Historic: sorting through files on the computer dating back to the 1990’s I found the notes relating to President Mary Robinson’s visit to Harare, Zimbabwe.

PRESIDENT ROBINSON’S STATE VISIT TO ZIMBABWE

The President, Mr. Robinson and party arrived in Harare on
Saturday, 1 October 1994 to commence their State Visit to Zimbabwe.
The President received full state honours from President Mugabe
and Ministers of the Zimbabwean Government. There was also an
enthusiastic welcome from traditional drummers and singers and
from members of the Irish community.

On Saturday afternoon President Robinson attended the Jairos Jiri
charity horse show which raises funds for the disabled children of
the Jairos Jiri Centre in Harare. The President met children from
the Centre before watching the jump off in the international event
in which teams from Zimbabwe, Ireland and South Africa
participated. The home team won to the delight of the crowd.

Later the President, accompanied by Minister Tom Kitt and
officials, met President Mugabe and a Zimbabwean delegation for
talks. Following the talks the President was guest of honour at a
State Banquet in State House at which President Mugabe paid
tribute to the contribution of the Irish to Zimbabwe, especially
in its struggle for independence. He singled out members of Irish
religious communities for special praise and spoke also of his
desire to foster greater economic links between Zimbabwe and
Ireland © sentiments shared also by President Robinson in her
response.

On Sunday the President focused on Zimbabwe’s tourism industry and
following a visit to Victoria Falls and a boat trip on the Zambezi
River, she and Mr. Robinson were guests of honour at a dinner
hosted by the Minister for Environment and Tourism, Mrs Rushesha,
and attended by local tourism interests and civic leaders. In her
address Mrs Rushesha conveyed her appreciation of Ireland’s
support and assistance for the development of tourism in Zimbabwe.
President Robinson spoke of how greatly impressed she was during
her visit to Victoria Falls at the way in which Zimbabwe valued
one of the world’s greatest treasures. Her visit the following
day to the Hwange Game Park would help her to gain an appreciation
of the contribution of such parks to the preservation and
conservation of the great natural resources of the region. She
was glad that Ireland and Zimbabwe had been able to work together
in tourism development, which was so important for both countries.

On her return to Harare on Monday afternoon the President laid a
wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Heroes Acre; a
memorial park and burial ground for heroes of the Zimbabwean

===========

STATE VISIT TO ZIMBABWE
HARARE, 6 OCTOBER, 1994

Last night the President and Mr Robinson were guests of honour at
a Dinner hosted by the Mayor of Harare, Cllr. Charles Tawengwa,
and attended by civic leaders and members of the business
community.

The Mayor praised the role of Irish people in Zimbabwe, especially
in the fields of education, agriculture, women’s organisations and
the hotel and catering sectors. The work that they were doing
among rural communities slowed down the drift to the city and was
of practical benefit to the city. The peace and stability that
Harare had to offer made the city, which was enjoying a
construction boom at present, an attractive location for
investment, he said, and he was looking forward to improving links
with Ireland. In that regard he proposed to invite the Lord Mayor
of Dublin to enter into a twinning arrangement with Harare.

The President remarked that she would encourage the Mayor to
pursue the twinning proposal. She had hoped that her visit would
increase knowledge and understanding of Zimbabwe in Ireland and
lead to practical links. She had learned a great deal about the
modern Zimbabwe since arriving and now had a better appreciation
of the great strengths that the country possessed, including its
natural beauty, cultural heritage and friendly people. She spoke
of the long standing connections between Ireland and Zimbabwe and
hoped that there would be greater contact between both countries,
especially in matters of trade and commerce.

This morning the President and party visited the Supreme and High
Courts of Zimbabwe in Harare, where she was greeted on arrival by
the Chief Justice, the Judge President of the High Court and the
Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Justice, Legal and
Parliamentary Affairs. She then met other members of the Supreme
and High Courts.

Afterwards the President visited the U.N.I.C.E.F. Goromonzi Rural
District Township Project which is involved in promoting health
and hygiene education and in a school Youth AIDS Education
programme. The Goromonzi district is situated just outside
Mashonaland East Province in an area that has above average
rainfalls. The resultant availability of surface water has
resulted in a number of water and sanitation related diseases
especially diarrhoea, dysentery and Schistosomiasis (Bilharzia).

During her time at the project the President visited a school
where children were receiving instruction in AIDS/HIV education.
She was shown an unprotected well and then a safe water source for
hand washing and new latrines for the schoolchildren..
At a nearby housing compound the President visited some houses to
see water sources, a new sanitation unit and traditional food
storage and cooking facilities.

In the afternoon the President, accompanied by President Mugabe,
will visit the Father Jerome O’Hea Memorial Clinic and St Francis
Xavier College in Kutama. President Mugabe was a pupil at the
college in the late 1930s and early 1940s during the time of Fr.
O’Hea, who was from Ireland.

