Dr.Sam Youssef Ph.D.,Ph.D.,DPT.
Priceless photo for history
Genius Xi Jinping deliberately placed deranged Trump and his lackeys in front of the COMMUNIST FLAG
When they paid respect to the Chinese Communist Party
This photo is PRICELESS

Dr.Sam Youssef Ph.D.,Ph.D.,DPT.
Priceless photo for history
Genius Xi Jinping deliberately placed deranged Trump and his lackeys in front of the COMMUNIST FLAG
When they paid respect to the Chinese Communist Party
This photo is PRICELESS

| In September 2020, alleged cocaine kingpin Dritan Gjika texted a contact that the phones they were using were no longer safe. Despite this, he and key interlocutors kept using their Sky phones for another six months — a move that would contribute to their downfall after police hacked into the encrypted messaging platform the following year.OCCRP has now obtained hundreds of pages of Gjika’s Sky chat logs, which were filed by Ecuadorian prosecutors as evidence in a criminal case against him and members of the powerful cocaine trafficking network he allegedly led.The chats reveal granular details about the daily logistics of running a cocaine empire, from infiltrating Ecuador’s ports, to handling international transfers of drugs and cash.Gjika, an Albanian national who is now one of Ecuador’s most wanted criminals, was arrested in Abu Dhabi in 2025 and is currently awaiting extradition to Ecuador.At least 17 others have been convicted in Ecuador of belonging to or aiding the same criminal syndicate. Four others were convicted of laundering the proceeds of the racket, making transfers of more than $43 million between 2015 and 2023.Read the full story → The Crime MessengerIn 2024, OCCRP published The Crime Messenger, a series of stories which showed how organized crime groups used mobile phones from encrypted communications company Sky Global to facilitate their operations.Reporters from OCCRP and 12 partners gained access to over 3,800 files from a major court case involving Sky, including police reports and chat logs, providing an unprecedented look inside these operations. |
| More OCCRP Reporting |
https://www.gzeromedia.com/video/quick-take/why-the-us-china-summit-changed-very-little
May 15, 2026
Ian Bremmer breaks down the high-stakes summit between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping in Beijing, one of the most consequential meetings between the two leaders in years, but one that produced remarkably few concrete outcomes.
Ian explains why that may actually be good news. With Trump politically weakened at home and facing mounting pressure over Iran and the economy, the risk of major concessions or destabilizing rhetoric was significant. Instead, both sides largely avoided escalation, especially on Taiwan.
D. Scott Phoenix |
TED2026
• April 2026
Deep tech entrepreneur D. Scott Phoenix spent years building AI — now, he believes we’re on the cusp of a profound merger between humans and machines. Reframing the AI debate through the lens of evolutionary biology, he shifts the question from whether we should fear or embrace AI to whether we understand what’s at stake if we get it wrong. Hear his provocative case for why we need to “eat the AI.”

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Success Reporter
May 14, 2026, 11:53 AM ET
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As AI threatens office jobs, Blackstone’s COO says it’s also creating thousands of high-paying trades jobs.Patrick T. Fallon / AFP via Getty Images
As generative AI threatens to upend the white-collar workforce, it’s creating a surge of opportunity in one corner of the labor market: the skilled trades.
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That’s at least according to Jon Gray, president and chief operating officer at Blackstone—the biggest publicly-traded alternative asset manager—who predicted a “huge boom in blue-collar employment certainly over the next five years.”
Speaking at the Milken Institute last week, Gray pointed to QTS, one of Blackstone’s portfolio companies, which operates or is developing more than 75 data centers worldwide.
A year ago, roughly 10,000 workers were on QTS job sites. By year’s end, that number is set to quadruple to 40,000—a 300% jump.
“Between the energy, the physical infrastructure, the data centers, the reindustrialization—something very powerful [is] happening,” Gray said.
The boom is being fueled by a massive wave of AI infrastructure investment. According to McKinsey, global spending on data centers could reach $7 trillion by 2030, creating lucrative opportunities for electricians, pipefitters, and HVAC technicians, helping build the facilities powering the AI economy. While data centers vary in size, a single data center can be 40% to 50% larger than an average Walmart Supercenter and require up to 1,500 workers during peak construction.
