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What Trump Doesnt Understand About America First
What Trump Doesnt Understand About America First

What Trump Doesn’t Understand About ‘America First’

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2025/08/europe-transatlanticism-vance-trump-america-first/683949/

In the summer of 1930, the U.S. secretaries of war and the Navy developed War Plan Red, a 94-page document laying out detailed plans to strangle the naval and trade capabilities of the United Kingdom in a hypothetical future that involved the U.S. and U.K. at war with each other. The centerpiece was a full-scale land invasion of Canada, a seaborne attack on Halifax, a blockade of the Panama Canal, the capture of British possessions throughout the Caribbean and the Bahamas and Bermuda, and a direct challenge of the Royal Navy by U.S. naval forces in the Atlantic.

Far from the sepia-tinted account of transatlantic relations that is so often evoked today, the union between the English-speaking nations that emerged after the First World War was neither fulsome nor uncritical. Rather, the experiences of the war provoked deep antipathy and suspicion among American decision makers toward the British empire. And the plans, though never approved by Congress or the president, were not merely theoretical—the U.S. built air bases, camouflaged as civilian airfields, along the Canadian border. Only after the threat of Nazism emerged in the mid-1930s was War Plan Red quietly shelved. It was not declassified until the 1970s.

War Plan Red’s existence is a useful reminder that so much of what people assume to be the granite-like permanence of the postwar transatlantic community—forged by the horrors of the Second World War and the exigencies of the Cold War—is in fact more recent and, as we are now discovering, more fragile. The misty-eyed nostalgia for a yesteryear of American and European unity has always been based on sentiment as much as reality. From President Dwight Eisenhower’s threat to crash the British pound during the Suez Crisis of 1956 to America’s opposition to French attempts to maintain control in Vietnam and Algeria, the decline of European power while the U.S. emerged as the undisputed hegemon was marked by naked rivalry as much as it was by the amity of “the West.”

So Donald Trump is drawing, however unwittingly, on historical precedent when he brandishes his own imperial designs on Canada, Greenland, and the Panama Canal. When he expresses his suspicions about Europe—the European Union, according to Trump, “was formed in order to screw the United States”—he does so too. The NATO Summit earlier this summer—an “orchestrated grovel at the feet of Donald Trump,” as the British journalist Martin Kettle put it—demonstrated how unbalanced the relationship has become. More recently, the Alaska summit at which Trump gave Russian President Vladimir Putin the red-carpet treatment only underscored the point. They discussed Putin’s invasion in the heart of Europe without a single European leader present. European leaders got what looked instead like a school photo in the White House alongside Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky—a row of school pupils holding hands to confront an overbearing headmaster. Perhaps the past 80 years of American transatlantic leadership—which established one of the greatest security alliances in history and built a democratic bulwark against the threat of Soviet Communism—will turn out to be the exception, not the rule.

Anyone listening attentively to J. D. Vance’s broadsides earlier this year at the Munich Security Conference and the AI Action Summit in Paris will have noticed a new mix of menace and petulance from the U.S. government. In addition to delivering a familiar critique of Europe’s sluggish and overregulated economy, the speeches signaled a willingness to use American power—and European dependency on that power—to interfere in Europe’s internal democratic politics: “The threat that I worry the most about vis-à-vis Europe is not Russia; it’s not China; it’s not any other external actor,” Vance said in Munich. “What I worry about is the threat from within.”

After Vance endorsed Germany’s far-right AfD party and met its leader in the run-up to the German election, Chancellor Friedrich Merz did not mince his words: “The interventions from Washington were no less dramatic and drastic and ultimately outrageous than the interventions we have seen from Moscow.”

From the July 2025 Issue: The talented Mr. Vance

At a rally in Poland days before the presidential election there, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem seemed to suggest that the U.S. would continue to support Poland only if Trump’s preferred candidate—the conservative historian Karol Nawrocki—were to win: “He needs to be the next president of Poland. Do you understand me?” Noem said, adding that if Nawrocki was elected, Poland “will continue to have a U.S. presence here, a military presence.” (Nawrocki did win, and was inaugurated earlier this month.)

All of this makes the Trump-Vance agenda very clear. Far from espousing an isolationist “America First” doctrine, when it comes to Europe, the Trump administration is seeking to enforce a doctrine of “America Everywhere,” in which political parties that share the same nativist outlook are actively supported by Washington, and those who do not are ceaselessly criticized.

Like so many Europeans of my generation, I am a product of transatlanticism. My father was one of the lucky few children to be moved to safety in the United States during the height of the Nazi bombardment of London; my Dutch mother was released from a Japanese-run prisoner-of-war camp in Indonesia following the U.S. victory over Japan. I studied as a post graduate at the University of Minnesota, and did a stint as a fact-checker at The Nation magazine in the early 1990s. Later, as an EU trade negotiator and member of the European Parliament, I was part of an effort, working with successive U.S. administrations, to build a rules-based global trading system. As Britain’s deputy prime minister from 2010 to 2015, I worked with the Obama administration on an array of shared endeavors, including counterterrorist operations and commercial agreements. And recently I spent seven years as a senior executive at Meta, on the front line of the technological revolution—and blazing controversies—emanating from Silicon Valley.

In short, a world in which Europe and America don’t walk tall and in tandem with each other, even when they disagree, is hard for me to contemplate. I fervently believe that the world is safer, stronger, and wealthier because of this unique relationship. But now is the time to imagine the previously unimaginable: a world in which deep-rooted transatlanticism gives way to shallow transactionalism.

