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Why Animal Research Needs a New Communication Strategy | The Scientist

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LLM (google/gemini-3.1-flash-lite-preview-20260303) summary:

  • Strategic Communication Needs: research institutions are encouraged to pivot toward proactive public relations to preemptively frame regulatory updates before external groups influence the narrative
  • Weaponized Transparency: publicly available regulatory data is being harvested and recontextualized by advocacy groups to generate political pressure and media scrutiny against research facilities
  • Oversight Misinterpretation: technical documentation like usda inspection reports is frequently stripped of necessary context to transform minor procedural corrections into claims of systemic failure
  • Coordinated Advocacy Tactics: activist organizations reportedly utilize social media and legislative lobbying to synchronize pressure campaigns against specific institutions like the national primate research centers
  • Regulatory Reality: the existing biomedical research framework is characterized by frequent site inspections and independent oversight, which the author describes as a robust system of stewardship
  • Institutional Vulnerability: historical silence within the scientific community is now viewed as a liability that allows misinformation to gain traction among policymakers, journalists, and the general public
  • Scientific Necessity: animal models are presented as essential to biological discovery and medical innovation, with the author claiming they remain irreplaceable by current artificial intelligence or organ chip replacements
  • Preemptive Disclosure: institutions are advised to release transparent information regarding animal welfare incidents immediately to establish factual context and mitigate potential reputational or legislative damage

To minimize misleading stories surrounding animal research, institutions should use proactive communication strategies.  

Image credit:©iStock.com, atakan
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As animal research becomes a more visible political issue, publicly available oversight records are increasingly being used to shape inaccurate narratives about essential biomedical studies. When these technical documents are presented without context, they can drive media coverage and policy proposals that misrepresent how animal research oversight actually functions. The research community must respond by communicating more proactively about regulatory systems, animal welfare protections, and the continued role of animal studies in biomedical discovery.

The Anatomy of a Modern Activist Campaign

Biomedical research with animals operates within one of the most heavily regulated environments in modern science. Facilities are routinely inspected, protocols are reviewed by independent oversight committees, and compliance documentation is publicly available. This framework reflects careful stewardship of public resources and a broad commitment to animal welfare.

Yet increasingly, the accountability that underpins this system is being repurposed as a political weapon.

Antianimal-research organizations have long relied on publicly available documents—United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) inspection reports, federal grant records, and regulatory correspondence—to misrepresent research programs and target institutions, scientists, and veterinarians. But the strategy is also evolving in an alarming way. Today, these groups not only mine public records for citations and violations, but they also watch for the political moment that will generate the greatest attention among policymakers.

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This dynamic is particularly evident in research involving species that attract heightened public scrutiny, such as nonhuman primates, dogs, and cats. Most recently, policy debates are intensifying around primate research, including discussions about the future of the National Primate Research Centers (NPRC); one such example is currently unfolding at the Oregon NPRC. Over the past several years, activists have selectively highlighted USDA inspection reports as evidence of systemic problems—even when the cited issues were addressed through the normal regulatory process— as justification for dismantling these programs or phasing out primate research altogether. These reports have become one component of broader advocacy efforts that include media outreach, coordinated social media campaigns, and appeals to lawmakers to restrict NPRC funding or impose new policy limits on primate research.

The Oregon NPRC is only one piece of a comprehensive, multi-layered strategy targeting primate research in the United States. Campaigns aimed at individual facilities often unfold in parallel with policy initiatives designed to restrict the availability of research animals (or specific species) more broadly. Currently, while domestic nonhuman primate breeding and research programs face growing pressure, activist groups work on legislative efforts to halt or limit the importation of these animals into the United States, a strategy aimed at restricting access to primates from multiple angles.

For example, in late February, in coordination with the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), Representative Nicole Malliotakis sent a letter to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), urging the immediate suspension of all nonhuman primate imports for research. The letter cites a transportation incident described in a USDA inspection report involving an imported macaque as an example that the current system is "unsafe by design." The incident—one already investigated and resolved by the time Rep. Malliotakis sent the letter—illustrates how rapidly activists use isolated episodes as catalysts for sweeping proposals when stripped of context. While HHS has yet to respond or act on the issue, it is certain that PETA and other activist groups will maintain pressure, including collaborations with other Congressional members, to force legislative action.

Public inspection reports provide an easy starting point for these campaigns. They are accessible, technical, and frequently misunderstood outside the regulatory community. A citation may reflect a minor procedural issue or a promptly corrected deficiency, yet it can be portrayed as evidence of systemic mistreatment. In some cases, reports from more than a year ago have been presented to journalists and policymakers as though they were newly discovered violations.

Consider an analogy many parents know well. Daycares regularly generate incident reports—a child fell, was bitten by a classmate, had an allergic reaction, etc. Parents sign documentation acknowledging what happened and what steps were taken. These reports do not indicate that the facility is unsafe or unsuitable for caring for children; instead, they demonstrate that the facility can recognize, respond to, and document issues transparently. Since incidents like these are unpredictable, they are an inherent aspect of this type of caregiving and indicate that professionals are doing everything possible to ensure the safety of those in their care. The same logic applies to animal research programs.

With USDA inspection reports, the pattern is predictable. Once documents are posted publicly, activists issue press releases portraying citations as evidence of widespread mistreatment. Journalists search for context and encounter that framing first, often before the institution involved has said anything publicly. If researchers respond, the narrative is already established.

Once inaccurate narratives gain traction, consequences extend well beyond the initial advocacy campaign. Media coverage follows. Legislative proposals emerge. Institutions face reputational damage before the underlying facts are fully understood. Individual scientists and veterinarians become targets for harassment. Plenty of examples illustrate the damage these campaigns can cause. In the late 2000s, protests targeting primate research at the University of California, Los Angeles escalated significantly, as researchers and animal care staff faced home demonstrations, property vandalism, online threats, and even car bomb attacks. More recently, groups such as White Coat Waste Project have inserted language in federal spending packages prohibiting the Department of Veterans Affairs from conducting research with dogs, cats, or nonhuman primates.

Yet the scientific and regulatory context surrounding animal research is deliberately absent from the activist-driven headlines that fuel sweeping anti-research campaigns. This is especially true for inspection reports or other highly technical regulatory documents where details such as corrective actions, veterinary oversight protocols, and staff training and retraining are never shared or understood by the public.

For the research community, this creates a difficult communications challenge. Historically, scientists and institutions have been largely silent about animal research, reflecting limited public-communication training, few dedicated science reporters, and a long-standing assumption that strong regulatory oversight would speak for itself. However, these recent examples demonstrate that such hesitancy is ineffective if we intend to protect animal research against these misleading attacks.

Reclaiming the Narrative Around Animal Research

The scientific community can choose a different approach, however. When institutions proactively address incidents—explaining what occurred, how it was corrected, and what safeguards are in place—they establish context before activists can fill the vacuum. In some instances, early engagement and transparent communication from the institution can prevent a story from advancing because the additional context clarifies the situation and challenges the activists’ claims that often surface weeks later.

Such actions—such as institutional press releases, updates to animal care webpages, social media communications, etc.—show accountability while reinforcing a critical point: Citations are not evidence that the system is failing. They demonstrate that oversight processes are working as intended, and that animal care staff are committed to promptly addressing issues in ways that benefit both animal welfare and the quality of the science.

Proactive communication also allows institutions to articulate what is actually at stake. Studies involving animals, including nonhuman primates, remain essential for advancing treatments for neurological conditions, infectious threats, and rare diseases that cannot yet be fully modeled with AI models or organ chips. While new approach methodologies are expanding the scientific toolbox, they complement, rather than replace, the biological insights that carefully conducted animal studies continue to provide.

This is an important point to make clearly, particularly as policymakers grapple with questions about research funding and specific animal research programs. If isolated regulatory citations become the primary lens through which lawmakers evaluate animal research, policy discussions will overlook the rigorous oversight systems already in place and the scientific progress those systems support. The result will be policies that stifle medical innovation and jeopardize public health.

