Mental illness and tragedies … that is what was reported in the Sunday papers. Time to look at Grok AI synopsis of the Vision for Change … all these years ie 20 and promises! If mental illness impacts your family please explore because in the U.S. President Trump has issued an executive order to open psychiatric hospitals … to get people off the streets. We know only too well his opinions about the mentally ill and constraint. Change lies ahead on the global stage and that includes Ireland. Be informed.

Vision for Change. a synopsis. What has been achieved in 2026?

Thought for 1m 16s

Synopsis of “A Vision for Change”

“A Vision for Change: Report of the Expert Group on Mental Health Policy” is a landmark Irish government policy document published in 2006. It outlines a comprehensive, person-centered framework for transforming mental health services in Ireland over a 7-10 year period, shifting from traditional institutional care to community-based, recovery-oriented models. The policy emphasizes promoting positive mental health across society, preventing mental illness where possible, and providing accessible, specialized services for those in need.

Key principles include a biopsychosocial approach (integrating biological, psychological, and social factors), user and family involvement in care, multidisciplinary teams, and equity in service provision. It proposes integrated care pathways, including primary care linkages, specialist teams for specific needs (e.g., child and adolescent, older adults, forensic), and a focus on early intervention, rehabilitation, and social inclusion.

The vision aims for every citizen to have access to high-standard, local mental health supports, fostering resilience and reducing stigma. gov.ie +2 While influential, the policy faced implementation challenges due to economic constraints and resource gaps in its early years. By 2020, it was succeeded by “Sharing the Vision: A Mental Health Policy for Everyone,” which builds directly on its foundations but adopts a broader, whole-of-society approach with 100 recommendations across promotion, prevention, acute care, and recovery. drugsandalcohol.ie +1 Achievements under the original vision have been carried forward and expanded under this successor policy.

Achievements by 2026.

By February 2026, significant progress has been made in realizing the goals of “A Vision for Change,” though full implementation remains ongoing amid challenges like waiting lists, regional disparities, and funding shortfalls relative to demand (mental health funding stands at about 5.6% of the overall health budget, below the 10% Sláintecare target).

mentalhealthreform.ie The transition to “Sharing the Vision” in 2020 has accelerated reforms, with record investments yielding tangible outcomes in service expansion, infrastructure, and outcomes monitoring.

Budget 2025 allocated €1.5 billion to mental health (a 44% increase since 2020 and 10.7% year-on-year rise), while Budget 2026 added further funding for clinical programs and bed capacity. gov.ie +1 Key achievements, organized thematically below, reflect a shift toward community-focused, integrated care as envisioned in 2006.

Funding and Systemic Reforms

  • Record Budget Increases: Cumulative funding rose by €601 million from 2012 to 2024, with €352 million for priority enhancements. By 2026, dedicated mental health research funding has tripled since 2022 to €3 million annually, supporting evidence-based innovations. gov.ie +1
  • Legislative Advances: The Mental Health Bill 2024, which reforms the 2001 Act to align with human rights standards (e.g., UNCRPD), passed the Dáil in 2025 and is advancing through the Seanad, expanding oversight roles for the Mental Health Commission and introducing person-centered safeguards. mentalhealthreform.ie +1
  • Capital Investments: €31 million invested in 2025 for infrastructure transformation, including a 10-year mental health capital plan. The National Mental Health Capital Planning Group (est. 2024) has mapped facilities and prioritized retrofits for trauma-informed designs. mentalhealthreform.ie +1 A new state-of-the-art National Forensic Mental Health Service opened in Portrane in 2023. drugsandalcohol.ie
  • Governance and Monitoring: 20 of “Sharing the Vision’s” 100 recommendations transitioned to business-as-usual by 2025, with an outcomes framework rolled out to track service user experiences and population indicators. HSE regionalization into six Health Regions promotes equity via population-based resourcing. drugsandalcohol.ie +1