Part of what is pulling the relationship apart is, ironically, the demonstrable nature of America’s supremacy over Europe, a supremacy delivered in no small part by the statecraft of previous U.S. administrations: an open trading system built on the undisputed role of the dollar as a global reserve currency; the deployment of overwhelming defense and security capabilities; the gravitational pull of a world-leading university system (despite, for now at least, the current administration’s attack on American academe); and economic prowess built on American domination of both international finance and technology. The U.S. has, on all of these benchmarks, comprehensively pulled ahead of Europe. When I served as deputy prime minister, the GDPs of Europe and the U.S. were roughly the same; today, the U.S. GDP is almost one and a half times larger.

No wonder some Silicon Valley investors now talk of Europe as a “dead” place—an adjective I’ve heard in various conversations—as if a continent of 500 million people and centuries of scientific and cultural discovery can be dismissed as little more than a hemispheric museum. In many ways, the tech elite is merely repeating the mockery directed at supposed European decadence by generations of American commentators (H. L. Mencken’s caustic assertion that “there are two kinds of Europeans: the smart ones, and those who stayed behind” comes to mind). Of course, their scorn has been fully matched by a long tradition of European snobbery toward supposedly uncouth Americans.

Michael Scherer: Trump says he decides what ‘America first’ means

Yet the divisions seem starker now. Rather than gentle ribbing between Old World and new, or specific disagreements between otherwise aligned allies, they are increasingly framed in zero-sum terms. A new class of American nationalists frets about the end of Western civilization, advancing a blood-and-soil ideology that elevates faith, family, and fealty to the nation over democratic ideals. Rather than seeking cooperation between political systems regardless of who is in power, they seek to elevate their ideological bedfellows at the expense of everyone else. It is the subjugation of diplomacy to virulent partisanship, egged on by outriders in business and politics who smell opportunity and personal advancement in populism.

A persistent theme in the U.S.’s critique of Europe has to do with America’s culture of free speech, derived from the First Amendment. A standard trope among the MAGA faithful is that Europe is a continent cowed by censorship. But this argument reeks of double standards: In Trump’s America, saying the wrong thing can get you defunded—or deported. Everyday travelers to America now nervously expunge anything from their social-media feeds that could be interpreted as criticism of the Trump administration for fear of being arraigned at the border. So much for free speech.

For all the flaws in Europe’s approach to free expression, European universities do not typically advise American and other foreign students to delete private messages for fear of attracting the attention of the authorities. Yet Europeans would be well advised to recognize that there is a significant kernel of truth in some of the critiques. Recent EU laws governing online content are a s

·theatlantic.com·
What Trump Doesnt Understand About America First
Wachsender Protest gegen Asylunterkünfte in Großbritannien
Wachsender Protest gegen Asylunterkünfte in Großbritannien

Wachsender Protest gegen Asylunterkünfte in Großbritannien

https://www.tagesschau.de/ausland/europa/proteste-asylunterkuenfte-uk-100.html

Großbritannien Wachsender Protest gegen Asylunterkünfte

Stand: 23.08.2025 08:23 Uhr

Die Zahl der Asylanträge in Großbritannien ist zuletzt stark gestiegen. Tausende Asylsuchende sind mangels Alternativen in Hotels untergebracht. Der Unmut in den Gemeinden wächst.

Etwa 250 Protestierende haben sich am Abend in Cheshunt nördlich von London versammelt, um gegen die Asylpolitik der Regierung zu demonstrieren. Die Demonstrierenden schwenkten die britische und die englische Fahne, auf Bannern war zu lesen: "Schützt unsere Kinder". Auch Gegendemonstranten versammelten sich.

Diejenigen, die hier auf die Straße gegangen sind, befürchten offenbar, dass weitere Migranten in einem Hotel im Ort untergebracht werden, in dem bereits Asylsuchende wohnen. Denn ein Gericht hatte in dieser Woche angeordnet, dass die Migranten im Nachbarort Epping aus einem Hotel woanders untergebracht werden müssen - möglicherweise also bei ihnen im Ort in Cheshunt, so die Vermutung. Belege dafür gibt es nicht. Auch in anderen Städten gingen Menschen auf die Straße, die Demonstrationen blieben weitgehend friedlich.

Protestwochenende erwartet

Großbritannien erlebt ein weiteres Wochenende mit zahlreichen Demonstrationen gegen die Asylpolitik der Regierung, für die Schließung der Hotels, in denen Migranten untergebracht sind. Viele auf den Straßen fordern Abschiebungen. Vor mindestens 26 Hotels im Vereinigten Königreich sind Proteste geplant.

Zur Verschärfung der Lage hat ein Vorfall in Epping vor einigen Wochen beigetragen, als ein Asylbewerber gegenüber einer Teenagerin sexuell übergriffig geworden sein soll. Die Behörden ermitteln noch.

In Großbritannien sind etwa 32.000 Asylsuchende in rund 200 Hotels untergebracht. Die konservative Regierung, die bis Juli 2024 im Amt war, hatte diese Politik eingeleitet und Verträge mit Hotelbetreibern ausgehandelt, weil andere Einrichtungen teurer waren und Unterbringungsplätze fehlten.

Das "Bell Hotel" in Epping darf nach einem Gerichtsbeschluss nicht mehr zur Unterbringung von Asylsuchenden genutzt werden.

Abkommen mit Frankreich noch ohne Resultate

Premierminister Keir Starmer hat mit Amtsantritt versprochen, die Zahl der sogenannten illegalen Einwanderung zu reduzieren und vor allem die Überfahrten über den Ärmelkanal nach England zu unterbinden. Doch damit blieb er bislang erfolglos. Er versprach, Schleuserbanden aufzuspüren und hat ein Abkommen mit Frankreich geschlossen.

Die französische Regierung erklärte sich bereit, Flüchtlinge aufzunehmen, die mit dem Schlauchboot nach England kommen. Im Gegenzug soll Großbritannien wiederum Asylsuchende aus Frankreich aufnehmen. So sollen Geflüchtete abgeschreckt werden, die Überfahrt anzutreten.