None of these mean institutions should minimize legitimate problems, especially if animal welfare is compromised. Openness and accountability are essential for maintaining public trust. But communication strategies must now evolve alongside the political landscape. That means anticipating how publicly available information might be interpreted—or misinterpreted—and ensuring that accurate context is available before misleading narratives take hold, not just with the public, but with lawmakers, journalists, and federal agency leaders.

Researchers and institutions cannot control how activist groups frame their campaigns nor completely prevent activist targeting. But they can control whether policymakers, journalists, and the public hear the full story.

In an era when regulatory transparency is weaponized, proactive communication is no longer optional. It is essential to protect both the credibility of animal research and the medical discoveries it enables.

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Ancient DNA Reveals What Actually Happened to Ordinary Europeans After the Western Roman Empire Fell

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LLM (google/gemini-3.1-flash-lite-preview-20260303) summary:

  • Genetic Gradualism: archaeological evidence suggests the decline of roman influence occurred through slow demographic transitions rather than instantaneous military upheaval.
  • Mythical Invasions: persistent narratives regarding sudden barbarian hordes destroying civilization are contradicted by genomic data showing long term regional integration.
  • Frontier Fluidity: border zones acted as heterogeneous mixing chambers where military, labor, and local populations interacted long before the collapse of central authority.
  • Social Coalescence: demographic shifts were characterized by individual and small kinship movements finding new opportunities as archaic state structures dissolved.
  • Cultural Adaptation: the absence of distinct disparities in burial goods suggests that northern and provincial populations adopted shared social practices despite diverse ancestral origins.
  • Kinship Structures: burial layouts and family clustering indicate that local lineage dynamics remained stable and were heavily influenced by established christian traditions.
  • Demographic Reality: life expectancy and child mortality statistics provide a bleak baseline for existence, characterizing the post-imperial transition as a survival of small, tightly-knit networks.
  • European Synthesis: the formation of present-day genetic profiles in central europe evolved over a century and a half through localized breeding and gradual cultural assimilation.

Illustration of farmers on the right walking towards a distant farmhouse and church and walking away from an old roman column and helmet on the left

The end of Rome supposedly came as suddenly as thunder, relative to history’s long arc.

The legions withdraw from their frontiers, opening the door to the barbarian hoards descending from the misty north, a tide of blond warriors rolling across the Rhine and Danube, trampling villas, cities, and laws beneath their leather or bare feet. Both in schoolbooks and popular imagination, 476 AD stands like a sword stroke: the year Romulus Augustulus, the teenage emperor of the Western Roman Empire, was deposed by the barbarian general Odoacer, and the Roman world gave way to the Dark Ages.

But the DNA from that period in southern Germany suggests the late Roman world was not swiftly overrun by barbarian tribes. Instead, the genetic evidence points to a slow and gradual shift that occurred through small-scale intermarriage between locals and newcomers.

In row after row of early medieval graves, beneath jewelry, weapons, clothing clasps, and the bones of families buried close together, researchers have found not the mark of a sudden conquest, but the traces of neighbors becoming kin. The analysis of 258 ancient genomes from cemeteries along Rome’s old northern frontier suggests that the collapse of imperial power did not unleash a vast barbarian replacement. Instead, it loosened the structures that had kept people apart, leading to a genetic melting pot in Europe. But the pot was slow-cooked.

Remarkably, something recognizably European began to take shape.

A Frontier that Was Never a Hard Barrier

Map showing ancient river systems and geological features in Europe and Asia.The Upper Germanic-Raetian Limes (green) marked the border of the Roman Empire until the second half of the third century ce, then replaced by the Danube-Iller-Rhine Limes (red) until the late fifth century CE. Credit: Nature, 2026.

The Roman frontier, or limes, was not an impenetrable wall between civilization and wilderness. It was a military zone, a marketplace, a tax boundary, a road network, and a cultural pressure cooker.

In what is now southern Germany, the Rhine and Danube marked the shifting edge of imperial authority. Fort cities such as Mainz, Regensburg, Trier, and Cologne grew from military and administrative roots. Around the soldiers that were on duty from all corners of the empire, lived farmers, laborers, local communities, and people settled under Roman supervision.

For centuries, these groups lived side by side, though they did not necessarily live together.

“Before the fall of the Western Roman Empire, there were distinct social groups inhabiting Roman territory,” said Professor Joachim Burger, a geneticist at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz and senior author of the study, in El País. One group, he explained, had ancestors from northern Europe and “likely lived as an endogamous minority in rural areas, working as agricultural laborers, possibly on land allocated by the Roman administration.”

Romans Et Al.

The other group lived in “Roman cities, villas, and military settlements,” Burger told El País. “They represented almost all the genetic diversity of the Roman frontier, from Britain to the Balkans.”

The traditional image of Rome’s fall imagines people outside the empire bursting in. But the new study, which analyzed 258 newly generated genomes from the Roman frontier between 400 and 700 AD, alongside 2,500 ancient and 379 modern genomes, shows that many people with northern ancestry were already inside or near Roman territory before the famous year of 476.

A researcher at the State Collection for Anthropology Munich (SAM) examines the skeleton of a woman who lived between 510 and 560 AD and was buried at the village of Altheim, Germany, in this undated photograph taken in Munich, Germany, and released on April 29, 2026. Credit: SAM/Harbeck

The earliest burials at Altheim, one of the main sites in the study, date to the early fifth century. These people clustered genetically with ancient and present-day populations from northern Germany, Denmark, and the Netherlands. Yet shared DNA segments suggest that many had already been established in the Roman frontier zone by the late fourth century. They didn’t just arrive as a single conquering host after the empire fell.

“That’s really important to put to bed — these romantic images of great peoples moving across the European countryside and destroying the Roman Empire,” commented Patrick Geary, a medieval historian at the Institute for Advanced Study who was not involved in the study, in Nature.

What the Graves Revealed

Three siblings, unearthed in Ergoldsbach, Bavaria, a town dating back to the early Middle Ages. Credit: Kreisarchäologie Landshut/ Richter.

The researchers focused on so-called row-grave cemeteries. These burial grounds appeared from around 450 AD across former Roman frontier regions, stretching from northern France and the Netherlands to northern Italy and western Hungary. People were buried in rows, often with personal belongings such as jewelry, weapons, clothing, and vessels. In southern Germany, these cemeteries usually belonged to small agrarian communities that grew crops and raised livestock. Some graves already showed Christian symbols by the end of the fifth century.

“Row grave cemeteries were a newly emerging early-medieval burial practice where individuals were buried in rows,” said Jens Blöcher, a population geneticist at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz and study lead author, in Reuters. “These cemeteries stretched across the former Roman frontier from the Netherlands to Hungary.”

The team examined sites in two main regions: the Danube-Isar area in Bavaria, especially Altheim, and the Rhine-Main area, including Büttelborn and Mömlingen. The cemeteries were scattered across the old frontier, with the Upper Germanic-Raetian Limes and later Danube-Iller-Rhine Limes marking the changing Roman border.

Besides DNA, the researchers combined ancient genomes with archaeological dating, radiocarbon measurements, bone analysis, grave goods, and strontium isotopes, which can reveal whether someone grew up locally or elsewhere. They also developed a Bayesian method called Chronograph to refine birth and death dates, and used a method called filia to infer ancestry from reconstructed family trees.

In plainer terms, they did not only ask: where did these people’s ancestors come from? They also asked: who married whom? Who buried their children nearby? Who lived long enough to know a grandchild?

That is where the story changes.

The year 470 and the loosening of Rome’s grip

Mean ancestry proportions of individuals alive at a given time in a model with 13 source populations, including local reference groups from the region. Credit: Nature, 2026.

The decisive shift came around 470 AD.

At Altheim, the earliest phase, between 400 and 470, contained people mostly of northern European ancestry. After 470, people with ancestry linked to Roman provincial populations began appearing in the rural hinterland. Some had genetic ties to central Italy. Others to southeastern Europe, especially the Balkans. Others even to Britain. One individual even carried substantial East Asian and western Steppe ancestry.