Promotion, Prevention, and Community Supports

  • National Promotion Plan: “Pathways to Wellbeing,” Ireland’s first cross-government mental health promotion plan (launched December 2024), integrates workplace guidelines, community programs, and targeted interventions for priority groups (e.g., Travellers, migrants, older people). Social prescribing expanded to all counties by 2023, serving 5,589 users and addressing isolation via GP referrals. drugsandalcohol.ie +1
  • Digital and Talk Therapies: Online guided CBT programs scaled to benefit up to 10,000 people annually. Counselling in Primary Care enhanced with €2 million in 2025 for targeted access (e.g., for men), alongside e-learning modules and referral tools. drugsandalcohol.ie +1
  • School and Youth Initiatives: Two-thirds of schools completed wellbeing self-evaluations by 2025; pilots for primary school counselling ongoing. The HSE’s Child and Youth Mental Health Office (est. 2024) published a three-year action plan in February 2025, including Single Point of Access systems and collaborations with voluntary sectors like Jigsaw. drugsandalcohol.ie +1
  • Older Adults and Inclusion: Model of Care for older people’s mental health (launched 2019) implemented with liaison teams in nursing homes. Commission on Care for Older People (est. 2024) delivered its first report in 2025, incorporating mental health indicators; age limits for services under review (from 65 to 70). drugsandalcohol.ie

Specialist and Crisis Services

The following table summarizes expansions in National Clinical Programmes, a core legacy of “A Vision for Change,” with teams operational or in development by 2026 (funded at €5.7 million in 2025):

ProgramAchievementsOperational Status
Eating DisordersModel of Care revised; adult and child/adolescent teams expanded.6/8 adult teams; 5/8 CAMHS teams.
ADHD in AdultsIntegrated stepped care evaluated (report 2025); clinical lead appointed 2024.5 full-time, 2 half-time teams; 8th in development.
Dual DiagnosisModel of Care launched 2023; training analysis completed; national action plan drafting.2/12 adult teams; 2/4 adolescent hubs.
Early Intervention in PsychosisProcess evaluation (2022) confirmed effectiveness; annual audits.5/25 adult teams; youth team developing; 3 more funded 2025.
Perinatal Mental HealthHub-and-spoke model; patient surveys piloted; inpatient unit negotiations.6 hubs, 13 spokes.
Mental Health Intellectual DisabilityModels rolled out (2020 adults, 2022 CAMHS); core team members mandated.18/31 adult teams; 4/16 CAMHS teams.
  • Crisis Resolution: New services like Crisis Response Teams and Solace Cafés rolled out (model published 2023); five demonstration sites resourced. Emergency Department audits show 70% compliance with standards; Suicide Crisis Assessment Nurses expanded. drugsandalcohol.ie +1 Pilots like Limerick’s CAST team diverted 35 ED visits in H1 2025. mentalhealthreform.ie
  • Forensic and Complex Needs: Tiered prison models scoped; Intensive Care Rehabilitation Units developed. National Placement Oversight Team completed over 50 assessments by 2024. drugsandalcohol.ie

Social Inclusion and Lived Experience

  • Housing and Employment: Joint protocols for housing transitions disseminated; five additional tenancy support posts funded from 2025. Sustainable funding for 45 Individual Placement Support posts for employment; day centers evaluated. drugsandalcohol.ie
  • Peer Involvement: HSE’s Mental Health Engagement and Recovery Plan (2023-2026) embedded lived experience in governance, including a National Volunteer Panel. drugsandalcohol.ie
  • Priority Groups: €365,000 for Traveller initiatives; €693,000 for suicide reduction (including LGBTQI+ supports). Cultural competence training and multilingual resources developed. gov.ie +1

Despite these gains, challenges persist: CAMHS waiting lists grew 15.5% to 4,437 children by 2025, with 713 young people waiting over 12 months (45% increase). Prevalence of mental health issues remains high, with 42.5% of adults affected and youth suicide above EU averages.

mentalhealthreform.ie Advocacy groups call for €200 million more in 2026 to close gaps and fully realize the community-based vision.

mentalhealthreform.ie Overall, by 2026, Ireland’s mental health system is more integrated and resourced than in 2006, with “Sharing the Vision’s” 2025-2027 plan targeting full equity and responsiveness.

drugsandalcohol.ie

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Melanie Phillips: The West’s War on Its Own Soul. WHY THEY HATE THE WEST?

