Qatar: “Need to Know” … Qatar’s growing control over the United States

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A period of hysteria in Eurupe … what does Moscow say?

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The Monopoly is over: China has succeeded in producing an ultraviolet lithography machine for the production of advanced chips – Reuters

Megatron

@Megatron_ron

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BREAKING: 🇹🇳 The monopoly is over

China has succeeded in producing an ultraviolet lithography machine for the production of advanced chips – Reuters

China built a prototype extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUV) machine in Shenzhen, the tool needed for the most advanced chipmaking, Reuters reports.

Until now, ASML is the only company that has truly cracked EUV technology. Its machines cost about $250 million each and are critical for making the most advanced chips designed by Nvidia and AMD, and manufactured by TSMC, Intel, and Samsung.

The result marks the payoff of a 6-year government program focused on semiconductor independence. People compared it to China’s version of the Manhattan Project, the U.S. wartime program that built the atomic bomb.

China’s prototype reportedly generates EUV light and is being tested, but it has not produced working chips yet, with 2028 and 2030 mentioned as targets. Sources describe former ASML engineers helping reverse engineer parts of the system, and Huawei coordinating a wider effort across labs and suppliers.

“The aim is for China to eventually be able to make advanced chips on machines that are entirely China-made,” one of the people said. ” China wants the United States 100% kicked out of its supply chains.”

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X : David Davis goes to Washington with Richard Williams former commanding officer of 22 SAS concerning unjust prosecutions ie NI Troubles Bill

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DogeDesigner X: In the future work will be optional

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Down Syndrome: a narrative we all should read because it tells us of a doctor who decided to give of his time to the neglected people with disabilities in the UK in the 19th century. Please share this Christmas time.

Mr Commonsense

@fopminui

You’ve probably heard of Down syndrome. But very few people know why it carries that name. It has nothing to do with being “down,” slower, or less. It is the name of a man who chose dignity when the world chose neglect.

In the 19th century, a young British doctor named John Langdon Down had every reason to pursue a comfortable, prestigious career. He was highly decorated, brilliantly trained, and could have earned a fortune treating wealthy patients. Instead, he accepted a position no one wanted — running a neglected institution for people with intellectual disabilities, a place most of society preferred to forget. What he found there was devastating. Children crammed into filthy rooms. Violence used as discipline. Disease, neglect, and humiliation treated as normal.

They weren’t seen as people. And that’s where John Langdon Down changed everything. He banned physical punishment completely. He made hygiene and care non-negotiable. He trained staff to treat residents with respect. He introduced education, art, speech, routine, and purpose. Then he did something radical for his time. He photographed them. Not as medical cases. As individuals. Dressed well. Standing proudly. Looking straight into the camera. At a time when people with disabilities were hidden and erased, those images made a quiet but powerful statement: these are human beings.

Down was also the first physician to carefully describe a specific genetic condition we now know as Down syndrome. But to him, it was never a label — it was a responsibility. When the system refused to support his vision, he walked away and built something entirely new with his own resources: not an institution, but a home. A community with education, work, music, gardens — and even a theater. Yes, a theater. For people the world said were incapable of learning or contributing.

After his death, his work continued through his family. In a profound twist of fate, his own grandson was born with Down syndrome — and was raised with the same love, respect, and dignity his grandfather believed every person deserved. In 1965, the World Health Organization officially adopted the term Down syndrome. Not as a description — but as an honor. An honor to a man who proved something the world desperately needed to learn: Everyone deserves dignity. Everyone deserves education. Everyone deserves to be seen. So the next time you hear the words Down syndrome, remember: it’s not about being “down.” It’s the story of a doctor who lifted lives — when everyone else looked away.

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Futurism: Top Spy Says Tech Corporations Are Closer to Running Entire World Than Governments

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Future SocietyThe Industrialists

Pot Meet Kettle

Top Spy Says Tech Corporations Are Closer to Running Entire World Than Governments

Who would know better?

By Joe Wilkins

Published Dec 17, 2025 7:00 AM EST

MI6's new chief, Blaise Metreweli, devoted a large portion of her first speech to the issue of all-powerful tech corporations.
Julia Demaree Nikhinson / Pool / Getty Images

When it comes to toppling governments from behind the scenes, not many know the business better than MI6. Since the end of World War II, British covert operatives have executed 42 coup attempts in 27 countries throughout the world, in pursuit of economic or political outcomes that suit the nation’s interests.

In other words, they know a hostile takeover when they see one — which is why it’s alarming that Blaise Metreweli, the new head of the spy agency, issued a statement warning that global power is increasingly being transferred to the world’s tech corporations.

“Our world is being actively remade with profound implications for national and international security,” Metreweli declared in her first statement as chief of MI6. “Power itself is becoming more diffuse, more unpredictable as control over these technologies is shifting from states to corporations and sometimes to individuals.”