Doch bislang wurden eben noch keine Personen nach Frankreich zurückgebracht. Viele Britinnen und Briten haben den Eindruck, die Regierung bleibe in der Asylpolitik erfolglos.

Triumph für Rechtspopulisten

Die politische Lage spitzt sich für Premier Starmer nun zu, vor allem nach dem Gerichtsurteil zum Hotel in Epping bei London. Geklagt hatte die dortige Stadtverwaltung nach teils gewaltsamen Protesten. Viele Menschen vor Ort begrüßten den Schritt. Daraufhin kündigten Gemeinden, in denen die rechtspopulistische Partei Reform UK an der Macht ist, an, auch gegen die Unterkünfte im Ort zu klagen.

Die Parteichefin der Konservativen, Kemi Badenoch, empfahl konservativen Stadträten ebenfalls, rechtlich gegen die Unterbringung von Asylsuchenden in den Hotels vorzugehen. Für die Partei Reform UK ist die Situation ein Triumph. Parteichef Nigel Farage sprach von einer "Krise" und forderte Massendeportationen.

Die Labour-Regierung wehrt sich nun gegen die Gerichtsentscheidung und will Einspruch einlegen. Ein Staatssekretär aus dem Innenministerium, Dan Jarvis, argumentierte, auch Labour wolle die Hotels schließen. Er warb dafür, dass für einen geregelten Ablauf Zeit nötig sei.

Deutlich wird, dass der Rückstau bei den Asylentscheidungen im Vereinigten Königreich groß ist. Im abgelaufenen Jahr bis Juni 2025 haben 111.000 Menschen Asyl beantragt - ein neuer Höchststand. 91.000 Personen warten auf eine Entscheidung.

Verschiedenes

via tagesschau.de - Die Nachrichten der ARD https://www.tagesschau.de/infoservices/alle-meldungen-100.html

August 23, 2025 at 08:30AM

·tagesschau.de·
Wachsender Protest gegen Asylunterkünfte in Großbritannien
Neue Weltordnung: Das Ende des Westens
Neue Weltordnung: Das Ende des Westens

Neue Weltordnung: Das Ende des Westens

https://taz.de/Neue-Weltordnung/!6106064/

I m US-Wahlkampf 1916 warben die Demokraten mit dem Slogan „Er hat uns aus dem Krieg herausgehalten“. Gemeint waren der Krieg in Europa und Präsident Woodrow Wilson, der skeptisch gegenüber globalem Engagement war. Das schloss keineswegs aus, in Nachbarstaaten zu intervenieren. Die USA operierten in Wilsons Amtszeit in Haiti, Nicaragua, der Dominikanischen Republik, Mexiko. Die USA maßten sich laut der Monroe-Doktrin das Recht an, als Regionalmacht willfährige Regime zu installieren. 1917 Wilson änderte seine Meinung und schickte zwei Millionen Soldaten nach Europa. Der Eintritt der USA in den Ersten Weltkrieg besiegelte die Niederlage des Deutschen Reiches – und war der Beginn des amerikanischen Jahrhunderts.

Wilson war überzeugt, dass „die göttliche Vorsehung“ die „friedfertigen“ Vereinigten Staaten beauftragt hatte, global „für Freiheit und Menschenrechte“ zu streiten. An die Stelle des zerfallenden osmanischen und Habsburger Reiches sollten Demokratien, Kapitalismus und nationale Selbstbestimmung treten. Hunderttausende feierten den US-Präsidenten im Dezember 1918 in Frankreich als Retter. Die Umsetzung von Wilsons forschem 14 Punkteprogramm, gedacht als gerechter Frieden, erwies sich angesichts der komplexen europäischen Wirklichkeit als schwieriger als gedacht. Der französische Ministerpräsident Georges Clemenceau bemerkte bei den Friedensverhandlungen in Versailles spitz, Wilson führe sich auf wie Gott – der habe aber nur zehn Gebote erlassen, der US-Präsident gleich 14.

Woodrow Wilson verkörperte jene Mixtur aus Machtwillen und Idealismus, überlegener Feuerkraft und messianischer Moral, die für die USA in den folgenden hundert Jahren charakteristisch sein sollte. Sein politischer Traum, die Gründung des Völkerbunds, der künftig Kriege durch ein Regelwerk überflüssig machen sollte, scheiterte: Der US-Senat lehnte den Beitritt der USA ab. Schon im Moment des Aufstiegs der USA zur globalen Hegemonialmacht war die Spannung zwischen Universalismus und nationalem Egoismus, zwischen Vernunft und religiöser Verklärung spürbar.

Imperiale Überdehnung der USA

Das amerikanische Jahrhundert ist vorbei. Die USA sind im Stadium jener imperialen Überdehnung angekommen, die, wenn man dem britischen Historiker Paul Kennedy folgt, zyklisch den Aufstieg von Großmächten beendet und deren Verfall einleitet.

Es gibt in diesem Prozess ein paar zentrale Stationen, etwa den illegalen Angriffskrieg gegen den Irak 2003. Der damalige Präsident George W. Bush war, wie Wilson 1916, erst skeptisch gegen einen Kriegseinsatz, dann folgte er der Hybris der Neocons und glaubte, die göttliche Vorsehung werde den Irak mit US-Bomben in eine blühende Demokratie verwandeln. Der klägliche Rückzug aus Kabul 2021 und das Desaster in Bagdad zeigten, dass die USA mit der Rolle des Weltpolizisten überfordert waren.