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists: Seabed zero … sabotage

Seabed zero: Baltic sabotage and the global risks to undersea infrastructure

By Bruce D. Jones | February 13, 2026

Ship in a port on a gray day.Finnish authorities took control of the Fitburg and escorted it to the port of Kantvik after it damaged an undersea cable. Image: MKFI, Public domain, via Wikimedia CommonsShare

For Finnish authorities, 2025 ended dramatically. On the very last day of the year, at 4:53 a.m. local time, a telecommunications company called Elisa noticed a significant disruption to data on one of its cables—a fiber optic line strung along the Baltic Sea floor connecting Helsinki to Tallinn, Estonia. Company reps alerted the Finnish Border Guard’s operations center, which triggered a national response, with Border Guard, customs authorities, the Finnish Defense Forces, and the Finnish Safety and Chemicals Agency all mobilized to respond. President Alexander Stubb released a statement stressing that “Finland is prepared for a range of security challenges and will respond as required.”

The cable that was damaged was a short one carrying a modest amount of data. But it was one link in the nearly one million miles of underseas fiber optic cables that carry 97 percent of all intercontinental data flows—the aorta of the global financial system and the mission-critical backbone of the technology sector. These cables, most of them privately owned, also facilitate more than four fifths of the US military’s communications. Aaron Bateman, assistant professor of history and international affairs at George Washington University, has aptly described the undersea cable network as the “soft underbelly” of American global power.

The incident was not the first undersea sabotage in the Baltic, and it won’t be the last. That shallow body of water has become a hotspot for targeting critical undersea infrastructure. Over the course of the past decades, major Western economies have become increasingly dependent on the flow of data and energy along the seafloor. Russia has begun to weaponize that dependency, and China looks set to follow suit. The West is belatedly rebuilding its capacity to patrol and protect its undersea infrastructure but still hasn’t adequately grappled with how to deter the growing risks below the waves.

What happened? Authorities in Helsinki suspected a modest-sized cargo ship, the Fitburg, of the cable damage. The 25-year-old vessel had recently departed St. Petersburg, Russia. Finland launched a Border Guard patrol vessel and maritime helicopter into the affected waters. Dramatic video footage showed Finnish soldiers, equipped like special forces, dropping from a helicopter onto the deck of the ship. An underwater camera indicated that the ship’s anchor had dragged along the seabed and likely caused the cable damage. Finnish authorities took control of the Fitburg, escorted it to the port of Kantvik, and detained the crew. One crew member, an Azerbaijani national, was later arrested and another, a Russian national, placed under a travel ban. (Later that day, Swedish telecommunications firm Arelion confirmed that two of its cables had also been damaged—one from Sweden to Estonia, the other from Estonia to Finland—likely by the same ship.)

It remains to be seen how the Finnish courts will respond. The obscurity of actions on the high seas and the complexity of global shipping makes attribution in such cases exceedingly difficult. Just a year earlier, in December 2024, the Estlink 2 power cable connecting Finland and Estonia was cut, and four other telecom lines were damaged. The Finns seized the Eagle S tanker, accused it of deliberate damage, and took its captain and two crew to trial. (Helsinki also noted that the ship was part of the “ghost fleet,” a group of up to 600 vessels often operating with false registration that Russia has been using to evade oil sanctions.) Later, a Finnish court dismissed the case against the crew members, given lack of clear evidence of attribution.