The average salary of construction workers on data center projects is about $81,800 annually or $39.33 an hour—roughly 32% more than those on non-data center builds—according to data from Skillit, an AI-powered hiring platform for construction workers.
Fortune reached out to Blackstone for further comment.
Despite the demand and rising pay, filling critical skilled-trade roles hasn’t been easy for companies racing to build out AI infrastructure.
An estimated 2.1 million skilled trades jobs in the U.S. could go unfilled by 2030—with potential economic losses reaching $1 trillion annually, according to U.S. Department of Education estimates cited in a report from JLL first shared exclusively with Fortune.
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The shortage stems from a perfect storm: an aging workforce nearing retirement, decades of educational emphasis on four-year degrees over vocational pathways, and surging labor demand tied to data centers and industrial development.
Companies are increasingly stepping in to help rebuild the talent pipeline themselves.
Last year, the charitable arm of Blackstone announced a $3 million investment to launch Blackstone Skilled Futures, a workforce development initiative created in partnership with Arizona State University, Maricopa Community Colleges, and local nonprofits to expand skilled-trades training in the Phoenix. QTS currently has three data centers under development in the area.
Meanwhile, Lowe’s announced earlier this year that it plans to invest $250 million over the next decade to help train 250,000 people in skilled-trade fields like plumbing, carpentry, and electrical work. According to the home improvement giant’s CEO, Marvin Ellison, the investment is critical to rebuilding the U.S. workforce amid the AI-driven shift, and he argues more companies need to recognize the urgency.
“We’re a company that believes strongly in the future of AI,” Ellison told Fortune at the time. “But in a world where administrative and analytical occupations are going to be increasingly dominated with the acceleration of AI, we think the skilled-trade initiative is going to be even more important here in the near future.”
Asset manager BlackRock also announced this year that it would invest $100 million in skilled-trade training programs, deploying funds through nonprofits and workforce development partners across multiple states. The initiative aims to reach 50,000 workers over the next five years.
At the Fortune Workplace Innovation Summit, Fortune 500 leaders will convene to explore the defining questions shaping the workforce of the future—delivering bold ideas, powerful connections, and actionable insights for building resilient organizations for the decade ahead. Join Fortune May 19–20 in Atlanta. Register now.
About the Author
By Preston ForeSuccess Reporter
Preston Fore is a reporter on Fortune‘s Success team.
By Invisible People | May 6, 2026 | Narrative Change

Image Credit: The White House from Washington, DC
If you work in the homeless services sector right now, you already know what’s happening. You’ve felt it. Budget cuts. Defunded contracts. Programs that quietly disappeared. Organizations that were housing hundreds of people have just shut their doors. And the people they served? Back on the street. Not because the work stopped working. Because the political will to fund it got deliberately killed.
You don’t need me to tell you nonprofits are under attack. You’re living it.
But here’s what I keep thinking about. We’re losing the narrative war. And that’s partly on us.
The attacks aren’t random. They’re coordinated, well-funded, and they’re working in part because we haven’t had sharp enough language to push back. We’ve been playing defense. Apologizing. Hedging. Explaining ourselves to people who aren’t arguing in good faith.
Let’s talk about how to actually fight back.
If you’re not yet fully convinced of how bad this is, spend fifteen minutes doing some research. Search “nonprofits under attack 2025.” Search “DOGE nonprofit cuts.” Search “homelessness industrial complex” and look at what’s being said about organizations like yours in conservative media, in policy circles, in the comment sections of local news stories about encampment sweeps.
What you’ll find is a coordinated campaign to discredit the entire nonprofit sector, and the homeless services sector in particular, using a handful of recycled arguments. Waste. Fraud. Abuse. Dependency. And the catchphrase “the homelessness industrial complex.”
DOGE accelerated this like crazy. Programs that were literally saving lives got gutted. Not because audits found fraud. Not because anyone proved the programs failed. They got gutted because the political narrative shifted, and we didn’t have enough public defenders to stop it.
Real organizations. Real people. Gone.
That’s on the political forces driving this. But it’s also on all of us for not fighting harder for the narrative before we got here. Let’s fix that.
Before anything else, you need one anchor message. Something short enough to say anywhere—a city council meeting, Thanksgiving dinner, a Twitter thread—that carries the whole argument.
Here it is:
This work saves lives. Cutting it costs more.