In one model of Altheim’s population between 470 and 620, the major ancestry sources included northern Europe, 34%; north Britain, 9%; Roman southeastern Europe, 20%; and Iron Age central Italy, 16%. The Balkan signal probably reflects the Roman army, which recruited heavily from southeastern Europe.

“The temporal alignment between the fall of the Western Roman Empire in Italy and the genetic shift we detect in southern Germany is remarkably precise,” Burger told Reuters.

The paper argues that as Roman military, legal, and economic structures weakened, people who had once been tied to estates, garrisons, landlords, or administrative arrangements could move more freely. Dependent peasants, slaves, laborers, merchants, and families began seeking new places in a world where old institutions no longer held them in place.

“Many had to seek new homes and migrated throughout the territory, where they encountered farmers of northern ancestry. From the outset, they began to mix,” Burger told El País.

The result was not a clean replacement of one people by another. It was messier, more human, and more historically plausible.

“Crucially, this influx was not driven by large, ethnically homogeneous tribal blocs or major clans, but rather by small kinship groups and even isolated individuals. This pattern directly contradicts the traditional narrative of a ‘mass barbarian invasion’ following Rome’s collapse,” Burger said in Reuters.

Barbarians, Romans, and the Problem With Labels

Researchers at the State Collection for Anthropology Munich (SAM) examine skeletons unearthed at the village of Altheim, Germany, in this undated photograph taken in Munich, Germany, and released on April 29, 2026. Credit: SAM/Harbeck

The word “barbarian” has always told us more about Roman prejudice than about the people it described.

To the Roman elite, a barbarian was basically anyone beyond the pale of Roman language, law, and manners. But by the fifth century, the frontier had blurred that distinction. Northern groups could serve Rome, farm Roman land, adopt Roman customs, and bury their dead in ways that blended local and imperial traditions. Roman soldiers, meanwhile, might come from Britain, the Balkans, Italy, or beyond.

“People from the northern regions had already migrated south in small groups long before the fall of the Western Roman Empire and had gradually adopted Roman customs,” Blöcher said in a statement quoted by El País.

This helps explain one of the study’s striking findings: ancestry and culture did not map neatly onto each other.

Blurring Lines

At Altheim, people with different genetic backgrounds were not buried in obviously different ways. The researchers found no systematic contrast in grave goods between those with more northern ancestry and those with more Roman provincial ancestry. In that rural cemetery, material culture seems to have been largely detached from genetic origin.

“Traditionally, the whole story . . . was seen as a clash of civilizations between Germanic hordes in the north and the Roman Empire in the south,” Burger told Scientific American. The new study, he said, points instead to “a story of peaceful integration.”

This does not mean the fifth century was entirely peaceful because the historical reality was far from it. It’s just that the shifting demographics didn’t occur with the descent of a huge horde of outsiders as previously largely believed. Rome’s western provinces suffered war, political fragmentation, economic strain, and military breakdown. But the genetic evidence suggests that in this part of the old frontier, the making of early medieval society depended less on conquest than on local movement, marriage, and adaptation.

Families after empire

By reconstructing pedigrees, the researchers found immediate intermarriage between people of mostly northern ancestry and those with Roman Azlburg-like ancestry after the demographic shift.

At Büttelborn, the graves reveal families buried with remarkable closeness. The cemetery plan shows clusters of parents, children, and relatives arranged in space, as if kinship itself had shaped the geography of burial. At Altheim, first- to fourth-degree relatives were buried significantly closer together than unrelated people. Spouses also tended to be interred near one another.

“It was really a tight kin group,” said Toomas Kivisild, a professor of human evolutionary genetics at KU Leuven who was not involved in the study, in Scientific American. Other post-Roman communities, such as those in England, did not show the same intensity of family clustering, he noted.

There’s a lot you can learn from this. Monogamy appears to have been the norm. Close-kin marriage was rare. Widows did not seem to remarry within their husband’s family. Levirate unions, in which a widow marries a male relative of her deceased husband, were absent.

“The family structure we find in southern medieval Germany closely reflects that of late Roman antiquity. Since this was a fully Christian era, this pattern is essentially Christian,” Burger told El País.

The collapse of Rome’s formal institutions did not mean Roman ways disappeared with them. Family customs, legal habits, and Christian moral ideals survived the fall of imperial government. They passed into communities that later historians might have called Germanic.

“At the time, this is a quite unique and new pattern that was developed in late Roman society and even codified in laws,” Burger told Scientific American. “But now we see it … in an early medieval, presumably Germanic society. So late antiquity isn’t actually finished; it’s just transforming into a new, less urban and more agricultural society.”

A Hard Life

The study also gives us some rare numbers for ordinary lives in the early Middle Ages.

Using Chronograph, the researchers estimated a generation time of 28 years. Life expectancy was 43.3 years for men and 39.8 years for women. Boys died before age seven at a rate of about 9.7%, compared with 7.8% for girls. After childhood, however, women faced higher mortality, likely because pregnancy and childbirth carried grave risks.

Nearly a quarter of children had lost at least one parent by age 10. Yet most were not entirely alone. The study estimates that 81.8% of children had at least one grandparent alive at birth, and 67.4% still had a grandparent alive at age 10.

We often imagine premodern childhood as a bleak landscape of orphanhood and loss. Loss was indeed common. But so was grandparenthood. Families may have absorbed shocks through wider kin networks. A child who lost a father might still grow up with a mother, grandmother, uncle, or older sibling nearby.

Rebecca Flemming, a historian of ancient disease at the University of Exeter who was not involved in the study, told Nature that the life expectancy and child mortality results surprised her because previous studies of the period have suggested lower life expectancies and higher child mortality. She called the genomic analysis “quite a valuable contribution.”

The Birth of a New Europe

By the early seventh century, the genetic profile of these communities had begun to resemble that of modern central Europeans seen in genetic studies today. The transformation took roughly 150 years. Northern ancestry remained numerically strong, while Roman-related ancestry left a smaller but lasting signal. Later northern and eastern inputs would further shape the region.

The authors even suggest that networks among people of northern ancestry may have helped early Germanic dialects spread into southern Germany, where Latin and local languages such as Gaulish had probably once dominated. This remains harder to prove than ancestry or kinship, but it fits a broader pattern: after Rome, language, law, land, and family all shifted together, though not always at the same pace.

Zuzana Hofmanová, an archaeogeneticist at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology who was not involved in the work, told Nature that the study shows how genetics can enrich history. “It can bring insights into the life of people that might not have been written about.”

That may be the study’s greatest achievement.

The new findings were reported in the journal Nature.

Tibi Puiu

Tibi is a science journalist and co-founder of ZME Science. He writes mainly about emerging tech, physics, climate, and space. In his spare time, Tibi likes to make weird music on his computer and groom felines. He has a B.Sc in mechanical engineering and an M.Sc in renewable energy systems.

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How to Make Vladimir Putin’s Year - WSJ

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LLM (google/gemini-3.1-flash-lite-preview-20260303) summary:

  • Military Withdrawal: trump seeks to remove 5,000 troops from germany following personal friction with chancellor friedrich merz.
  • Diplomatic Friction: the presidential reaction stems from the german chancellors public comments regarding iran and u.s. policy credibility.
  • Alliance Strain: planned reductions in troop presence and missile deployments threaten the operational cohesion of nato.
  • Geopolitical Risks: eroding forward deployment signals potential weakness to vladimir putin regarding western resolve in border states.
  • Strategic Inconsistency: critics argue that relocating forces to eastern european allies like poland or estonia would be more effective than total withdrawal.
  • Burden Sharing: the administration frames troop cuts as a response to european defense spending despite documented increases by regional partners.
  • Global Security: instability in the strait of hormuz and the ongoing conflict in ukraine create high stakes for maintaining transatlantic military unity.
  • Administrative Intent: internal pressure exists within the u.s. government to pursue a significant military retreat from the european continent.