The Fitburg’s ownership, registration, and operations are characteristically complex. She was built by the Korean-owned Daewoo Mangalia Heavy Industries at a shipyard in Romania; had two previous names (Finex and Volmeborg); was owned and operated by a Turkish firm (the Albros Shipping and Trading company); was sailing between Russia and Israel; and had on board crew members from Georgia and Kazakhstan. As of now, Finnish authorities have not accused Russia or any other actor of sabotage. NATO also declined to formally make any accusation but did state that it was assisting the Finns “with analysis and information exchange from our NATO shipping center.” Still, Russian involvement is widely suspected.

Seabed zero. The Baltic Sea has become ground zero in targeting critical undersea infrastructure. Previous incidents include the dramatic attack on the Nord Stream pipelines in September 2022, seven months after the second Russian invasion of Ukraine. A year later, a data cable that links Sweden and Estonia and the Balticonnector pipeline that sends natural gas between Estonia and Finland both sustained significant damage. Similar incidents occurred in November 2024, December 2024, and January 2025.

In addition to the Elisa cable, past incidents in the Baltic Sea include damage to the Nord Stream pipelines in September 2022, EE-S1 data cable in October 2023, BCS East-West Interlink and the C-Lion1 data cables in November 2024, Estlink 2 power cable in December 2024, and a Latvia State Radio and Television Centre fiberoptic cable in January 2025. (Map by Thomas Gaulkin / Datawrapper; Source: Wilson Center / Submarine Cable Map / TeleGeography)

On several occasions, European navies have detected Russian submarines sailing near vital undersea infrastructure, including fiber-optic cables in the Irish Sea and major seabed energy pipelines in the Norwegian Sea. Analysis by maritime intelligence firms also reveal a pattern of Russia-connected vessels sailing unusual patterns over seabed infrastructure.

Driven by this, and on the heels of the 2024-2025 spate of attacks in the Baltic, NATO established a multinational force operation named Baltic Sentry. The operation is part of a wider NATO effort to improve surveillance and protection of critical undersea infrastructure. The December 2025 incident suggests there’s more work yet to be done. And indeed, five days after the Fitburg was detained, Latvian authorities boarded another ship that was suspected of having caused damage to a telecom link to Lithuania.

RELATED:

The ‘Zapad’ exercise and how Lukashenko learned to love the Bomb

These won’t be the last such incidents. And they are not accidents: They are expressions of a new Russian strategy.

From 2000 onwards, Russia has been rebuilding and modernizing its once-substantial navy. Moscow has paid particular attention to the undersea realm. Part of that effort is in continuity with Soviet naval thinking, which in the second half of the Cold War placed particular emphasis on the potential role of attack submarines in disrupting NATO resupply efforts across the northern Atlantic and on its nuclear-capable ballistic missile submarines. But the other part of Russia’s naval rebuilding focuses on a new mission. As the Russian Navy set out its new doctrine, it has explicitly adopted the goal of using a combination of surface and sub-surface assets to threaten—and appear to threaten—the critical undersea infrastructure on which the West relies. As Johanes Peters, head of the Center for Maritime Strategy and Security at Kiel University, has argued, “In an early stage of a conflict, disrupting these cables would be one of Russia’s main tactics.” The primary purpose would be to interrupt military communications. Civilian damage and financial confusion would be supplemental objectives. Putin evidently sees these undersea infrastructures—critical and under-guarded—as an “Achilles’ heel” of the West.

Not all damage to cables is intentional. Indeed, it’s likely that most incidents are accidental. Storms and undersea landslides can damage cables, and ship anchors and bottom trawl fishing that unintentionally sever cables has been a fact of undersea life since the mid 1800s. Additionally, shark bites—even if they don’t sever cables—can damage underwater lines by rupturing their protective coating and allowing seawater in. Still, there’s no real question that the frequency of deliberate attacks is rising.

Europe is particularly exposed to the new Russian threat: by proximity (the entire continent is surrounded by and increasingly dependent on a network of seabed infrastructure that brings oil, gas, electricity, and data to European governments, companies, and citizens); by bathymetry, or water depths (the seas in question are shallow, meaning they can be targeted without sophisticated equipment); and by complacency (since the end of the Cold War, Europe has allowed important parts of its capacity for undersea warfare and defense to atrophy). Several governments, notably Britain and Norway, have begun to rebuild these assets. But reversing two decades of underinvestment in naval defenses will take time.