That’s it. Eight words. No apology. No qualifier. No concession. It forces whoever you’re talking to argue against human outcomes AND financial reality at the same time. Good luck to them.
Now, depending on your audience, you can take that in different directions. Our own research here at Invisible People, a 1,000-person study on how different audiences actually receive messaging about homelessness, found that people come to the same truth through different doors. That’s not manipulation. That’s just how communication works.
For a general audience: “These programs save lives. When you cut them, you don’t save money. You just pay more later in emergency rooms, jails, and crisis response.”
For fiscal conservatives: “If your goal is saving taxpayer money, cutting homeless services is the worst possible way to do it. The math doesn’t work. An ER visit costs five times more than a housing program.”
For faith communities: “This work saves lives. That’s the beginning and end of it. What we do with that fact says everything about who we are as a community.”
Same truth. Three different doors. Use the one that fits who you’re talking to.
This is the foundational attack. It sounds like accountability. It isn’t.
Accountability isn’t the problem. Selective outrage is.
Because here’s the thing. Waste, fraud, and abuse exist everywhere. Every single sector.
The Pentagon has failed its financial audit seven years in a row. Trillions of dollars unaccounted for. Nobody’s proposing we abolish the military.
Corporate fraud costs the US economy hundreds of billions every year. Nobody’s proposing we ban corporations.
We don’t ban hospitals because some doctors commit Medicare fraud.
We don’t shut down all pharmacies because of the opioid crisis.
We don’t abolish Wall Street because of the 2008 fraud that crashed the global economy.
We don’t defund all law enforcement because of police misconduct.
See the pattern? We only apply the “burn it all down” logic to programs that serve poor and vulnerable people. That’s not an anti-waste policy. That’s a values statement about who deserves protection in this country.
Next time someone hits you with the waste and fraud argument, try this:
“We file public financials that anyone can look up. The Pentagon can’t say that. If your concern is accountability, I’m with you. But what happened with DOGE wasn’t accountability. It was elimination. Those are very different things.”
This phrase has become one of the most effective rhetorical weapons against our sector. It’s designed to make nonprofits sound predatory, like organizations are somehow profiting from keeping people homeless, like the real beneficiaries are the social workers and case managers rather than the people being housed.
It’s cynical as hell. And it needs a direct response.
Here’s mine: if you want to understand why homelessness keeps growing, look at a rent chart. Not a nonprofit budget.
For every $100 increase in median rent, homelessness goes up 9%. Let that sink in. Over 19,000 people enter homelessness every single week in this country. And that number is growing. Not because nonprofits are failing. Because rents are skyrocketing, wages aren’t keeping up, and the racist systems that created housing inequality in the first place never got fixed.
Nonprofits cannot fix the cost of housing. They cannot fix the lack of a living wage. They cannot fix racism. They cannot fix the political failure to build enough affordable housing over the last 40 years. That’s not their job. That’s policy. That’s on politicians and the political and public will to act.
What nonprofits can do is catch people when those systems fail them. House them. Connect them to services. Help them stabilize. And they do that every single day, with chronically underfunded budgets, while the actual causes of the crisis go unaddressed.
So, when someone points at a growing homeless population and says, “the nonprofits are failing,” what they’re really doing is blaming the paramedics for the car crash.
And when most people throw around “the homelessness industrial complex,” what they’re actually pushing for is the criminalization industrial complex. That machine involves police time, court time, jail beds, public defenders, prosecutors, and administrative staff to process all of it. The 2024 Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority found that anti-camping ordinances don’t reduce homelessness. They just move it. And they cost more in enforcement than prevention would have.
A criminal record also creates almost impossible barriers to housing. Can’t pass a background check. Can’t get certain jobs. Lose eligibility for some housing programs. The criminalization “solution” digs the hole deeper for people already in crisis at enormous public expense.
When someone says “homelessness industrial complex,” here’s what you say:
“Homelessness is exploding because rents are exploding and wages aren’t keeping up. Nonprofits didn’t cause that and they can’t fix it alone—that’s a policy failure. What nonprofits can do is help people survive it. Cutting them doesn’t fix the housing crisis. It just means more people suffer it alone.”
One of the most powerful things you can do is refuse to let this conversation stay abstract. Put numbers on the table and make them answer.
