://econ.st/46TPDnw
Trump’s indictment has turned every American voter into a juror: https://econ.st/40mdBFx
Only politics and not the law can stop Donald Trump: https://econ.st/3FHO28q
Republicans close ranks around Donald Trump, again: https://econ.st/3s8jaLp
The real injustice would have been not to indict Donald Trump: https://econ.st/40m4d4J
Why Donald Trump’s defeat in court matters: https://econ.st/3QocUHp
Listen: Where is Donald Trump taking the Republican Party next?: https://econ.st/46OCQmq
,1,As the most complex organ in your body, your brain changes radically throughout your life. Starting from before birth and continuing even after you've died. This is what happens to your brain as you age.
00:00 - What happens to your brain when you age?
00:32 - In the womb
01:03 - Childhood
03:19 - Teenage years
04:48 - Early adulthood
05:27 - Middle age
07:04 - Later life
07:36 - Death
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Is there a genetic link between endometriosis and the brain?: https://econ.st/46u9Q31
Even doctors can struggle to diagnose concussions: https://econ.st/3RlFfQP
Artificial brains are helping scientists study the real thing: https://econ.st/3Plo6UN
A big advance in mapping the structure of the brain: https://econ.st/48sx6jJ
Studying broken chromosomes can illuminate neuroscience: https://econ.st/3rff7we
The troubling link between contact sports and long-term brain injuries, listen to our science and technology podcast, Babbage to find out more: https://econ.st/3rgN3Zp
Neurons are not the only brain cells that think: https://econ.st/3PjU1EN
Are brain implants the future of computing? Watch our film to find out: https://econ.st/3ZxzNfP
How adult brains learn the new without forgetting the old: https://econ.st/3EDJO1b
Becoming a father shrinks your cerebrum: https://econ.st/3EH67Df
How to keep the brain healthy: https://econ.st/3PBe3w4
,1,Hizbullah has been shooting rockets across the Israel-Lebanon border. If it intervenes in the Israel-Hamas conflict, it could lead to serious escalation.
00:00 - The origins of Hizbullah
01:06 - Its political rise
02:00 - How big a threat is it?
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Why has Israel’s ground invasion been delayed?: https://econ.st/3tFIlFi
The firepower of Iran-backed militias: https://econ.st/3tLoK6K
Israel faces the danger of fighting a war on two fronts: https://econ.st/45LenNA
What is Hizbullah?: https://econ.st/479FOBT
Watch: What is Hamas?:https://econ.st/3SkFk7T
What is the Palestinian Islamic Jihad?: https://econ.st/3tTzvUs
A short history of the Arab-Israeli conflict: https://econ.st/3Qa80xr
A short history of Gaza: https://econ.st/498Z7Nm
,1,The Economist’s defence editor Shashank Joshi spoke to legal experts to find out whether Israel’s response to Hamas’s terrorist attack is lawful.
00:00 - Is Israel breaking the rules of war?
00:59 - Blockade
01:32 - Bombardment
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Is Israel acting within the laws of war?: https://econ.st/3tzVBv7
Joe Biden steers a risky course after a Gaza hospital blast: https://econ.st/3ty6RIl
Mapping Israel’s war in Gaza: https://econ.st/3M5xECv
Hamas tunnels under Gaza will be a key battlefield for Israel: https://econ.st/490c8ZG
To save Palestinian lives in Gaza, open the crossing into Egypt: https://econ.st/3M3PzJu
A short history of Gaza: https://econ.st/408EJYR
Israel faces the danger of fighting on a second front: https://econ.st/3twmikn
Will Israel’s agony and retribution end in chaos or stability?: https://econ.st/48RGPQI
Netanyahu wages war and fights for his own survival: https://econ.st/3Q0xDku
Hamas’s attack was an Israeli intelligence failure on multiple fronts: https://econ.st/3Q9Rgrp
Brutal urban warfare awaits Israel’s army in Gaza: https://econ.st/3tw0vJJ
By Invitation: The crisis shows the failure of Israeli policy towards Palestinians, says Shlomo Brom: https://econ.st/3FhRzKl
By Invitation: Nimrod Novik on the false premises and failure of vision that led to the Hamas attacks: https://econ.st/3LWaXAx
1843: “It’s an Anne Frank situation”: an Israeli professor hides from Hamas: https://econ.st/3RO3Qh9
Watch: Israel and the Palestinians: a century of conflict: https://econ.st/3ZS68hf
Listen: With no electricity, limited internet and dwindling food supplies, what is life like in Gaza?: https://econ.st/3PRoaM9
Listen: An interview with a senior political leader of Hamas: https://econ.st/3rMPIua
,1,Scientists are hoping to build the world’s first clinically approved artificial womb. The purpose is to save the lives of more premature babies.