This issue, however, is not limited to Europe, nor just shallow waters, and the threats don’t come only from Russia.

The China dimension. The vulnerability of Europe’s seabed infrastructure is perhaps the best illustration of a wider, problematic four-part phenomenon of the post-Cold War world: the dramatic industrial expansion in the oceans (for trade, energy, and data flows); the relative decline of Western naval power; resurgent Russian capacity underseas; and the explosive growth of Chinese maritime and naval power. All of these has left the West badly exposed to disruption of surface shipping (by the Houthis in the Red Sea, Russians in the Black Sea, and potentially China in the Western Pacific.) This vulnerability has now, also, extended to the flow of energy and data across the seabed.

And although Chinese activities are mostly noted in the Western Pacific, Europe suspects the Asian superpower’s involvement in its seas as well. In at least three of the cable-cutting incidents over the past two years, the boats in question were either Chinese owned or registered. For example, during the Balticonnector incident, two ships were implicated. The first was the Russian nuclear-powered cargo ship the Sevmorput, which has ties to the Russian state. The second, the Newnew Polar Bearwas registered in Hong Kong and owned by Hainan Xin Xin Yang Shipping. Beijing eventually acknowledged the ships’ involvement, though it claimed it was an accident. The fact that the two ships were later observed sailing in tandem formation alongside a huge concentration of gas pipelines off the coast of Norway—pipelines that now transmit the largest source of Europe’s energy imports—casts the “accident” assertion into question, to say the least.

There have been incidents in other regions too, notably close to Taiwan. In February 2023, the only two cables connecting Taiwan to its Matsu Islands were severed. The island’s 14,000 residents were left without internet, losing the ability to send emails or engage in e-commerce. It took nearly two months to restore the cables. Taiwan blamed China, specifying a Chinese fishing vessel and cargo ship for the attacks. And while the territory and number of people affected were insignificant, it was widely seen as a practice run for a wider severing of cables to Taiwan in the event of Chinese military action there.

Additionally, China recently unveiled a new deep-sea cable cutting submersible, a vessel with no purpose other than to threaten seabed infrastructure.

Its use threatens Taiwan’s connections to the outside world in an invasion scenario. But there are also substantial US military stakes in seabed cables and infrastructure, including several layers of submarine detection sonar arrays in the First and Second Island Chains, all connected to land by cable. These would be likely targets in the early stages of any major US-China conflict—and attacks on them would likely trigger a fulsome American response.

How to respond? For now, the use of commercial and dual-use ships to inflict partial damage on seabed infrastructure falls short of full-blown war. So do the options for response.

RELATED:

New START ends. But a one-year extension could bring many benefits

As these incidents from the Baltic to the Taiwan seas accumulate, there’s a slow but steadily growing focus on protecting undersea cables. There’s an additional incipient recognition that the problem involves not just fiber-optic data links, but the wider undersea infrastructure—like power cables that bring electricity in from wind farms and natural gas pipelines. Some of the concern comes from the companies that own the cables and who under existing international law are liable for the costs of repairs. However, a growing number of governments recognize that even though these cables are for the most part privately owned and operated, they provide an essential public good and that the options for protection largely fall outside of the scope of corporate capacity. That’s particularly true if indeed it is the Russian Navy and its various hybrid affiliates that are threatening this infrastructure.

The most straightforward response, conceptually, is to deny saboteurs the intended effect of their actions. This can be done by one of two means: increased resilience or rapid repair. Resilience is a critical concept here. If signals can be rapidly rerouted to alternative cables, damage to one specific cable won’t have much effect. Similarly, if cables can be repaired in days, rather than weeks or months, then the effects will be limited. For states with myriad connections to the outside world, this is a viable approach. This tactic is, however, far less viable for states with fewer links. Two such states are Taiwan and Australia. Both play an important role in American military planning for possible war scenarios with China.