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An Editor at Large: It’s bad enough that the President got serious about tariffs, says columnist Gerard Baker, but how in the world did he end up embracing regime change? Photo: Matt Rourke/Associated Press

America’s friends in Europe are finally awake from their long nap after the Cold War and are spending more on their own defense. President Trump deserves credit for this progress, so it’s especially regrettable that he’s squandering this alliance repair by threatening to yank a U.S. Army brigade from Germany.

Mr. Trump is sore at German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who took an unfortunate shot last week by saying Iran is humiliating the U.S. in the Strait of Hormuz. That may play well in Germany, where Mr. Trump is unpopular, but it was bound to incite the U.S. President.

Mr. Trump has responded by announcing plans to pull 5,000 U.S. troops from Germany and threatening more. “We’re going to cut way down,” he told the press. “And we’re cutting a lot further than 5,000.” About 85,000 U.S. troops are in Europe, and Germany is the biggest outpost (roughly 35,000). The President is also unhappy about Europe’s lack of help in the war with Iran, and he has a point even if he didn’t consult the allies first.

But the President’s anti-NATO pique is sending a terrible message to Vladimir Putin, which won’t help Mr. Trump’s goal of ending the war in Ukraine. That conflict is grinding on, at great human cost, with no peace settlement in sight. Another day, another 268 Russian drones fired into Ukraine, the Institute for the Study of War says in its May 3 update.

The press reports say the Pentagon will also cancel a planned long-range missile unit deployment to Germany. This is the superior firepower that discourages Mr. Putin from provoking a crisis in the Baltic states. Mr. Putin hasn’t been able to subdue Ukraine, and Russia’s economy is beleaguered. But that’s all the more reason to be prepared in case he decides his best option is to escalate by testing NATO’s resolve in a border state.

Mr. Trump’s weekend moves have earned a rebuke from the GOP defense hands in Congress, Rep. Mike Rogers (Ala.) and Sen. Roger Wicker (Miss.). The men are correct that the brigade is moving in the wrong direction.

“Rather than withdrawing forces from the continent altogether,” the pair said in a joint statement, “it is in America’s interest to maintain a strong deterrent in Europe by moving these 5,000 U.S. forces to the east.”

If Mr. Trump wanted to reward allies who are stalwart about their defense, he would relocate those 5,000 troops to Poland (4.48% of GDP spent on defense in 2025) or Estonia (3.38%). This also makes strategic sense given the geography of the Russian threat.

Alas, the Merz flap may be cover for those in the Trump Administration who want a larger U.S. retreat from Europe. The Pentagon’s defense strategy says Europe must take “primary responsibility for its own conventional defense.” Dressing that up as “burden-sharing” is false advertising given that Europe is now sharing more of the military burden. Americans may be tired of Europe, but U.S. leadership is still essential to making NATO a credible deterrent in the coming years as Mr. Putin (and perhaps a successor) seeks to push Russia’s sphere of dominance to the west.

Russia is also helping Iran bedevil the U.S. in the Strait of Hormuz, including intel on U.S. targeting. This is another reason not to send a message of appeasement to Mr. Putin, who wants nothing more than dividing the U.S. from Europe and blowing up NATO.

imageServicemen at the U.S. Air Force Base in Ramstein, Germany, June 6, 2023. Heiko Becker/Reuters
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Exclusive: Metalenz Has Figured Out a Way to Make Face ID Invisible | WIRED

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LLM (google/gemini-3.1-flash-lite-preview-20260303) summary:

  • Hardware Obsolescence: the persistent industry obsession with eliminating screen cutouts has led to the constant redesign of smartphone housing.
  • Metasurface Innovation: a startup is marketing flat-lens technology that uses nanostructures to replace bulky, multi-element optical components.
  • Manufacturing Scale: claims regarding hundreds of millions of units already deployed in minor sensor roles are being used to justify further market integration.
  • Polarization Utility: the system identifies materials based on light reflection, creating yet another invasive layer of data for machine learning algorithms to process.
  • Biometric Security Claims: the marketing of a new facial recognition platform asserts superiority over existing systems by allegedly differentiating human skin from silicone masks.
  • Corporate Integration: partnerships with major silicon manufacturers are intended to ensure this proprietary hardware reaches mass production by 2027.
  • Under Display Implementation: developers are attempting to embed sensors beneath active panels despite previous industry failures to maintain image quality.
  • Planned Market Rollout: promises of invisible, seamless surveillance hardware are scheduled to hit consumer devices through iterative releases between 2027 and 2028.

familiar with the notch—the unsightly cut-in that graced many smartphones for years, like the iPhone X or the LG G7.

The notch has largely been replaced on today’s smartphones by floating punch-hole cameras that take up less space and look a little more futuristic, though notches are still prevalent on some laptops, like Apple’s MacBooks.

On the iPhone, Apple calls its floating pill-shaped camera system the Dynamic Island, which debuted on the iPhone 14. The iPhone still has the largest camera cutout today, due to its Face ID biometric authentication system. (Barring Google Pixel phones, the vast majority of Android phones don't offer a secure face authentication equivalent, so they don't need a bulky camera cutout.) This island could get much smaller, however, thanks to new under-display camera technology announced at Display Week 2026 from Metalenz, a optics startup from Boston.

A Primer on Metasurfaces

Metalenz’s optical metasurfaces technology is a flat-lens system that uses a fraction of the space of traditional multi-lens elements in most smartphones. You can read more about it in our original coverage of the company here, but in short, instead of refracting light through multiple plastic or glass lens elements—which improves image clarity, corrects aberrations, and brings more light to the camera sensor—metasurfaces use a single lens with nanostructures to bend light rays toward the sensors.

Metalenz says more than 300 million of its metasurfaces are already used in consumer devices today, replacing bulky traditional optics in time-of-flight sensors that capture depth information and assist with a camera's autofocus.

The company also pioneered a method to use these metasurfaces to capture polarization data. When light hits an object with specific material properties, it creates a unique polarization signature. Light reflecting off black ice has a different polarization signature from light reflecting off the road. Using machine learning algorithms, this enables a system that can quickly identify black ice on the road and alert the driver.

Computer Hardware electronics showing Metalenz prototype
Photograph: Courtesy of Metalenz

That's why the company developed Polar ID, a facial authentication platform to rival Apple's Face ID. With polarization data, its sensors can distinguish a real face from someone wearing an eerily accurate 3D mask of the same person, because the polarization information from light bouncing off a human's skin is unique compared to light bouncing off the silicone of the mask. Yes, it's even more secure than Google's face unlock system on Pixels, which can be spoofed with a high-quality 3D mask.

Metalenz announced a partnership with Qualcomm in late 2023 to scale it up, and now this Polar ID face-recognition system is finally ready for mass production. It will be deployed on consumer devices—laptops and smartphones—in 2027. Its rollout could mean that Android finally gets a Face ID equivalent, with components that use less space than Apple's TrueDepth camera system, and unlike Google's face unlock, it isn’t affected by bright light or dim environments.

“We've now proven with multiple third parties that have done testing that we meet the highest security standards they have in terms of performance, in terms of keeping out masks and any mask of any quality,” Rob Devlin, CEO of Metalenz, tells WIRED.

But the next step? Making those components disappear from view.

The Under-Display Camera

At Display Week, a display technology convention in Los Angeles, Metalenz showed off how its Polar ID system could work underneath an OLED display. You'll still have a selfie camera visible on the screen for, you know, selfies. But the Polar ID system would sit next to it under the display, where it’s effectively invisible.

This isn't the first time we've seen under-display cameras—Samsung famously employed one on several iterations of its Galaxy Z Fold folding smartphone—but image quality greatly suffers when the camera is stuffed under the display. This is likely why Samsung switched to a traditional punch-hole camera on its latest Z Fold7.

