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Sunrise Movement Backs Saikat Chakrabarti, Progressive Firebrand Behind the Green New Deal

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Sunrise Movement Backs Saikat Chakrabarti, Progressive Firebrand Behind the Green New Deal


The Sunrise Movement is leaning into its roots in climate activism with a congressional endorsement of Saikat Chakrabarti, the former chief of staff to Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., and one of the architects of the landmark environmental legislation known as the Green New Deal. 

The youth climate group shared its endorsement with The Intercept with early voting underway in California and less than a week to go before primary day. Chakrabarti will face off against State Sen. Scott Wiener and San Francisco Board of Supervisors member Connie Chan, both Democrats, in a heavily contested primary race to succeed Democratic former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in California’s 11th Congressional District.

“For years, the Sunrise Movement has shown us the power that people like all of us have when we organize strategically,” Chakrabarti wrote in a statement to The Intercept. “Together with Sunrise, we pushed Washington to respond to the needs of working people when most Democrats (and of course Republicans) refused to do so. We were able to change political reality in Washington, and we’ll do it again.”

Chakrabarti rose to national prominence after co-founding Justice Democrats in 2017 alongside other former presidential campaign staffers for Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., to support progressive primary challengers to establishment Democrats. He has been a thorn in the side of moderate Democrats ever since. 

Chakrabarti became Ocasio-Cortez’s first chief of staff after her upset victory over longtime incumbent Rep. Joe Crowley in 2018, a win that helped put Justice Democrats on the map and ushered in the first members of the progressive Squad in Congress. In Ocasio-Cortez’s office, he worked with the Sunrise Movement and other stakeholders to draft the Green New Deal. Elements of the bill were later included in the Biden-era Inflation Reduction Act, which invested $369 billion in fighting climate change, but ultimately fell short of progressives’ loftiest ambitions. 

Chakrabarti has long espoused progressive views and is expected to vote with Ocasio-Cortez and the rest of the Squad if elected to Congress. But despite his prominent role in Ocasio-Cortez’s early rise, his former boss has not endorsed Chakrabarti, driving speculation of a rift, which the candidate has continuously denied. Progressive Reps. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., and Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., have endorsed Chakrabarti, as has former Rep. Jamal Bowman, D-N.Y. Justice Democrats, the group he helped found, is also backing his campaign.

After leaving Ocasio-Cortez’s office, Chakrabarti went on to lead New Consensus, a progressive environmental policy think tank that recently released the Mission for America, which he bills as a “successor” to the Green New Deal. The policy proposal seeks to “rapidly slash emissions” and “build a new, clean economy” to protect workers against the threat of job cuts driven by the rise of artificial intelligence.

“We’re proud to endorse Saikat Chakrabarti. Saikat has spent years fighting for the Green New Deal, taking on corporate power, and delivering for working people, not billionaires and special interests,” wrote Aru Shiney-Ajay, Executive Director of the Sunrise Movement, in a statement to the Intercept. 

The climate justice group pivoted this cycle to emphasize its explicit opposition to President Donald Trump and presented Chakrabarti as a candidate “ready to fight back with courage and vision,” Shiney-Ajay added. “We know he’ll be instrumental in helping build a Democratic Party that is unapologetically for working people, serious about confronting the climate crisis, and ready to take on authoritarianism head-on.”

Chakrabarti has relished his role as an opponent of entrenched political power. He has long antagonized the 20-term congresswoman he seeks to replace, slamming her in a series of 2019 tweets after then-House Speaker Pelosi penned an op-ed critical of AOC, at the time Chakrabarti’s boss. (The two congresswomen, who hold divergent ideologies but are both known for their political savvy, have built bridges in the years since.)

While running for her district, Chakrabarti has continued to provoke Pelosi, calling her out in a recent video after she endorsed Chan against him. He launched his campaign to challenge the former Speaker before she announced her retirement in November, unlike his two opponents, who jumped in once it was clear they’d be competing for an open seat. 

“My goal, honestly, is to replace a huge part of the Democrat establishment,” Chakrabarti said in November during an episode of the Intercept Briefing. “I’m calling for primaries all across the country. … I think we actually have to get in there and be in a position of power where we can do all that, so it’s not going to be this constant compromising with the establishment, trying to figure out how we can push.”

Politics is Chakrabarti’s second act. The tech entrepreneur made millions as a founding engineer of the payment process platform Stripe.

But in the tech-dominated district where Pelosi won re-election with 81 percent of the vote last cycle, Chakrabarti faces an uphill battle. Wiener, a state senator who has the support of the California Democratic Party, has a clear lead over both Chan and Chakrabarti, who appear to be neck and neck for second place. The top two candidates next Tuesday will advance to the general election in November.

“I believe we can improve the material lives of working people and build a future we all actually want to live in,” Chakrabarti told The Intercept. “I’m grateful to the Sunrise Movement for joining our coalition, and I look forward to working with them again in Congress.”

Mina the Hollower is the best old-school action adventure I’ve played in a while

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Mina the Hollower is the best old-school action adventure I’ve played in a while

Modern Legend of Zelda games like Breath of the Wild are built around Link’s ability to run, climb, and jump with the best of them. In old-school, top-down Zelda titles, though, the ability to increase Link’s sad starting mobility was a banner event. Finding items like the speed-enhancing Pegasus Boots in Link to the Past or the jump-granting Roc’s Feather in Link’s Awakening made the methodical exploration in these games feel that much more kinetic and akin to a top-down platform game.

