Mario Nawfal: What about the Fear of “Spooking the Markets” … does this have any relevance to strategic leverage?

https://twitter.com/MarioNawfal/status/2062512379263435020/video/1

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Forever corrected for laughing inappropriately; 30+ years on I am reading a book written by a psychiatrist, who explains the condition Pseudobulbar affect. A cause TBI and frontal lobe damage, which I have. I am a firm believer in lifelong learning even though I forget so much but this has caused me and those close to me much embarrassment. This explanation is from the Mayo Clinic in the U.S.

Pseudobulbar affect

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Overview

Pseudobulbar affect, also called PBA, is a brain condition in which a person suddenly starts to laugh or cry and can’t manage the reaction. The term “pseudobulbar” means a condition in the brainstem’s corticobulbar pathways that control facial and emotional expression. The word “affect” means how a person shows emotions. These emotional reactions typically do not fit the situation or how the person is feeling. PBA usually happens in people with certain neurological conditions or injuries that affect how the brain controls emotions.

If you have pseudobulbar affect, you feel emotions like you usually do. But sometimes you laugh or cry too much or at the wrong times. It may be more than usual for a situation. For example, something that would cause you to smile instead leads you to laughter that doesn’t match your feelings. Or a sad moment in a movie leads to intense sobbing. Since you can’t know when this may happen, it may embarrass you or make daily life difficult.

Pseudobulbar affect often goes undiagnosed. Sometimes, it’s mistaken for a mood disorder. But once the condition is diagnosed, you may be able to manage PBA with medicine.

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Symptoms

One of the main signs of pseudobulbar affect is suddenly beginning to cry or laugh when you don’t feel sad or find something funny. Or those behaviors may be an overreaction to the situation. The reaction may happen at any time and may last for several minutes. You may start laughing, but it often turns into tears. Crying appears to be more common than laughing.

With PBA, you cannot manage when you laugh or cry. For example, you might laugh too much in response to a mildly amusing comment. Or you might laugh or cry at something others don’t see as funny or sad. These emotional responses are not how you would typically react.

Pseudobulbar affect is often mistaken for depression because of the crying. While some people with PBA also may have depression, the two conditions are different. With PBA, crying lasts only a short time. Depression is a feeling of sadness that doesn’t go away. People with PBA also do not have problems sleeping or eating, which are common signs of depression. PBA also may be mistaken for bipolar disorder because both conditions cause sudden emotional changes.

When to see a doctor

If you think you have pseudobulbar affect, talk with your healthcare professional. If you’re being treated for a neurological condition, your specialist may be able to diagnose PBA.

Many people with pseudobulbar affect likely don’t report the condition or get a diagnosis due to a lack of awareness about the condition. Talk with your healthcare professional if you have symptoms that concern you.

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Causes

The exact cause of pseudobulbar affect is not completely understood. While further research is needed, a possible cause of PBA may be an injury to the pathways in the brain that manage how you show emotions. Increases and decreases in certain brain chemicals that send messages between nerve cells also play a role in PBA.

Risk factors

People with certain neurological conditions or injuries have a higher risk of pseudobulbar affect. These include:

  • Stroke.
  • Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also called ALS.
  • Multiple sclerosis, also called MS.
  • Alzheimer’s disease.
  • Parkinson’s disease.
  • Progressive supranuclear palsy.
  • Brain tumors.
  • Dementia.
  • Traumatic brain injury.

Complications

Being unable to manage laughing or crying due to pseudobulbar affect may cause people to isolate themselves from others. Since the condition may be misdiagnosed, a lack of understanding and correct treatment of the condition also may cause anxiety and depression. A misdiagnosis may lead to other mood disorders.

The condition might affect your ability to work and do daily tasks, especially if you’re already coping with a neurological condition.

Prevention

There are no known ways to prevent pseudobulbar affect. It’s caused by neurological conditions or brain injuries. While PBA cannot be prevented, there are some ways to lower the risk:

  • Protect your brain. Wearing seat belts and helmets and taking other steps to protect your brain may help prevent injuries that could lead to PBA.
  • Manage neurological conditions. If you have a condition such as MS or Parkinson’s disease, following treatment plans and keeping your brain healthy may help reduce the chance of developing PBA.
  • Early detection. If you or someone you know experiences sudden laughing or crying that doesn’t match emotions, talk with a healthcare professional about PBA. Early treatment can help manage symptoms.

By Mayo Clinic Staff

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Diagnosis & treatment

Dec. 23, 2025

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The Rundown AI: AI tutors edge out of law faculty

Study: AI tutors edge out law facultyImage source: Images 2.0 / The Rundown

The Rundown: A new study led by Stanford ran a blind test of AI legal tutoring, asking 16 contract professors to judge anonymized answers from their peers and from two of Google’s AI systems — with the faculty siding with the AI outputs 75% of the time.