A grid of six images showing the differences between camera lenses
Photograph: Courtesy of Metalenz

That isn't much of a problem with a sensor designed to capture polarization data. Devlin says the signal does get slightly distorted by hiding under the display, and you lose some intensity, but the polarization information largely remains unchanged. You can see in the example image above—the top three images are what the traditional Polar ID sensor sees, and the set below is what it sees when Polar ID is underneath an OLED display.

The display needs a thinned-out section to house the Polar ID sensor, meaning this system requires tight integration with the display manufacturer. But adding that thinner region should not affect panel quality. (Devlin says the company is in early conversations with a few of the bigger smartphone manufacturers but didn’t divulge details.) “You can't really even tell that there is a thinned-out region,” Devlin says about the display.

Over a video call, I watched a demo of Devlin testing Polar ID under OLED, and the system had no trouble authenticating his face or discerning when he was wearing a 3D mask.

“Folks have decided to differentiate along a continuous display versus Apple’s interrupted display,” Devlin says. “So I think this is also something that can really offer face unlock in a truly seamless manner—seamless in the sense that you don't even feel like you're securely unlocking your phone when you are.”

You can imagine that this under-display camera could prove useful not just in phones but in laptops that want to eliminate the notch for a continuous display. While Polar ID will arrive on devices in 2027, Devlin says the under-display version is likely an extra year out and should land in the market in 2028.

Smartphone companies have long been infatuated with an uninterrupted screen experience while minimizing the black bars around the panel, with some, like Samsung, exploring under-display cameras and others even trying pop-up cameras that mechanically rise up out of the phone's frame. It is likely why Android phone makers haven't fully adopted a Face ID-like biometric authentication system: The hardware was too bulky and expensive to justify interrupting a beautiful, edge-to-edge display. Polar ID’s solution might finally give them the security they need without the “island” they've been trying to avoid.

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Elon Musk’s plan to save humanity // He is bent on remaking the world

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  • Consolidation of Infrastructure: The subject is currently integrating his diverse enterprises—including Tesla, SpaceX, xAI, and X—into a vertically integrated AGI platform state to control energy generation, computing, data, and transportation.
  • Orbital Dominance: Leveraging SpaceX's satellite network, the objective is to move critical data processing and solar energy harvesting into orbit, effectively bypassing terrestrial state control and traditional regulatory constraints.
  • Automation Paradigm: The strategy centers on the rapid replacement of both manual and cognitive human labor with humanoid robots and advanced AI models, significantly diminishing the economic relevance of human workers.
  • Financial Disintermediation: Through the deployment of the xMoney payments platform and potential integration of cryptocurrencies, the initiative seeks to operate independently of traditional banking systems and sovereign monetary policies.
  • Technological Singularity: The underlying motivation is an aggressive push toward the Singularity, where recursive machine intelligence and automation render conventional human governance, markets, and economic processes obsolete.
  • Ambition vs. Reality: While the subject has a history of missed deadlines and hyperbolic rhetoric, his proven ability to disrupt global industries demands that his capacity for profound, large-scale technological transformation be taken seriously.

Trickster, hypester, bullshit artist, Elon Musk is a profoundly ambiguous figure. A libertarian, an exponent of slashing the state, he built a business empire on subsidies and government contracts. Committed to truth, his platforms spread deepfakes and lies. Committed to freedom, he interferes in European politics, and supports the far right. Driven by a desire to save humanity, he builds the tools and technologies that may come to supersede us. What accounts for such a man, the burning energy, the chaotic contradiction? The figure, perhaps, of the hero — a creature of psychoanalysis, and one too of History.

Heroes are born in the denial of death. To Ernst Becker, writing in the Seventies, this is the root of human character, and of human heroism. Fearing death, we strive to make meaning, to achieve cosmic significance through that which lies beyond ourselves. Heroes are born in this struggle, yet so too is tragedy — for the cosmic impulse of the hero can come to justify any sacrifice.

Today, Elon Musk would bring humanity to Mars, foster abundance on Earth, and seed intelligence across the stars. To him, we stand alone in the universe — a dim and flickering light of consciousness set amid an endless dark. Bound to a single planet, this light is at risk — and so, using SpaceX, we must settle Mars. Through Tesla, Musk plans to “end scarcity” — to engineer a world free from want, a place of “sustainable abundance” powered by the limitless light of the sun and served by millions of robots. Enabling these transformations will be intelligence — the intelligence of artificial minds, built from and operating within a vast orbital infrastructure of computation. With abundance assured, and bound no longer by the limits of earthly physics, these minds would then be free — free to observe, analyze, and colonize the universe.

“Should they come into fruition, his plans would forever undermine the salience, the power, even the meaning, of nations, states, markets, and the societies that ungird them.”

Musk’s vision begins and ends in the problem of meaning. Should they come into fruition, his plans would forever undermine the salience, the power, even the meaning, of nations, states, markets, and the societies that undergird them. He would birth a new form of power: the AGI platform state. Yet the scale of his ambition makes even this warning seem parochial — for Musk, in truth, aims  to break the fundamental constraints of our existence. In doing so he risks not just humanity, but meaning itself.

We live in an age where the wildest precepts of science fiction have become not only imaginable, but investable. That this is so owes much to Elon Musk. Erratic, distractable, willfully controversial, he is nevertheless an industrial titan, a man who with any one part of his portfolio would have made an enduring mark on the annals of mankind. Through Tesla, he has transformed markets in electric vehicles, solar energy and batteries; through SpaceX, he revolutionized satellites, internet access, and space flight. He owns X, one of the world’s leading social media platforms, and xAI, which leverages X data to build Grok, a leading AI system. With Neuralink, he has transformed the ability of humans to interact with machines, providing hope to immobile and paralyzed people across the world. He was a founder of OpenAI, the creator of the world’s first major AI tool; through Optimus, a Tesla subsidiary, he plans to mass produce and commercialize humanoid robots.

Musk is creating the future — and, to read the statements of his companies, it will be a glorious place. Tesla’s stated mission is the elimination of scarcity via sustainable abundance, a world of “global prosperity”, “human thriving”, and “economic growth shared by all”. To Tesla and to Musk, growth is infinite, and innovation removes constraints. This future will be achieved by nothing less than “redefining the fundamental building blocks of labor, mobility and energy at scale and for all” — an extraordinary and, should it come into reality, epoch-making statement of intent. But these dreams of technological liberation, the very real results Musk has already achieved, and the astonishing scope of his ambition, are also creating something else — a vertical stack of power unlike any wielded in human history, and one with the scope to transform the basis of history. The contours of this power structure are increasingly visible through his business deals.

Deal by deal, Musk is refashioning his empire. His companies, previously separate and dispersed, are being consolidated, merged, and floated. At the same time, he is launching new ventures. In 2025, xAI — his AI company, and the owner of Grok — bought X, his social media company. SpaceX, his space flight and satellite business, has now acquired xAI itself.  Sources suggest that the deal valued xAi at $91 billion, and SpaceX at $1 trillion — making it the most valuable private company ever to have existed. On 10 March, Musk announced that X — owned now by SpaceX — is launching a payments platform, xMoney. On the 21st March, Musk announced a further venture — Terafab, a three-way collaboration between Tesla, SpaceX, and xAI, one dedicated to manufacturing semiconductors. SpaceX — a company therefore combining rockets, satellites, artificial intelligence, and shortly payments and chips too — is now planning an IPO. With a valuation as high as $2 trillion, this would be the largest IPO in history, and one with heavenly ambitions — for Musk intends to put a million data centers in space.

A million data centers in space, a sustainably abundant robot future; few things could seem more absurd. A creature of irony, the object and progenitor of innumerable memes, Musk knows how and when to grab attention of his markets, investors and employees. Throughout his career, he has repeatedly overpromised and under-delivered — in the short run. He promised autonomous driving by 2019, a million Tesla robotaxis by 2020; Mars colonies by 2022; none of these promises quite came true. Musk bullshits, and Musk overpromises. To focus on this, however, would be a mistake. Like him or loathe him, Musk has a history of effecting transformational commercial change, change driven by grandiose ideas of the future. With Musk, above all, we must judge the man not by what he says, but by what he builds.