This kind of kinetic feeling is built into Mina the Hollower from the start. As the titular, mouse-like Hollower, you’re armed with the ability to jump up and burrow into soft soil, zipping under obstacles and past enemies with satisfying pep as you do. After a short sojourn underground, you pop out with an extended jump that quickly becomes second nature.

The sense of energy and verve built in to this simple movement system makes Mina a joy to control. You feel that joy when you burrow away from an enemy attack only to quickly circle back to pop out for a quick counter. You feel it burrowing underneath the scenery through a small hole to uncover a labyrinthine secret corridor. You feel it hopping and bouncing across a series of gaps on inflatable, balloon-like pads.

Navigating maze-like rooms like this is sheer joy thanks to the game’s smooth control scheme.

Navigating maze-like rooms like this is sheer joy thanks to the game’s smooth control scheme. Credit: Yacht Club Games

Add in an intricate upgrade system, a sprawling, well-designed map, compelling combat, and a huge variety of secrets to uncover, and you’ve got one of the best homages to and expansions on the classic Zelda formula that I’ve ever played (with elements of games like Castlevania thrown in for good measure). Mina the Hollower stands out from the crowded field of Zelda clones to be an instant contender for one of the best games of 2026.

Characters and combat

The core narrative of Mina the Hollower focuses on Mina’s efforts to restore six broken, towering spark generators across the island that she designed to bring electricity and prosperity to the world of Tenebrous Isle. As the game progresses, Mina slowly becomes aware of some negative side effects from these generators and the sinister actions being taken to cover up those effects. What starts as a relatively straightforward and predictable climate change allegory leads up to a touching and surprisingly (though not entirely) bleak ending that I’m wary to say too much about.

Plotting aside, Mina the Hollower is full of colorful NPCs that shine through in some efficient and fun writing. While half of the characters simply act as signposts to some objective or other, the other half will pop up with non-sequiturs and turns of phrase that had me grinning all evening. And you never know when an ostensible friend might turn into a pickpocket that you need to chase down, or when that hard luck case you’re rescuing might transform into a terrifying mini-boss.

Unlike real-life snowmen, these guys don’t just stand still and take your abuse.

Unlike real-life snowmen, these guys don’t just stand still and take your abuse. Credit: Yacht Club Games

While the imposing, varied bosses are a highlight, even basic enemies rarely feel perfunctory in Mina the Hollower. They seem to take pains to stay just out of range of your weapons before darting in for their own attacks. This is a game that rewards careful positioning and patience in waiting for your own counterattack openings, and it is quick to punish players who get too mindlessly aggressive.

But it’s also a forgiving game, offering a pack full of refillable potions to restore your health (and which require landing your own attacks to get the most out of). Using those potions leaves you immobile and vulnerable for a couple of crucial seconds, though, adding a sense of risk even to a simple health restore.

If you do run into trouble with the more reflex-oriented portions of the game, Mina the Hollower is conducive to grinding through weaker enemies to earn enough in-game bones to buy a bevy of offensive and defensive upgrades. If that’s too much work, though, the options menu includes a ton of inventive modifiers to tweak the difficulty in easier, harder, or simply weirder ways.

Mapping it out

From a vibrant central town hub, Mina the Hollower’s sprawling map splits off to six highly varied dungeons, each culminating in a thrilling climb up a generator tower. Just getting to these dungeons feels like half the challenge at points, with each route requiring some intricate positional puzzle-solving to clear a path. You might find yourself escorting bombs across a swampy marsh, intentionally falling between floors, or digging under transparent, impermeable panels to find the right way through these mazes.

Unlike a lot of other Zelda-inspired action-adventure games, though, there’s no set order to the dungeons you take on. While the game will gently nudge you toward the challenges it thinks you’re ready for, nothing is gated behind an item or ability you have to earn from an earlier challenge.

You’d be forgiven for thinking this was a scene from some sort of old-school Castlevania reboot.

You’d be forgiven for thinking this was a scene from some sort of old-school Castlevania reboot. Credit: Yacht Club Games

That said, there are dozens of helpful trinkets hidden throughout the landscape that can make certain challenges much simpler, such as improving your movement, aiding your attacks, or increasing your resilience. I felt like I was constantly getting sidetracked from the main path to find a hidden challenge room or platform pathway behind some random bush that inevitably led to one of these helpful items. By the time I rolled the credits after about 20 hours, though, I had only found 54 percent of the items the game had to offer.

Throughout the overworld and each dungeon, these intricately designed maps loop gently back around and on top of themselves, with plenty of unlockable shortcuts to prevent the need for a ton of backtracking. And despite the retro top-down visual style, the maps make use of a surprising amount of verticality. You’ll frequently find yourself walking under an elevated bridge or by a seemingly inaccessible nook, only to find the entrance hours later when exploring an unrelated, far-off area. It all comes together to create a real sense of place and makes you want to keep coming back to explore every inch.

