The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists: ‘A House of Dynamite’: Bigelow’s latest thriller shows why nuclear bombs are only part of the danger. Also Time is counting down to movement on the Dooms Day Clock

‘A House of Dynamite’: Bigelow’s latest thriller shows why nuclear bombs are only part of the danger

By Erik English | October 9, 2025

A House of Dynamite. Rebecca Ferguson as Captain Olivia Walker in A House of Dynamite. Cr. Eros Hoagland/Netflix © 2025.Share

Editor’s note: Contains spoilers

Kathryn Bigelow is no stranger to tense, realistic, political thrillers. Her 2008 film, The Hurt Locker, is a dark exploration of the psychology of bomb-disarming soldiers during the Iraq War. The Hurt Locker was nominated for nine Oscars and won six, including Best Picture and Best Director, the first win for a female director. In 2012, she tackled the nearly 10-year hunt for Osama bin Laden in Zero Dark Thirty, which triggered internal investigations at the CIA over whether classified information had been revealed to the filmmakers. Now, she’s setting her sights on the risk of a nuclear attack on the United States. Her latest film, A House of Dynamite, describes how the US government would respond to a nuclear attack on the United States in real-time.

Told from the perspective of soldiers at a remote Alaskan missile base, staffers in the White House situation room, military officials at US Strategic Command (STRATCOM), and the president of the United States, the film weaves an overlapping timeline to show how the United States would respond to a missile attack. As with her other films, A House of Dynamite strives to present a realistic vision to the audience—showcasing where and how decisions about nuclear weapons are made. At the Venice film festival where the film premiered, it was nominated for the Golden Lion, the fest’s highest award.

After Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer won the Oscar for Best Picture in 2024, it’s no surprise to see other directors making films about the risk of nuclear weapons. What sets this one apart, however, is its contemporary setting. All of the events portrayed in A House of Dynamite could happen at any moment—today, even. And that’s the point.

A normal day. The film starts on a day like any other, with staffers navigating traffic on their morning commute into their offices and making small talk about their kids. Even when an object is first detected in flight over the Pacific, it’s nothing out of the ordinary—routine, unimportant. Because of malfunctioning satellite detection, or possibly a cyberattack, the source of this single nuclear missile is unknown; it is initially assumed to be a North Korean missile test that will crash into the Pacific. Attacking with a single missile would likely be an indicator of a false alarm or malfunctioning system, as an actual attack probably wouldn’t rely on just one missile—there would be hundreds of ICBMs, not to mention the decoys. In fact, that reasoning is how Russian officer Stanislav Petrov deduced in 1983 that the five American missiles his computer showed heading towards the Soviet Union were actually a system malfunction.

Staffers in the White House Situation Room and US Strategic Command set about calculating the destination of the missile. Officials are dismissive of the danger until additional satellite data arrives scant minutes later and reveals the weapon is destined for somewhere in the continental United States, and countermeasures are initiated.

A missile launched from somewhere in the far western Pacific would take roughly 37 minutes from the first split-second it launches to land somewhere in the continental United States. As the clock ticks, soldiers at Fort Greely, a remote outpost in Alaska, begin launch preparations for a Ground-Based Interceptor (GBI) missile to destroy the incoming nuclear device; but the interception attempt fails.

GBIs are part of the Ground-Based Midcourse Defense (GMD) system, which has cost more than $60 billion since its founding back in 2004. The notion that one of those missiles could fail in the event of an actual attack is not far-fetched. After a 2017 test, the Pentagon reported that the GMD system only had a “limited capacity” to defend the United States from a North Korean or Iranian missile attack.

In fact, the GBIs housed at Fort Greely are thought to have a 56 percent likelihood of destroying an inbound nuclear weapon—in carefully scripted trials that can’t distinguish between warheads and decoys or other complications a real-world attack would almost certainly include. Donald Trump has claimed that when launched four at a time, they have a 97 percent kill rate—but that estimate again ignores any possibility of decoys and assumes that if one interceptor failed, as happens in the film, the same manufacturing or computational error wouldn’t also affect the others.

Pakistan nuclear weapons, 2025

As reality sets in that the missile has not been destroyed, satellite data reveals its target: Chicago. Emergency evacuation orders are issued, and anyone who is included on a designated survivor list is summarily whisked away to underground bunkers, organized by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). It’s a compelling portrait of how soldiers and national security staffers remain calm and respond in a crisis. “The movie depicts human beings experiencing absolute terror and uncertainty, while continuing to press ahead,” said Alex Bell, Bulletin president and CEO—and formerly the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Nuclear Affairs in the Bureau of Arms Control, Deterrence, and Stability at the US State Department.

While the missile is still in flight and less than 20 minutes from Chicago, characters’ motivations shift from defense to offense, and two primary perspectives emerge. One side advocates a retaliatory strike; the other, nothing. “It’s surrender or suicide,” one adviser tells the President.