One person experiencing chronic homelessness costs communities somewhere between $30,000 and $50,000 a year in emergency room visits, jail stays, ambulance calls, and police responses. Permanent supportive housing through a nonprofit costs roughly $10,000 to $15,000 a year per person. That’s three to five times cheaper. Houston reduced homelessness by 63% using a Housing First approach and saved money doing it.
Cutting homeless services doesn’t eliminate homelessness. It moves the cost to the emergency room, the jail, and the morgue, all of which are more expensive. You don’t save money by gutting nonprofits. You just make the crisis more expensive and more visible.
Ask this question every chance you get, in public, on the record:
“What is your plan for the people who were being served? When this program closes, where do they go?”
Make them answer that out loud. Because the honest answer is that people go back to the street, back to the ER, at greater cost to everyone. That answer is your best argument.
One of the biggest mistakes I see advocates make is getting defensive the second someone brings up waste or fraud. The defensive response sounds like “Well yes, there are some bad actors, but most nonprofits are good…” You’ve already lost. You’ve conceded the premise before the conversation even started.
Don’t do that. Own accountability as a strength and go on offense.
“Yes, bad actors exist in every sector. That’s exactly why public reporting, independent audits, and Form 990 transparency matter. We support all of that. Now let’s talk about what actually happened here. Entire programs were eliminated with no plan for the people being served, based on a political narrative rather than audit findings. That’s not accountability. That’s abandonment.”
Here’s a distinction worth burning into your brain and repeating everywhere: reform targets bad actors. Abandonment eliminates the mission. What we saw wasn’t reform. It was abandonment. The people who paid for it were the most vulnerable people in the country.
Data matters, but data alone doesn’t move people. Stories do.
Our Invisible People research is clear on this. Breakthrough moments in public opinion don’t usually come from overwhelming statistics. They come when a message connects with someone’s existing values and expands their perspective a little. Nothing does that better than a specific, real human story.
Don’t open with your overhead ratio. Don’t lead with cost per unit. Lead with the person. The veteran who came back from two tours with untreated PTSD and found his way back through your outreach team. The woman who spent three years on the street and is now employed and stable. The kid who aged out of foster care at 18 and would have had nowhere to turn without your case managers.
The critics are speaking in abstractions. You speak in human beings.
And when the program closes, those human beings don’t disappear. They go back to the street, back to the ER, at greater cost to everyone.
“Nonprofits waste money.”
“We file public financials anyone can look up. The Pentagon can’t say that. Show me your sources and then let’s compare our overhead to what we’d spend in ER visits if we closed.”
“There’s fraud in these organizations.”
“There’s fraud at hospitals, banks, and defense contractors too. We don’t abolish those. We go after the bad actors and protect the mission.”
“Homeless services don’t work.”
“Houston reduced homelessness by 63% using Housing First. Untreated homelessness costs communities three to five times more than housing does. What’s your definition of working?”
“DOGE exposed the waste.”
“DOGE cut programs saving lives with zero replacement plan. People who were housed are back on the street. That’s not reform. That’s abandonment with better branding.”
“Why should taxpayers fund this?”
“Because the alternative costs taxpayers more. Housing is the cheaper option. The ER is not.”
“These organizations are inefficient.”
“Chronically underfunding organizations creates the exact dysfunction you’re criticizing. You can’t run a program on a shoestring and then blame the organization for fraying.”
“Private charity should handle this.”
“Private charity was handling it. That’s what you just cut.”
“The homelessness industrial complex is keeping people homeless.”
“The actual industrial complex here is criminalization. Tickets, sweeps, jails, courts. It costs more, creates criminal records that make housing impossible, and moves homelessness around without solving anything. Housing nonprofits are trying to end homelessness. Criminalization just tries to make it invisible. Those aren’t the same thing.“
Sometimes the most effective move is a simple parallel that makes the double standard impossible to ignore.
“We don’t ban hospitals because some doctors commit Medicare fraud.”
“We don’t shut down pharmacies because of the opioid crisis.”
“We don’t abolish the military because the Pentagon can’t pass an audit.”
“We don’t defund all law enforcement because of police misconduct.”
“We don’t ban restaurants because some get health code violations.”