I could go on about the imposing, screen-filling boss designs, the wide variety of primary and secondary weapon options, the masterful pixel art, and the rocking chiptune soundtrack, but those just feel like table stakes for a game of this caliber. Mina the Hollower is a triumph of the genre that I’d recommend even to people who don’t think they’re fans of Zelda-style games.

TV Legend Behind ‘Full House’ and ‘Mork & Mindy’ Dead at 94

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TV Legend Behind ‘Full House’ and ‘Mork & Mindy’ Dead at 94


Howard Storm, a veteran television director whose work helped shape some of America’s most beloved sitcoms, has died. He was 94.

Storm, best known for directing episodes of “Taxi,” “Full House,” “Mork & Mindy” and “Everybody Loves Raymond,” died Tuesday in Beverly Hills, according to Variety. His publicist confirmed that he died of natural causes.

For generations of TV fans, Storm’s name may not have been the one in lights. But his fingerprints were all over some of the most familiar shows ever to hit American living rooms.

Storm found his passion for directing in 1975, working alongside two comedy powerhouses: James L. Brooks and Garry Marshall. From there, he built a career behind the camera that stretched across decades and included some of the biggest names in entertainment.

His directing credits included six episodes of “Rhoda,” 59 episodes of “Mork & Mindy,” two episodes of “Taxi,” three episodes of “The Redd Foxx Show,” two episodes of “Better Days,” three episodes of “Full House” and three episodes of “Everybody Loves Raymond.”

That meant Storm worked with a stunning lineup of comedy stars, including Robin Williams, Christopher Lloyd, Valerie Harper and Redd Foxx.

Before he became a trusted name in television directing, Storm started out on stage as a stand-up comedian. He toured with Andy Williams as an opening act and appeared on “The Merv Griffin Show” more than a dozen times.

His early Hollywood path also included a creative connection with Woody Allen in the 1970s. Storm worked as an assistant on “Bananas” and “Take the Money and Run.” He also wrote scripts for “The Partridge Family” and Bob Newhart programs.

In 1985, Storm stepped into feature films with “Once Bitten,” a vampire comedy starring a young Jim Carrey, along with Lauren Hutton and Karen Kopins.

He later directed an episode of “Kenan & Kel” in 1999 before taking on a few acting roles himself, appearing in 2010’s “Valentine’s Day” and 2012’s “An Old Man’s Gold.”

Storm’s career spanned the golden age of network sitcoms, when family comedies and sharp ensemble shows dominated TV. He worked during a period when shows like “Mork & Mindy,” “Taxi” and “Full House” became more than just entertainment. They became part of American pop culture.

Storm is survived by his two sons, Anthony and Casey, his daughter-in-law Julia, and his grandsons Leo and Sidney.

Trump boosts prediction markets as his family profits

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Trump boosts prediction markets as his family profits

Donald Trump Jr., who has invested in the prediction markets industry. Photo: Gage Skidmore / Wikimedia Commons

US President Donald Trump on Tuesday used his social media platform to boost prediction markets – a burgeoning industry from which Trump’s family stands to profit – and lashed out at state leaders working to regulate them, singling out officials in Illinois, New York and elsewhere as “scum.”

Trump, whose administration is considered by some to be the most brazenly corrupt in US history, argued that the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) must have “exclusive authority” over prediction market regulations, declaring that “it is a major industry, and we must protect it.” The president’s message echoed that of his CFTC chief, Mike Selig, who said earlier this year that the agency would fight any state-level efforts to restrict prediction markets.

Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), who is co-leading legislation that would ban online prediction markets from allowing bets on government actions, said Trump’s post on Tuesday amounts to “more evidence of how the corruption works.”

“Trump and his family are making tons of money off these new prediction markets—and so of course he is leading the charge against consumer protections and for preferential regulatory treatment of his companies,” said Murphy, alluding to Donald Trump Jr.’s role on the advisory board of Polymarket – the world’s largest prediction market platform.

The New York Times reported last month that Trump’s “publicly traded media company unveiled its own prediction market product last year. And the president’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., has ties to two of the industry’s top firms, including Polymarket, the platform that prosecutors say was used by the soldier for well-timed bets.”

“The most corrupt president in our nation’s history wants to make sure states like ours can’t regulate prediction markets so his family and administration can keep profiting.”

The president’s attack on state efforts to regulate prediction markets drew swift pushback from state leaders who have supported cracking down on the platforms, warning they are avenues for insider trading and corruption.

“Illinois took action to prevent and ban insider trading with online prediction markets in our state,” Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker wrote on social media in response to Trump’s post. “The most corrupt president in our nation’s history wants to make sure states like ours can’t regulate prediction markets so his family and administration can keep profiting.”

The Trump administration, which has steamrolled federal regulators who have raised questions about prediction markets, is currently suing Illinois and other states over their efforts to regulate the platforms. Critics argue that prediction markets are illegal sportsbooks masquerading as financial exchanges in an attempt to skirt gambling restrictions.

Dominick Freda, legal director of Better Markets, said Tuesday that “Congress never intended to unleash nationwide gambling and certainly did not envision having the tiny and ill-equipped CFTC adopt the role of nationwide gambling czar.” Better Markets on Tuesday filed an amicus brief in support of Tennessee’s effort to rein in Kalshi and other prediction market platforms.

