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Expanding AI access worldwide

Could AI deepen global inequality or help close the gap?

Lisa Monaco, President of Global Affairs, Microsoft, says it all comes down to trust. She argues that “people won’t use technology that they don’t trust,” especially as geopolitical tensions raise concerns about the reliability and resilience of digital infrastructure.

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Putin & Xi sit with gratitude in new podcast

In the latest episode of Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping's wellness podcast This Authoritarian Life, the two leaders discuss gratitude, presence, and the power of unexpected blessings.

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Trump's Iran climbdown wasn't an offramp

Four weeks into a war nobody planned to still be fighting, President Donald Trump issued Iran an ultimatum: reopen the Strait of Hormuz within 48 hours or watch your power grid get obliterated. Iran said no and threatened to retaliate against desalination plants and other civilian infrastructure in Gulf countries. Trump must have found this credible because on Monday morning, he announced a five-day extension of his self-imposed deadline, citing "very good and productive" talks that Iran categorically denied had taken place.
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How can we fix the AI divide?

AI is moving fast, but not everyone is moving with it. Inside the UN, global leaders debate how to close the widening AI divide.
Artificial intelligence isn’t just about innovation. It’s about access, infrastructure, and whether the benefits of a transformative technology will be shared or concentrated.

In a new Global Stage livestream from the United Nations Goals Lounge in New York, Tony Maciulis moderates a conversation with Lisa Monaco (President of Global Affairs, Microsoft), Doreen Bogdan-Martin (Secretary-General, International Telecommunication Union), and Ambassador Parvathaneni Harish (Permanent Representative of India to the UN) on the growing gap between the Global North and Global South in AI adoption, and what it will take to close it.

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Women are reshaping the US economy

Women drove nearly 3x more job growth than men last year — but the story doesn’t end there. Wage momentum is slowing, and spending patterns are shifting. What does that mean for the broader economy?

Explore the latest insights from Bank of America Institute.

Walmart’s $1 billion investment is strengthening associate careers

Chris, an Army veteran, started his Walmart journey over 25 years ago as an hourly associate. Today, he manages a Distribution Center and serves as a mentor, helping others navigate their own paths to success. At Walmart, associates have the opportunity to take advantage of the pathways, perks, and pay that come with the job — with or without a college degree. In fact, more than 75% of Walmart management started as hourly associates. Learn more about how over 130,000 associates were promoted into roles of greater responsibility and higher pay in FY25.

Rahm Emanuel joins Ian Bremmer on stage at the 92nd Street Y in NYC to unpack the strategic challenges of the Iran war as Tehran has been able to exert an effective veto power over the Strait of Hormuz — a critical chokepoint for global oil and energy.

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Danish Social Democrats suffer worst election result in a century

Amid rising costs of living, Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen’s center-left party won just 22% of the vote in yesterday’s nationwide election, marking the Social Democrats’ worst result since 1903. The left-wing Socialist Party and right-wing Danish People’s Party were the beneficiaries, undermining the notion that Frederiksen had somehow cracked the code for halting the rise of populists. And yet, the PM could retain her position – and she may have US President Donald Trump to thank. Frederiksen was something of a bulwark against Trump when he threatened to seize Greenland earlier this year, boosting her standing at home and ensuring that left-leaning parties won more seats than right-leaning ones on Tuesday. As such, the PM has a viable – if difficult – path to building another coalition government.

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Read: Meet the real screen addicts: the elderly,” in The Economist. I personally feel like my mother spends more time looking at a screen than I do as a millennial, and this piece confirmed my suspicion that this may be a growing trend. It’s filled with interesting nuggets on how and why people over the age of 65 have become some of the most enthusiastic adopters of digital gadgets. – Natalie J.

Read: “When We Cease to Understand the World,” by Benjamin Labatut. This haunting, genre-blurring non-fiction novel explores the discovery of cyanide and its profound fallout. It has been used in all sorts of areas: to make fertilizer, as an agent of chemical warfare, to kill Jews during the Holocaust, as well as for the discovery of quantum uncertainty. This boook made me think about how breakthroughs can unleash consequences no one fully grasps, and is less about explaining science than about confronting its psychological weight. I would recommend it to anyone trying to grapple with the emergence of another technology we scarcely understand the consequences of: artificial intelligence. – Riley

Watch: “Dhurandhar 1 & 2.” There has been an excess of spy thrillers in recent years in Hindi cinema, but Aditya Dhar has been the one getting it right with the Dhurandhar franchise. The films follow Indian spy Hamza Ali Ansari (Ranveer Singh) as he infiltrates gangs in Lyari, Pakistan, to feed sensitive intelligence back to home base. The story weaves in references to major India-Pakistan conflicts — the 26/11 Mumbai attacks of 2008, Uri attacks of 2016, the one in Pulwama in 2019, as well as Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s demonetization plan. Parts of these films are grounded in fact; others very much aren’t. But as cinema, it works – the writing is sharp, the action sequences are mind-blowing (literally), the soundtrack is superb, and the acting is exceptional. The best way to watch it? As a movie, not a history lesson. – Suhani

Watch/Listen: You may know about NPR’s original Tiny Desk, but have you watched Tiny Desk Brazil? In this episode, singer-songwriter (and former culture minister) Gilberto Gil trades stadium-scale production for something that feels like music at home. Joined by his grandchildren Flor and Bento, he revisits favorites like “Desde que o Samba é Samba,” “Tempo Rei,” and the quieter “Se Eu Quiser Falar com Deus,” where the stripped-down playing really lands. – Natalie W.

Moscow also launched 23 cruise missiles and seven ballistic missiles at Ukrainian cities, including the city of Lviv, which is near the Polish border and not usually targeted. The strikes also come as Russia intensifies its front-line attacks out East, leading analysts to conclude that Russia’s spring offensive has begun. The Kremlin’s goal: take the strategically integral Donetsk region as the cold thaws.

In this "ask ian,” Ian Bremmer explains why the US–Israel war with Iran is posing a political risk for President Trump, whose political brand has long centered on ending America’s “forever wars.”
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In this Quick Take, Ian Bremmer says President Trump’s decision to back away from a 48-hour ultimatum to reopen the Strait of Hormuz signals how risky further escalation with Iran could be.

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Trump’s comments on social media yesterday morning sent fuel prices tumbling, as investors increased their hopes for a swift end to the Iran conflict. But right before the post, there was a flurry of activity between oil traders, per a Financial Times analysis of Bloomberg data. The well-timed trades have raised eyebrows among market strategists, while the White House has denied allegations of sharing insider knowledge.

Saudi Arabia and the UAE weigh joining Iran war

Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates are moving closer to joining the US-Iran conflict. It’s a notable shift for the former friends-turned-foes: despite backing opposite sides in Somalia, Sudan, and Yemen, they could find themselves aligned again in Iran. Riyadh reportedly urged US President Donald Trump to continue military action against Tehran and gave the US access to King Fahd air base. Meanwhile, the Emiratis closed an Iranian-owned hospital and club in Dubai, cutting off support for Iran. Both Gulf countries have an immense stake in the war. Most of their food imports come via the Strait of Hormuz. Separately, their desalination plants that clean their water are under threat. What’s more, billions of dollars of foreign investment – and the region’s burgeoning tourism are – on the line. Their calculation: take a risk in the short term by joining the war in the hopes of weakening Iran in the long run.

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