00:00 The dangers of premature birth
01:49 How to build an artificial womb
04:17 How does it work?
05:54 When will artificial wombs be rolled out?
Sign up to The Economist’s weekly science newsletter: https://econ.st/46wOpyv
Read our full quarterly report on fertility: https://econ.st/3S1LZnj
Watch our film about the booming surrogacy industry: https://econ.st/3QfjpgX
How to build an artificial womb https://econ.st/3PRLFEW
“Reproductive techno-horror” is a burgeoning genre on screen https://econ.st/3tsEf3t
New ways of making babies are on the horizon https://econ.st/45u8fsM
Mouse “embryoids” can now be grown from stem cells https://econ.st/3tAzZyB
Watch more of our Now & Next series https://econ.st/46f9mgU
,1,Many Israelis blame Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu for failing to stop Hamas’ terrorist attack. Can his leadership survive the war and its fallout?
00:28 - What will the war do to Netanyahu?
00:52 - Government’s absence
01:20 - Protests
01:52 - Positive changes
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletters: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Read about how Hamas’ atrocities and Israel’s retaliation will change both sides forever: https://econ.st/3Qq13tL
Will Israel’s agony and retribution end in chaos or stability? https://econ.st/3rP3OuS
Find out what brutal urban warfare awaits Israel’s army in Gaza: https://econ.st/46O8vUB
Israel faces a danger from Hizbullah on its second front: https://econ.st/46LzL6j
Read about Israel’s call to evacuate from northern Gaza: https://econ.st/46tyRLY
Watch a discussion on Israel and Gaza: the attacks, politics and its implications:
https://econ.st/3RXx39G
Find out what life is like in Gaza: https://econ.st/46OQYM5
Read our data story on Hamas’ attack, the bloodiest in Israel’s history: https://econ.st/46PTS34
Read about how Hamas has failed to rally the Middle East to its cause: https://econ.st/3FcGkTL
Read a short history of Gaza: https://econ.st/40akRod
What will a successful ground invasion look like for Israel? https://econ.st/48RLrpS
Listen to an interview with a senior political leader of Hamas: https://econ.st/3ZWRPbx
Read more about how Netanyahu is waging war while fighting for his own survival: https://econ.st/3ZWcpsf
Watch a film on the history of conflict between Israel and the Palestinians: https://econ.st/3S0A1Kq
,1,On October 7th Hamas fighters launched a surprise attack on Israel and slaughtered more than 1,300 people, mostly civilians. What is Hamas and how powerful is it?
00:00 - What is Hamas?