“The CFTC continues to waste its resources and focus on cheerleading these unpoliced, unregulated casinos when it should focus on its real job: regulating the multi-trillion-dollar commodities and derivatives markets,” said Freda. “It is more important than ever for the CFTC to regulate and police those markets so that Americans can count on stable prices for the many goods they rely on, from gas to groceries. The CFTC should leave gambling regulation to Tennessee and the other states whose laws and regulations have protected the American public for decades, and must be allowed to continue to do so.”

-Common Dreams

Jerusalem Prayer Breakfast Blends Faith, Politics, and Warnings on Iran

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Jerusalem Prayer Breakfast Blends Faith, Politics, and Warnings on Iran


The Knesset hosted the 10th Jerusalem Prayer Breakfast on Wednesday morning—a high‑profile gathering of faith leaders, lawmakers, and international guests who prayed for Israel and voiced firm warnings about regional threats. The event combined devotional moments with political appeals, reflecting a view that spiritual solidarity must accompany strong security and diplomatic stances.

Speakers framed the meeting as both spiritual and strategic. Former US congresswoman Michele Bachmann opened by calling the gathering “a pivotal moment in world history” and urged prayerful action alongside political clarity, saying, “We’re Gideon’s Army gathered together to do the work.” Her speech linked biblical conviction to present geopolitics and praised recent US–Israeli operations as part of a broader fight against hostile regimes.

Member of Knesset (MK) Tatiana Mazarsky (Yesh Atid) welcomed participants to the Knesset and emphasized resilience under fire, thanking international supporters who she said, “tell the true Israeli story.” Mazarsky described the event as a necessary show of solidarity after repeated attacks, saying the people of Israel draw strength from faith and covenantal promises that, she asserted, bind the nation and its supporters together.

MK Ohad Tal tied (Religious Zionism) prayers to national defense, calling prayers “the first line of defense for Jerusalem,” while arguing that prayer must be matched by action. He warned that Iran’s leadership aims to destroy Israel and insisted the world must choose sides, asserting bluntly, “The Iranian regime is perhaps the greatest force of evil in our time.” Tal also rejected a Palestinian state as a viable security solution and urged regional partners to pursue normalization with Israel, warning that linking progress to Palestinian statehood would only bring “further violence and bloodshed.”

Throughout the program, speakers stressed a common set of themes: the threat from Iran and its proxies, the importance of international Christian–Jewish solidarity, and a belief that spiritual commitment should influence policy. Bachmann framed the moment as biblically significant and said God had assigned Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu specific roles in history, which she said they alone could fulfill.

Organizers and parliamentarians underscored the event’s practical purpose: to cement diplomatic relationships, counter narratives they see as hostile in global media, and sustain moral and material support for Israel. Mazarsky warned of ideological campaigns reaching Christian communities abroad and called for coordinated action “together in prayer, together in education, together in politics and diplomacy” to blunt those efforts.

Voices from the podium combined urgent security warnings with pastoral appeals: to pray, to stand with victims, and to press governments to act. The event ended with calls for continued international solidarity, as speakers urged supporters to stand with Israel through prayer, diplomacy, education, and public advocacy.

Nike’s recycled World Cup uniforms reveal the limits of ‘circular’ fashion

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Nike’s recycled World Cup uniforms reveal the limits of ‘circular’ fashion

In June, athletes from 16 countries will kick off the World Cup wearing other people’s used clothing.

Well, maybe. They’ll be sporting uniforms made from recycled fabric, potentially including a mix of scraps and old clothes. It’s the latest initiative from Nike, one of the world’s largest apparel companies, to incorporate more recycled material into the attire it makes. This time, the garment giant said it used “advanced chemical recycling” to produce its first elite performance apparel from 100 percent textile waste. 

Nike executives and some media coverage have implied that the outfits represent a turning point for sustainable fashion — that “circular” clothing, capable of being recycled over and over again, could soon reach everyday consumers.

The real picture, as you might expect, is a bit more complicated.

Nike has indeed signed deals with two chemical recycling companies, but no one is saying much about their technology or how scalable it is. Despite increasing investments from fashion brands, experts said not to expect to find sales racks lined with chemically recycled clothing anytime soon. 

“Yeah, it’s technically possible,” said Veena Singla, an environmental health researcher at the University of California, San Francisco. “But is it going to happen in reality?” She and others who study chemical recycling don’t think so — at least not in any way consumers might expect. The day when they can buy chemically recycled clothes, wear them, then return them for another trip through the cycle isn’t nigh. 

What seems more likely is the fashion industry expands its use of this recycling technique with industrial scrap fabric — and at nothing approaching the level needed to address projected increases in textile production.

Nike is right that the fashion industry has a sustainability problem. Apparel companies produce more than 100 billion articles of clothing every year. In the process they generate up to 10 percent of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions and an unfathomable amount of waste; the vast majority of textiles are eventually landfilled, incinerated, or sent to unofficial dump sites in poor countries. And all of this is made possible by fossil fuels, with nearly 70 percent of clothes made from oil-derived fabrics. The most common is polyester, a type of plastic also used in water bottles.

Rather than easing up on production, Nike and many of its competitors have pledged to boost the “circularity” of polyester — mostly through recycling.