She also noted that “we’re now operating in a space between peace and war.”

“This is not a temporary state or a gradual, inevitable evolution,” she continued.

Over the past few months, politicians from the ruling Labour party have grown increasingly frustrated at political meddling from tech billionaires like Elon Musk, who called for the overthrow of the UK government at a far-right rally in September.

Notably, Metreweli stopped short of calling out any billionaires by name or identifying the systemic issues that got us here, according to The Paper. Instead, she followed other ministers in centering a vague loss of public trust, rather than the profit-driven forces reshaping global power for their own interests.

“The foundations of trust in our societies are eroding,” she said. “Information, once a unifying force, is increasingly weaponized. Falsehoods spread faster than fact, dividing communities and distorting reality. We live in an age of hyper-connection yet profound isolation. The algorithms flatter our biases and fracture our public squares.”

Metreweli is notably the first woman to lead as chief of MI6. Her own history speaks to the intricate web of colonial power brokers that have laid the groundwork for the increasingly monopolistic world we now live in.

For example, Metreweli grew up in the upper crust of British-occupied Hong Kong, where she received a lavish private education. Though she never would’ve had to worry about it, Western corporations have a long history of brutal exploitation of native-born workers and economic collusion with the occupation government.

After receiving her education, Metreweli went on to work as an intelligence operative in the US- and British-occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan, important economic zones which were regarded as part of the old British Empire. (Her official assignment was “Second Secretary for Economic Affairs at the Foreign Office” in Dubai, per The Times.)

In short, Metreweli’s alarm over corporate power isn’t so much a critique of tech monopolies in general, but a defense of the British state’s role in influencing world governments. Her speech, shaped by a career fighting for British interests, boils down to a simple refrain: that power should be ours to wield, not theirs.

More on tech corporations: The AI Industry Is Traumatizing Desperate Contractors in the Developing World for Pennies

Joe Wilkins

Correspondent

I’m a tech and transit correspondent for Futurism, where my beat includes transportation, infrastructure, and the role of emerging technologies in governance, surveillance, and labor.

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X Wall Street Apes: “What is the greatest threat to the West today?

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Exploring Ireland’s history: UCD Archives. Kathleen McConnell was requested by Eamon de Valera to join the ‘consular staff’ of his tour of America – Occtober 2nd 1919

Kathleen O’Connell was born on 5 October 1888 at Caherdaniel, Co. Kerry, one of eleven children of John O’Connell, farmer, and Mary Ann O’Connell (nĂ©e O’Sullivan). Educated locally, she emigrated to America in 1904 and trained as a secretary in Chicago. In 1912 she became secretary to the American delegation of the Gaelic League in New York. In response to news of the Easter rising she joined Cumann na mBan in the US and became active in collecting aid for the dependants of the men killed and wounded.

On 2 October 1919 she was requested by Ă‰amon de Valera to join the ‘consular staff’ of his tour of America. Throughout the tour she worked closely with him, travelling the country dealing with his public and private correspondence and assisting with his speeches. Returning to Ireland with de Valera in November 1920, she immediately went into hiding. Arrested with de Valera on 22 June 1921, they were released the following day. She joined the delegation to meet Lloyd George in July 1921 and was later to share de Valera’s views of the treaty.

She followed de Valera loyally throughout the civil war and was present on the platform in Ennis at his arrest in August 1923. During his imprisonment she acted as his agent and messenger throughout the country. Devoted to the cause of Ireland, she identified service to the nation with service to de Valera.

Through opposition and government she was a constant at de Valera’s side, both nationally and internationally. Forced to retire in 1954 because of a cancer-related illness, her position was taken by her niece Maire O’Kelly. She died 7 April 1956 and was buried at Glasnevin cemetery.

(Source: Dictionary of Irish Biography)

The Kathleen O’Connell papers in UCD Archives relate overwhelmingly to O’Connell’s association with Eamon de Valera. However, the papers also include a series of photographs spanning over forty years from 1912–1956. O’Connell was well travelled and the collection includes images from her travels both in Ireland and throughout Europe. The first photograph below is dated July 1931, taken by Kathleen O’Connell while holidaying in Bruge, Belgium, with the author Annie M.P. Smithson. The scene is of a cobbled square, tall buildings at back, a man leading a large dog pulling a small cart to the front. An annotation in Kathleen’s hand records that she sent the photograph to the Irish Independent which published it and gave her 10/-. The second photograph is of O’Connell herself, taken during her final holiday in Caherdaniel, Co. Kerry before her death. She is in the hills above the village, sitting looking directly at the camera, with the sea visible in the background.

UCDA P155/242, 282 Papers of Kathleen O’Connell, photographs taken in Bruge, Belgium and Caherdaniel, Co. Kerry.

UCDA P155/242

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“Russia is testing us”: New MI6 head warns of Putin’s “aggresive ….”

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