00:55 - Hamas’s control of Gaza
01:18 - Growth of Hamas military capacity
01:32 - The latest attack on Israel
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Hamas’s attack was the bloodiest in Israel’s history: https://econ.st/3ts3qD3
A short history of Gaza: https://econ.st/408EJYR
As war looms Israel calls for 1.1m people to evacuate northern Gaza: https://econ.st/3RZF1za
Israel faces the danger of fighting on a second front: https://econ.st/3twmikn
Will Israel’s agony and retribution end in chaos or stability?: https://econ.st/48RGPQI
Netanyahu wages war and fights for his own survival: https://econ.st/3Q0xDku
Hamas’s attack was an Israeli intelligence failure on multiple fronts: https://econ.st/3Q9Rgrp
Brutal urban warfare awaits Israel’s army in Gaza: https://econ.st/3tw0vJJ
Hamas’s carnage upends Joe Biden’s plans for the Middle East: https://econ.st/46HDHov
Israeli hostages now face a terrifying ordeal: https://econ.st/3RP81ta
The lessons from Hamas’s assault on Israel: https://econ.st/46zasEA
A Hamas leader refuses to admit his group planned to kill civilians: https://econ.st/45xJgoy
By Invitation: The crisis shows the failure of Israeli policy towards Palestinians, says Shlomo Brom: https://econ.st/3FhRzKl
By Invitation: The Palestinian cause has been damaged by factionalism, argues a former prime minister: https://econ.st/3ZQ1ArS
By Invitation: Nimrod Novik on the false premises and failure of vision that led to the Hamas attacks: https://econ.st/3LWaXAx
1843: People in Gaza hate the night. All they can see are explosions: https://econ.st/3PTkObo
1843: “It’s an Anne Frank situation”: an Israeli professor hides from Hamas: https://econ.st/3RO3Qh9
Watch: Israel and the Palestinians: a century of conflict: https://econ.st/3ZS68hf
Listen: With no electricity, limited internet and dwindling food supplies, what is life like in Gaza?: https://econ.st/3PRoaM9
Listen: An interview with a senior political leader of Hamas: https://econ.st/3rMPIua
Listen: Gaza is now under siege. What else is Israel planning?: https://econ.st/3Qf8aVN
Listen: Israel has suffered the biggest terror attack in its history. How will it respond?: https://econ.st/45jCVNj
,1,Plastic pollution is destroying ocean life and coastal livelihoods. With small island states suffering most, what do they reveal about how to solve this global problem?
00:00 The plastic problem
00:43 What challenges do small islands face?
02:48 Where is the plastic coming from?
07:47 How are small islands combating plastic pollution?
11:13 How is plastic waste managed? / Where does plastic end up?
12:30 Future solutions
14:31 The global plastic treaty
Sign up to our weekly science newsletter to keep up to date: https://econ.st/3dMaWBt
The world’s waste problem is growing fast: https://econ.st/3LAZmXd
Watch our film on how chemical pollution is suffocating the sea: https://econ.st/3rLOW0f
Making trade greener: https://econ.st/46WQaVJ
Watch our film on ocean acidification: https://econ.st/46G1ZPG
,1,In a world where over a third of all languages use gender-specific grammar, non-binary people are looking for innovative solutions.
00:09 - Being gender-neutral in English
00:17 - The problem posed by grammatical gender
00:43 - Innovative solutions
Read Johnson, The Economist’s language column: https://econ.st/3rwxcpF
Find out why you have an accent in a foreign language: https://econ.st/48skXLr
Watch our film on how to sound like a local when you speak a foreign language: https://econ.st/465vQ4l
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletters: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Sign up to 1843’s newsletter, The Extraordinary Story: https://econ.st/3OdEkys
Read more about how languages with grammatical gender handle non-binary people: https://econ.st/464gLQh
Find out which languages take the longest to learn? https://econ.st/48mwdsG
Read about why God’s pronouns are causing conniptions in Britain: https://econ.st/46clJLe
,1,Ageing has always been inevitable but fasting, epigenetic reprogramming and parabiosis are just some of the scientific techniques that seem to help people stay young. Might the Peter Pan dream become real?
00:00 - Can science turn back the clock?
01:01 - Centenarians
02:51 - What is ageing?
04:51 - Dietary restriction
06:00 - Roundworms
07:55 - Epigenetics
09:43 - Blood and guts
11:40 - Senolytics
12:38 - Metformin
13:51 - Anti-ageing treatments are coming
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Read the Technology Quarterly on longevity: https://econ.st/462fqto
Christian Californians may have a solution to America’s obesity: https://econ.st/3EC4GG9
How to eat to 100: https://econ.st/3EwQTAq
Who wants to live forever? Quite a lot of people: https://econ.st/3LjHBMh
Is longevity more than a billionaire’s pipe-dream? Listen to our science and technology podcast Babbage to find out more: https://econ.st/3PzSbBl
A $3bn bet on finding the fountain of youth: https://econ.st/3EzGZyb
,1,In garages, bedrooms and workshops across Ukraine a small army of amateur enthusiasts has emerged to build and adapt drones capable of taking the fight to the Russians. We explain how the war created this cottage industry, and what motivates the people behind it.