The push to do so through chemical means is a response to the shortcomings of other strategies they’ve tried. Traditional mechanical recycling through shredding and grinding causes fibers to break down. The resulting fabric must be blended with 70 to 80 percent virgin material so anything made with it doesn’t pill and tear. 

The much more prevalent strategy involves turning discarded plastic bottles into new polyester. Patagonia pioneered this approach in the early ‘90s, and by the start of this decade virtually all recycled polyester was sourced from old bottles. Today, however, companies have increasingly faced lawsuits and regulatory scrutiny from those who would rather see bottles turned back into bottles.

Chemical recycling is supposed to be the next best thing. The term refers to using solvents to dissolve fibers into their base chemical units — building blocks that can be spun into new fabrics. On its face, this is a truly “circular” solution, because it doesn’t depend on bottles, and proponents say it can turn your used polyester shirts or running shorts into new ones over and over again, with no loss in fabric quality. 

That’s the vision now being promoted by fast-fashion brands like Gap, H&M, and Levi’s, many of which have signed multi-year agreements with a handful of chemical recycling startups. Last fall, Nike agreed to source “circular” polyester from two of them: the Swedish firm Syre and Loop Industries here in the U.S.

Research does bear out some of the hype. Technically, chemical recycling can produce virgin-quality polyester, and at least one method, called methanolysis, is capable of preserving that quality through repeated rounds of recycling. But there are significant constraints.

Diana Ferreira, a textile researcher at the University of Minho in Portugal, said textile-to-textile chemical recycling remains limited by the availability of suitable fabric to work with. “If we are dealing with clean, well-sorted, polyester-rich waste streams, chemical recycling can in principle produce material with properties comparable to virgin polyester,” she said. “However, if we are talking about post-consumer textile waste, the situation is much more complex.”

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In other words, chemical recycling works best with industrial scraps, which are more uniform than piles of used clothes. The latter may include blends of cotton, nylon, wool, spandex, and acrylics, not to mention dyes, chemical coatings, thread, labels, and zippers. All of this stuff makes chemical recycling much less feasible — at least, not without meticulous sorting and repeated rounds of pre-treatment to chemically remove all of those contaminants.

“If we wanted it to work, we would have to have our clothes … be 100 percent polyester, and we’d need to get rid of so many toxic chemicals,” Singla said. 

Beth Jensen, of the nonprofit Textile Exchange, is more sanguine. She said “all solutions,” including chemical recycling, are needed to reduce the fashion industry’s dependence on fossil fuels. But she agreed that establishing the infrastructure required for companies to accept used clothing and use technologies like methanolysis to make it into new apparel remains a ways away. Plus, it’s not clear who will build it. Companies like Nike? Governments? Recyclers? Some combination of those entities working collaboratively? 

Even if the industry can hit its optimistic targets for chemically recycled polyester by the early 2030s — whether from scrap or from people’s old clothes — production of “circular” fabric would likely pale in comparison to the more than 169 million metric tons of polyester projected to be manufactured annually by then. Dionisios Vlachos, a professor of chemical engineering at the University of Delaware, said Syre’s goal to produce even 3 million metric tons by 2032 is “too aggressive.”

Instead, companies need to “reverse the trend of fast fashion,” said Nusa Urbancic, CEO of the nonprofit Changing Markets Foundation. That means making less clothing overall, whether it contains recycled or virgin materials.  Last year, growth in recycled polyester — mostly from bottles — was dwarfed by an even larger increase in the production of fossil fuel-based polyester.

Urbancic sees chemical recycling as “an excuse to keep producing plastic clothes” and advocates for a shift away from polyester altogether; the material sheds microfibers and may expose consumers to hazardous chemicals.

Nike, Syre, and Loop Industries did not respond to interview requests or detailed lists of questions, highlighting a transparency problem flagged by Singla, Vlachos, and others Grist spoke with. Industry confidentiality makes it difficult to know what’s actually going on in these firms — and whether “#TheGreatTextileShift” they promise will be different from failed chemical recycling initiatives in the past.

It’s worth noting that Loop Industries has never turned a profit since its founding in 2010. The company is under investigation by the SEC following a 2020 report accusing it of systematically misrepresenting its technology to regulators and investors, and in 2022, it settled a class-action lawsuit over similar accusations. Syre, for its part, has not said how the “gigascale” factory it plans to build in Vietnam will be able to process consumers’ old clothes, given the country’s ban on used apparel imports.

“It remains to be seen whether [Nike’s announcement] amounts to anything,” Singla said. For the foreseeable future, it seems chemically recycled polyester will be limited to niche products like World Cup uniforms.


Territorial integrity and self-determination still dominate the Falklands discussion – but oil may change that

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Territorial integrity and self-determination still dominate the Falklands discussion – but oil may change that

The people of the Falkland Islands are deep in “commemoration season”, preparing for Liberation Day on June 14. This date has been celebrated on the South Atlantic archipelago as its national day since 1982, when Britain defeated Argentina in a 74-day conflict that claimed more than 900 lives, and reclaimed control over the territory.

