Robert Kennedy: Bill Gates behind moves to reduce Africa’s population

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A voice from the wilderness of the Democrats … Nancy Pelosi

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A favorite of mine, over the decades. Bertrand Russell’s Philosophy. “The Art of idleness”

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The Harvard Gazette: Ageing Independently, by design. Quote “But one successful example of the scattered housing is the Village model in Boston and elsewhere now, where people that are scattered throughout the city find each other through this villages group that provides services, social connection, and a sense of community.”

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Ann Forsyth standing in a stairwell.
Ann Forsyth.Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer

Nation & World

Aging independently, by design

Most older adults say they want to spend their golden years in their own homes. The reality is more complicated, says urban planning expert.

Liz Mineo

Harvard Staff Writer

March 5, 2026 7 min read

With the rapid graying of the United States, due to extended lifespans and declining birth rates, concerns among older adults are also on the rise. Their worries range from financial concerns to physical and mental health issues to healthcare and housing.  Most older adults would prefer to stay in their own homes throughout their golden years, according to a recent Pew Research Center poll. But aging in place is not that simple.

In this interview, which has been edited for clarity and length, Ann Forsyth, Ruth and Frank Stanton Professor of Urban Planning at the Graduate School of Design, talks about what aging in place entails, how technology helps older adults, and what communities can do to assist those who want to avoid the nursing home.


In surveys, most older adults say that they would prefer to live in their own home rather than a nursing home. How would you define aging in place?

At its simplest, it is aging in your own home. But that leaves a lot of questions, such as which home is home? Is it the home you lived in in your 40s and 50s? Is it one that you moved into in your 60s and 70s in order to age in place? And then the issue is, for how long? Is it one that you would leave only when you die? Or do you stay in that home as long as you can look after yourself and then move somewhere else in your community, maybe a senior housing development? For many people, aging in place is really about staying outside a nursing home.

What challenges do people face when trying to live independently as they age?

The main issue is uncertainty. There are many positives about staying in your own home. It provides shelter, meaning, and continuity. You may want to stay in your own home, but you’ve got uncertainty about whether you’ll be physically able and mentally able to manage your household. There’s also uncertainty about how long your household will stay intact. If you’re married or have a partner, and something happens to them, then you’ll have to make different kinds of decisions. For older people, there is more potential for surprises that could undermine their ability to stay at home. Some people might worry about mental problems that could affect their ability to manage their home finances and so on. There’s a lot of worry and concern.

Most homes are not equipped for aging in place. Can design help?

It is tricky. What you have to do is balance two factors, one of which is compensation for losses or problems that might come along. For example, being able to get around without having to go upstairs, or when using a walker, or being able to use assistive devices that may need wider, bigger spaces and so on. But you also need to have an environment that provides some challenge and meaning because you need to physically and mentally challenge yourself to maintain your capacities. The stairs dilemma is quite interesting: Do you have a house without stairs so that it’s easier to get around when you are no longer as mobile? Or do you have stairs because they help you maintain capacity through incidental exercise? If you’re wealthy enough, you can have a bit of both because you can have a bedroom and bathroom on the main floor. That’s very complicated; it’s hard to find those houses, and they’re quite expensive. One way to think about it is when your home gets too challenging, you move, but at that moment, you’re facing a lot of challenges, and the thought of actually having to move and deal with all your stuff and emotions may be very difficult.

How can urban planning support aging populations?

This is an area where cities need to bite the bullet. In the U.S., the Americans with Disabilities Act has been terrific for helping make public buildings physically accessible and offering protection for a variety of disabilities. But there is a need to think comprehensively about not only the physical environment, but programming, and other aspects of the social environment, which is key to prevent loneliness and social isolation among older people. That is something that more cities will need to do more of.

In terms of housing, there are two philosophies; one is clustering older people together so it’s easier to provide services like classes or meals, versus integrating them with the wider community. Both of them have benefits, and can be done at different scales, so you don’t have to have a massive retirement community like Sun City with tens of thousands of older people all in one place. You could have an apartment block filled with older people in a part of the city. That configuration allows them to be together, to meet and support each other, and to keep reforming their social networks as people depart.