But many states are not inclined to let attacks on their infrastructure go unanswered, even if the damage from that attack is limited. And so, experts have seen governments move towards more muscular responses. One is what could be called dissuasion by exposure.  Attacks on undersea infrastructure are designed to be deniable. If they can be observed as they are happening, the benefits of gray zone action can be denied. NATO’s Baltic Sentry operation is designed with this in mind, deploying a combination of maritime patrol aircraft, surface ships, and drones to limit the ability of Russia (or any other state) to act without attribution. The sheer scale of the world’s oceans limits the possibilities here, though. And so, the second part of the response involves seizure of assets after the fact, as Finland has now done, twice.

The United States and the United Kingdom have also begun using seizure as a tool for sanctions enforcement, such as intercepting the Russian-flagged oil tanker Marinera off the coast of Scotland.

These measures may prove inadequate. As William B. Ruger chair of national security economics at the Naval War College Peter Dombrowski and I have written, Western countries may need to move up the deterrence chain and be willing to respond with more forceful measures. Attribution issues are difficult, but it seems unlikely that NATO members are going to continue to allow Russia to engage in sabotage or threaten sabotage against critical infrastructure with limited or weak responses. Governments are concerned about escalation dynamics, and European governments want to stay within the framework of international law. The viability of doing so grows ever more tenuous, though, as countries like Russia, and to a lesser degree China, operate beyond its bounds.

The undersea as a geopolitical hotspot. Powerful governments (and earlier, empires) have long sought to use the high seas to generate wealth and project power. In the 20th century, such efforts found expression undersea, as well. In the 21st century, it seems likely that the undersea realm and the seabed itself will only grow in importance.

Threats to critical undersea infrastructure are one part of a wider set of approaches that straddle the worlds of gray zone aggression and war preparation. They do not in and of themselves pose an existential threat. But some actions, like severing cables that link US undersea sensors, could trigger escalation.

Governments should urgently increase their underseas defenses anyway for two reasons. First, the costs to European and Western societies from a sustained Russian or joint Russian-Chinese effort to degrade and damage the seabed infrastructure would be high, especially on civilians. Imagine the effects of a simultaneous severing of oil and gas flows into Europe from Norway and North Africa during winter, or the costs of significant delays to financial flows between London and New York.

Second, the tools used to inflict damage to undersea infrastructure are part of a widening arms race undersea that absolutely poses a threat to geopolitical stability. This includes the rapid buildup of Russia’s fleet of sophisticated attack submarines; the rapid buildup of China’s undersea forces; and new autonomous underseas devices. Russia has recently launched one such device, informally labeled by NATO as a “doomsday” weapon. This autonomous submarine drone, which is powered by a nuclear reactor and carries a nuclear payload, is one of the world’s most destabilizing weapons.

The seabed is a new zone of geopolitical contest and will only grow in importance as the AI build out generates huge additional data flows, governments look to the seabed for critical minerals and metals, and international tensions mount. It’s central to the dynamics of nuclear deterrence. And it will be the most important battle ground in the next great power war, if it comes.

Together, we make the world safer.

The Bulletin elevates expert voices above the noise. But as an independent nonprofit organization, our operations depend on the support of readers like you. Help us continue to deliver quality journalism that holds leaders accountable. Your support of our work at any level is important. In return, we promise our coverage will be understandable, influential, vigilant, solution-oriented, and fair-minded. Together we can make a difference.