Despite its failed invasion, Argentina has never given up its claim that what it refers to as Las Islas Malvinas, which are located approximately 500 km off its east coast, are integral to its sovereign territory. The UK counters that descendants of British settlers, present since the 1830s, possess the right to self-determination which they express through their continued association with the UK as a British Overseas Territory.

Map of Falkland Islands/Islas Malvinas, showing its position about 500kms off the coast of Argentina in the South Atlantic.

Falkland Islands/Islas Malvinas, sits about 500kms off the coast of Argentina in the South Atlantic. Panther Media Global

There are then competing interpretations of territorial integrity and self-determination. These are two of the most important principles of postwar international law. With each argument premised on an “all-or-nothing” logic of absolute rights, historical events and their legal significance have been continuously and cyclically rehashed over nearly two centuries.

But the issue of who controls the islands has been made more significant by the looming possibility of a major oil extraction. The Sea Lion field, about 220 km north of the Falklands, has a potential yield of up to 55,000 barrels a day with a further 125,000 a day in phase two. Its owner plans to commence drilling as early as 2027.

The Argentinian president, Javier Milei, whose programme of heavy government spending cuts is producing widespread hardship in Argentina, has recently ramped up his aggressive rhetoric about the future of the islands, posting a message to X: “THE MALVINAS WERE, ARE, AND ALWAYS WILL BE ARGENTINE”. He said in a separate interview that his government was doing “everything humanly possible” to return the Falklands to Argentina.

There’s no sense that rival claims would be any clearer or easier to resolve now than they were in 1982. Argentina will never relinquish its claim that the island archipelago is an inalienable part of its territory. And the UK has no reason to abandon its reasoning that the key issue is what the islanders want – and what they want is to be British. Moreover, any UK government proposing to hand over the Falklands would face an unimaginable backlash.

Equitable and good

But in thinking beyond the binary “territorial integrity versus self-determination” as it defines the Falklands/Malvinas controversy, our research proposes something that international law already provides for but rarely uses. Under the ICJ Statute, it requires the consent of both parties – a significant hurdle in any sovereignty dispute.

Argentinian soldiers at the inauguration of a monument commemorating the 'illegal occupation' of what they refer to as Las Islas Malvinas.

Argentinian soldiers at the inauguration of a monument commemorating the ‘illegal occupation’ of what they refer to as Las Islas Malvinas. EPA/Juan Ignacio Roncoroni

There is a legal basis for this. In legal terms, it is known as ex aequo et bono (according to what is equitable and good). But the principle behind it is straightforward. Instead of asking: “Who has the stronger legal claim to the land?”, it asks: “What arrangement would actually be fair for everyone involved, even setting aside strict legal entitlements?”

What’s really at stake with the Falklands/Malvinas is not just the land. It’s the sea. The emergence of large-scale offshore extraction raises opportunties and questions that the permanent diplomatic stalemate may no longer be able to manage effectively. And yet international law, built around the idea of who owns which piece of land, has no adequate framework for dealing with them.

Under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (Unclos) maritime entitlements flow from land sovereignty: it is the coastal state that claims the exclusive economic zone. This means the law channels every question about resources back into the unresolvable argument over who owns the islands themselves, rather than allowing the resources to be divided on their own merits.

Moving beyond deadlock

One approach which might break the deadlock is an equitable arrangement for sharing maritime boundaries and resources. This could be similar to what Australia and East Timor achieved in 2018. Rather than continuing to fight over competing claims to the Timor Sea, they agreed through conciliation to a permanent maritime boundary and an equitable sharing of oil and gas revenue.

More ambitious proposals — including forms of shared or delegated sovereignty — have periodically surfaced in academic and diplomatic discussions, but remain politically implausible at present.

But we argue to go beyond simply redrawing lines on a map. A genuinely fair settlement needs to consider what large-scale offshore oil extraction would actually mean for the South Atlantic, both in terms of opportunity and risk. The track record of major oil operations in fragile environments around the world is not encouraging. The islands lack the infrastructure and workforce to support industrial extraction – and an offshore disaster would devastate not just the Falklands but Argentina’s coastline too.

Here is where an unlikely common interest emerges. The islanders have built their identity around environmental stewardship and a distinctively traditional way of life. Argentina frames the UK presence as neocolonial resource extraction. Both, from very different starting points, have reason to fear what unchecked oil exploitation could bring. A settlement and common understanding grounded in fairness could protect the environment, provide for more equitable sharing of resources, and safeguard the islanders’ way of life — none of which the current stalemate achieves.

The recently leaked Pentagon memo makes the point for us. The suggestion that Washington could withdraw its backing for British sovereignty as a diplomatic bargaining chip reveals how dependent the current arrangement remains on wider geopolitical alignments.

Sovereignty over the Falklands may remain politically non-negotiable for the foreseeable future. But oil, environmental risk and strategic competition increasingly expose the limits of a legal framework built on absolute territorial claims. The question international law must confront is whether frozen sovereignty disputes can sustainably govern shared maritime spaces in an era of resource competition and geopolitical instability.

YouTube to begin automatically labeling AI videos

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YouTube to begin automatically labeling AI videos

AI content creation tools like Google’s new Omni model threaten to make reality even harder to discern from AI fantasy, but YouTube is taking an important step toward verifying video origins. After debuting wishy-washy AI content labeling in 2024, Google will begin using more prominent labeling for AI videos, and the site will no longer rely entirely on uploaders to divulge when they use AI tools to create a video.

When YouTube first attempted to tackle the identification of AI videos in 2024, it was almost gratuitous. AI videos at the time nearly always outed themselves by looking bizarre or disjointed. In just a few years, AI models like Seedance, Runway, and Google’s own Veo have raised the bar for realism and consistency in AI video—the spaghetti is more accurate than ever.

Recognizing that, YouTube is making the AI labels more prominent and automating part of the process. Creators are still required to indicate when uploading videos if they were created with the help of AI tools. However, uploaders didn’t have any incentive to be honest about that before. Starting this month, YouTube will use “new internal signals” to flag AI content. This will apparently apply to videos that show “significant photorealistic AI use.”

Simplified AI Labels & Auto-Detection: What You Need to Know

Google is vague about what signals will figure into its AI detection system—we’ve asked for more details and will update if we hear anything. The blog post does mention two ironclad triggers: C2PA metadata indicating a purely AI source and the use of watermarked Google tools like Veo. Creators who believe their videos have been tagged as AI incorrectly can appeal, but not if the site marks an upload as AI for either of those reasons. Those labels are “permanent.”

When applied, the new labels will also be someplace you’ll actually be able to see them. Previously, Google’s essentially voluntary AI labels were only visible in the expanded video description in a section titled “How this content was made.” If you didn’t go looking for that information, you’d never see the label at all.

The three styles of AI labels you will now see on YouTube.

The three styles of AI labels you will now see on YouTube. Credit: YouTube

As the new system rolls out, Google will use labels that are more prominent on both standard videos and YouTube Shorts. For videos filmed the right way (landscape), the AI tag will appear directly below the video and above the description box. For Shorts, the label will appear as a small overlay at the bottom of the video itself, although that will add to the already cluttered look of the TikTok-aping Shorts.

YouTube says the new label is intended to be clear and glanceable. It’s a small ellipse with “AI” and an information symbol. The company has not specified if the label is clickable, but it certainly looks that way. Importantly, there may still be AI content on YouTube that doesn’t use the new label. Google says this system is aimed at “photorealistic and meaningfully AI altered or generated content.” An animated video created with AI or a realistic one that only has a few AI elements will continue to have AI disclosures in the expanded description box.

EU governments clear US trade deal legislation

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EU governments clear US trade deal legislation


European Union governments cleared legislation on Wednesday to remove import duties on many U.S. goods, an EU source with knowledge of their meeting said, ​a move that should avert President Donald Trump’s threat of higher tariffs on ​EU cars and other products.

Under a deal struck at Trump’s Turnberry golf ⁠resort in Scotland last July, the EU agreed to remove import duties ​on U.S. industrial goods and grant preferential access to U.S. farm and seafood produce, ​while accepting U.S. tariffs of 15% on most EU goods.

Ten months since that framework accord, the EU has still not fulfilled its side of the deal, prompting Trump to say he ​would impose “much higher” tariffs on EU goods if the EU does not implement ​its commitments by July 4.

Ambassadors from the 27 EU member nations have now cleared legislation ‌to ⁠put in place those import duty reductions. The decision came after negotiators from EU governments and the European Parliament agreed on texts last week that also put in place a range of safeguards in case the Trump administration breaches the trade accord.

​The legislation still ​needs to be ⁠approved by the European Parliament. Its trade committee is set to hold an indicative vote next Tuesday, with the decision ​by the full EU assembly in mid-June.

The safeguards, pushed by ​EU lawmakers, ⁠include a clause to end the trade deal at the end of 2029 and a provision to allow the European Commission to suspend parts of the deal if ⁠the ​United States backtracks on cutting tariffs to 15% ​on washing machines, wind turbines and other products with high steel or aluminium content. They are currently ​subject to 25% tariffs.

Hot Honey Salmon Bites

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Hot Honey Salmon Bites

Hot Honey Salmon Bites are crispy, flavorful bite-sized pieces of salmon coated in a sticky sweet-and-spicy hot honey glaze that’s completely irresistible! Perfectly seasoned salmon is air-fried until tender and slightly crisp on the edges, then tossed in a buttery hot honey sauce that delivers the perfect balance of heat and sweetness. These salmon bites are quick, easy, and versatile enough to serve as an appetizer, weeknight dinner, rice bowl topping, taco filling, or party snack.

If you love bold flavors and easy seafood recipes, these salmon bites are guaranteed to become a favorite!

Why You’ll Love These Hot Honey Salmon Bites

  • Ready in just 20 minutes
  • Sweet, spicy, and savory flavor combination
  • Crispy edges with tender flaky salmon
  • Easy air fryer recipe
  • Oven instructions included
  • Perfect for bowls, tacos, appetizers, or dinner

What Makes Hot Honey So Good?

Hot honey combines the natural sweetness of honey with spicy chili heat, creating a sauce that works perfectly with savory foods like salmon.

When melted together with butter, the glaze becomes rich, glossy, sticky, and absolutely packed with flavor.

The balance of sweet heat complements the buttery salmon beautifully without overpowering it.


Ingredients & Substitutions

Fresh salmon filets work best for this recipe. Remove the skin and cut the salmon into evenly sized cubes for consistent cooking.