00:00 - Ukraine’s drone war
00:47 - The army of volunteers
03:03 - Ukrainian drone success
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
An interview with the head of Ukraine’s defence intelligence: https://econ.st/3Pt9PW3
1843: The “crazy professors” making drones for Ukraine: https://econ.st/3rcsU6V
Ukraine faces a long war. A change of course is needed: https://econ.st/46mmiS4
Ukraine’s latest weapons in its war with Russia: 3D-printed bombs: https://econ.st/3rbhS1K
Ukraine is betting on drones to strike deep into Russia: https://econ.st/3sXkQqZ
How racing drones are used as improvised missiles in Ukraine: https://econ.st/3t1fNWw
Tracking the Ukraine war: where is the latest fighting?: https://econ.st/461jXfK
Special Report: The war in Ukraine shows how technology is changing the battlefield: https://econ.st/3t9MqkI
Watch: How the conflict in Ukraine is shaping the future of war: https://econ.st/3Zod2dW
Watch: What secret weapon sank Russia’s flagship?: https://econ.st/3Zr1Hd7
Listen: Ukraine’s drone strikes against Russia are working. Can it keep them up?: https://econ.st/3PKfyIb
Listen: How Ukrainian drones could change the way wars are fought everywhere: https://econ.st/3Poze38
,1,The business of surrogacy is growing fast, as fertility rates fall and demand from gay parents rises. This global trade has a dark underbelly, and needs policing.
00:51 America: putting a price on family
05:32 What’s driving demand?
07:52 How did surrogacy become a global trade?
11:30 Surrogacy’s dark underbelly
16:49 How can surrogacy be better regulated?
21:10 What’s in the child’s best interest?
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Read our full quarterly report on fertility: https://econ.st/44YZqqD
The fertility sector is booming: https://econ.st/3rntoHm
Surrogacy reform is spreading in the rich world: https://econ.st/46jxFdK
Watch more of our Now & Next series https://econ.st/46f9mgU OR https://econ.st/3PrywBZ
Listen to our podcast about Britain’s proposed surrogacy law reforms: https://econ.st/44Wcayl
Watch our film about whether it’s worth having kids: https://econ.st/3Pr0SMR
,1,We are launching a new subscription for podcasts. To hear more from “Money Talks” and access the whole range of our podcasts, including exclusive episodes and series, become a subscriber to Economist Podcasts+
,1,Ukraine is bracing for a long war. Can the country ensure that Western aid keeps flowing as the fight extends into 2024—and possibly beyond?
00:00 - How should Ukraine prepare for a future at war?
00:29 - A long war
01:46 - Drones open a front in Russia
03:53 - Attrition
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Why is Vladimir Putin looking to North Korea for arms?: https://econ.st/3rkFeBN
How the Pentagon assesses Ukraine’s progress: https://econ.st/45QDvDw
Tracking the Ukraine war: where is the latest fighting?: https://econ.st/3rmygw6
How could FPV drones change warfare?: https://econ.st/465VN3c
How soon will Ukraine be able to use its F-16s?: https://econ.st/46bEcXO
The jury is still out on Ukraine’s big push south: https://econ.st/3Loy5Ho
The Ukrainian army commits new forces in a big southward push: https://econ.st/3PcBbj0
Why are Moscow’s air defences performing so badly?: https://econ.st/3r4ZozX
Ukraine’s sluggish counter-offensive is souring the public mood: https://econ.st/3Ro8aDI
War is reshaping the Ukrainian state—for the better: https://econ.st/4691opy
1843: Russia has taken thousands of Ukrainian kids. Some don’t want to go home: https://econ.st/3PEIO32
,1,The Economist brought together Yuval Noah Harari and Mustafa Suleyman to grapple with the biggest technological revolution of our times. They debate the impact of AI on our immediate futures, how the technology can be controlled and whether it could ever have agency.
00:00 - Harari and Suleyman discuss the future of AI
00:51 - What will the world look like in 2028?
03:35 - Is AI comparable to an alien invasion?