Pick the one that fits your audience. Healthcare workers will feel the hospital one. Veterans and patriotic audiences respond to the Pentagon one. Small business owners get the restaurant one. The logic is identical every time. You’re just choosing which door they’ll walk through.
Strip away all the noise, the “industrial complex” framing, the waste and fraud rhetoric, the selective outrage, and there’s a values question underneath all of it that the critics don’t want to answer out loud:
Do we believe it’s acceptable for people to die on the street in the wealthiest country in human history?
Because that’s what we’re actually debating. Not overhead ratios. Not administrative costs. Whether society has any obligation to its most vulnerable people, and what happens when that obligation gets abandoned?
Pull the conversation up to that level whenever you can. Make them answer it. Most people, when they’re forced to confront it plainly, can’t defend the alternative.
The people these organizations serve didn’t create the systems that failed them. They don’t get to opt out of homelessness because the politics got complicated. The mission doesn’t pause. The need doesn’t pause.
And neither should we.
Invisible People’s 2025 Effective Homelessness Advocacy Messaging Toolkit—the research-backed guide we built on 1,000 interviews, covering audience segmentation, altruistic versus self-benefit framing, and counterarguments to criminalization.
National Alliance to End Homelessness—data, policy research, and Housing First evidence.
National Low Income Housing Coalition—housing policy tools and advocacy resources.
GuideStar / Candid—where anyone can pull a nonprofit’s Form 990 and financials. Know how to use this. It’s your transparency weapon.
National Council of Nonprofits—advocacy, resources, and policy tools for the nonprofit sector. If you want to understand the legal and policy landscape nonprofits operate in, start here.
The narrative war is real and it’s intensifying. If we don’t act now, we may never get another chance.
Public support for housing solutions is slipping. Support for criminalization is growing. Not because criminalization works—it doesn’t—but because the other side is louder, better funded, and has been telling a simpler story for years while we’ve been heads down doing the work.
That has to change. Not by doing more research. Not by writing better white papers. By getting in the fight. By using the language in this post. By refusing to let bad narratives go unchallenged in your city council meeting, your op-ed, your social media, your conversation with your neighbor.
The truth is on our side. But truth doesn’t win on its own. You have to make it louder than the lies.
So, make it louder.

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The summit’s short agenda reveals a preference for continuing stability, which buys time. The question is how each side will use it.
Expert comment
Published 13 May 2026 —4 minute READ
Image — Chinese youth hold American and Chinese flags as they join officials to welcome US President Donald Trump at Beijing Capital International Airport on 13 May 2026 in Beijing, China. Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images.


Senior Research Fellow, US and North America Programme
When US President Trump and China’s President Xi meet in Beijing this week, the US list of concrete deliverables is short: keep rare earths flowing, create a board of trade mechanism for non-sensitive sectors, and secure Chinese purchase commitments. The gap between this short agenda and the long list of issues between two nations engaged in grinding, multidimensional competition reveals a shared preference for managing their rivalry rather than resolving it. But while Xi pursues this relationship management as strategy, Trump takes a more transactional and improvisational approach. With three more Trump-Xi meetings expected this year – at APEC in Shenzhen, the G20 in Miami and a Xi state visit – the question now is how each side will use this continued stalemate.

Trump brings a commercial focus to Beijing and will be accompanied by a CEO delegation, reflecting a turn away from focusing on more structural issues. Among his aims are Chinese purchases of American products like soybeans, LNG and Boeing aircraft. While such purchases, even if fulfilled, are unlikely to compensate for the damage to US businesses from the 2025 trade war, the optics are helpful for a politically vulnerable administration.
Xi also brings economic concerns – especially with further US tariffs pending – and will push on technology access. He has also signalled that Taiwan tops his agenda. China has long criticized US military support for Taiwan, which Beijing considers Chinese territory. The Trump administration approved an $11 billion arms package for Taiwan in December but has not yet followed through with delivery – even after Taiwan’s Legislative Yuan approved a special defence budget last week. On Monday, Trump indicated he would discuss the package with Xi, casting doubt on longstanding US policy regarding Taiwan.
The brief agenda spans only a fraction of the US–China relationship. On AI, officials seek to establish a communication channel rather than address underlying competition. On China’s nuclear build-up, Beijing has shown little appetite to engage. Although communication beats silence, such underwhelming efforts sidestep structural dynamics. Other issues like the South China Sea, industrial overcapacity and currency issues are marginal or absent. While the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has pushed Iran up the agenda, the focus will be on immediate resolution levers rather than underlying Chinese support for Iran, Russia and North Korea.