================

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Axios: President Trump mired in RISK

PRESENTED BY META
 
Axios AM
By Mike Allen · Mar 07, 2026
☀️ Hello, Saturday. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,534 words … 6 mins. Thanks to Zachary Basu for orchestrating. Edited by Mark Robinson and Bill Kole.Driving the day: President Trump posted at 6:11 a.m. ET: “Today Iran will be hit very hard!” Go deeper.⏰ Overnight, your phone will spring ahead into daylight saving time.
 
 
1 big thing: Trump’s risky business
 
Illustration of a man resembling Donald Trump pushing all the poker chips in toward the center of the table.
Illustration: Maura Kearns/Axios
 
President Trump is mired in risk, Axios’ Zachary Basu writes:

Risk his Iran war of choice goes bad. Risk the February job losses are a trend, not a blip. Risk the stock market keeps dropping. Risk his tariffs, and now soaring oil costs, are pushing prices higher. Risk that deregulated AI accelerates job losses. Risk that Democratic enthusiasm leads to a midterm wipeout.

Why it matters: Trump fancies himself a high-risk, high-reward president, a confidence cheered by the vast majority of Republican officials and voters. But risk is risk — and by most measures, it’s rising everywhere.

By the numbers: Early polling on the Iran war suggests there may be little or no reward to be had, particularly with the swing voters Trump has lost over affordability concerns.

Pollster G. Elliott Morris took an average of high-quality surveys and found just 38% of Americans support U.S. military strikes in Iran — lower than retrospective support for the war in Iraq in 2014.

Most Republicans support the war. But no broader rally-around-the-flag effect has materialized.

Zoom in: For years, Trump, Vice President Vance and the broader MAGA movement argued that war with Iran would be catastrophic — too costly, too risky, too likely to spiral.

Six U.S. service members have died since the opening strikes. Trump told TIME when asked whether Americans should be worried about retaliatory attacks at home: “I guess … When you go to war, some people will die.

The first 100 hours of the war alone are estimated to have cost $3.7 billion. Oil prices are up more than 25%, with the instability threatening Persian Gulf investments that Trump has made central to his economic vision. 

Trump told Axios he must be “involved” in selecting Iran’s next leader — but also acknowledged the worst-case scenario: “We do this, and then somebody takes over who’s as bad as the previous person.”Covers of the new TIME, today’s N.Y. Post

The intrigue: Some Middle East experts, including hawkish Trump allies in Washington, believe the president is playing with fire by encouraging Kurdish militants to cross into Iran and fight the regime.

The possibility of a brutal civil war — in an ethnically diverse country of 93 million — could tip Iran into the prolonged chaos that defined George W. Bush’s legacy in Iraq.

Trump, asked about polls showing most Americans oppose the war, told the New York Post he’s not worried: “I think that the polling is very good, but I don’t care about polling. I have to do the right thing.

Zoom out: Even before his attack on Iran rattled global markets, Trump was losing the argument on the economy — historically his strongest issue.

New data show the economy shed 92,000 jobs in February far worse than the 60,000-job gain economists expected, and the third time in five months the labor market has contracted.

Surging oil prices threaten to reverse the genuine progress Trump has made on gas prices and inflation, with new risks to the kitchen-table costs at the core of voters’ affordability concerns.

His tariffs — sold as a path to cheaper goods and more American jobs — have so far delivered neither, with prices rising and manufacturing shedding jobs for 13 of the past 14 months.

Between the lines: The Trump administration has gone all-in on AI accelerationism, pressuring GOP state lawmakers to back off on safety regulations that could constrain the technology’s explosive growth.

This might be Trump’s biggest bet of all: AI could supercharge the economy and cement his legacy as the president who unleashed the next industrial revolution.

But most Americans are deeply skeptical and anxious, fearing AI could accelerate job displacement, hollow out the middle class and eventually threaten humanity itself.

White House deputy press secretary Kush Desai said in a statement to Axios: “The biggest risk America faces is backing down from President Trump’s America First agenda and abandoning the president’s push to secure our borders, mass deport criminal illegal aliens, safeguard our national security, and restore America as the most dynamic economy in the world.”

“The so-called ‘experts’ have repeatedly predicted doom and gloom since President Trump took office, and they have repeatedly been proven wrong. President Trump and his administration are laser-focused on continuing to deliver for the American people.

 What to watch: Trump’s biggest political risk is losing Congress in November, and watching his second term collapse into investigations, impeachment and legislative gridlock.

The midterm environment is trending against Republicans across every early indicator — primary turnout, generic ballot polling and special election results.

The bottom line: A swift, clean victory in Iran could help stabilize Trump’s numbers. A prolonged conflict — with casualties, spiking prices and no clear endgame — could turn a difficult midterm map into a wipeout.Share this story … Go deeper: Trump’s power play.
    

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Online cancel culture What Rowan Atkinson has to say:

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Mario Nawfal: And then, only then, the survivors hit the final boss: Israel’s five-layer missile-defense wall. Arrow, THAAD, Patriots, David’s Sling, Iron Dome. No other country on Earth has anything close.

“When plunder becomes a way of life, men create for themselves a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that glorifies it.” Frederic Bastiat” Recommend Grokipedia/wiki. This is wisdom from 1800’s that we have yet again ignored

Hitting Israel from inside Iran is basically the Olympics of missile warfare. The second Tehran hits “launch,” those missiles aren’t heading straight for Israel. They’re entering the world’s deadliest obstacle course.

