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| Donald Trump’s supporters thought the risks of his presidency were peripheral. Now, those risks are front and centre. Charlotte Howard, our New York bureau chief, and Greg Carlstrom, our Middle East correspondent, discuss how the president’s rhetoric is unsettling allies at home and abroad. |
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Peptides are not a miracle drug | The Economist
2026-03-29
Do peptides really work? The Economist’s health editor, Natasha Loder, senior science writer, Tim Cross and co-host of The Intelligence podcast, Jason Palmer, discuss the booming peptide market, the risks of unregulated experimentation, and how internet hype is outpacing scientific evidence.
00:00 – Are peptides really the shortcut to bigger muscles, better skin, and faster recovery?
00:10 – How easy is it to buy peptides online?
00:42 – What is BPC-157 and the so-called “Wolverine Stack”?
01:01 – How are these substances being sold despite safety warnings?
02:01 – What exactly are peptides and why are they so popular?
03:24 – What are the biggest health risks and unknowns?
04:31 – How has the internet accelerated the spread of “bro science”?
05:40 – What are regulators doing to
Tucker Carlson: Trump betrayed America First | The Economist
2026-03-19
Has Donald Trump betrayed America First? Tucker Carlson thinks so. In an interview with Zanny Minton Beddoes, The Economist’s editor-in-chief, Carlson argues the war on Iran was launched on Israel’s timetable, not America’s, and that the idea behind it “is not only contrary to America First, it may be its inverse”.
#tuckercarlson #usa #trump
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Why civil war is brewing in Iran
2026-01-29
Is civil war brewing in Iran? Nicolas Pelham, our Middle East correspondent, and Jason Palmer, co-host of The Intelligence podcast, discuss internal tensions in the country and why some protesters seem to be turning their backs on peaceful demonstrations.
00:50 – What are Iran’s two opposing camps?
02:56 – What does this deepening divide mean for politics?
03:57 – Why has Iran shifted from protest to civil conflict?
06:16 – Is there any way to stop a civil war?
Listen to the full episode: https://econ.st/3NKjsm1
Is America about to attack Iran?: https://econ.st/4qKVKEC
Sign up to our weekly newsletter: https://econ.st/3J0xzBr
#TheEconomist #Iran #Protests
Britain’s political system is struggling
2025-12-17
The Economist has crunched the data to analyse how chaotic the next general election could be.
Is China the new superpower?
2025-12-12
It has been a good year for China. The country is winning its trade war with America. China is mastering new technologies and becoming an even more fearsome competitor in global markets.
Zanny Minton Beddoes, our editor-in-chief, and deputy editor Edward Carr sit down with our top China experts to assess what—if anything—could halt China’s rise.
00:00 – How strong are China’s armed forces?
03:02 – What could undermine the Chinese economy?
05:07 – The threat from China’s population
08:41 – Will China be the new superpower?
Watch the full show: https://econ.st/4oMaxxe
Why China is winning the trade war: https://econ.st/4iVifDY
How America could end up making China great again: https://econ.st/4awcf2r
China knows how to punish countries that offend it: https://econ.st/48B9YS8
Steve Bannon: Trump will have a third term
2025-10-23
At The Economist, we believe it is important to engage seriously with people whose ideas challenge our own. In keeping with that belief, our editor-in-chief, Zanny Minton Beddoes, and our deputy editor, Ed Carr, spoke to Steve Bannon, one of the chief architects of the MAGA movement. Bannon insists that president Trump will have a third term and has played a role in galvanising Europe’s populist nationalists, many of whom are now close to power.
Subscribers can watch the full interview as part of our new video series The Insider.
00:00 – The Economist interviews Steve Bannon
00:52 – What kind of America does Bannon want to build?
02:00 – Bannon on seizing America’s institutions
06:15 – Bannon says Trump will have a third term
10:41 – Bannon’s role in populist nationalist movements in
The cocaine market is bigger than ever
2025-10-18
Pablo Escobar’s control-everything model is dead. Cocaine traffickers today are highly decentralised, using scuba divers, narco subs and sophisticated chemistry to evade policing. Our Latin America correspondent, Kinley Salmon, explains why cocaine trafficking has become harder than ever to stop.
Can Germany keep the hard right from power?
2025-10-16
Germany’s hard-right Alternative for Germany, or AfD, is more popular than ever. One in four Germans now support it. Yet despite its rise, the party remains shut out of power.
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