Washington’s narrow focus is itself revealing. It partly reflects the Trump administration’s transactional, short-term approach. More significantly, the 2025 trade war and Chinese rare earth export controls reoriented leverage and exposed vulnerabilities – even more acute given depleted US munitions stocks amid the Iran war.
Going into the summit, both leaders face domestic constraints. Trump is navigating affordability politics, inflation, an unpopular war and setbacks to his trade agenda, with his approval rating at second-term lows. Agricultural communities, core to his support, have lost export markets and face rising fertilizer prices. For Trump, the pressure is on ahead of November’s midterm elections when his Republican party must defend Congressional majorities. He is also on the clock to resolve the Iran war.
Xi, meanwhile, faces debt, deflation, demographic headwinds and softening global demand. China’s latest economic growth target is its lowest since 1991, even as pre-war stockpiles and diversified imports help buffer Iran shocks. But Beijing operates on a longer timeline; Xi answers to party elites and the focus is on stability.
The US and China have taken very different approaches to managing their economic rivalry. As the two leaders seek continuing stability to buy time, how they use it is telling.
China has spent the past decade – especially since Trump’s first term – building its economic statecraft architecture, including export controls, the unreliable entity list, the Anti-Foreign Sanctions Law, and rare earth export licensing. China’s October 2025 rare earth export controls showed a willingness to use its dominance over rare earth supply chains as leverage. Although these measures were largely suspended by the so-called ‘Busan truce’, earlier April 2025 controls on permanent magnets and heavy rare earths remain in place. Beijing’s recent order directing companies not to comply with US sanctions against five refineries, accused of importing Iranian oil, also points to China’s growing assertiveness. Related workTrump’s treatment of US allies has weakened his negotiating position with Xi
Cohesive strategy and patient investment have strengthened China’s hand in other critical domains too. China installed more solar capacity in 2024 than the rest of the world combined and dominates battery and EV supply chains. It is also accelerating frontier technology progress and increasingly pushing towards indigenization – even after Washington opened a door by giving the green light for Nvidia H200 chip sales.
But there are gaps, notably advanced lithography, the machinery required to produce cutting-edge semiconductors. And China’s foundations are not unshakeable: fixed-asset investment struggled in 2025, the property sector continues to drag, and industrial policy draws mounting external backlash.
The US picture is more mixed. Trump administration policy is an uneven companion to private sector innovation – and often a hindrance. In areas with bipartisan support, consistent policy and strategic coherence can deliver progress. Continued export control coordination with the Netherlands and Japan on lithography is one example; efforts to develop alternatives to China’s critical minerals dominance are another, though they will take years to fully realize.
In other areas, progress is hampered by policy improvisation: the back-and-forth on tariffs, curtailed deployment of renewables, damaged research and state capacity, narrowing talent pathways, and a pattern of White House policy reversals. The US economy has nonetheless proven resilient, drawing on deep inherited advantages, such as AI infrastructure investment, energy abundance, deep capital markets, and innovation ecosystems. But tailwinds alone are insufficient. Without more coherent policy, including an industrial policy doctrine, gaps will emerge and grow.
For trade partners looking ahead, little will change. Hedging and trade diversification remain prudent policy. More broadly, evaluating the summit’s outcomes demands looking past immediate headlines and statements to the data and execution that follow. What commitments are made on the economic side – and whether they are fulfilled – are particularly important and will set the stage for future meetings.
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While the expectation is for no drastic changes, three unlikely scenarios are worth considering. The first is dramatic change in the Middle East, whether a ceasefire, Hormuz reopening or resumed bombing. The second is a bilateral blowup, although an impulsive response by the Trump administration that strains the Busan truce would face domestic backlash. Third is a small but real risk that Trump offers an unexpected accommodation – including on Taiwan language or technology controls – in exchange for economic and commercial benefits.
A summit where pomp and ceremony meets policy continuation is more likely and will allow for a collective exhale. Stability buys both nations more time. The more pointed question is what each does with it. Forget the hackneyed notion that China thinks in centuries. Against a US system that operates in news cycles and swings between elections, even modest long-term discipline is advantageous. And Beijing is using this time to build. If Washington fails to match this effort with greater policy coherence and execution it will enter the next three Trump–Xi meetings in a weaker position.