Der Trumpismus ist kein Alptraum, aus dem wir aufwachen werden. Die USA und Europa haben nicht mehr die gleichen Interessen

Das Ende der globalen US-Vorherrschaft hat früher, unblutig und sachlich, begonnen – mit dem Beitritt China zur Welthandelsorganisation WTO 2001. Der politische Westen, die USA und Europa produzierten 2001 mehr als 40 Prozent aller Waren und Dienstleistungen weltweit, China damals nur drei Prozent. Heute ist der Anteil der USA und der EU auf je 14 Prozent gesunken, der chinesische hat sich auf 20 Prozent vervielfacht. Die Wohlstandsexplosion in China hat das globale Machtgefüge tiefer und radikaler verändert als jeder Krieg.

Abgehängt wie Großbritannien

Einen solch atemberaubend rasanten Aufschwung gab es Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts schon einmal. Damals überholten die USA und das Deutsche Reich in extrem kurzer Zeit Großbritannien bei der Stahlproduktion. Das kündigte den Niedergang des britischen Empires und den Beginn des amerikanischen Jahrhunderts an. In gewisser Weise wiederholt sich diese Figur. Die USA heute ähneln mit sinkenden Patenten und gigantischer Verschuldung dem damals im Abstieg befindlichen britischen Weltreich, China mit seinem Innovationsgeist und machtpolitischen Ambitionen den einst aufstrebenden USA.

Es mag nahe liegen, den aktuellen Präsidenten mit seiner Mischung aus Autoritärem und intellektueller Dürftigkeit, Selbstüberschätzung und Kurzsichtigkeit für den Autor des Niedergangs der USA zu halten. Doch das ist analytisch falsch und politisch illusionär. Donald Trump ist das Symptom dieses Niedergangs.

Die Kosten, den globalen Garanten der liberalen Weltordnung zu spielen, sind mit dem Aufstieg Chinas für die USA schlicht zu hoch geworden. Die USA verfügen zwar als einziger Staat über ein globales Netz von Militärstützpunkten. Sie geben mehr Geld für Rüstung aus als alle anderen Nato-Staaten, China und Russland zusammen. Aber sie sind ökonomisch eine Macht im Niedergang.

Trump ist eine weiten Teils deformierte Antwort auf Probleme, auf die die liberalen Eliten keine Lösungen haben. Von der Hyperglobalisierung seit 1990 haben die Superreichen im Westen und die Mittelschichten in China und in den aufstrebenden Staaten profitiert. Den Mittelschichten in den USA hat sie geschadet. Trumps Zollpolitik ist erpresserisch, ökonomisch schädlich, aber auch das Versprechen, die zerstörerischen Folgen der kapitalistischen Globalisierung für die US-Mittelschicht abzufedern.

Außenpolitik wie Roosevelt

Außenpolitisch markiert Trumps Politik des Rückzugs und der ökonomischen Abschottung via Zöllen eine Rückkehr zu Wilson im Wahlkampf 1916, zum Isolationismus. Theodore Roosevelt, einer von Wilsons Vorgängern, begründete 1918 seine Abneigung gegen den Völkerbund knapp und deutlich: „Wir sind keine Internationalisten, wir sind amerikanische Nationalisten“. Trump klingt heute nicht anders.

Mit dem Rückzug der USA aus der Rolle des Weltpolizisten zerfällt auch der politische Westen, die Achse Washington-Europa. Die Nato existiert zwar noch. Noch immer sind rund 80.000 US-Soldaten in Europa stationiert. Aber der Kern, das (atomare) Abschreckungsversprechen der USA für Europa, hat Trump aufgelöst, als er bekundete, Putin könne in Europa machen, was er will.

Oder ist das ein Irrtum? Auf diese Idee konnte man kommen, als Trump kürzlich Bundeskanzler Friedrich Merz und die Staatschefs Emmanuel Macron, Giorgia Meloni, Keir Starmer und Wolodymyr Selenskyj im Weißen Haus empfing und Europas Führer in einer spektakulären live Übertragung Einigkeit mit dem gut aufgelegten US-Präsident demonstrierten.

Trump scheint – jedenfalls momentan – von der Idee ergriffen, wie Wilson 1917, Roosevelt 1941 und Clinton 1995, einen Krieg in Europa zu beenden. Waren die Untergangsprognosen also übereilt? Ist der Westen als Machtfaktor doch robuster als es scheint?

Unkalkulierbarkeit als Machtinstrument

Wer genau hinsah, entdeckte hinter der neuen transatlantischen Harmonie etwas anderes: Panik. Merz & Co versuchten fast alles zu vermeiden, was den wankelmütigen US-Präsidenten verstören könnte. Sie waren fluchtartig nach Washington gereist, um zu verhindern, dass Trump nach Putins Einflüsterungen in Alaska Selensky ein weiteres Mal öffentlich demütigen und von Hof jagen könnte. Dies war ein gut choreografierter Notfalleinsatz, geboren aus berechtigtem Misstrauen – aber keine Wiedergeburt des politischen Westens.

Hinzu kommt, dass sich Trump launisch wie ein Kind verhält, das bei jedem neuen Spielzeug das alte liegen lässt. Verlass ist bei Trump nur auf seine Unzuverlässigkeit. Rationaler formuliert: Der US-Präsident setzt, typisch für Autokraten, Unkalkulierbarkeit als Machtinstrument ein. Die USA streifen die Rolle des Welthegemon ab und verwandeln sich in eine Regionalmacht. Trumps territoriale Drohungen Richtung Panama, Grönland und Kanada wirken wie eine Wiederbelebung der Monroe-Doktrin aus dem 19. Jahrhundert.

Entsprechend geringer fällt das Interesse der posthegemonialen USA an Europa und dessen Sicherheit aus. Dass die USA Kiew irgendwann endgültig opfern, ist noch immer wahrscheinlicher als eine Renaissance des Westens in einer Anti-Putin-Allianz.