There’s also age-specific housing for older people, or co-housing programs that try to mix older and younger groups of people, and both can work with or without external support. The debate always centers about how much clustering there is of older people to make services and socializing easier versus how much they’re just scattered throughout the environment, which makes it more complicated for services. But one successful example of the scattered housing is the Village model in Boston and elsewhere now, where people that are scattered throughout the city find each other through this villages group that provides services, social connection, and a sense of community.

What role can technology play in helping older adults age at home?

There are many kinds of technologies that can make aging in place much easier. We’re not only talking about walkers and wheelchairs, but also digital technologies and even ordinary appliances. In a study I did with Yingying Lyu, a Harvard graduate who now works at West Chester University of Pennsylvania, we found that older folks in rural China prefer to use a rice cooker or a slow cooker because it makes them feel much safer than using gas-stoves or wood. Robotic vacuums are also helpful, but there are other kinds of technology that are changing old age. For example, going up and down stairs can be complicated, but with the help of robotic shorts, we might be fine with stairs. Technologies can also help caregivers. A lot of robots can help people lift things, and they could help caregivers transfer someone from a bed to a wheelchair or help get them out of the bathtub. Technology already helps older folks maintain family ties and social relationships through video conferencing on computers and phones.

People are living longer and having fewer children. How might these demographic changes affect the care of older Americans?

There are big challenges these days with smaller families, more mobile populations, and older people living so much longer. As families reduce in size and disperse more, there will be less labor to do that informal, unpaid care that families do for their older relatives. There will be more need for paid care. That’s going to be a huge challenge in most parts of the world.

There are a number of strategies for minimizing the amount of care older people need, and that includes improving people’s health, so that they would need less care. It also includes finding new sources of caregiver labor force, such as attracting people from different industries into caregiving or relying on immigration, which is often used to increase the caregiving workforce. And then promoting cooperation among older people to care for each other, using technologies, both for caregivers and older people, and improving the environment. Of course, all of these strategies need resources, and communities and governments need to be better prepared to deal with the impact of demographic changes on aging populations.

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The Conversation. A large release of important documents once meant teams of journalists staying back, working through piles of records late into the night. Now especially in the case of Epstein-Maxwell case, a number of online sleuths are doing a lot of the investigations

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  1. Oliver Alfred Guidetti Post Doctoral Researcher, Cybersecurity and Psychology, University of Wollongong

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A large release of important documents once meant teams of journalists staying back, working through piles of records late into the night.

Today, it triggers something closer to a public audit. The January 30 publication of more than three million documents related to convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein has mobilised thousands of online users into doing their own digging. They range from massively popular political livestreamers such as Hasan Piker and Dean Withers, to crowdsourced intelligence communities on Reddit.

These netizens are combing through documents, comparing excerpts and trying to piece together what the archive does (and does not) reveal.

Part of the scrutiny comes from the legal framework behind the release. The Epstein Files Transparency Act largely focuses on protecting victims’ identities. However, the US Department of Justice says it also excluded duplicate records, privileged material and other categories during its review.

Whether those additional filters align with the law’s intended limits has itself become part of the story. So people are examining not only the documents that were published, but the gaps around them.

By pooling their time and expertise, online communities can reveal patterns and contradictions that may otherwise go unreported. The same mechanism, however, can flip into something darker.

Our mission is to share knowledge and inform decisions.

About us

A file release becomes a public investigation

Massive, legally mandated document releases – such as the millions of pages declassified under the 1992 John F Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act – are routinely heavily redacted to protect intelligence sources or privacy.

But rather than settling public doubts, visible gaps often act as a catalyst for further suspicion and distrust. This creates the feeling that the public must audit for itself.

When thousands of people scan the same archive, patterns emerge quickly. Duplicate records surface. Chronologies begin to form. And inconsistencies are noticed that might otherwise remain buried.