Frozen salmon can also be used—just thaw completely before cutting.

Olive Oil

Olive oil helps the seasoning stick while also helping the salmon crisp slightly in the air fryer.

Seasonings

Paprika, garlic powder, onion powder, salt, and pepper create a flavorful savory coating that pairs perfectly with the hot honey glaze.

Hot Honey

Store-bought or homemade hot honey both work beautifully.

Butter

Butter adds richness and helps create a silky glaze that coats every salmon bite perfectly.


How To Adjust The Spice Level

One of the best things about this recipe is how easy it is to customize.

For Less Heat

  • Use regular honey instead of hot honey
  • Use less glaze
  • Add extra butter to mellow the spice

For More Heat

  • Add red pepper flakes
  • Mix in hot sauce
  • Use extra spicy hot honey

How To Make Hot Honey Salmon Bites

These salmon bites come together quickly with minimal prep.


Step 1: Season The Salmon

  1. Cut salmon into 1-inch cubes.
  2. In a large bowl, combine:
    • Olive oil
    • Paprika
    • Garlic powder
    • Onion powder
    • Salt
    • Black pepper
  3. Toss salmon gently until evenly coated.

Step 2: Air Fry The Salmon

  1. Preheat air fryer to 390°F.
  2. Arrange salmon pieces in a single layer.
  3. Air fry for 9–10 minutes, shaking halfway through cooking.

The salmon should reach an internal temperature of 140–145°F.


Step 3: Make The Hot Honey Glaze

  1. In a saucepan over medium heat, melt butter.
  2. Stir in hot honey until warm and smooth.

Step 4: Coat The Salmon

  1. Add cooked salmon bites to the glaze.
  2. Toss gently until every piece is coated.

Garnish with fresh parsley and serve immediately.


Oven Instructions

No air fryer? No problem!

To Bake In The Oven

  1. Preheat oven to 400°F.
  2. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
  3. Arrange seasoned salmon pieces in a single layer.
  4. Bake for 10–12 minutes until cooked through.
  5. Toss with warm hot honey glaze before serving.

How To Serve Hot Honey Salmon Bites

These salmon bites are incredibly versatile and pair well with many sides and meals.

Delicious Serving Ideas

As An Appetizer

Serve with toothpicks and extra hot honey drizzle.

In Rice Bowls

Serve over:

  • White rice
  • Brown rice
  • Quinoa
  • Cauliflower rice

Add avocado, cucumber, edamame, and greens.

In Tacos

Stuff into tortillas with slaw, avocado, and lime crema.

With Pasta

Toss into buttery noodles or creamy pasta dishes.

As A Main Dish

Serve with:

  • Roasted vegetables
  • Mashed potatoes
  • Salad
  • Garlic green beans

How To Store & Reheat

Refrigerator

Store cooled salmon bites in an airtight container for up to 2 days.

If possible, store sauce separately.

Reheating

Reheat:

  • In the air fryer
  • In the oven
  • In a skillet

Avoid overheating to keep the salmon tender.


Hot Honey Salmon Bites Recipe

Prep Time

10 minutes

Cook Time

10 minutes

Total Time

20 minutes

Servings

4 servings


Ingredients

  • 1½ pounds salmon, skin removed, cut into cubes
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1 teaspoon paprika
  • 1 teaspoon garlic powder
  • 1 teaspoon onion powder
  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt
  • ½ teaspoon black pepper
  • 3 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • ¼ cup hot honey
  • Fresh parsley, chopped for garnish

Instructions

Season The Salmon

  1. Preheat air fryer to 390°F.
  2. In a large bowl, mix olive oil, paprika, garlic powder, onion powder, salt, and pepper.
  3. Add salmon bites and toss gently to coat.

Cook The Salmon

  1. Arrange salmon in a single layer in the air fryer basket.
  2. Air fry 9–10 minutes, shaking halfway through cooking.

Prepare The Glaze

  1. In a saucepan over medium heat, melt butter.
  2. Stir in hot honey until warmed through.

Toss & Serve

  1. Add cooked salmon bites to the sauce.
  2. Toss gently until coated.
  3. Garnish with parsley and serve immediately.

Tips For The Best Salmon Bites

  • Cut salmon into equal-sized pieces for even cooking.
  • Don’t overcrowd the air fryer basket.
  • Pat salmon dry before seasoning for better texture.
  • Toss gently to avoid breaking apart the salmon.
  • Serve immediately for the crispiest texture.

Variations

Garlic Hot Honey Salmon

Add minced garlic to the glaze for extra flavor.

Asian-Inspired Version

Add soy sauce and sesame oil to the glaze.

Crispy Breaded Salmon Bites

Coat salmon lightly in panko breadcrumbs before air frying.

Lemon Hot Honey Salmon

Add fresh lemon juice for brightness and balance.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use frozen salmon?

Yes, but thaw completely before cutting and seasoning.

Is hot honey very spicy?

It has mild-to-moderate heat, but you can adjust the spice level easily.

Can I make these ahead of time?

They’re best fresh, but leftovers can be reheated gently.

What air fryer works best?

Any basket-style air fryer works well as long as the salmon cooks in a single layer.

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