Behind Musk’s recent deals is a logic of power and control, a logic we would do well to consider. He is aiming for vertical integration — control of energy generation, of computing infrastructure, of data and the sources of data, of internet connectivity, of transport, and control of manual labor. It is a question of power — energetic power, computational power, and commercial power. Control over each enables the greater growth of the other; taken together, they give him end-to-end control over AI, the basis of AI, and the tools through which AI is expressed. Multi-billion dollar valuations suggest we must take his plans seriously — but taking it seriously suggests a vista far greater, far more alarming in scope, than that conjured by even the most hyperactive investment analyst. Musk is betting not simply on growth — he is betting on the singularity.

Read the news, talk with friends, experiment with Claude or OpenAI; something strange, something singular, is occurring all around you. The cognitive capabilities of human beings — our capacity for reason, for language, for calculation — are being scraped, abstracted, and automated. Tasks that would take weeks — designing an image, writing a story, building a financial model, developing an app — can be compressed now into days, hours, minutes. Across the “higher” industries, a tsunami of change approaches. Goldman Sachs estimates that 25% of all American work tasks are exposed to automation, and 300 million workers globally. Administrative, legal, and financial  jobs are particularly vulnerable: 46%, 44%, and 35% of their respective work tasks are currently considered automatable. This may, however, prove to be a severe underestimate — for the AI models are improving at an exponential rate, and automation is not limited to desk jobs, those involving “higher” cognitive skills. In Beijing, Los Angeles, and shortly London, driverless cars now compete with those driven by humans. Humanoid robots are entering use in factories, warehouses, and restaurants; soon we may also see them on the streets, and in our homes; in time, such robots may become no more exceptional than a washing machine, an ordinary item of domestic tooling. Given the imminent reality of both cognitive and physical automation,  another possibility presents itself — one of entirely automated economic activity, of companies led by AI, served by robots, and working to the benefit of AI-controlled shareholders.

In this world, the relative value of human labor will collapse, machines will recursively self-improve, and capital — the intangible capital of AI models, the physical capital of servers, robots and rockets — will leap into the stars. Wittingly or otherwise, Musk is developing a self-sovereign vertical infrastructure of dominion, one explicitly designed to serve and accelerate this future and the artificial general intelligence it relies on — the AGI platform state, a new state form that is designed to advance the needs not of humans, but of AI. The AGI platform state arises in the infrastructure of disintermediation, physical automation, orbital independence, and the unifying layer of data and intelligence. The tools of the AGI state span energy generation, internet access, satellite technology, payments infrastructure, robotics, data collection, and intelligence itself.

Already, satellite internet shows us how orbital infrastructure side-steps territorial power. Through Starlink, SpaceX now owns 97% of all satellite internet usage. At sea, in warzones, and in remote and isolated areas, thousands of Starlink satellites — solar-powered, and kilometers above the earth — now provide internet access. Business deals deepen this capacity; in 2025, SpaceX acquired the spectrum rights of the telecommunications company EchoStar — providing it with the ability to provide satellite to smartphone internet access, entirely unmediated by terrestrial infrastructure. In great swathes of the planet, internet and cellular access no longer relies upon terrestrial power, disintermediating the state. This is real, highly material power. On the battlefields of Ukraine, Starlink connectivity is a matter of life and death, and one operated at the will of Elon Musk. Russia itself — a high-tech military power, and a leading player in the 20th century space race — relied heavily on Starlink; when Musk withdrew access, they lost territory.

Musk’s occasional goofiness belies an ultra-serious vision. Credit: Getty

If SpaceX side-steps state control of communication, then xMoney is designed to side-step banks. In time, it may also side-step sovereign control of money. Envisioned as an “everything app”, xMoney will enable peer-to-peer fiat payments, a debit card, and cash deposits — circumventing banks, and the states that rely on banks. Fiat money, of course, requires the state — but what if xMoney accepts crypto? Musk — aka “the Dogefather” — is a well-documented lover of cryptocurrencies, in particular that of Dogecoin. Should xMoney accept crypto, or issue its own crypto, backed perhaps by the assets of SpaceX, this would be a further sign of independent ambition — for it would be uncontrolled by any sovereign state. This matters for power today, and power tomorrow. Little appreciated outside blockchain circles is the role of stablecoins and cryptocurrencies in facilitating the AI agent economy. Peer-to-peer microtransactions, conducted at digital speeds, are likely to be the basis for economic exchange between robots — thus enabling a whole new sphere of economic activity, and one with decreasing ties to states. xMoney is tied to X.com — a pairing of individuals’ financial access with social media activity. Both, of course, will generate data: the primary input into AI models, and a central power resource in the age of AI. Data, and the power derived from data, is at the core of Musk’s vertical mission — and we can see this reality embodied in Tesla.

Tesla is the world’s most valuable carmaker — but it is much more than that. It is an industrial force, a multi-market behemoth, and the centerpiece of Musk’s plans for terrestrial power. A public company, it holds $1.31 trillion in market capitalization, placing it among the world’s 10 most valuable businesses. It holds a 59% share of the American electric vehicle market, and — though subject to increasingly strong competition — 7.7% of the global market. To develop the company, and with it to revolutionize the global EV market, Tesla has repeatedly re-imagined the limits of EV technology and industrial practices — extending the range of EVs, bringing battery production in-house at highly-automated “gigafactories”, and refining the interior, software-first design of the automotives themselves. The needs of Tesla products are reshaping entire industries. Electric vehicles require batteries, and the electricity to power them. Through developing its own EV-capabilities, Tesla has also become a leading player in renewable energy. Through Megapack, a battery designed to support power grids, it is a global top-three producer of large battery storage systems; through Powerwall it is a leading supplier of batteries to store solar energy in consumers’ homes, and holds over a third of the US market.

Tesla is now switching to robotics. In a recent Tesla earnings call, Musk announced that Tesla would cease production of Model S and Model X cars; the factory space would instead be used to produce Optimus robots. Musk claims he will soon create one million humanoid robots a year, but he has competition. From Boston Dynamics to China’s Unitree and Agibot, others are also rushing to enter the industry. The opportunity is vast; analysts predict that humanoid robots represent a $5 trillion market, and that within 30 years they may number in the billions. No competitors, however, will have what Musk hopes soon to control — an independent stack of energy generation, energy storage, compute, payments, data, and satellite connectivity. Here, infrastructure converges with automation — for Musk will have built an army, the resources to power it, and the tools to control it.

Operating within Tesla’s EVs and Optimus robots is Grok, Musk’s proprietary AI. Grok demonstrates that the thread between social media, a new payment app, humanoid robots, and electric vehicles is data — data, and the role of data in driving, enabling, and empowering artificial intelligence. The role of X in social media and, soon, financial transactions means it will hold a vast and ever-evolving database on our needs, concerns, and desires. Covered in sensors, interacting with a non-predictable, changeable physical world, each Tesla EV and Optimus robot is also an ongoing source of data, data through which the world can be observed, controlled, and manipulated. To manage this data, and to carry out actions on the basis of it, Musk needs AI. In turn, that AI needs computational power and the energy to generate that power — at vast scale. It is here that Musk seeks something truly new — energy in orbit. To harness this energy would be to transform history.

Economic life relies on power — the ability to convert the surrounding energy flows, those of wind, of wave, or splitting of an atom — into work. Above all other sources of energy, we rely on fire — the light of the distant sun, and on the fires we ourselves create here on earth. Harvested and metabolized by organic processes, solar energy is the basis of planetary life, and with it our existence. Our ability to harness that energy, and to channel that power, is what has led to the growth and spread of humanity.