A prime example was when open-source intelligence communities successfully cross-referenced early releases of the Epstein flight logs with public charity and event schedules. In doing so, they reliably mapped out passenger associations and timelines days before official media could verify them.

But this capacity has limits. The crowd is often better at saying “look here” than “this proves that”. And when victims’ privacy and other people’s reputations are at risk, incorrect inferences can cause lasting harm.

Moreover, our desire for closure in conditions of uncertainty makes us more susceptible to “apophenia” – the tendency to perceive connections between unrelated data points.

From WikiLeaks to the platform era

The Epstein file dump stands in stark contrast to the document releases of the early WikiLeaks era, beginning in 2006.

At that time, interpretation was slower and more journalist-mediated. For massive drops such as the 2010 Cablegate release, WikiLeaks initially partnered with media outlets such The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel to process the data. (Although they did later publish the full unredacted archive, putting thousands of named individuals at risk).

Journalists reviewed hundreds of thousands of diplomatic cables, redacting sensitive names to protect sources, and providing extensive editorial framing before the public saw the findings.

The infrastructure of the internet operates differently today. Social media algorithms reward outrage, and information travels as screenshots, fragments and threads. Context is easily lost as content moves further away from its source.

Artificial intelligence tools further complicate things by introducing synthetic “evidence” into the public record. A number of AI-generated images, video and audio clips have been debunked since the Epstein files release. One of the most prominent is a viral AI image that claims to show Epstein alive in Israel.

These conditions create risks

Large archives often contain partial names, common names or ambiguous references. When those fragments circulate online, innocent people can become attached to viral claims through little more than coincidence.

For instance, ordinary IT professionals and random citizens whose photos appeared in old FBI photo lineups included in the archive have been falsely accused by online mobs and politicians who assumed anyone listed in the vicinity of the dump was a co-conspirator.

Narrative lock-in is another risk. Once a particular explanation gains momentum, later corrections or clarifications often struggle to travel as far as the original claim.

In one example, a spreadsheet summarising public calls to an FBI tip line went viral, with the false claim that it was Epstein’s official “client list”. Even after journalists clarified the document’s true nature, the initial framing had locked in across social media.

A related phenomenon is information laundering. A claim may begin as speculation in a forum or social media post, but then reappear as something “people are saying” and, over time, can be framed as having been verified.

One example involves “redaction matching”, wherein online sleuths are baselessly asserting that the length of black censor bars on the files perfectly match the character counts of specific politicians’ names.

The Epstein case has also highlighted a different risk: technical mistakes within the release itself. A number of key failures in how the DOJ redacted data has led to victims’ names and details being found out.

A closing lesson

None of this means people should stop asking questions. Public scrutiny is the bedrock of accountability. But scrutiny works best when it follows clear standards. Viral interpretations of files should be treated as starting points for inquiry – not conclusions.

The deeper lesson from the Epstein files is about institutional trust. When institutions fail to resolve serious allegations, judgement does not disappear; it moves outward into the public sphere.

And a public that feels compelled to investigate its own institutions is not merely asking questions about a set of documents. It is signalling that confidence in the official process has eroded.

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OCCRP: Tainted Gold: Mined in Venezuela, Routed to Global Markets Via Curaçao

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🔴 Tainted Gold: Mined in Venezuela, Routed to Global Markets Via Curaçao

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OCCRP Weekly <newsletter@occrp.org> Unsubscribe6:04 PM (5 minutes ago)
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March 6, 2026

Greetings from Amsterdam,

A warm welcome to our new readers this week from the European Commission, Deutsche Bank, the Center for a New American Security, UK tax authority, and many others! Thanks for joining this community. 

The gold industry has long had a labeling problem: Gold declared as “scrap” doesn’t face the same level of scrutiny as metal freshly dug out of the ground. Experts say it’s a loophole that allows the origins of gold extracted in conflict areas to be easily obscured by traders, and later approved by the regulator as conflict-free.