The details: The study tested contract-law office-hours questions, a setting where strong answers need judgment and critical thinking instead of just one correct answer. Sixteen professors from 14 schools blindly judged 2,918 matchups between their own answers and those of Google’s Gemini 2.5 Pro and NotebookLM.Faculty chose Gemini 2.5 Pro and NotebookLM responses 75% of the time, with only a single top professor staying level with the models in evaluations. Extending the testing with an AI stand-in judge, the team ranked nine more systems, with Claude Opus 4.7 on top and all models beating the professors.

Why it matters: Early models like GPT-4 were already passing the bar exam, but this study puts AI in tougher, more subjective judgment situations on office hours contract law questions. AI’s rollout into the education world is still controversial and jagged, but areas like on-demand tutoring can help change the learning process for the better.
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📰 Everything else in AI todaySuno raised over $400M at a $5.4B valuation, with the AI music startup rolling out its first model built in partnership with the music industry “in the coming months.”Google released Gemma 4 12B, a new multimodal model able to run on a 16GB laptop, and the first Gemma variant of this size built for native audio.xAI rolled out Grok Imagine 1.5 Preview, the company’s latest image-to-video update, which brings upgraded realism, audio syncing, and prompt following.Microsoft and the Mayo Clinic are building a frontier healthcare AI, trained on anonymized patient data and owned by the clinic, with Azure handling distribution.Google Labs launched a new experiment called Dreambeans, connecting to users’ Gmail, Calendar, Photos, and Search to generate a feed of personalized daily stories.

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A growing divide is emerging between Trump and Netanyahu over the region’s future. According to U.S. officials, Trump wants to reduce tensions, end ongoing conflicts, and pursue a diplomatic deal with Iran. Netanyahu, by contrast, appears more inclined to maintain military pressure on Iran and its allies, including Hezbollah. Source: Axios, Barak Ravid

@clashreport

A growing divide is emerging between Trump and Netanyahu over the region’s future. According to U.S. officials, Trump wants to reduce tensions, end ongoing conflicts, and pursue a diplomatic deal with Iran. Netanyahu, by contrast, appears more inclined to maintain military pressure on Iran and its allies, including Hezbollah. Source: Axios, Barak Ravid

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The Register on X: UK lawmakers call on government to ditch Palantir NHS contract


UK lawmakers call on government to ditch Palantir NHS contract

Lock-in to a small number of suppliers holding up digital government plans, committee says Lindsay Clark

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Published Wed 03 Jun 2026 // 09:01 UTC

MPs have told the government to cut its ties with Palantir, and end the US spy-tech firm’s controversial involvement in the National Health Service’s Federated Data Platform.

Warning against vendor lock-in across government, the House of Common science and technology committee said it was most concerned about Palantir, which had secured central roles in health and defense systems.

“Palantir should not have a such a significant role in the UK public sector… it is far from the only company capable of providing the data analysis ‘middleware’ required by public bodies,” the report from the Science Innovation and Technology Committee said.

The report notes concerns about Palantir’s origins as a company getting a foothold in government with security, immigration services, and defense contracts. It also describes the political musings of co-founder Peter Thiel and CEO Alex Karp.

However, it added: “Our view that Palantir’s increasing presence across the public sector represents an unacceptable point of weakness is not ideologically motivated or driven by concerns about the quality of their products. The government should retain the ability to pick and choose individual suppliers and safeguard against the risk of vendor lock-in and debilitating dependencies, particularly in areas of critical national importance such as healthcare and national security infrastructure.”

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Palantir won the £330 million Federated Data Platform (FDP) contract in November 2023 after a procurement process, which NHS England, the soon-to-be-defunct health quango, maintained was open and fair. The award followed £60 million in Covid-era NHS contracts awarded without competition.

The committee recommended that the government use the February 2027 break clause in the FDP contract and either “develop an in-house replacement or seek an alternative developed by UK-owned and UK-based providers that are more compatible with UK values, and do not pursue either technical or contractual dependencies.”

The Science Innovation and Technology Committee said dependency on a small number of suppliers, locked into repeated government contracts, was one of the factors holding up delivery of the broader vision for digital government. The others included over-reliance on legacy systems, the problem of digital sovereignty and over-hype by senior politicians and industry figures.

Dame Chi Onwurah MP, Committee chair, said: “We welcome the government’s intentions to make the UK a ‘truly digital state,’ but it’s not clear how this will be delivered. Without a detailed and measurable plan, it risks falling short – but there’s still time to put this right.