First stop: Iraq, where American Patriot batteries are waiting to swat them out of the sky. Anything that survives that gauntlet drifts into Syria and Jordan, and by then the Israeli Air Force is already airborne, tearing across the sky looking to intercept. Jordan joins in too, because nobody wants Iranian missiles flying overhead.

If a missile actually survives that, it gets targeted by American warships in the Mediterranean.

And then, only then, the survivors hit the final boss: Israel’s five-layer missile-defense wall. Arrow, THAAD, Patriots, David’s Sling, Iron Dome. No other country on Earth has anything close.

And yet… a handful of Iranian missiles still punched through and hit Tel Aviv and Haifa.

Which tells you two things:

Iran throws a lot of metal into the sky.

No matter how many layers of defense exist, in modern war, something always leaks through.

Source: EN Industry

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World Economy … 2025. By country:

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President Trump: Be prepared to think further

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George Gallaway: THEY ARE LYING. “The US is lying about their casualities,,,,Tel Aviv looks like Gaza”

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Futurism: “My thinking wasn’t broken, just noisy — like mental static.” Comment: interesting as we are at war and the Pentagon told Anthropic to basically proceed or else …

AI Use at Work Is Causing “Brain Fry,” Researchers Find, Especially Among High Performers

“My thinking wasn’t broken, just noisy — like mental static.”

By Frank Landymore

Published Mar 6, 2026 4:05 PM EST

A human brain is placed in a frying pan on a stove, with a red glow around the brain suggesting heat or cooking. The image has a stylized, high-contrast, and slightly grainy effect.
Illustration by Tag Hartman-Simkins / Futurism. Source: Getty Images

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It’s looking more and more like using AI to churn out work can take a considerable toll on your mental health, despite the tech’s promises of easing workloads.

The latest research to illustrate this grim trend: a survey of nearly 1,500 full time US workers, which found that an alarming proportion of employees who constantly use AI at work to push their productivity past their normal capacity are becoming fatigued, as the researchers from from Boston Consulting Group and University of California, Riverside described in a new report in Harvard Business Review.

The researchers even gave the phenomenon an evocative name: “AI brain fry.”

“One of the reasons we did this work is because we saw this happening to people who were perceived as really high performers,” Julie Bedard, a partner at BCG and an author of the report, told Axios.

In the study, 14 percent of workers said they had experienced “mental fatigue that results from excessive use of, interaction with, and/or oversight of AI tools beyond one’s cognitive capacity.” The percentage was highest in marketing, software development, HR, finance, and IT roles.

Many employees described brain fry symptoms using similar language. They reported a “buzzing” feeling or a mental “fog.” Other symptoms included headaches and slower decision-making.

AI companies promise that AI can supercharge productivity. Whether or not that’s true, the tech is enabling workers to multitask at a speed and workload well past their regular limit, which seems to be part of the problem regarding its cognitive effects.

The study identified information overload and constant task switching as some of the main drivers of brain fry. In particular, the most draining aspect of using AI to automate work was oversight, or the need to constantly supervise the AI tools, with some overseeing multiple AI agents at the same time. A high degree of oversight predicted 12 percent more mental fatigue for employees, the report found.

“I had one tool helping me weigh technical decisions, another spitting out drafts and summaries, and I kept bouncing between them, double-checking every little thing,” one senior engineering manager described in the HBR report. “But instead of moving faster, my brain just started to feel cluttered. Not physically tired, just… crowded. It was like I had a dozen browser tabs open in my head, all fighting for attention.”

“My thinking wasn’t broken, just noisy — like mental static,” the senior manager continued. “What finally snapped me out of it was realizing I was working harder to manage the tools than to actually solve the problem.”

The work also found a correlation between self-reported AI brain fry and an employee’s intent to quit their company. Intent to leave rose by nearly 10 percent among those who reported AI brain fry. 

Brain fry is also bad news for an employer’s all-important bottom line. Workers who experienced brain fry experienced a 33 percent increase in decision fatigue. For multibillion dollar firms, this could translate to millions of dollars of being lost to poor decision-making or paralysis each year.

The findings add to a growing body of research and anecdotal accounts describing the toll of using AI at the workplace. Another report in HBR last month found that AI was actually intensifying work instead of reducing workloads. Amid increasing discussion into the topic, more engineers have come out to criticize AI’s usage in the workplace, with many admitting that their own AI usage was speeding them towards burnout.

More on AI: AI CEOs Worried About Chernobyl-Style Event Where Their Tech Causes a Horrific Catastrophe

Frank Landymore

Contributing Writer

I’m a tech and science correspondent for Futurism, where I’m particularly interested in astrophysics, the business and ethics of artificial intelligence and automation, and the environment.

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Journalist George Moniot just explained why a regimechange in Iran would be a terrible idea….

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Live CNN: Churchill’s Pitch to the Americans to avoid talking about Oil. Better to blame Iran focused on becoming Communist.

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