Since the beginning of the industrial age, national power has been based upon the ability of states to extract, dominate and control the congealed light of the sun. Britain, blessed by providence with extraordinary reserves of shallow-lying coal, birthed and led the industrial revolution. Germany, France, Russia, Japan, the United States and China similarly burned coal to industrialize. Petroleum, mined in the Middle East and elsewhere, underlines the core processes of our lives, providing fuel, fertilizers, plastics, and much else besides. Without oil, and without coal, the global economy would collapse. Control these energy sources — control fire — and you control the earth. Iran, the homeland of fire-cults, thus now holds the world to ransom via the Straits of Hormuz.

Musk seeks to step outside of this power, and in doing so, conquer it — for Musk, like Prometheus, seeks to conquer fire. SpaceX seeks to place a million satellites into space: orbital data centers, placed there to harness the power of the sun. Data centers on Earth run up against physical limits — the need for land, the need for water, the need to compete with other human demands for energy consumption. Space, meanwhile, is limitless — literally so in spatial terms, and practically so in regards to solar energy. The earth receives only about half a billionth of the sun’s energy, yet the entire solar system is bathed in the light of the sun. Parked in space, solar cells could theoretically harvest more energy than that currently produced by the entire earth. Through SpaceX, Musk thus plans to build a hyperscaler, one “bigger than Oracle”; this resource will be used to power AI on earth and in the heavens.

“Unable to physically access these facilities, or to strangle their sources of energy, most states would be unable to control Musk, his satellites, his robots, or his AI.”

In themselves, these plans would represent a profound disruption in global affairs. They would break the territorial link between energy generation and political power. A thousand kilometers from the surface of the earth, a new reality will come into being — one of energy generation, and machine computation, conducted beyond the easy reach of people, of democracies, and states. Unable to physically access these facilities, or to strangle their sources of energy, most states would be unable to control Musk, his satellites, his robots, or his AI. For now, a handful of governments possess the orbital weapons necessary to kill satellites, but they too may face a problem. Musk is predicting, planning and promoting an exponential, potentially uncontrollable, growth in machine power. Should this occur, even superpowers may lose their potency against the machines.

Grok — powered by orbital computers, trained upon the data-feeds of Musk’s vast business empire, and acting in the world via AI agents and Tesla robots — will be Musk’s engine of control in the future he sees awaiting us. This is a power base for the Singularity, but Musk is by no means sanguine that he or anyone else can control it. He envisions a world without work for humans, a place where exponential increases in intelligence enable and merge with exponential increases in robot capability, creating a “supernova” of recursive improvement. In this new world, one that Musk expects to arrive within a decade, “corporations that are purely AI and robotics will vastly outperform any corporations that have people in the loop”. Humanity will be dwarfed by the machine; Musk predicts that “in five or six years, AI will exceed the sum of all human intelligence. If that continues, at some point human intelligence will be less than 1% of all intelligence.” At some point, he believes, the intelligence of the machines will so outstrip humanity that efforts at control will be meaningless. Robots, driven by nothing more than an urge to “understand the universe”,  will propagate intelligence across the stars — intelligence that may or may not include humans and human consciousness.

Picture, if you will, the sci-fi future that Musk seeks to reify. On land, labor is becoming meaningless. Our higher economic functions — planning, trading, analyzing — are carried out by AI agents; our “lower” functions are being carried out by robots. In offices, homes, and factories, an ever-expanding fleet of machines is carrying out tasks once reserved for humans. Cloud-connected, AI-enabled, each is able to call upon the compressed knowledge of humanity, a knowledge constantly updated by real-time data flows. Unable to compete, millions, then billions of workers, are left unemployed. Coordinating, directing, and mining these data flows are the satellites of SpaceX, their numbers expanding every year. Politicians are concerned, but their power is slipping away; states struggle to control the system above, and earthly power is increasingly delegated to the machines. Freedom is meaningless, for there is nothing to spend, nothing to do, and nothing to decide. Markets and political processes no longer lie in the hands of citizens; they lie, at best, with a handful of oligarchs, the controllers of AI infrastructure. Resistance is pointless; predicted, analyzed, prevented in advance, humanity no longer controls the tools of production, or the levers of power. But then — why and how does one resist? AI is all around you — in your phone, your car, smartwatch, your house, in the ads you see when you walk along the street. It is your friend, your counselor, and your decision maker. Able in seconds to access all the data you have ever produced, it knows you better than you know yourself — and so, in time, it chooses for you.

States could crumble, industries may vanish, the heavens may blaze with the cold light of a million satellites — but the greatest loss, the true question before us, is that of meaning. Musk’s quest for cosmic significance risks dissolving the very conditions that give human life meaning: scarcity, struggle, and agency. In his heroic mission, he risks destroying the basis of heroism itself — our capacity to act, and our capacity to choose. The risk is not that Musk might fail in his greatest ambitions, but that he might succeed.


James Kingston works in web3. He is the author of the Adam Smith Institute paper Profitable Peripherals: Maximising the potential of British CDOTs.


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China’s ‘Teapot’ Refiners, Targeted by U.S., Offer Financial Lifeline to Iran - WSJ

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LLM (google/gemini-3.1-flash-lite-preview-20260303) summary:

  • Sanction Evasion Strategem: private chinese refiners known as teapots act as a critical conduit for illicit iranian oil revenue to bypass international financial restrictions.
  • Escalating Regulatory Pressure: the united states treasury department has expanded punitive measures by targeting hengli petrochemical and dozens of associated shipping entities.
  • Financial Arbitrage Tactics: these independent refineries utilize yuan-denominated transactions and lack significant overseas assets to insulate themselves from traditional western economic retaliation.
  • Logistical Smuggling Networks: operators frequently employ deceptive practices including deactivating vessel transponders and executing ship-to-ship transfers to obscure the origin of crude oil.
  • State Sponsored Obfuscation: beijing leverages these privately held firms to maintain access to energy supplies while theoretically maintaining distance from the geopolitical controversy surrounding tehran.
  • Market Proliferation: the parallel shadow trade ecosystem has expanded to encompass nearly six hundred vessels, rendering comprehensive enforcement operations increasingly difficult and costly.
  • Corporate Denials: while linked to multi-billion dollar transactions by external oversight groups and governmental reports, firms like hengli publicly reject any involvement in sanctioned commerce.
  • Institutional Resilience: despite the threat of secondary sanctions, these refiners continue to operate as a vital economic lifeline, underscoring the limitations of current external influence efforts.

May 1, 2026 10:00 pm ET

Hengli Petrochemical's new refining and petrochemical complex, with storage tanks and industrial structures, on Changxing Island.A refining and petrochemical complex belonging to China’s Hengli, whose business has been targeted by U.S. sanctions. Aizhu Chen/Reuters

BEIJING—The U.S. is intensifying efforts to cut off Iran’s most vital financial lifeline—its secretive oil trade with China—by turning up the heat on a business ecosystem that grew from modest beginnings to funneling tens of billions of dollars a year to Tehran.

While the U.S. moves to squeeze Iran by blockading its ports and intercepting tankers, Washington has taken new steps in recent days to target the privately run Chinese refiners, known as “teapots,” that soak up nearly every barrel of oil Iran exports.

The U.S. Treasury Department imposed sanctions last week on a unit of Hengli Petrochemical, a refiner that it said has purchased billions of dollars of Iranian petroleum, along with 40 shipping firms and vessels allegedly involved in the trade.

Then, on Tuesday, the department warned financial institutions that they could be targeted for facilitating transactions for Chinese refiners using Iranian oil.

But the teapots are survivors, having endured not only U.S. sanctions but also efforts by the Chinese government itself—in the years before they became so useful to Beijing—to shut them down.

For China, the more than 100 teapot refiners are a critical tool for working around U.S. sanctions. A spokesman for China’s Foreign Ministry said this week that unilateral U.S. sanctions “have no basis in international law” and that the country would defend the rights and interests of its companies.

By outsourcing the Iran oil trade to largely private firms operating independently of China’s state energy giants, Beijing can support Tehran and secure access to Iran’s oil while balancing relations with the U.S. and Middle Eastern powers, energy analysts say.