06:22 - The importance of regulation
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Yuval Noah Harari argues that AI has hacked the operating system of human civilisation: https://econ.st/3PDyFUz
Yuval Noah Harari argues that what’s at stake in Ukraine is the direction of human history: https://econ.st/3sRFNDF
How scientists are using artificial intelligence: https://econ.st/3PkMRAc
How artificial intelligence can revolutionise science: https://econ.st/3sMVDPQ
How worried should you be about AI disrupting elections?: https://econ.st/48buN4d
Your employer is (probably) unprepared for artificial intelligence: https://econ.st/48foCMI
What are the chances of an AI apocalypse?: https://econ.st/3Lm2VR2
How Britain can become an AI superpower: https://econ.st/3sRLSA5
Why tech giants want to strangle AI with red tape: https://econ.st/4882bJj
Large, creative AI models will transform lives and labour markets: https://econ.st/3ZeQLz4
The relationship between AI and humans: https://econ.st/3EDmKje
Watch: How to stop AI going rogue: https://econ.st/46eekdX
Watch: Beyond ChatGPT: what chatbots mean for the future: https://econ.st/3Piq0Fl
Listen: Mustafa Suleyman on the coming age of AI: https://econ.st/45RxTbZ
Listen: How will AI influence the 2024 election?: https://econ.st/3ZeEdaY
,1,Rampant inflation, a booming black market for US dollars and crippling debt - welcome to Argentina, one of the world's most dysfunctional economies. How did it end up like this?
00:00 - Argentina’s economy is in crisis
01:21 - What is happening now?
04:16 - Why is this happening?
05:52 - Overspending
07:00 - Printing money
08:03 - Borrowing money
08:51 - Trade controls
11:06 - What are the solutions?
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Meet Javier Milei, the front-runner to be Argentina’s next president: https://econ.st/3L9zKkk
Javier Milei would be a danger for democracy in Argentina: https://econ.st/45F8Ys1
Argentina is pushing international lending to its breaking point: https://econ.st/3qKfDSN
Argentina could get its first libertarian president: https://econ.st/3L47T4K
Annual inflation of 114% is pushing Argentina to the right: https://econ.st/3sAJ1eM
Javier Milei, an Argentine libertarian, is rising in the polls: https://econ.st/3PsqASB
Listen: Argentina’s economic woes push voters to the populist right: https://econ.st/3PjV88E
,1,These days higher education can feel like a risky investment. Here are The Economist’s tips on how to make your degree worth the money.
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Read more about whether it is worth going to university: https://econ.st/43fAo6x
For our summer reads: https://econ.st/43fRtgY
Listen to our podcast, Money Talks counting the cost of education: https://econ.st/44oP3ME
Why affirmative action in American universities had to go: https://econ.st/3YYtEsv
The university lottery: https://econ.st/45yC50b
American universities have an incentive to seem extortionate: https://econ.st/3OTBDT6
Muddled policies are harming British universities: https://econ.st/3PfIGqv
,1,Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO of Meta, is one of the richest and most powerful men in the world. His position seems unassailable, so why does he run his business empire as though it’s under constant threat?
00:00 - Who is Mark Zuckerberg?
00:58 - How did we get here?
01:31 - What are his successes?
03:15 - What are his failures?
04:50 - What does the future look like?
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Meta’s Threads app has better odds of usurping Twitter than previous clones had:
https://econ.st/45rKy4U
The Musk-Zuckerberg social-media smackdown: https://econ.st/44UYhB1
Where have all the laid-off tech workers gone?:
https://econ.st/3OXEdsn
Big tech and the pursuit of AI dominance:
https://econ.st/45vVwGx
How digital gaming spreads far and wide:
https://econ.st/3QCNg3r
Things are looking up for Meta:
https://econ.st/3Ov3MzK
Another game falls to an AI player:
https://econ.st/3OBNkOe
Meta will lay off 13% of its workforce:
https://econ.st/45gbzbN
Facebook and the conglomerate curse:
https://econ.st/3YEOrB6
How much trouble is Mark Zuckerberg in?:
https://econ.st/3KKdGwa
Has TikTok burst the Zuckerbubble?:
https://econ.st/3KJbrcN
,1,Ever wondered why it's so hard to sound like a local when you go on holiday? Discover the pronunciation tips your teachers may have missed.
Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI
Why you have an accent in a foreign language: https://econ.st/3YACr3Q
The Economist’s summer reads: https://econ.st/3OXjvJb