Sicherheit als Auslaufmodell

Was bedeutet das für Europa? Die USA garantierten seit 1945 die Sicherheit (West-)Europas. Das ist ein Auslaufmodell. Daher nimmt man hierzulande das Ende des Westens – gerade angesichts des russischen Revanchismus – mit einer Mischung aus Nostalgie und Angst wahr. Europa allein zu Haus. Doch sich an ein besseres Gestern zu klammern, ist selten klug.

Der Trumpismus ist kein Alptraum, aus dem wir aufwachen werden. Nüchtern betrachtet haben die USA und Europa in der postwestlichen Welt nicht mehr die gleichen Interessen. Die USA zertrümmern derzeit die internationale regelbasierte Ordnung, die Wilson und Franklin D. Roosevelt mit erschufen.

Trump ist aus der Weltgesundheitsorganisation WHO, dem Klimaabkommen, UNESCO, dem UN-Menschenrechtsrat ausgestiegen. Er hat das Iran-Atom-Abkommen und den INF Abrüstungsvertrag ruiniert. Die USA ersetzen die Stärke des Rechts durch das Recht des Stärkeren.

Europa braucht neue Bündnispartner

Europa aber ist auf eine halbwegs funktionierende rechtliche globale Ordnung angewiesen. Die EU ist selbst ein Regelwerk, das sich ohne akzeptierte Normen in Luft auflösen würde. Europa muss sich künftig Bündnispartner jenseits der USA suchen. Und es muss unabhängig werden, um in der neuen gewalttätigeren Weltordnung weder von den USA noch von Russland wirtschaftlich noch militärisch erpressbar zu sein. Das wird ein steiniger, absturzgefährdeter Weg.

Vielleicht aber ist das Ende des Westens nicht nur ein Verlust. Zur Pax Americana gehörten auch ungerechte Kriege, brutale Machtpolitik, Putsche gegen demokratisch gewählte Politiker. Der Historiker Jürgen Osterhammel hat vor ein paar Jahren bemerkt, dass der Westen von Beginn an immer minderwertige Gegner brauchte: „Kein Westen ohne Zivilisationsgefälle“. Europa nach dem Untergang des Westens ist auch die Möglichkeit, diese finstere Seite, die arrogante Überlegenheit, zu überwinden

·taz.de·
Neue Weltordnung: Das Ende des Westens
How to Use WOULD | English Grammar Explanation & Practice
How to Use WOULD | English Grammar Explanation & Practice

How to Use “WOULD” | English Grammar Explanation & Practice

https://www.engvid.com/how-to-use-would-english-grammar-explanation-practice/

“It would be great if someone explained how to use ‘would’ in real life.” I agree! It’s why I made this advanced English grammar lesson. In this class, you will learn (and PRACTICE!) how to use would for offers, preferences, requests, hypothetical situations, reported speech, and more. If I were you, I would watch this video, answer my questions, and do the quiz to double-check your understanding.

Englisch

via engVid https://www.engvid.com

August 23, 2025 at 12:06AM

·engvid.com·
How to Use WOULD | English Grammar Explanation & Practice
Classic Stories: Frankenstein
Classic Stories: Frankenstein

Classic Stories: Frankenstein

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0lyfbyf

Enjoy a classic story in English and learn 10 uses of ‘make’ - in 5 minutes.

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Englisch

via Learning English Stories http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p02pc9s1

August 22, 2025 at 10:00AM

·bbc.co.uk·
Classic Stories: Frankenstein
RFK Jr.s Wi-Fi and 5G conspiracies appear to make it into MAHA report draft
RFK Jr.s Wi-Fi and 5G conspiracies appear to make it into MAHA report draft

RFK Jr.‘s Wi-Fi and 5G conspiracies appear to make it into MAHA report draft

https://arstechnica.com/health/2025/08/maha-draft-takes-on-electromagnetic-radiation-echoing-rfk-jr-s-conspiracies/

The Trump administration's plans to improve Americans' health will include a push to review the safety of electromagnetic radiation, echoing long-held conspiracy theories and falsehoods about Wi-Fi and 5G touted by health secretary and anti-vaccine advocate Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

On Friday, Politico obtained a draft version of the "Make Our Children Healthy Again Strategy," a highly anticipated report from the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) Commission intended to steer the administration's health policy. The report, which has not been adopted by the White House, is being viewed as friendly to industry, and it contains little to no policy recommendations or proposed regulations. For instance, it includes no proposed restrictions on pesticides or ultra-processed foods, which are top priorities of the MAHA movement.

Otherwise, the document mainly rehashes the talking points and priorities of Kennedy's health crusades. That includes attacking water fluoridation, casting doubt on the safety of childhood vaccines, pushing for more physical activity in children to reduce chronic diseases, getting rid of synthetic food dyes, and claiming that children are being over-prescribed medications.

Notably, the report does not mention the leading causes of death for American children, which are firearms and motor vehicle accidents. Cancer, another top killer, is only mentioned in the context of pushing new AI technologies at the National Institutes of Health. Poisonings, another top killer, are also not mentioned explicitly.

While the importance of water quality is raised in the report, it's only in the context of fluoride and not of any other key contaminants, such as lead or PFAS. And although the draft strategy will prioritize "whole, minimally processed foods," it offers no strategy for reducing the proportion of ultra-processed food (UPF) in Americans' diets. The strategy merely aims to come up with a "government-wide definition" for UPF to guide future research and policies.

Technologie

via Ars Technica - All content https://arstechnica.com

August 18, 2025 at 07:27PM

·arstechnica.com·
RFK Jr.s Wi-Fi and 5G conspiracies appear to make it into MAHA report draft
Suffixes free and -less
Suffixes free and -less

Suffixes –free and -less

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0lxm4xr

Carefree or careless? The suffixes -free and -less.