Make your gift now

Keywords: ChinaNATORussiacablesdata flowfiber optichigh seasanctionssubmarinesthe Baltic Seaundersea
Topics: Disruptive Technologies

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

The Deep View: IBM is changing entry-level jobs, Not Killing Them

IBM is changing entry-level jobs, not killing them
With even some of the best developers barely writing code anymore, what is there left for an entry-level tech worker to do? According to IBM, a lot.
Last week, the company announced plans to triple entry-level hiring in the US in 2026. However, these positions aren’t going to look like the early career jobs of the past, Nickle LaMoreaux, the company’s HR chief, said at Charter’s Leading with AI Summit. 
IBM has overhauled its job descriptions for low-level positions, shifting the focus from tasks that AI can automate to areas that AI can’t. This means less coding and admin work, more person-to-person work, such as customer engagement. Though IBM didn’t reveal specific hiring targets, this workforce expansion will be implemented across the board. 
“The entry-level jobs that you had two to three years ago, AI can do most of them … you need to be able to show the real value these individuals can bring now,” LaMoreaux said at the summit. “And that has to be through totally different jobs.”
The decision is a complete reversal of the common view that AI will demolish the job market for young and early-career workers. It also adds another piece of evidence to the growing pile of conflicting studies and research on AI displacement. For instance: 
A study from Harvard claims that AI tools actually intensify work, rather than lessen it, as people feel more capable of taking on a broader scope of tasks. Meanwhile, MIT claims that AI can already automate thousands of hours of work, and make certain jobs obsolete. And a study from Gartner splits the difference: While many will lose their jobs as a result of AI-enabled automation, 50% of those workers will be rehired to do similar work. 
There’s no doubt that AI automation will have “extraordinary repercussions” for enterprises, Luis Lastras, director of language technologies at IBM, told The Deep View. However, businesses that are seeking to use AI to shave staff and boost the bottom line might be thinking about this technology the wrong way, he said. 
If an individual can now do five times as much in one day as they previously could, enterprises shouldn’t be looking at doing the same amount with less people. Rather, they should be looking at ways to empower people to do more: more exploration, more experimentation, more creation, he said. 
“If I were a business owner, I would focus a lot on very strong people, not on fewer people,” Lastras told me. “Because I would want to scale my ability to experiment.”
The truth is that AI’s impact on jobs may still be too early to call. No one could predict the employment impact of the printing press, the calculator, the car, the internet, and so on. The difference, however, is AI’s potential to automate work — and even, to some extent, thought — in its entirety. In a perfect world, all employees with automatable jobs would be given the opportunity to experiment, build, learn and try new things. However, we live in an economy dominated by public companies focused on both growth and profits. As shareholders breathe down enterprises’ necks for returns, companies constantly feel the tug to cut costs. Many, if they see the opportunity to save money today by cutting staff, will take it, even if it means compromising the opportunity to make more money tomorrow.
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

10/05/06 Supreme Court Justice Anthony Scalia … reposted by Elon Musk “Diversity does not make a Nation”

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

‘Grandma hobbies’ remarkable findings from University of Helsinki

@NextScience

A long-running study from the University of Helsinki found that women who regularly engage in traditional “grandma hobbies” such as knitting, sewing, crocheting, and gardening tend to live up to eight years longer on average. These activities help calm the nervous system by lowering stress and promoting a meditative, focused state through repetitive movement. They also build confidence by creating a sense of purpose, routine, and visible accomplishment.

Mentally, such hobbies keep the brain active, supporting memory, attention, and cognitive flexibility as women age. Together, these effects show that simple, creative pastimes can be deeply therapeutic, emotionally grounding, and beneficial for long-term health.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

A profound few words from the remarkable Sir David Attenborough

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Benjamin Franklin: children whose path in life is so diverse, and we ask why but we know is there are no answers even yet.

@archeohistories

Boston, 1712. The midwife hands a baby girl to her mother. Fifteenth child in the Franklin household. They name her Jane... Seven years later, another baby arrives. A boy. Benjamin. Number seventeen.

Same parents. Same cramped house. Same poverty. Two children who will share almost identical genetic potential. But their lives will split so completely that 250 years later, one name will be on currency and in every history textbook, while the other will be barely a whisper in footnotes.

Jane Franklin married at fifteen. Not for love. For subtraction. One less mouth for her parents to feed. Her husband Edward made saddles, which meant irregular income and a future of counting pennies until her fingers ached.

