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  • Five Prime Ministers Since Brexit: How Britain Lost Its Stability

    For most of its modern history Britain changed prime ministers about once a decade and prided itself on dull, steady government. Since the Brexit vote in 2016 it has churned through five leaders, crashed its own bond market, and thrown out the party that had governed for fourteen years. This is how a country famous for stability lost it, and whether it has got it back.

    Politics · 2026-07-15

  • Why the World Is Choosing Nuclear Again, Despite Chernobyl and Fukushima

    Two of the worst industrial accidents of the last century were nuclear, and yet support for nuclear power is rising, more than thirty countries have pledged to triple it, and tech giants are switching old reactors back on. This is what the numbers actually say, which fears are real, and how the mood turned around.

    Infrastructure · 2026-07-14

  • Us and Them: Why Humans Invented Race

    Every people on earth has, at some point, looked at itself and decided it was the standard by which everyone else falls short. That instinct is ancient and universal. But the idea of a few ranked biological races is neither. It is recent, it was built on purpose, and the science does not support it. This is where discrimination by race actually comes from, and why understanding it is the thing that undoes it.

    Society · 2026-07-13

  • 2020 Days Since 2020

    The virus that stopped the world is still here, but it no longer empties cities or fills mortuaries. Roughly 2,020 days since the year 2020 ended, this is a clear look at what COVID-19 really was, why it killed on the scale it did, why it stopped, and what the lockdowns, the crash and the rest of that year did to the world.

    Health · 2026-07-12

  • Why So Many Flags Are Red, White and Blue

    Line up the flags of the Netherlands, Russia, France and Luxembourg and most people cannot tell you which is which. Around thirty countries fly the same three colours, and once you count every territory and variant it is well over fifty. That is not a coincidence. It is four centuries of nations copying each other's homework, and it starts with a Dutch ship.

    Society · 2026-07-11

  • The United States and Iran: Why Neither Side Lowers Its Guard

    Decades of hostility, collapsed deals, and now open strikes around the Strait of Hormuz. Beneath the headlines, both Washington and Tehran get something from the confrontation. Understanding what that is explains why it never quite ends.

    Global Affairs · 2026-07-10

  • The Data Brokers You Never Meet: How Your Information Gets Bought and Sold

    A whole industry collects and resells information about you. You have almost certainly never heard of the companies in it, and that is not an accident.

    Technology · 2026-07-09

  • El Niño Is Back in 2026: What It Is, Why It Happens, and What It Did Last Time

    A patch of the Pacific Ocean warms up by a degree or two, and the whole planet's weather shifts. Here is what El Niño actually is, why it keeps returning, what forecasters expect in 2026, and what the last one did.

    Climate · 2026-07-08

  • How Lehman Brothers Broke the World: The 2008 Crisis, Explained

    In September 2008 a single investment bank collapsed and nearly took the global financial system with it. The story runs through subprime mortgages, a chain of bets called credit default swaps, and an insurer named AIG that had quietly promised to cover losses it could never pay.

    Markets · 2026-07-07

  • The Great Depression Was a World Story: How the 1930s Broke More Than America

    It is remembered as an American tragedy of crashed stocks and dust-blown farms. But the slump of the 1930s circled the planet through gold, debt, and trade, threw tens of millions out of work from Berlin to Santiago, and helped clear the road to a second world war. This is the global version.

    Markets · 2026-07-06

  • Watergate: What Actually Happened, and Why the Name Still Means Scandal

    Most people know the word without knowing the story. Watergate was never really about a break-in. It was about what a presidency did to cover one up, and how close the country came to letting it work.

    Politics · 2026-07-05

  • America at 250: Who Actually Got Free in 1776?

    On the Fourth of July 2026 the United States turns 250, and the thing everyone is celebrating, freedom, is far more tangled than the fireworks suggest. The colonists who fought the British were British. Most of the people living in the country did not get free at all. And for many of the least free, the side actually offering liberty was the enemy. This is the honest story of who got free, and who had to keep fighting for it.

    Society · 2026-07-04

  • Mikhail Gorbachev: Celebrated Abroad, Resented at Home

    Gorbachev is remembered in two completely different ways. In the West he is the man who helped end the Cold War peacefully and won a Nobel Prize. In Russia he is often blamed for destroying the Soviet Union. Both verdicts come from the same set of facts.

    Global Affairs · 2026-07-03

  • Capitalists vs Communists: The Cold War, in Quick

    For almost half a century the world was split in two, the capitalist West against the communist East, two superpowers with enough nuclear weapons to end the world and every reason never to use them. Here is the whole thing, fast.

    Global Affairs · 2026-07-02

  • G7, G20, NATO, the UN, BRICS, ASEAN: What They Actually Are, and Whether They Matter

    You hear the names constantly and half of them blur together. Here is the plain version: what each of these clubs and alliances really is, who is in it, and which ones actually have the power to make anything happen.

    Global Affairs · 2026-07-01

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