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Englisch

via Learning English Vocabulary http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p02pc9xz

August 18, 2025 at 02:51PM

·bbc.co.uk·
Suffixes free and -less
The story of diversity in America is more complicated than it might seem
The story of diversity in America is more complicated than it might seem

The story of diversity in America is more complicated than it might seem

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2024/11/14/population-us-race-mixed-race/

For decades, the racial composition of the American population could be described with two terms, Black and White. There were members of other racial groups in the U.S. too, of course — immigrants from South America and Asia and other regions of the world — but most non-White Americans were Black in part because of federal limits on immigration.

via Washington Post - Politics https://www.washingtonpost.com

November 14, 2024 at 10:28PM

·washingtonpost.com·
The story of diversity in America is more complicated than it might seem
BOX SET: English In A Minute 26 TEN English lessons in 10 minutes!
BOX SET: English In A Minute 26 TEN English lessons in 10 minutes!

BOX SET: English In A Minute 26 – TEN English lessons in 10 minutes!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ujfl_c12G8I

Only got 10 minutes to learn English? Don't worry! Our English in a Minute box set is the perfect resource for you. Sit back, relax, and learn essential English words and grammar with some of your favourite BBC Learning English teachers!

00:00 Meanings of 'quality' 01:05 How to use 'capacity' 02:09 Meanings of 'cause' 03:15 How to use 'appropriate' 04:19 Meanings of 'consider' 05:21 How to use 'over' 06:13 Meanings of 'paint' 07:13 How to use 'general' 08:19 Meanings of 'energy' 09:19 Verbs to use with 'problem'

For more English In A Minute materials including transcripts, quizzes, vocabulary and activities, visit our website 👉 https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/course/eiam

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Englisch

via BBC Learning English https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCHaHD477h-FeBbVh9Sh7syA

August 17, 2025 at 12:30PM

·youtube.com·
BOX SET: English In A Minute 26 TEN English lessons in 10 minutes!
glitch
glitch

glitch

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/glitch

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for August 17, 2025 is:

glitch • \GLITCH\  • noun

Glitch is an informal word referring to an unexpected and usually minor problem. It is used especially for a minor problem with a machine or device, such as a computer.

// The email went out to everyone in the company because of a technical glitch.

See the entry >

Examples:

“Britain’s postal system, once overseen directly by a government minister, became a (government-owned) statutory corporation in 1970. In time, parts of it were spun off—since the days of Margaret Thatcher, the nation has pursued privatization more aggressively than most other countries—and the legal and oversight structure was subjected to continual tinkering. In a deal originating as a ‘public-private partnership’ arrangement, the Post Office in the late 1990s computerized its accounting and other operations. ... Glitches in the software soon resulted in hundreds of rural postmasters being falsely accused of theft and summarily fired.” — Cullen Murphy, The Atlantic, 3 June 2025

Did you know?

There’s a glitch in the etymology of glitch—it may come from the Yiddish glitsh, meaning “slippery place,” but that’s not certain. Print use of glitch referring to a brief unexpected surge of electrical current dates to the mid-20th century. Astronaut John Glenn, in his 1962 book Into Orbit, felt the need to explain the term to his readers: “Literally, a glitch is a spike or change in voltage in an electrical circuit which takes place when the circuit suddenly has a new load put on it.” Today, the word can be used of any minor malfunction or snag. If you’re a gamer you might even take advantage of a glitch that causes something unexpected, and sometimes beneficial, to happen in the game.

Englisch

via Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day https://www.merriam-webster.com/word-of-the-day

August 17, 2025 at 06:06AM

·merriam-webster.com·
glitch
4 Brain Breaks for World Language Learners
4 Brain Breaks for World Language Learners

4 Brain Breaks for World Language Learners

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p76Tu9-HMV8

When students who are learning a new language engage in playful games that include movement, they return to the lesson more energized and refreshed.

Spanish teacher Jamie Midyette understands just how taxing learning a language can be. At times in her class at Albert Hill Middle School in Richmond, VA, she sees her students lose eye contact, look sleepy, or get distracted. It’s at those times when she knows to turn to a valuable tool for her world language learners: brain breaks.

To find more teaching strategies for world language classrooms, visit: https://www.edutopia.org/subject/world-languages

Join the Edutopia community today to get articles, videos, and more delivered via email every Wednesday—all tailored to you and your unique role: https://edut.to/3wEVHUh

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worldlanguages #studentengagement #brainbreaks

© 2025 George Lucas Educational Foundation

Schule

via SCH ::: Edutopia https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdksaQxXH13BMeHo09MorBg

August 14, 2025 at 02:32AM

·youtube.com·
4 Brain Breaks for World Language Learners
As Trump Pushes International Students Away Asian Schools Scoop Them Up
As Trump Pushes International Students Away Asian Schools Scoop Them Up

As Trump Pushes International Students Away, Asian Schools Scoop Them Up

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/14/business/us-international-students-trump.html

The president’s hostility toward foreign students has made American higher education a riskier proposition for them. Other countries are eager to capitalize.

Schule

via NYT - Education https://www.nytimes.com/section/education

August 14, 2025 at 06:03AM

·nytimes.com·
As Trump Pushes International Students Away Asian Schools Scoop Them Up
Get over it hook up blow away: 10 Everyday English Expressions
Get over it hook up blow away: 10 Everyday English Expressions

“Get over it”, “hook up”, “blow away”: 10 Everyday English Expressions

https://www.engvid.com/get-over-it-hook-up-blow-away-10-everyday-english-expressions/

Understand and start using ten common, casual phrasal verbs that native English speakers use in everyday conversation. I explain how and when to use phrases like get out, bend over backward, bust out, have at it, get over it, chill out, hook up, and more. You’ll also hear about the informal or risky meanings some of these can have. Hear and practice the correct pronunciation with me so you can use these expressions confidently in conversation.