Created with Highcharts 9.0.1Iranian crude exportsSource: VortexaNote: Captures the 28-day moving average
Created with Highcharts 9.0.1War started2026April00.250.500.751.001.251.501.752.002.252.50 million barrels a day

With many entities involved in the Iran oil trade already blacklisted by the U.S.—including ships, ports and refineries—a parallel system has developed with little overlap with China’s sanctions-compliant oil market.

Some companies involved in the Iran trade have grown less scared of sanctions, said Emma Li, a China analyst at ship-tracking firm Vortexa. “The sanctioned market itself has become so big that people feel like, ‘Oh, sanctions are not that bad.’ ”

For now, China’s teapots appear to have access to Iranian oil, including from shipments that left Iran before the U.S. blockade. A long-term blockade, however, could force refiners to turn to other countries. 

Elaborate lengths

On paper, China doesn’t buy oil from Iran. Chinese customs authorities haven’t reported any crude imports from the country from 2023 onward.

Instead, Iranian sellers, Chinese teapots and middlemen go to elaborate lengths to hide their activity, according to U.S. sanctions notifications and indictments. Tankers switch off their transponders to avert detection and perform risky ship-to-ship oil transfers to disguise the origin of Iranian crude. Iranian front companies help facilitate payments, U.S. officials say. Five teapot refiners have been targeted by U.S. sanctions since last year.

Unlike large state refiners, the teapots have few overseas assets and less to lose if they get cut off from the U.S. banking system. They can also settle the trade with Iran in Chinese yuan instead of dollars. This has insulated them from the effects of sanctions and provided China with a workaround to keep the oil flowing. 

The teapots are now at the forefront of one of China’s most crucial energy relationships. An estimated 12% of China’s oil imports came from Iran in 2025.

The logistical network supporting this multibillion-dollar trade has grown rapidly. U.S.-based advocacy group United Against Nuclear Iran says that as of earlier this year it had identified nearly 600 ships that it suspects of covertly transporting Iranian crude or petroleum products, up from 70 in late 2020.

“It’s the teapot refineries that are keeping the regime in Tehran in business,” said Daniel Roth, research director at UANI.

The trade is now so large that shutting it down completely would be difficult, if not impossible, energy analysts say. To succeed, they say, the U.S. would have to take far more drastic steps such as intercepting many more ships or destroying Iranian energy-export infrastructure.

Such moves would push up global oil prices and risk angering Beijing, which has spent years trying to insulate itself from supply disruptions.

Survivors

How the teapots emerged as top buyers of Iranian crude “is almost certainly the result of happenstance rather than design,” said Erica Downs, a scholar who has researched China’s teapots at Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy. 

For many years, the teapots were a thorn in Beijing’s side as the central government sought to focus the nation’s refining sector under two state-owned giants, Sinopec and China National Petroleum.

As part of that effort, teapots were prevented from importing crude oil directly, which limited their ability to compete against the state-owned refining giants.

The teapots found ways to survive. Many, based in the coastal province of Shandong, received protection from local officials who valued the jobs they created, including helping the teapots take advantage of loopholes in the tax system, according to Downs. 

Sanctioned teapot refineries in China

Dalian

Hengli Petrochemical (Dalian) Refinery

RUSSIA

2025 crude oil

import quota:

20.0 million

metric tons

MONGOLIA

JAPAN

Beijing

Cangzhou

Hebei Xinhai

Chemical Group

2.2M

3.7M

Dongying

Shandong Shengxing Chemical

Zibo

Shandong Jincheng Petrochemical Group

Shanghai

CHINA

Shouguang

Shandong Shouguang Luqing Petrochemical

2.6M

3.0M

Hong Kong

INDIA

Dalian

Hengli Petrochemical (Dalian) Refinery

RUSSIA

2025 crude oil

import quota:

20.0 million

metric tons

MONGOLIA

JAPAN

Beijing

Cangzhou

Hebei Xinhai

Chemical Group

2.2M

3.7M

Dongying

Shandong Shengxing Chemical

Zibo

Shandong Jincheng Petrochemical Group

Shanghai

CHINA

Shouguang

Shandong Shouguang Luqing Petrochemical

2.6M

3.0M

Hong Kong

INDIA

Dalian

Hengli Petrochemical (Dalian) Refinery

RUSSIA

2025 crude oil

import quota:

20.0 million

metric tons

MONGOLIA

JAPAN

Beijing

Cangzhou

Hebei Xinhai

Chemical Group

2.2M

3.7M

Dongying

Shandong Shengxing Chemical

Zibo

Shandong Jincheng Petrochemical Group

Shanghai

CHINA

Shouguang

Shandong Shouguang Luqing Petrochemical

2.6M

3.0M

Hong Kong

Dalian

Hengli Petrochemical (Dalian) Refinery

2025 crude oil

import quota:

20.0 million

metric tons

N. KOREA

Cangzhou

Hebei Xinhai Chemical Group

Beijing

S. KOREA

2.2M

3.7M

Dongying

Shandong Shengxing Chemical

Zibo

Shandong Jincheng Petrochemical Group

Shouguang

Shandong Shouguang Luqing Petrochemical

2.6M

3.0M

Shanghai

CHINA

Taipei

TAIWAN

CHINA

Hong Kong

Dalian

Hengli Petrochemical

(Dalian) Refinery

2025 crude oil

import quota:

20.0 million

metric tons

N. KOREA

Cangzhou

Hebei Xinhai

Chemical Group

Beijing

S. KOREA

2.2M

3.7M

Dongying

Shandong Shengxing

Chemical

Zibo

Shandong Jincheng

Petrochemical Group

Shouguang

Shandong Shouguang

Luqing Petrochemical

2.6M

3.0M

Shanghai

CHINA

Taipei

TAIWAN

CHINA

Hong Kong

Sources: Treasury Department, Kpler

Emma Brown/WSJ

And in 2015, the government changed course, allowing some teapots to import crude as Beijing sought to expose state oil giants to more competition.

At first, Iran wasn’t a top supplier. Russia, Angola, Venezuela and Brazil were preferred; the Mideast firms were less flexible on pricing, one teapot executive said in 2016.

The calculus shifted in 2018, when President Trump accelerated U.S. sanctions on Iran. Suddenly, buying Iranian crude was too dangerous for China’s national oil companies and the product became a discounted commodity. 

The teapots seized the opportunity. Between 2017 and last year, China’s imports of Iranian oil are estimated to have more than doubled to roughly 1.4 million barrels a day, according to Kpler, a commodity research firm tracking tanker movements.

At Hengli, the refiner targeted by U.S. sanctions last week, revenue has more than tripled since 2018 to around $30 billion last year, according to financial reports from the company, which is listed on Shanghai’s stock exchange.

The Treasury Department said Hengli purchased billions of dollars of petroleum from Iran in recent years, making it one of Tehran’s most important customers.

There is no mention of business with Iran in Hengli’s recent public financial reports. Hengli denies the U.S. allegations and said in a stock-exchange filing that it “has never had any trade dealings with Iran.”

Hengli said this week that it was operating normally despite the sanctions and would continue to settle crude-oil purchases in yuan instead of dollars. Its stock price initially dropped by around 10% on news of the sanctions before gaining back much of what it lost.

Copyright ©2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Appeared in the May 2, 2026, print edition as 'China’s ‘Teapot’ Refiners Offer Financial Lifeline to Iran'.

Brian Spegele is a senior correspondent in The Wall Street Journal's Beijing bureau. He writes broadly about political, economic and business development in China, and he has traveled throughout the country for his reporting. This is Brian’s second posting in China for the Journal. He was previously based in Beijing as a reporter from 2011 to 2017, where he covered the rise and early rule of President Xi Jinping.

He also has served as a reporter for the Journal’s financial enterprise team in New York, where he investigated topics including the Trump Organization's finances and the role of private equity in the U.S. healthcare system.

Brian won a Knight-Bagehot fellowship at Columbia University in 2017 and earned an M.B.A. from Columbia Business School. He speaks Mandarin Chinese and Italian.




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