“A critical part of this transformation should include reducing the UK’s dependence on a small number of big US tech companies like Palantir. Vendor lock-in isn’t inevitable, and the current position leaves us seriously exposed. The UK can and should be aiming for technology sovereignty in critical parts of our public sector and supporting domestic alternatives through smarter procurement,” she said.

The committee said the government needed to get its approach right before embarking on ambitious projects such as the digital ID scheme, expected to roll out by the end of the current Parliament. Without modernized digital infrastructure, digital ID will struggle to succeed, and to keep citizens’ data secure.

“Only once the foundations of the UK’s digital infrastructure are secure, and public trust has been gained, should the government proceed with its planned digital ID. The success or failure of this project will be a defining test of its wider digital transformation ambitions,” Onwurah said. ®

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Mario Nawfal on X: “It’s a bad time for free speech in Britain”. Why? Once it gave a haven to Karl Marx

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Voice of Nigeria VON: Why Do Muslims Throw Stones at the Jamarat? The Deeper Meaning… Struggle between good and evil. Can we learn anything from this in a world of wars especially focused between Christians and Islam

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Neutrality Studies: Iran … Western War narrative challenged

Iran DESTROYS Western War Narrative… With Lego Movies | Explosive Media

May 19, 2026 Interviews

The Iran-War is fought not only on the battle field, but also on the media-front. And Iran won it BIG-TIME with the incredibly popular Lego movies, explaining the Iranian position and exposing the US system of war and destruction. At the same time, the makers of the Lego movies also build bridges to the US population. Together with Benjamin Schoendorff from the Resistance is Fertile Podcast I interview one of the Iranian’s behind the videos from the group that calls itself “Explosive Media”—the Lego Resistance Front. Links: Explosive Media:https://lnk.bio/ExplosiveMediaa Resistance is Fertile Podcast: https://resistanceisfertilepodcast.su… Neutrality Studies substack: https://pascallottaz.substack.com (Opt in for Academic Section from your profile settings: https://pascallottaz.substack.com/s/a…) Merch: https://neutralitystudies-shop.fourth… Donation: https://neutralitystudies.com/donate

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The Irish government’s agreement to supply Russia with vast quantities of alumina is even more concerning than it first appears : Australia banned the export of alumina to Russia, citing its critical role in the Kremlin’s war machine. Meanwhile, Ireland’s exports of alumina to Russia have skyrocketed since the 2022 invasion of Ukraine, now providing 99% of all alumina from the EU.

Spencer Joseph

@SpencerJJoseph

The Irish government’s agreement to supply Russia with vast quantities of alumina is even more concerning than it first appears : Australia banned the export of alumina to Russia, citing its critical role in the Kremlin’s war machine. Meanwhile, Ireland’s exports of alumina to Russia have skyrocketed since the 2022 invasion of Ukraine, now providing 99% of all alumina from the EU. Ireland also approves approx 95% of all Russian visa applications – an extremely high percentage. Ireland’s Russian embassy in Dublin is widely viewed by security sources as a hub for Russian intelligence (GRU/SVR) and influence operations in Western Europe. It has an unusually large staff relative to bilateral ties, and Ireland’s neutrality, location (back door to the UK), and open society make it attractive for hybrid activities

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The UK now hosts more than 500 active data centres (the third largest in the world). They have been rammed through despite huge local community concerns about the impact on their local landscapes and energy and water consumption. These enormous data centres are giant industrial facilities consuming vast quantities of electricity, water and land while placing increasing pressure on the UK’s energy infrastructure.

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James Melville 

@JamesMelville

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The UK now hosts more than 500 active data centres (the third largest in the world). They have been rammed through despite huge local community concerns about the impact on their local landscapes and energy and water consumption. These enormous data centres are giant industrial facilities consuming vast quantities of electricity, water and land while placing increasing pressure on the UK’s energy infrastructure.

Water consumption by data centres is expected to reach 9.3 trillion litres, while CO2 emissions will rise to 399 million tons.

Annual power consumption from data centres is projected to double to 945 TWh by 2030, around ‌the ⁠same as the whole of Japan’s energy consumption, with AI accounting for 40% of the total.

The rise of AI is accelerating this trend. The UK Government’s Compute Roadmap notes that AI data centres can devote up to 40% of their energy consumption to cooling systems.

It is estimated that data-centre power and water consumption could double by 2030 due to AI growth.

Emerging research suggests large AI facilities can create localised warming effects around their sites, sometimes described as a “data heat island” effect.

Numerous campaigns against these data centres are being organised by local communities. No one voted for this. If you are involved in any of these local campaigns, please DM me and I’ll try and help you amplify your campaigns.

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