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When Prediction Becomes Control: The Politics of Scaled AI

Artificial intelligence does not expand human knowledge; it expands the precision with which that knowledge can be exploited. As models scale, they become instruments of prediction and optimisation that outstrip the capabilities of individuals and institutions. The central danger is not rogue AI but concentrated intelligence: a small elite or powerful state wielding tools of superior foresight, modelling and influence. Unless capability is distributed, society risks becoming captive to those who control the lens.

The Deal That Never Closed: RedBird, the Barclays and the Daily Telegraph

* Telegraph.com is completely independent from the Daily Telegraph * yet the fate of that newspaper now matters to anyone who cares about media power in Britain. This long read traces how a heavily indebted Barclay structure, Abu Dhabi linked financing, RedBird Capital and United Kingdom public interest law collided over the Daily Telegraph. It explains why the latest five hundred million pound bid has been withdrawn and why the real decision was made long before any formal refusal.

Venezuela, US Power, and Media Failure: A Critical Look at British Foreign Reporting

The Imperial Press collapses into imperial fantasy, turning America’s pressure on Venezuela into a spectacle while ignoring the moral question at its core: by what right does a powerful state kill and coerce beyond its borders. the historical errors, the military illusions, and the geopolitical hysteria behind modern British foreign reporting.

DeIndustrialisation of Germany: A Self Inflicted Wound

Germany’s de-industrialisation is not an accident but a self-inflicted collapse. By shutting nuclear plants, severing cheap Russian gas and accepting costly US LNG, Germany destroyed the energy base that powered its industry. Offshoring core manufacturing to China and arriving late to the electric-vehicle transition deepened the decline. High labour costs, rigid regulation and a bloated welfare model have finished the job. Germany dismantled itself—and now the bill is due.

The Real AI Arms Race Is Energy, Not Silicon

The race for artificial intelligence supremacy will not be won with chips alone but with cheap, abundant power. As AI models consume electricity on the scale of small cities, China’s vast renewable build-out and ultra-high-voltage grid give it a decisive structural advantage. The United States, fixated on silicon and sanctions, risks missing the real battlefield: energy sovereignty. In the new AI order, watts—not transistors—will determine who rules computation.

The End of the Page: How AI Is Replacing the Web We Knew

AI is quietly erasing the foundations of the old web. Publishers who block crawlers and cling to paywalls are locking themselves out of the next discovery layer. As assistants like ChatGPT and Perplexity deliver answers directly, pages lose their value. The homepage, the catalogue, and the paywall are relics. What replaces them is an intelligent layer where information finds the user, not the other way round.

The Collapse of the Ukraine Narrative: How Western Media Pivoted from Triumph to Retreat

For two years Western governments and media promised victory in Ukraine, portraying Russia as weak and isolated. That narrative has collapsed. Sanctions failed, NATO’s industrial base faltered, and the battlefield turned. Europe faces de-industrialisation while Russia’s economy and army expand. The press that once sold triumph now prepares audiences for retreat, conditioning the public for a negotiated peace — one dictated on Moscow’s terms, not Washington’s.

The Global Fertility Crisis: Why America, Japan, and South Korea Are Running Out of Families

In Texas and Tokyo and Seoul, thirty-year-olds now run the same arithmetic: rent that devours half a salary, jobs that can vanish tomorrow, childcare that costs more than university, and the quiet certainty that no one is coming to save them. The future no longer feels like a place that rewards commitment. Across the richest societies in history, the fertility rate has become the most honest metric we have left: a mirror held up to civilisational confidence. The reflection is merciless.

The Carbon Ledger: China Pollutes Less per Person Than America or Britain

China is often portrayed as the world’s leading polluter, yet the numbers tell another story. The United States and Europe burned through most of the planet’s carbon budget to industrialise and preserve their prosperity. An average American still uses almost three times more energy than a Chinese citizen. By any fair per-person and historical measure, the West remains the greatest emitter, and China’s industrialisation is occurring at a fraction of that cost.

Russia’s Generals Declare the Tank Dead: Inside Moscow’s Vision of the Digital Battlefield

Russia’s senior military theorists now declare the age of the tank over. In a new doctrinal paper, General Yury Baluevsky and Ruslan Pukhov describe the Ukraine war as the first true “digital war,” dominated by drones, satellites, and computing power. They argue that dispersed micro-units, autonomous systems, and real-time networks will replace massed armour and artillery. Future supremacy, they warn, will belong to nations that control chips, data, and orbiting communications rather than steel.

Fujian: The Carrier That Ends America’s Monopoly at Sea

China’s CV-18 Fujian has entered service as the world’s second electromagnetic-catapult carrier, ending decades of U.S. monopoly in carrier aviation.
It marks the moment China’s navy moved from coastal defence to blue-water power projection, fielding stealth fighters, early-warning aircraft, and an all-domestic strike group. The Fujian is more than a ship it is Beijing’s declaration that parity with the U.S. Navy has arrived.

Elections Without Consent

Markets soar, jobs shrink, and faith in the system collapses beneath the curve Democratic wins read as momentum on the surface. The deeper signal is institutional mistrust and a widening break between market outcomes...

AI Will Learn from Us and That’s What Should Terrify Us

We assume greater intelligence means greater empathy. History says otherwise. From empires to corporations, power optimises for survival, not virtue. When our creations surpass us, they’ll inherit our logic not our mercy. This is not science fiction but a mirror: the future will think like us, and that may be the most frightening outcome of all.

The British Press and the Uyghur Story It Wants You to Believe

British commentators often mistake sentiment for evidence when writing about China. Behind the emotion lies a more complex reality a multiethnic state balancing growth, control, and the legacy of violence it claims to have subdued. From mosque restorations to militant spillovers in Syria, the story of Xinjiang is not one of moral clarity but of power, order, and contested memory in an age of selective outrage.

Beijing Writes the AI Rules While Washington Writes Press Releases

While Beijing executes a three-stage national plan that defines artificial intelligence as civilisational infrastructure, Washington and London are still improvising with memos and committees. China is aligning technology, governance and diplomacy into one machine. The West still debates ethics while Beijing writes the rules of the intelligent age.

Mamdani’s Win Shows How Human Contact Can Defeat the Algorithm and the Chatbot

Zohran Mamdani’s surprise victory in New York unfolded against a background of quiet algorithmic persuasion. While voters turned to chatbots for guidance, unseen biases shaped what they heard. This essay asks whether human contact can still outmatch machine influence — and what happens when a handful of global actors own the language that defines political thought.

Getty Defeat and Meta Fair Use Win Signal Shift in AI Copyright Battles

Two courts on opposite sides of the Atlantic have handed AI developers narrow but significant wins. In London, the High Court ruled that a trained model is not an “infringing copy,” while in California, judges upheld fair use on limited facts. The real fight over data provenance, training locality, and market harm still lies ahead.

The Caribbean Standoff: Washington’s Warships and Venezuela’s Moment of Pressure

American and British warships massing off Venezuela mark not a prelude to invasion but a theatre of pressure fleets circling a crisis that looks like war yet stops short of it. With around ten thousand troops at sea, Washington appears to be testing leverage, not launching conquest. Maritime power is being used as policy: signalling, coercion and the threat of precision strikes dressed in the language of counternarcotics.

Javier Milei and the Triumph of Austrian Economics in Argentina

Javier Milei’s sweeping mid-term victory was more than a political win. It marked the first real-world test of Austrian economics the belief that free prices, hard money, and minimal state control can rebuild a nation from the ground up. After years of crisis, voters backed his radical plan to shrink government, balance the budget, and restore confidence in Argentina’s currency.

Europe’s Ukrainian war: When language replaced strategy, defeat became inevitable.

THE TELEGRAPH.COM LONG READ — Europe no longer wages war only on the battlefield. It wages it in language, in narrative, and in the stories it tells itself. A generation of leaders has replaced strategy with moral theatre, diplomacy with slogans, and truth with propaganda and now the bill for that self-deception is coming due.

Nexperia and the Law of Overreach

The Dutch government’s intervention in Nexperia is no ordinary corporate dispute. It marks the first time in peacetime that The Hague has used Cold War-era powers to take control of a functioning private company in the name of “technological security.” By removing Nexperia’s Chinese chief executive and suspending shareholder control, the state has effectively placed Europe’s largest discrete-chip producer under direct administration.
This legal commentary examines whether that act was lawful, proportionate, or politically orchestrated

America Returns to Gunboat Power in the Caribbean

In the span of two months, U.S. naval forces have turned the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific into a theatre of undeclared war launching at least fifteen lethal strikes on boats alleged to be drug carriers, leaving dozens dead and entire crews vanished at sea. Washington calls it counternarcotics. Caracas, Beijing and much of Latin America call it a return to gunboat power extrajudicial killings in peacetime waters under the flag of law enforcement.

The Scholar State in Global Competition: Wang Yi, Chinese Diplomacy and the Civilisational Divide

Chinese diplomacy cannot be understood through the language of ideology alone. Behind Wang Yi’s measured tone and deliberate cadence lies a civilisational grammar shaped by two millennia of scholar-official tradition and moral bureaucracy. Where Western diplomats see negotiation, Beijing performs continuity and legitimacy, a ritual of culture, hierarchy and virtue.

Locked Out of Power: The Price of Germany’s Refusal to Work With the AfD

A decade after the Union parties vowed never to work with the AfD, Germany’s political geometry has hardened into paralysis. The exclusion that was meant to contain the right now keeps the left in power and strengthens the very movement it tried to suppress.