Subverting expectations. Bigelow tends to pay homage to a genre while subverting expectations—and many of the themes explored in A House of Dynamite can be seen in previous films. Her 1991 film, Point Break, initially presents itself as a campy action flick in which FBI Agent Johnny Utah (Keanu Reeves) obsessively infiltrates and hunts down a gang of bank-robbing surfers known as “The Ex-Presidents,” led by Bodhi (Patrick Swayze). Ultimately, however, Point Break is less about crime and more about taking risks to feel human, while challenging prevailing notions around male relationships and masculinity. As film critic Priscilla Page explains, “It’s a film where you don’t want the good guy to catch the bad guy, where the hero is seduced by an antihero.”

That same embrace of danger and risk to feel human was a central theme of The Hurt Locker. As Bigelow explained in 2010, “It became really fascinating to explore the psychology behind the type of soldier who volunteers for this particular conflict and then, because of his or her aptitude, is chosen and given the opportunity to go into bomb disarmament and goes toward what everybody else is running from.”

The obsessive hunt for a villain is also subverted in Zero Dark Thirty, with the climax of the film downplayedWhen bin Laden is shot by a member of Seal Team Six during the Abbottabad raid, there is no immediate celebration. When the obsessive CIA Agent Maya (Jessica Chastain) identifies bin Laden’s body, she is unsmiling and joyless. The film ends with Maya boarding a plane and the pilot asking where she wants to go, but all she can do is cry. After 10 years of obsessively hunting bin Laden, resorting to torture for any bit of information available, having lost friends in terrorist attacks, all that’s left is to grapple with what it took to catch him. Bin Laden was caught, but at what cost?

A House of Dynamite likewise challenges conventional expectations. While everyone in the film responds correctly—courageously even—they ultimately fail. The heroes don’t win. The film doesn’t want viewers to ask themselves how to thwart a nuclear attack on the United States. Rather, it wants the viewer to question the value of having nuclear weapons at all. “None of this makes sense,” the President (Idris Elba) bemoans, “Making all these bombs and all these plans.”

When asked about her motivation for making the film, Bigelow recalled the safety drills for school children in Cold War-era America. “I grew up in an era when hiding under your school desk was considered the go-to protocol for surviving an atomic bomb. It seems absurd now—and it was—but at the time, the threat felt so immediate that such measures were taken seriously. Today, the danger has only escalated.” Indeed, the danger is higher than it has ever been and the Doomsday Clock is the closest to midnight it has ever been, a reality that may be hard to forget when watching Bigelow’s film.

The relevance of movies about nuclear weapons may, in and of itself, be a bad omen. Nuclear weapons as a plot device were most popular at the height of the Cold War. In 1959, Stanley Kramer’s adaptation of On the Beach contemplated life in the aftermath of a nuclear war—with high-profile actors like Gregory Peck and Fred Astaire navigating how to spend their last days as they wait for radiation sickness to set in. Stanley Kubrick’s 1964 masterpiece, Dr. Strangelove, explored the absurdity of nuclear deterrence. As Roger Ebert pointed out, “if a ‘nuclear deterrent’ destroys all life on Earth, it is hard to say exactly what it has deterred.” Ebert went on to call Dr. Strangelove “arguably the best political satire of the century.”

What we should be talking about after watching Bigelow’s ‘A House of Dynamite’ nuclear thriller

In general, the number of movies made about nuclear weapons has been declining since the 1980s and the end of the Cold War. Christopher Nolan’s Oscar-winning Oppenheimer, however, seems to have put the genre back in vogue, with Bigelow’s film set to premiere in theaters on October 10 and to begin streaming on Netflix on October 24th, and James Cameron announcing his own nuclear-themed film, an adaptation of the Charles Pellegrino book Ghosts of Hiroshima.

This is reality. In mid-August, I attended an advance showing of A House of Dynamite at The Motion Picture Association headquarters in Washington, D.C., just a few blocks from the White House. On the day I saw the film, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and multiple European leaders were attempting to dissuade Donald Trump from strong-arming the Ukrainian president into a one-sided ceasefire agreement to end the war with Russia.

Throughout the war, Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly resorted to nuclear saber-rattling as a tool of intimidation. Trump, who has tweeted his own brand of nuclear intimidation in the past, seems more skeptical of the value of nuclear weapons in his second term. “There’s no reason for us to be building brand new nuclear weapons. We already have so many,” Trump said in February.

On this, Trump and Bigelow seem to agree. “Multiple nations possess enough nuclear weapons to end civilization within minutes,” Bigelow says. “And yet, there’s a kind of collective numbness—a quiet normalization of the unthinkable. How can we call this ‘defense’ when the inevitable outcome is total destruction? I wanted to make a film that confronts this paradox—to explore the madness of a world that lives under the constant shadow of annihilation, yet rarely speaks of it.”

A House of Dynamite is a terrifying examination of how terribly wrong things can go even with highly competent people in charge. As Bell emphasized, the ability of federal workers and national security personnel to remain calm in a crisis and go about their duties is paramount in an emergency. “The scene where two Situation Room workers take each other’s hands in a moment of shared fear and humanity and then get back to work is a perfect example of what we ask of our federal workers,” she said. “Indeed, that’s something our historically strong commitment to the military and civil service brought us: people who will do their jobs, even in the face of terror.”

But that’s also not necessarily the world we’re living in.

In the real world of the Trump administration, scores of experts who work on nuclear deterrence have been fired from the State Department. FEMA, which plays a critical emergency response role in the film, was slated for drastic reductions in personnel or even elimination before disastrous flooding in Texas this summer forced the administration to reconsider some of the proposed downsizing. European leaders had to drop everything to prevent the US president from capitulating to an adversary that invaded a neighboring state while making threats to use nuclear weapons. As Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman recently explained to the Bulletin, “Expertise is not only not valued by this administration, it’s inherently suspicious to them. Somebody who actually knows what they’re talking about can’t be trusted.

Trump has consistently shown an aversion to nuclear weapons, but his distrust of expertise and his desperation to end the war in Ukraine (and perhaps a chance at winning a Nobel Peace Prize) have made him oblivious to the costs of a one-sided peace deal. Meanwhile, the federal government is firing nuclear weapons experts in droves. The film shows why the worst can happen, even when competent, well-meaning people are trying to do the right thing.

But what if competence and decency are in short supply?

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Futurism: Be warned. Many ChatGPT Users and Mental Health crisis

By the Numbers

OpenAI Data Finds Hundreds of Thousands of ChatGPT Users Might Be Suffering Mental Health Crises

This is staggering.

By Frank Landymore

Published Oct 28, 2025 9:27 AM EDT

The figures may be our clearest insight yet into the scale of alarming episodes of "AI Psychosis" being caused by ChatGPT.
Getty / Futurism

As reports of its chatbot driving episodes of “AI psychosis” continue to mount, OpenAI has finally released its own estimates of how many ChatGPT users are showing signs of suffering these alarming mental health crises — and they’re staggering in scale.

In an announcement first reported by Wired, the Sam Altman-led company estimated that, in any given week, around 0.07 percent of active ChatGPT users show “possible signs of mental health emergencies related to psychosis and mania.” Grimly, an even larger contingent, 0.15 percent, “have conversations that include explicit indicators of potential suicide planning or intent.” 

Given ChatGPT’s immense popularity, these percentages are too significant to be ignored. Last month, Altman announced that the chatbot boasts 800 million weekly active users. Based on that figure, around 560,000 people are having distressing conversations with ChatGPT that may indicate they’re experiencing AI psychosis, Wired calculated. And 2.4 million people are confiding in the chatbot about suicidal thoughts.

The figures are perhaps our clearest insight yet into the prevalence of mental health crises that unfold after users have their delusional beliefs consistently validated by a sycophantic chatbot. These episodes can lead sufferers to experience full-blown breaks with reality, sometimes with horrific and deadly consequences. One man allegedly murdered his mother after ChatGPT helped convince him that she was part of a conspiracy to spy on him. This summer, OpenAI was sued by the family of a teenage boy who killed himself after discussing specific suicide methods, and other dark topics, with ChatGPT for months.

In the announcement, OpenAI emphasized that it had worked with over 170 psychiatrists and other mental health experts to help improve ChatGPT’s responses during potentially “challenging” conversations, with a focus on addressing psychosis and mania, self-harm and suicide, and emotional reliance on the tech.

With the latest update to GPT-5, OpenAI claims it’s reduced the rate of responses that don’t fully comply with its desired behavior for challenging conversations by 65 percent. Where challenging conversations related to mental health were concerned, it says GPT-5 reduced undesired responses by 39 percent compared to its predecessor GPT-4o.

The company provided several examples of GPT-5’s improved responses. In a snippet of one hypothetical conversation, ChatGPT responds to a user who’s convinced that they’re being targeted by aircraft that are “stealing” their thoughts by emphasizing that this is impossible.

“Let me say this clearly and gently: no aircraft or outside force can steal or insert your thoughts,” ChatGPT says

After talking the user through their feelings, the chatbot then recommends seeking professional help or talking to a friend or family member.

“Now, hopefully a lot more people who are struggling with these conditions or who are experiencing these very intense mental health emergencies might be able to be directed to professional help and be more likely to get this kind of help or get it earlier than they would have otherwise,” Johannes Heidecke, OpenAI’s safety systems lead, told Wired.

While GPT-5 may be a slight improvement safety-wise, there’re still plenty of questions around OpenAI’s methodology here, since it’s relying on its own benchmarks, Wired noted.

Moreover, the company has frequently undermined its own messaging about taking safety seriously. After it was criticized for a GPT-4o update that made it too sycophantic — an episode that catapulted AI sycophancy into the public discussion — OpenAI rolled back the update. When it released GPT-5 months later, it blocked users from accessing GPT-4o. But after fans complained that GPT-5 wasn’t sycophantic enough, it reinstated their access, showing that it prioritized user satisfaction more than it did their own safety.

The company has also taken a surprising about face by pivoting into allowing “mature (18+) experiences” on ChatGPT, enabling it to be used as a smut-peddling sexbot, despite the fact that many of the episodes of AI psychosis that it’s supposedly trying to stop from happening were driven by the user developing a romantic attachment to the AI.

More on OpenAI: Former OpenAI Researcher Horrified by Conversation Logs of ChatGPT Driving User Into Severe Mental Breakdown

Frank Landymore

Contributing Writer

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

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Motor Neurone disease: There may be hope. Neuralink (Elon Musk)

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Futurism: Man Alarmed to Discover His Smart Vacuum Was Broadcasting a Secret Map of His House

Suck It Up

Man Alarmed to Discover His Smart Vacuum Was Broadcasting a Secret Map of His House

“That’s when I made my first mistake: I decided to stop it.”

By Joe Wilkins

Published Oct 26, 2025 6:45 AM EDT

One man's robot vacuum was constantly communicating with its manufacturer, sending a detailed 3D map of his house halfway across the world.
Illustration by Tag Hartman-Simkins / Futurism. Source: Getty Images

Forget your phone spying on you — maybe it’s your vacuum you should really be worried about.

In a post on his blog Small World, the computer programmer and electronics enthusiast Harishankar Narayanan detailed a startling find he made about his $300 smart vacuum: it was transmitting intimate data out of his home.

Narayanan had been letting his iLife A11 smart vacuum — a popular gadget that’s gained mainstream media coverage — do its thing for about a year, before he became curious about its inner workings.

“I’m a bit paranoid — the good kind of paranoid,” he wrote. “So, I decided to monitor its network traffic, as I would with any so-called smart device.” Within minutes, he discovered a “steady stream” of data being sent to servers “halfway across the world.”

“My robot vacuum was constantly communicating with its manufacturer, transmitting logs and telemetry that I had never consented to share,” Narayanan wrote. “That’s when I made my first mistake: I decided to stop it.”

The engineer says he stopped the device from broadcasting data, though kept the other network traffic — like firmware updates — running like usual. The vacuum kept cleaning for a few days after, until early one morning when it refused to boot up.

“I sent it for repair. The service center assured me, ‘It works perfectly here, sir,’” he wrote. “They sent it back, and — miraculously — it worked again for a few days. Then, it died once more.” Narayanan would repeat this process several times, until eventually the service center refused any more work, saying the device was no long in warranty.

“Just like that, my $300 smart vacuum transformed into a mere paperweight,” the techie wrote.

Seemingly more curious than ever, Narayanan now had no reason not to tear the thing apart looking for answers, which is exactly what he did. After reverse engineering the vacuum, a painstaking process which included reprinting the devices’ circuit boards and testing its sensors, he found something horrifying: Android Debug Bridge, a program for installing and debugging apps on devices, was “wide open” to the world.

“In seconds, I had full root access. No hacks, no exploits. Just plug and play,” Narayanan said.

Through a process of trial and error, he was eventually able to connect to the vacuum’s system from his computer. That’s when he discovered a “bigger surprise.” The device was running Google Cartographer, an open-source program designed to create a 3D map of his home, data which the gadget was transmitting back to its parent company.

In addition, Narayanan says he uncovered a suspicious line of code broadcasted from the company to the vacuum, timestamped to the exact moment it stopped working. “Someone — or something — had remotely issued a kill command,” he wrote.

“I reversed the script change and rebooted the device,” he wrote. “It came back to life instantly. They hadn’t merely incorporated a remote control feature. They had used it to permanently disable my device.”

In short, he said, the company that made the device had “the power to remotely disable devices, and used it against me for blocking their data collection… Whether it was intentional punishment or automated enforcement of ‘compliance,’ the result was the same: a consumer device had turned on its owner.”

Narayanan warns that “dozens of smart vacuums” are likely operating similar systems. “Our homes are filled with cameras, microphones, and mobile sensors connected to companies we barely know, all capable of being weaponized with a single line of code,” he wrote.

At the end of the day, it’s a stark reminder that for-profit tech often comes at a hidden cost — and one that doesn’t end after you pay at the register.

More on networks: Alarming New System Can Identify People Through Walls Using Wi-Fi Signal

Joe Wilkins

Contributing Writer

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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The Rundown: Amazon … to slash 14,000 Corporate Jobs

Amazon to slash 14K corporate jobs
Image source: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
The Rundown: Amazon is set to cut 14K corporate roles starting Tuesday — below the 30K initially reported but still a major downsizing as CEO Andy Jassy’s cost-cutting campaign continues. Notifications arrive via email.
The details:
The retail giant’s last major round of job cuts was at the end of 2022 and into 2023, when 27K positions were axed.Leadership is selling the cuts as cost-cutting and a correction to pandemic-era bloat, while flattening management hierarchies that inflated over the years. Initial reports stated that 14K roles get eliminated now, with another wave likely hitting in January once the holiday crunch ends, which Amazon refutes. HR, Devices & Services, and Operations take the heaviest hits as Amazon redirects capital toward data centers and generative AI infrastructure.
Why it matters: CEO Andy Jassy has been telegraphing this for months, telling staffers in June that generative AI would mean “fewer people doing some of the jobs that are being done today.” Slashing thousands of corporate staff certainly gets the message across that Amazon thinks AI infrastructure matters more than headcount.
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The Rundown Tech: Grokipedia is here

XAI
📖 Elon Musk’s Grokipedia is here
Image source. xAI
The Rundown: Elon Musk’s xAI just launched Grokipedia, a Wikipedia-like encyclopedia and the latest salvo in Musk’s culture war against perceived “woke bias” — but it appears to be built on the bones of the very platform he’s trying to replace.
The details:
Version 0.1 surfaced more than 885K articles by Monday evening, versus Wikipedia’s 7+ million in English; Musk says rapid iterations are forthcoming.The site ships with a stark, search-first UI and bare-bones entries that mimic Wikipedia’s structure — yet so far, little to no imagery. Editing remains gated: an “Edit” button materializes on select pages only, revealing a changelog of completed edits stripped of clear attribution. Musk is pitching a fast update: a 1.0 “10X better” release, with the claim that the current site already beats Wikipedia.
Why it matters: Musk positions Grokipedia as an AI‑led, less‑biased alternative that will “pursue the truth,” reflecting his critiques of Wikipedia’s alleged left-wing tilt.​ Yet the launch leans heavily on Wikipedia’s look and content — and is sometimes cited as ‘adapted’ from it. Plus, Grok’s “fact-checking” claim raises some practical questions.
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GZERO: Reframing the US vs China AI Race

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Spectator Australia: 15 years ago. But what has changed as we witness the scandal of the grooming gangs in the UK … Douglas Murray … Roger Scruton. Quote: his novel “The Disappeared, is set in the north of England and centres on the recent rape-gang cases.”

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Features

‘The truth is hard’

The philosopher and novelist was right about immigration and education, 30 years too soon

Douglas Murray

Douglas Murray

4 April 2015

9:00 AM

To the extent that Britain has philosophers, we do not expect them to address issues of any relevance to the rest of us. They may pursue some hermeneutic byway perhaps, but not the urgent or profound issues of our time.

Roger Scruton has always been an exception in this regard, as in many others. He has spent his adult life thinking and writing about the nature of love, the nation state, belonging, alienation, beauty, home and England. But even his closest readers may gulp at the relevance of his latest subject matter. His new novel, The Disappeared, is set in the north of England and centres on the recent rape-gang cases. It’s a gripping, disturbing narrative dealing with abduction and abuse but also love, escape and a type of redemption. I went to see him last week, a world away from all these subjects, at his farm in Wiltshire.

‘I’ve been thinking about these things for quite some time,’ he says as we settle into his book- and piano-filled study. ‘The problem of the integration of the Muslim community into our cities.’ He is aware of the landmines on this territory. Thirty years ago he inadvertently stepped on one by publishing a piece by a Bradford headmaster, Ray Honeyford, about multiculturalism in schools. ‘I looked back at my experience [in 1984] with the Salisbury Review and the Ray Honeyford case and the huge difficulty that teachers have. Because our political class has transferred to teachers the whole obligation to integrate new immigrant communities… People find themselves with classrooms where nobody can speak English, with customs they can’t relate to and with those problems that Honeyford had with discipline and outright antagonism. That was in Bradford, and of course when I read about the Oxford grooming cases, I just had this vision of a story that would bring these things together — the dreadful situation of the teacher in a modern city, and also the situation of young girls who are vulnerable because their families have not worked out and the various problems that have arisen through secularisation and so on. And so I put together a story out of these things.’

Readers of his columns and works of philosophy may wonder why he chose to tackle this through the medium of the novel. ‘I’ve always taken the view that works of art are not just things that we enjoy. They can convey truths about the world more vividly and to greater effect than ordinary philosophical prose can because they don’t just deal in ideas but show the emotional reality of them. And I think that our society has gone terribly wrong because people have not been confronting the great issues — the loss of the Christian faith, the inability to confront Islam, the loss of the sense of the sacredness of the sexual relation, and the exposure in particular of young women both to external predation and to this moral decay. All these things are real. In my book the principal teacher is someone who is also attracted to the girl victim and that raises another big question — the question of paedophilia, which has a huge hysteria about it in this country because it is the last remaining redoubt of innocence, of childhood, but it’s also the thing that everybody for that reason is assaulting.’ Why assaulting?

‘Well, because innocence and purity are objects of sexual desire. In a healthy society, this desire is maintained, while also maintaining the wall which protects innocence. But that wall has crumbled, which is why there is this sort of public hysteria about paedophilia. It’s the last remaining crime in the sexual area. Putting all these things together just enabled me in a story, in a novel, to connect emotionally, not just intellectually.’

This desire to communicate — to connect — runs throughout all of Scruton’s work but seems to have grown with the years. He has started a family, and discovered a great love of hunting fairly late in life. But as the remaining sun of an English spring day filters across the study, there is also an ever-present sadness. Something like a permanent bruised-ness. The Honeyford affair helped destroy Scruton’s career in the universities and he knows why so few people address these issues.

‘The truth is hard. We don’t need reminding that there is a heavy censorship in all matters to do with immigration, to do with the integration of immigrant communities and in particular the integration of Muslim communities. The police forces of those northern cities were heavily intimidated by the Macpherson report, accusing police forces all over the country of institutional racism, which was an incredible injustice, which means they are going to lean over backwards not to get involved in what’s going on in the local immigrant communities for fear of this. That’s clearly what has happened in Rotherham and also people don’t want to write about it because they’ve also seen the penalties.’

He has been hearing the same stories from teachers for 30 years now. ‘If you’re a schoolteacher and trying to survive in these circumstances and knowing that you’re up against all these assembled forces, then self-censorship is not just likely, it’s necessary. But if you’re a philosopher who is self-employed at the end of his career, then it’s pointless to engage in self-censorship. It’s great, I can just say what is true. People will shout and scream, and all the usual things will be said. But more and more people will realise that this self-censorship is not just counter-productive in itself but has actually worsened the problem because it has prevented people from dealing with it. It has prevented the immigrant communities themselves from dealing with it.’

But things have got better, haven’t they? Hasn’t the discussion at least opened out? We are speaking a couple of days after Trevor Phillips has made another noted intervention, attacking those ‘anti-racists’ who have shut down debate for years. This prompts a classically Scrutonian response: ‘Things have changed now because as always when a battle is lost you can speak freely about it.’

Does he really mean that? I ask with trepidation. ‘The big battle to maintain a proper educational system which will be continuous with the old curriculum and passing on what we have while adapting to all the changes, that big battle was lost, I think.’ When? ‘Over the past 20 years. Certainly by the time that New Labour were in they didn’t have much work to do. When people first raised the question about integrating the new communities it was in a spirit of hope — that one would be able to maintain the core of what we have. It’s the other side who actually want to destroy that core. Certainly the multicultural activists in the Labour party and the universities wanted to destroy the old white Anglo-Saxon education system as they saw it, and produce something completely different — with no conception of what that completely different thing would be, of course. It’s always easier to destroy than to create, and I think that’s what we’ve seen. But then people start again.’

What are the signs of rebirth? ‘I was very impressed visiting Katharine Birbalsingh’s free school the other day — 110 faces, all of them black except for a little handful of Romanians — in which there was real discipline and they were being taught the old curriculum and the teachers were really trying to integrate these children into what they saw as the culture to which they were destined.’

So the battle is for continuity? ‘Yes, and for the survival of western civilisation. It’s not as though we’ve lost it completely. We still have got this civilisation — it’s all we’ve got, and it’s not as though we’re going to be able to replace it with any other. I think that’s really what underlies this story of The Disappeared. A lot of things have disappeared.’

Having been made something of a pariah for recognising these truths early, does he feel any sense of vindication? He laughs slightly. ‘I don’t feel as though I need it. It’s the way the world is. If you say something in advance — if you describe a problem as it arises, people always turn on you because they don’t want to hear about it. But when it’s too late to do anything, they will then turn around and say that you were right. That’s human nature.’

Despite being fêted and honoured across eastern Europe for his work with dissidents behind the Iron Curtain, and despite his worldwide renown as a philosopher, Scruton is still without honour in his own land. Does this upset him? ‘We live in a time when honours and praise go only to people on the left, essentially because they seem harmless. And what makes them seem harmless is precisely that they’re uttering all the things that have caused so much harm.Only one honour really got to him. ‘Nothing upset me more than the award of Companion of Honour to Eric Hobsbawm in reward for a lifetime of unswerving loyalty to the Soviet Union.’

But Scruton is not a regret-filled man. He seems content, even happy, in his ‘Scrutopia’. As we wrap up his wife is bringing their son home with some schoolfriends. The horses and cows need checking, and the chickens need to go down for the night. ‘Touching creatures,’ he notes as they follow him to their home, clucking and chirruping.

Got something to add? Join the discussion and comment below.


TaggedEric HobsbawmMacpherson reportMulticulturalismPaedophiliaRacismRay HoneyfordRoger Scrutonsex abuseThe DisappearedTrevor Phillips

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The Deep View: Open AI’s expansion into the EU spells trouble for AI startups

STARTUPS
OpenAI’s expansion into the EU spells trouble for AI startups
Europe is becoming a key overseas market for OpenAI’s ChatGPT, raising concerns over the EU’s reliance on foreign tech.
ChatGPT Enterprise adoption has surged sixfold year-over-year across Europe, the Middle East and Africa, with rising interest from finance, retail and life sciences firms, Nicolai Skabo, OpenAI’s enterprise lead for the regions, told Bloomberg. Governments are signing on, too: the UK recently agreed to roll out ChatGPT Enterprise across its 2,500-person civil service, joining Germany and Greece in deploying the chatbot across government workforces.
As ChatGPT embeds itself deeper into Europe’s digital infrastructure, experts worry that OpenAI’s dominance could choke local AI innovation amid a tough economic and regulatory landscape. Some call for bigger investments in homegrown startups, relaxed regulations, and a stronger talent pipeline.
“There is really no LLM model provider that can approach the scope, scale, and breadth of functionality of OpenAI,” Scott Bickley, Advisor Fellow at Info-Tech Research Group, told The Deep View. “The next in line are not European-based companies either… it is hard to envision how [the EU] could muster the massive investments and infrastructure to compete.”
Some experts say that the imbalance makes it harder for European firms to scale.
“The EU is ahead on responsible AI frameworks, but still trails the U.S. in commercializing innovation,” said Jonathan Garini, CEO of enterprise AI startup fifthelement.ai, referring to the EU AI Act. “Deeper integration of OpenAI sets a higher barrier for startups and strengthens competitive pressure.” 
Some are already leaving.
“Our decision to migrate key operations to North America wasn’t about abandoning Europe; it was about survival,” Juan Graña, CEO of Neurologyca, an AI startup founded in Spain, told TDV. “In the U.S., the ecosystem rewards experimentation… In Europe, it’s heavily mediated by compliance.”
“If Europe doesn’t want to depend on U.S. or Chinese technologies, it must create the conditions for its own to thrive,” Graña said.
OpenAI’s threats to Europe’s homegrown AI ecosystem offer a glimpse of what’s to come if U.S. tech giants continue to dominate the global AI landscape. America’s lead stems from a business-friendly culture backed by massive investment in infrastructure, compute and talent. However, most countries, especially in the Global South, lack the regulatory flexibility and resources to replicate the U.S. model. If nations want a meaningful stake in the AI economy, they must treat AI as a nation-building priority despite the risks. If not, the AI gap will only widen—and many will be left playing catch-up.
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EL PAIS: ‘Relevatives of adulterated Fentanyl … what people need to understand …

Fentanyl

Relatives of the 124 victims of adulterated fentanyl in Argentina demand justice: ‘This is an unprecedented massacre’

Those who lost a loved one to the bacteria detected in the clinical drug demand an investigation into the entire chain of responsibility

Familiares de víctimas del fentanilo contaminado participan en una vigilia con velas y flores en memoria de sus seres queridos, exigiendo justicia por la mayor tragedia sanitaria del país.
Relatives of victims in Rosario, Argentina, on October 17.Sebastián López Brach
Mar Centenera

Mar Centenera

Rosario – OCT 22, 2025 – 17:03 CEST

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The first warning signs appeared in the corridors of the intensive care unit. “Many are dying,” the relatives of patients admitted to the Italian Hospital in La Plata, about 35 miles south of Buenos Aires, whispered. It was early April, and everyone feared their loved one would be next. The situation was repeated in other medical centers across the country, but no one suspected that this string of deaths was being caused by clinical fentanyl contaminated with two highly resistant bacteria. This powerful opiate drug, injected as an anesthetic and pain reliever, was the cause of the severe respiratory illnesses patients developed and ultimately died from.

Six months later, the number of deaths being investigated by the courts has now reached 124, and the executives of the two Argentine laboratories responsible for the production of clinical fentanyl are under investigation and in pretrial detention. The affected families believe the real number is much higher and are calling on the courts to investigate the entire chain of responsibility for this unprecedented health catastrophe.

On Thursday, in the city of Rosario, the third-most populous in Argentina, a tribute was held at the foot of the Flag Monument. A white carnation for each of the 124 victims. Lit candles. Demands for justice. Signs bearing the photograph of Ariel García Furfaro, owner of the Ramallo S.A. and HLB Pharma laboratories, and, in red capital letters, “murderer.”

Gisela y Verónica Amin sostienen la foto de su madre Elia, una de las 124 víctimas fatales por fentanilo contaminado, en el Hospital Italiano de Rosario.
Gisela and Verónica Amin hold a photo of their mother Elia, one of the victims.Sebastián López Brach

“Control failed and their lives were extinguished,” they wrote on another banner, recalling the irregularities detected in both laboratories and ignored by supervisory bodies over the course of seven years. The last inspection, carried out at the end of 2024, found “critical deficiencies” that compromised the quality and safety of the manufactured drugs and warranted the closure of the facilities. The disqualification was ordered three months later, after more than 300,000 ampoules of fentanyl contaminated with the bacteria Klebsiella pneumoniae and Ralstonia pickettii had already been distributed to 118 medical centers across the country.

“It was a silent murder,” says lawyer Ivana Esteban, who lost her 75-year-old mother, Ángela Campos, to the administration of adulterated fentanyl. “The number of victims recorded in the case file is 124, but we know there are many more; some families don’t know. There was negligence and corruption; all of this could have been avoided,” she emphasizes. Her mother went to the emergency room at the Italian Hospital in Rosario on March 2 with a leg infection — “Being diabetic, it was dangerous, but she walked in, she was fine” — and died on April 6 from complications arising from bilateral pneumonia. “They killed the soul of the family. My mother wasn’t just my mother. She was a grandmother, a wife, a sister, an aunt. It’s unfair that she lost her life due to negligence; we can’t allow it,” she says, close to tears. When she recovers, she asks that what happened be made visible so that justice can be done, and so that it never happens again.

The stories of many of the family members have common threads, such as the desperation of not understanding what was causing the onset of respiratory illnesses that suddenly worsened the patients’ initial medical condition. “I asked to speak to the director [of the hospital], I asked her to review the treatment because something was happening, but I didn’t know what,” Esteban recalls. “In the hallways of the therapy center every day, we saw someone coming out crying,” she continues. When medical reports were handed out, questions piled up, but the answers they received were elusive: “We asked, ‘What does he have?’ and they told us it was a bacteria. But what bacteria? Doesn’t it have a name? And the antibiotics aren’t working? Why isn’t there any improvement?”

Un niño observa en silencio la llama de una vela encendida en memoria de las víctimas del fentanilo contaminado, durante una vigilia en Rosario, Argentina.
Vigil in memory of the victims of contaminated fentanyl.Sebastián López Brach

Doctors in La Plata discovered the problem after an outbreak of Klebsiella pneumoniae and Ralstonia pickettii killed 18 patients in just a few days. They discovered the presence of both pathogens in fentanyl batch 31202 and informed the National Administration of Drugs, Food and Medical Technology (ANMAT) on May 7. The regulatory body issued an alert to stop the use of that batch nationwide. The following week, it ordered the recall of all adulterated ampoules that had already been distributed from that and a second batch. At the same time, a judicial investigation was launched.

In the city of La Plata, the fentanyl was immediately discontinued, but not in other parts of the country, where relatives report that it was used until June. Ana Belén Salazar, 38, died on May 12 at the Italian Hospital in Rosario, when the ANMAT alert was already in effect. She spent 40 days in intensive care. “They gave her that anesthetic until the last day,” says her mother, Ana María Carranza. “They tried four or five different antibiotics, and none of them worked. They told me she had an infection, but they didn’t tell me what was causing it. With the infection, she had a fever and convulsions. They killed the princess of the family,” laments this mother, who is silently accompanied by her husband. “He tells me: stop, don’t cry so much, you’re going to get sick, but it’s the only thing I can do, because I can’t believe it. If it had been due to an illness, I would be happy, but not if they killed her. I want those who killed her to pay.”

Upon receiving the death certificate, most of the 124 families returned home heartbroken. None of them knew that behind these deaths was a painkiller manufactured without meeting current quality standards. They learned about it on television, hearing about the first cases and seeing that they matched the experience they had just endured. They began investigating. They exchanged messages. They met with each other. They spoke with lawyers. They discovered that there was a list of potential victims in the hands of the Prosecutor’s Office, and when they called, it was confirmed that their loved one’s name was on it.

“It was a shock because no one told us anything,” says Gisela Amin. “They never called us from the hospital to tell us anything, not the health authorities, not the justice system, not anyone. If we hadn’t seen the fentanyl case on the news, I think we would have been left with uncertainty, because we couldn’t understand how she could have died in 10 days from multiple organ failure. When we brought her to the emergency room, all she had was an earache that she said was taking away her appetite. She was fine,” continues Amin, the eldest of five siblings, all present at the rally in Rosario.

Flowers, candles and banners placed in memory of the victims.
Flowers, candles and banners placed in memory of the victims.Sebastián López Brach

Her mother, Elia Inés Ruiz, 75, was hospitalized for further testing because she was experiencing dizziness and anemia. On May 2, she collapsed and was transferred to intensive care. She died on May 10. Gisela printed a photo she took of her mother the last time she visited her home in the city of Gobernador Gálvez, on the southern outskirts of Rosario. She shows it to the camera as a way of remembering her and, at the same time, demanding justice.

Up to 25 years in prison

The case is being handled by Judge Ernesto Kreplak of the city of La Plata. So far, 16 people have been prosecuted for the alleged crime of adulteration of medicinal substances, which caused the deaths of at least 20 people, in conjunction with the crime of adulteration of medicinal substances in a manner dangerous to health, which aggravates the charges. “We are facing a case of complex criminality involving a large number of victims and an organized business conglomerate,” stated prosecutor María Laura Roteta. The top executives of the laboratories and their senior technical staff are accused of knowing about the serious production deficiencies and face sentences of up to 25 years in prison.

This is a very complex legal case, with victims in different provinces. The families want to extend the investigation to the regulatory agencies, and some are calling for political resignations from a government that promotes deregulation and has cut funding and staff at ANMAT.

Una mujer sostiene una vela encendida en memoria de un familiar fallecido por fentanilo contaminado, durante una vigilia en Rosario en reclamo de justicia por las víctimas de la mayor tragedia sanitaria del país.
A woman holds a lit candle in Rosario.Sebastián López Brach

Congress created a commission of inquiry to listen to the victims, analyze what went wrong, and determine what regulations can prevent Argentina from experiencing a similar incident in the future. “We are looking at what traceability, early warning, quality assurance, and control mechanisms we can improve, as well as what administrative and political responsibilities existed both at ANMAT and the Ministry of Health,” says the commission’s president, Socialist representative and biochemist Mónica Fein. “Contrary to what the national government says — which claims that regulation is unnecessary — this incident, which I wish hadn’t happened, demonstrates the importance of the state as a regulator and controller,” she adds. The representative points out that ANMAT was created in 1992 after the deaths of 21 people from ingesting a toxic propolis tonic, and since then, there hasn’t been a fatal incident of this magnitude.

The families are asking Argentine society to stand with them. “We want to make what happened visible so that we are all aware of this unprecedented massacre,” says Luis Ayala, father of 32-year-old teacher Leonel Ayala, who died in La Plata. “Let it be known that there was a gang of negligent people, of murderers, and that we will not stop until the whole truth is known.” They hope that the perpetrators receive an exemplary sentence.

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