Englisch

via engVid https://www.engvid.com

August 13, 2025 at 05:33AM

·engvid.com·
Get over it hook up blow away: 10 Everyday English Expressions
The Presidents Police State
The Presidents Police State

The President’s Police State

https://www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/archive/2025/08/trump-national-guard-dc/683839/

This is an edition of The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here.

For years, prominent voices on the right argued that Democrats were enacting a police state. They labeled everything—a report on homegrown extremism, IRS investigations into nonprofits—a sign of impending authoritarianism. Measures taken by state governments to combat the spread of COVID? Tyranny. An FBI search of Mar-a-Lago? The weaponization of law enforcement.

Now that a president is actually sending federal troops and officers out into the streets of the nation’s cities, however, the right is in lockstep behind him. This morning, Donald Trump announced that he was declaring a crime emergency, temporarily seizing control of the Washington, D.C., Metropolitan Police Department and deploying the D.C. National Guard to the nation’s capital.

“This is liberation day in D.C.,” Trump said. Nothing says liberation like deploying hundreds of uniformed soldiers against the wishes of the local elected government. District residents have made clear that they would prefer greater autonomy, including congressional representation, and they have three times voted overwhelmingly against Trump. His response is not just to flex power but to treat the District of Columbia as the president’s personal fiefdom.

Trump’s move is based on out-of-date statistics. It places two officials without municipal policing experience in positions of power over federalization and the MPD, and seems unlikely to significantly affect crime rates. What the White House hopes it might achieve, Politico reports, is “a quick, visually friendly PR win.” Trump needs that after more than a month of trying and failing to change the subject from his onetime friend Jeffrey Epstein.

But what this PR stunt could also do is create precedent for Trump to send armed forces out into American streets whenever he declares a spurious state of emergency. Some of Trump’s supporters don’t seem to mind that fact: “Trump has the opportunity to do a Bukele-style crackdown on DC crime,” Christopher Rufo, the influential conservative personality, posted on X, referring to Nayib Bukele, the Trump ally who is president of El Salvador. “Question is whether he has the will, and whether the public the stomach. Big test: Can he reduce crime faster than the Left advances a counternarrative about ‘authoritarianism’? If yes, he wins. Speed matters.”

Rufo seems to view everything in terms of a political battle to be won via narratives; the term authoritarianism appears to mean nothing to him, and maybe it never meant anything to others on the right who assailed Barack Obama, Joe Biden, and Democratic governors. It does have a real meaning, though, and Bukele is its poster boy. Despite the constitution having banned it, he ran for a second term in office; his party then changed the constitution to allow “indefinite” reelection. Lawmakers in his party also brazenly removed supreme-court justices, and his government has forced journalists into exile and locked up tens of thousands of people without due process. This is apparently the America that Chris Rufo wants.

To justify the crackdown, Trump has cited an alleged carjacking attempt that police records say injured the former DOGE employee Edward “Big Balls” Coristine. But MPD has already arrested two Maryland 15-year-olds for unarmed carjacking. That’s good news. Carjacking is a serious crime and should be punished. But Trump has used the incident to claim that violent crime is skyrocketing in Washington. This is, put simply, nonsense. During a press conference today, Trump cited murder statistics from 2023, and said that carjackings had “more than tripled” over the past five years. He didn’t use more recent numbers because they show that these crimes are down significantly in Washington. Murder dropped 32 percent from 2023 to 2024, robberies 39 percent, and armed carjackings 53 percent. This is in line with a broad national reduction in crime. MPD’s preliminary data indicate that violent crime is down another 26 percent so far this year compared with the same timeframe in 2024, though as the crime-statistics analyst Jeff Asher writes, this drop is probably overstated.

Trump’s descriptions of Washington as a lawless hellscape bear little resemblance to what most residents experience. Not only is D.C. not "one of the most dangerous cities anywhere in the World,” as Trump claims, but his prescription seems unlikely to help. He said he is appointing Attorney General Pam Bondi and Terry Cole, the head of the Drug Enforcement Administration, to help lead the federalization effort and MPD, but neither has any experience with municipal policing. They have not said what they will do differently. If the administration deploys its forces to high-profile areas such as the National Mall, they won’t have much impact on violent crime, because that’s not where it happens; if they go to less central areas with higher crime rates, they won’t get the PR boost they seek, because tourists and news cameras aren’t there.

Throughout his two presidencies, Trump has treated the military as a prop for making statements about which issues he cares about—and which he doesn’t. He deployed the D.C. National Guard during protests after the murder of George Floyd in summer 2020. Earlier this summer, he federalized the California National Guard and sent Marines to Los Angeles to assist with immigration enforcement, but they were sent home when it became clear that they had nothing to do there. Yet according to testimony before the January 6 panel, Trump did not deploy the D.C. National Guard when an armed mob was sacking the U.S. Capitol in 2021 to try to help Trump hold on to power.

Good policing is important because citizens deserve the right to live in safety. Recent drops in crime in Washington are good news because the district’s residents should be able to feel safe. But Trump’s militarization of the city, his seizure of local police, and his lies about crime in Washington do the opposite: They are a way to make people feel unsafe, and either quiet residents’ dissent or make them support new presidential power grabs. Many of Trump’s defenders are angry when he’s called an authoritarian, but not when he acts as one.

Related:

Trump’s farcical D.C. crackdown

Emergency powers are about to be tested. (From January)

Here are three new stories from The Atlantic:

Bono: Israel and Gaza, held hostage by fundamentalism

Jonathan Chait: Donald Trump doesn’t really care about crime.

Extreme Home Makeover: White House Edition, by Alexandra Petri

Today’s News

An explosion at a U.S. Steel plant in Clairton, Pennsylvania, killed at least one person and injured at least 10. Authorities are investigating the cause as rescue efforts continue, with one person still missing.