Her brother Benjamin left home around the same time. Learned printing. Moved to Philadelphia. Started climbing. Jane started something else. Pregnancy. Twelve times in twenty-two years. Her body became a factory of life that kept delivering heartbreak. The babies came, and then they left. Josiah at five years old. Sarah as a toddler. Benjamin at three. Another Jane at seven. The names blur together in colonial death records, assuming there were records at all. Eleven of her twelve children died before she did.

While Benjamin Franklin sat in London drawing rooms discussing natural philosophy, Jane sat in Boston doing arithmetic that meant survival. Three shillings for rent. Can we afford candles this week? How much soap can I make before my hands crack open? She wasn’t less intelligent than her famous brother. Her letters prove a mind just as sharp, just as curious. She read everything she could find. She understood politics deeply. She thought in complex, elegant sentences. But intelligence without access is just potential that evaporates.

Benjamin got apprenticeship and patronage. Jane got a husband whose mind deteriorated, leaving her as sole provider for a household that kept expanding and collapsing in cycles of birth and death. She made soap. Took in boarders. Sewed by candlelight until her vision blurred. Became the communication center for the entire Franklin family network, coordinating help and resources, invisible infrastructure that held everything together.

When Benjamin died in 1790, twenty thousand people attended his funeral. France mourned. He’d secured his legacy as a founder, inventor, diplomat. He left Jane a house and income. She was seventy-eight. For the first time in sixty-three years of marriage, she had financial security. She lived four more years before dying quietly in Boston. Same family. Same intelligence. Wildly different outcomes based entirely on which body they were born into.

📷© Bodoklecksel (Wikimedia Commons) / Die grossen Polarexpeditionen London 1978 (Restored & Colorized) © Daughters of Time #archaeohistories

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Leonardo da Vinci wasn’t just a painter, he was a walking encyclopedia of genius, born in 1452 as an illegitimate child with little formal education.

@PhilosophyOfPhy

Leonardo da Vinci wasn’t just a painter, he was a walking encyclopedia of genius, born in 1452 as an illegitimate child with little formal education. Yet, this self-taught visionary became the ultimate Renaissance man: artist, inventor, scientist, engineer, and more.

His mind raced so far ahead of his time that many of his ideas feel like sci-fi from the 1400s. His works are difficult to understand not because they’re old but because they’re too advanced.

Take the Mona Lisa. That smile isn’t accidental. Leonardo used sfumato to blend colors so subtly it creates optical illusions. X-rays reveal earlier versions beneath the surface, showing obsessive revision. Her gaze follows you, the landscape blends real geography with imagination art, psychology, and mystery fused into one timeless image.

Then comes “The Last Supper”. He abandoned true fresco for experimental oils, causing it to decay almost instantly, a genius flaw. Perfect perspective pulls everything toward Jesus, while the apostles react with raw human emotion. Hidden symbols, strange details, and revealed underdrawings hint at a mind that never stopped questioning.

Beyond paintings lie his notebooks over 6,000 pages written in mirror script. Inside: flying machines, a proto-helicopter, armored tanks, diving suits, early robots, and a self-supporting bridge later proven workable by MIT. Ideas centuries ahead of technology.

His science was just as radical: anatomical drawings still admired today, ideas about blood circulation before Harvey, fossils explained without biblical floods, moonlight as reflected sunlight, human ape similarities before Darwin, and gravity pulling matter toward Earth before Newton.

Leonardo saw no boundary between art and science. Veins were rivers. Wings were machines. Observation ruled everything. He left much unfinished perfectionism, illness, or a mind always chasing the next question. His scattered notebooks hid his genius for centuries. Leonardo reminds us: true genius isn’t about finishing things. It’s about questioning everything. What’s your favorite Leonardo mystery?

✍️

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

X Basil the Great JAPAN UNVEILS NEW ANTI-ISLAM LAWS

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment