In May, the Trump administration released its fiscal 2026 budget request, which called for cutting National Science Foundation and NASA science budgets by more than half. The administration’s proposed NOAA budget, released a few weeks later, proposes eliminating the agency’s scientific research arm altogether, terminating over 1,000 additional employees and shuttering around a dozen institutes,… Continue reading How Climate Scientists Saw the Future Before It Arrived
Governing at the Speed of Change: An AI-Enabled Adaptive Framework for Complex Challenges
State and local governments face increasing—and increasingly complex—economic and social problems that require more agile decisionmaking with less certainty than ever before, as RAND describes in its Social and Economic Policy Rethink Initiative. However, there may be new solutions that can support government officials as they face the future. AI technology is rapidly advancing, offering… Continue reading Governing at the Speed of Change: An AI-Enabled Adaptive Framework for Complex Challenges
A Good Night’s Sleep Is Important for Weight Loss
This Nature Outlook is editorially independent, produced with financial support from Avadel. A healthy diet and regular exercise have long been staples of weight management. But research shows that the role of sleep, which helps to regulate appetite hormones and calorie intake, is just as important. Esra Tasali, a sleep specialist at University of Chicago… Continue reading A Good Night’s Sleep Is Important for Weight Loss
Germany Has Stepped Up on Ukraine. Can It Also Lead on Upgrading Europe’s Defense Capabilities?
While there was much apprehension among European commentators leading up to U.S. President Donald Trump’s meeting with Russia’s Vladimir Putin in Alaska last month, a silver lining emerged: for once, Europe managed to present a united front. Germany, in particular, played an important role. Chancellor Friedrich Merz hosted Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy for an emergency… Continue reading Germany Has Stepped Up on Ukraine. Can It Also Lead on Upgrading Europe’s Defense Capabilities?
Interview: Grimoires & the Occult
Podcast: Download MYS383: Are demons liars who can never be trusted? Can possession stem from more than the demonic? Jimmy Akin continues his conversation with Alexander Eth from Glitch Bottle podcast and tackles grimoires, exorcism, Hermetic texts, divine hiddenness, and how the Catholic faith understands magic. Get all new episodes automatically and for free: Follow… Continue reading Interview: Grimoires & the Occult
The Quantum Mechanics of Greenhouse Gases
There’s a simple story of the greenhouse effect: A blanket of carbon dioxide envelops the planet, letting sunlight in but trapping its heat. As a result, Earth warms. But how does this actually work? Carbon dioxide amounts to only a tiny smattering of gas molecules — 0.042%, or roughly 420 parts per million — in… Continue reading The Quantum Mechanics of Greenhouse Gases
Why U.S. Public Health Needs Employers at the Table
The U.S. economic engine runs on the health of its workforce. Yet, for all the talk about GDP growth and global competitiveness, we ignore the role of public health in sustaining economic vitality. It’s time to change that. U.S. employers should become central players in the public health system, not just passive beneficiaries. The CDC,… Continue reading Why U.S. Public Health Needs Employers at the Table
The Climate Change Paradox | Quanta Magazine
The Earth’s atmosphere is nothing but freely roaming molecules. Left alone, they would drift and collide, and eventually even out into a mixture that’s dynamic, yet stable and broadly unchanging. The sun’s rays complicate things. Energy enters the Earth system in daily cycles, the bulk of it going to whichever half of the planet is… Continue reading The Climate Change Paradox | Quanta Magazine
Protecting the Public from the Risk of Political Violence
The attack on Charlie Kirk was not just a murder. It was an assault on the thousands of attendees who were there, victimizing them by making them unwilling participants in a sniper assassination. More broadly, it was an attack on civic participation and open debate—the lifeblood of democratic governance. There is, unfortunately, a risk of… Continue reading Protecting the Public from the Risk of Political Violence
Photos Capture the Extreme, Beautiful Work of Climate Science
Nearly 170 years ago, a scientist named Eunice Foote discovered a fundamental truth about the gases that surround us. In her home laboratory in New York, she filled one glass cylinder with carbon dioxide and another with regular air, placed a thermometer in each and left them out in the sun. Less than 20 minutes… Continue reading Photos Capture the Extreme, Beautiful Work of Climate Science