In our latest investigation, we unpacked one such case, with new evidence gathered by reporters revealing how gold mined in parts of Venezuela controlled by a combination of Colombian guerrillas, criminal syndicates, and military units may have slipped into the gold supply chain used by major tech companies.This was made possible by a crucial transit stop: the Caribbean island nation of Curaçao. Between 2012 and 2018, a trading company in Curaçao funneled more than $2.2 billion worth of gold – much of it from Venezuela – into refineries in Europe, declaring most of it as scrap, even though one of the company’s co-founders later claimed much of it originated in Venezuelan mines.“Whether it comes from [a] mine or comes from a poor guy’s teeth, I don’t know,” another of the company’s co-founders told OCCRP and partners.The gold was sold through another intermediary to the major Swiss refinery Argor-Heraeus, which forms part of the supply chain of major U.S. tech companies.  There is no evidence Argor-Heraeus violated any laws or regulations, since it was only required by its regulator, the London Bullion Market Association (LBMA), to conduct due diligence on its immediate supplier, another Swiss company. Part of the problem is that the LBMA  still does not require these refiners to provide full disclosure of all their upstream suppliers, including mines of origin.This raises questions about how much gold from conflicted-affected areas is continuing to find its way into everyday products — like the one you’re using to read this newsletter.The analysis above is a free preview of our upcoming OCCRP PRO membership, a new offering tailored to professionals who rely on our investigations for work in finance, law, compliance, risk management, policy, and related fields. Interested to learn more? Let us know and tell us what you need! Your feedback will directly shape the services we 
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GZERO: How arming the Kurds in Iran could lead to “civil war on steroids”

How arming the Kurds in Iran could lead to “civil war on steroids”

GZERO Staff

March 05, 2026

Washington appears to be exploring a familiar playbook: arming Kurdish groups to add pressure on the Iranian regime. But according to Brookings Senior Fellow Thomas Wright, the strategy is murky and potentially risky. Reports suggest the US may consider aiding Kurdish militants inside Iran, including PJAK, a group affiliated with the PKK. That connection alone could inflame tensions with Turkey, which views the PKK as a terrorist organization and a direct threat to its national security.

Any move that strengthens Kurdish armed groups could also disrupt the fragile peace process between Ankara and Kurdish militants. Without a clear plan for what comes after increased pressure on Tehran, actions meant to weaken the regime could destabilize the country instead—potentially fragmenting Iran and creating a geopolitical vacuum in the Middle East.

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Power of people when pushed too far. 2.5 m+ people have already joined the international boycott of ChatGPT

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With the Munitions cupboards bare from Steve Hanke. Check out BlackRock … there is a 5% limit on what you can withdraw from your investments and this is a first time ever move of this kind

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A first!! Blackstone had to put in $400M of its own cash to cover the exits Two of the biggest funds on the planet are limiting how much you can take out.

World and wars too many. People need to be aware enough to determine if US & Israel attack on Iran fell in line with the Rule of Law, Congress, Morality & is truly wishes of the people. “A substantial proportion of people do what they are told to do, irrespective of the content of the act, and without pangs of conscience, so long as they perceive that the command comes from a legitimate authority.” Stanley Milgram

Be Aware 1st time ever … we are talking financial markets and BlackRock

Jacob King

@JacobKinge

·

For the first time in history, BlackRock is halting the amount people can withdrawal. This is a major red flag. Something big is coming.

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

Michael Burry Stock Tracker ♟

@burrytracker

·

Breaking: BlackRock just froze $1.2 billion in withdrawal requests at its private credit fund.

Here’s what happened:

• Investors in BlackRock’s $26B fund asked to pull out 9.3% of their money

• BlackRock said no — capped withdrawals at 5%

• Blackstone’s $82B fund saw record withdrawal requests the same week

• Blackstone had to put in $400M of its own cash to cover the exits Two of the biggest funds on the planet are limiting how much you can take out.

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