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Houthis tout strikes on Israel as EU haggles trade perks; Amsterdam tests classical study boost; ageing inflammation worsens COVID/flu; fusion rocket hits plasma ignition; Itauma talks KOs; Navy trainee discrimination case tossed; March 28 birthdays & 2005 Sumatra quake
Houthis claim first direct strikes on Israeli military positions
Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels say they’ve launched their first military operation targeting Israeli military sites, pitching it as solidarity with Iran and Hezbollah. They also promise to keep going until Israel halts its offensives, because nothing says “regional stability” like another group announcing an open-ended forever-war subscription plan.
EU charges ahead with trade talks, still lobbying for wine and cars (shocking)
The EU is wrapping up trade negotiations with Mercosur, India, and Australia, and is largely sticking with its familiar playbook. Push hard for better access for European wine and cars, then get protective about beef, because free trade is beautiful right up until it looks back at you from a pasture.
Amsterdam uses live classical music to help students study
Live classical music sessions in Amsterdam are helping students concentrate during exam season. Run by the Concertgebouw’s youth association, the events aim to support focused studying while gently recruiting younger audiences into classical music, a rare public service that does not involve an app, a subscription, or a grift.
Heavyweight Moses Itauma says quick KOs are not the whole story
Moses Itauma tells BBC Sport he’s not satisfied with being known only for fast knockouts across his 13-fight pro career. He wants to prove his all-round game, reflects on his family’s sacrifices, and calls Jermaine Franklin his toughest opponent so far, which is the polite boxer way of saying, “Finally, someone who doesn’t fall over immediately.”
Royal Navy pilot trainee’s sex discrimination claim struck out over contractor status
Hannah McCann, a Royal Navy pilot trainee, brought an employment tribunal claim against the UK Ministry of Defence alleging sex discrimination and harassment, saying a male instructor acted as a gatekeeper and failed to train her properly, contributing to her failing a final aptitude test in May 2023. The claim was struck out before a full hearing after the tribunal found the MoD was not vicariously liable because the instructor was a contractor supplied via Babcock, while the MoD retained final decision-making on trainee selection and withdrawal, an outcome that feels like accountability doing a perfect barrel roll away from the runway.
Research suggests ageing inflammation helps explain worse COVID and flu outcomes in older adults
New research points to ageing-related inflammation as a key factor behind why older adults face much higher risks from COVID and flu. Immune cells marked by the GZMK gene, first identified in severe COVID, may amplify harmful immune responses and worsen outcomes, basically your immune system getting older and deciding to “help” in the most counterproductive way possible.
Pulsar Fusion claims plasma ignition in fusion rocket prototype
UK startup Pulsar Fusion says it achieved the first plasma ignition inside a nuclear fusion rocket engine prototype, a milestone it claims could eventually cut Mars travel from months to a few weeks. The demo happened during a livestream at Amazon’s MARS Conference, and the company plans further upgrades including stronger superconducting magnets to better contain and control the plasma, which is excellent news for anyone who’s ever thought, “What if we took the tech that is famously hard to control and then put it on a rocket?”
March 28: notable birthdays
March 28 birthdays include musician Lady Gaga (40) and actor Vince Vaughn (56).
On this day: 2005 Sumatra earthquake
On March 28, 2005, an 8.6-magnitude earthquake struck off Sumatra’s western coast, killing about 1,000 people and destroying hundreds of buildings.
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This podcast is a fully automated experiment in AI-generated content. Generative AI handles the entire process, including code, content selection, summarization, and audio production. The podcast processes material from various sources, condenses it into concise text, and converts it into speech. No human intervention is involved in the production process.
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