Anna Lamb
Harvard Staff Writer
May 13, 2026 5 min read
If Grandpa occasionally dozes off in front of the TV or squeezes in a power nap after lunch, it’s probably no big deal. But if he can’t keep his eyes open at the breakfast table, even after a full night of sleep, that could be a red flag, according to researchers at Mass General Brigham.
In a new study published in partnership with Rush University Medical Center, excessive napping by older adults is linked with higher mortality rates, signaling a possible connection to underlying disease.
“We know that older people tend to nap a lot. And we do a lot of work on age-related diseases, so we were thinking napping could predict mortality in older adults,” said Chenlu Gao, a researcher in the MGB Department of Anesthesiology, and lead author of the study. Gao is also a research fellow in the division of sleep and circadian disorders at Brigham and Women’s Hospital.
“We had this great opportunity to collaborate with the Rush Alzheimer’s Disease Center, who have a comprehensive data set,” said Gao. “Using this data set, we found that there is a connection between daytime napping and mortality in older adults.”
The Rush Memory and Aging Project, which began in 1997 as a cohort study looking at the cognition and neurodegeneration of older adults in northern Illinois, proved invaluable to Gao’s research. In 2005, the Rush project began having participants wear wrist monitors for 10 days to measure rest-activity data — allowing researchers to extract extensive information on nap length, frequency, timing, and day-to-day variability.

“What is great about this study is that it objectively measured daytime napping patterns, not just via self-report,” Gao said.
At baseline, there was little connection between mortality and subjects who napped within or below the “average” amount for their age group — just under an hour for participants in this study whose ages fell mostly in the early 80s range.
“Short naps, or within one hour per day of napping, are most likely benign or not associated with additional risks,” Gao said. “Our participants, on average, nap about 50 minutes per day, and they take on average about two naps per day.”
“Short naps, or within one hour per day of napping, are most likely benign or not associated with additional risks.”Chenlu Gao
By 2025, researchers had access to as much as 19 years’ worth of follow-up statistics from 1,338 total participants — all in retirement and older than 56. They found that both longer and more frequent naps were associated with higher mortality in the age group observed. Notably, each additional hour of daytime napping per day was associated with a roughly 13 percent higher mortality risk while each extra nap per day was associated with a 7 percent higher mortality risk.
Gao wants to make one thing clear: These findings do not suggest that the naps cause poor outcomes, but rather that they may serve as a warning sign for underlying disease.
“We think naps are more like a reflection of health conditions,” she said. “If you think about when you get the flu, you tend to be very tired during the day. Maybe you take several naps, but you also have other visible symptoms, so you know the nap is because of the flu. For some older adults who nap a lot during the day, their conditions may not have those very visible symptoms, so they don’t know they have the conditions causing them to feel really tired.”
And while the study is limited in determining a causal relationship between napping and health, Gao said there could be other factors that explain the associations between the two.
“I would imagine that those who are socially more active and also physically more active tend to be less depressed, less anxious, would be napping less,” said Ruixue Cai, another researcher at the MGB Department of Anesthesiology and the second author of the paper. “And just anecdotally, when we talk to older adult participants in our other studies, a lot of them say that they were really lonely and bored during the day because they’re retired, and so they would go take a nap.”
“Because for a healthy person, after a night of sleep, they should feel pretty refreshed and able to stay awake in the morning hours, but for people who are not so healthy, they may struggle with sleepiness even in the morning hours,” Cai said.
According to the study, morning nappers had a 30 percent higher mortality risk compared to those who nap in the early afternoon.
However, the occasional napper — regardless of age — should not be alarmed when they feel like getting some quick shut-eye, Gao said.
“I think those are fine,” she said. “We usually suggest limiting the naps to 20 minutes, and finish before 2 or 3 p.m., just so it doesn’t affect nighttime sleep.”
Gao emphasized this new data is no substitute for clinical advice.
“There are studies that try to implement long-term nap interventions to see if that will influence health. This is a really good future direction,” she said. “Findings from these studies would tell us how long-term nap habits influence health and inform clinical nap guidelines, beyond our current findings.”