A federal judge denied the Department of Justice’s request to unseal grand-jury records in Ghislaine Maxwell’s criminal case, adding that they offer no “meaningful new information” beyond what was revealed at trial.

President Donald Trump said his administration is considering reclassifying marijuana as less dangerous and will decide in the coming weeks.

Dispatches

The Wonder Reader: Isabel Fattal compiles a list of beach-read recommendations for all moods.

The Weekly Planet: A new study found that, in hundreds of clean-energy futures, the world fell short of key resources, Alexander C. Kaufman writes.

Explore all of our newsletters here.

Evening Read

Illustration by Jonelle Afurong / The Atlantic*

A Cheat Code for Parents Isn’t Working Anymore

By Shirley Li

Julia, a Muppet on Sesame Street, is a 4-year-old girl with bright-orange hair who likes singing, painting, and playing with her stuffed bunny, “Fluffster.” She’s also autistic—which means, as the show made clear during the character’s TV debut, in 2017, that Julia expresses herself in a manner some might not understand. When Big Bird worries that Julia’s silence means she doesn’t like him, his fellow Muppet Abby explains that Julia does things “in a Julia sort of way.” By the end of the episode, Big Bird and Julia are friends, even harmonizing in song.

Neurodivergence is rarely portrayed authentically on-screen, let alone in a way children can grasp. But Julia, who went on to become a regular presence on the show, is the result of a collaboration between Sesame Workshop, the nonprofit company behind Sesame Street, and a team of researchers who study child development and autism. And her introduction did more than demonstrate what neurodivergence can look like; the show emphasized that she has an identity of her own and is as worthy of friendship as anyone else. Those are complex concepts, carefully constructed for young viewers to comprehend.

In the years ahead, such meticulous work may be harder to accomplish.

Read the full article.

More From The Atlantic

A tech rule that will “future-proof” your kids

The elite-university presidents who despise one another

The facial-recognition sham

Elaina Plott Calabro: Canada is killing itself.

No one in the White House knows how to stop Ebola.

Trump invites Putin to set foot in America.

Yes, a moon base.

Culture Break

Illustration: Louise Zergaeng Pomeroy. Sources: Edoardo Fornaciari / Getty; Evening Standard / Getty.

Examine. The novelist Muriel Spark was more than just a wit; she was also a religious writer.

Read. “Surface Support,” a poem by Michael D. Snediker:

“Meniscus augur & hour of errors as the mercury rag spills its rings / from his last good pore, his teeth shaped in greenhouse suet or little / expectant pots of orchid balm in snow.”

Play our daily crossword.

P.S.

Today’s non-Atlantic recommended reading comes from David D. Kirkpatrick at The New Yo

·theatlantic.com·
The Presidents Police State
Trumps Farcical D.C. Crackdown
Trumps Farcical D.C. Crackdown

Trump’s Farcical D.C. Crackdown

https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2025/08/trump-dc-national-guard/683835/

In the summer of 2020, as demonstrators gathered in Washington, D.C., to protest against the murder of George Floyd, President Donald Trump directed the National Guard and officers from various federal law-enforcement agencies to patrol the streets of the nation’s capital. The results were a disaster from the perspective of crowd control but a delight to a wannabe authoritarian  obsessed with good TV: Troops and police buzzed peaceful protesters with a helicopter and fired pepper balls at them as Trump walked across Lafayette Square for a photo shoot.

Now, five years later, Trump has once again decided to impose his idea of law and order upon Washington. This time, however, the city is quiet, and he’s not responding to any protests. He’s sending in the troops because he can—because D.C., as a federal enclave with few protections from presidential overreach, makes for a uniquely soft target. This ostensible show of strength is more like an admission of weakness. It is the behavior of a bully: very bad for the people it touches, but not a likely prelude to full authoritarian takeover.

The inciting incident for this particular round of repression was the attempted carjacking last week of Edward Coristine, better known as Big Balls, a 19-year-old member of Elon Musk’s DOGE inner circle. This sent Trump into a frenzy. “Crime in Washington, D.C., is totally out of control,” he wrote on Truth Social. “I am going to exert my powers, and FEDERALIZE this City.”

One could raise a few objections to this. First, violent crime in the District, including carjackings, has declined dramatically from its post-pandemic highs to the lowest rate in 30 years. Second, if Trump is deeply concerned about safety in D.C., why did his Department of Homeland Security slash federal security funding for the city almost in half in recent months? (Why, for that matter, did he refuse for hours to deploy the National Guard on January 6, 2021, when a violent mob assaulted law-enforcement officers?) And third, the president cannot unilaterally “federalize” the city. D.C. is under the direct authority of the federal government, but the Home Rule Act of 1973 provides the city with significant control over its own affairs—something that can be removed only by an act of Congress.

What Trump can do, and what he announced he would do in a press conference this morning, is direct the D.C. National Guard onto the streets of the city, along with a variety of federal agencies that the president listed off in a bored, singsong tone (“FBI, ATF, DEA, Park Police, the U.S. Marshals Service, Secret Service, Department of Homeland Security …”). He also declared his intention to take control of D.C.’s Metropolitan Police Department under a never-before-used provision of the Home Rule Act that allows the president to direct local police for up to 30 days given “special conditions of an emergency nature.” Congress can extend the authorization, but Senate Republicans might well have to surmount a Democratic filibuster to do so. Whether Trump’s use of the statute can be challenged in court is unclear.

[Quinta Jurecic: Trump is exploiting D.C.’s lack of statehood]

The idea of armed officers under presidential control patrolling the streets of a free city is not a reassuring one. So far, however, the surge in law enforcement—which began a few days ago, before this morning’s announcement—appears mostly farcical. Footage from WUS9, a local news station, showed a pack of Drug Enforcement Administration agents lumbering awkwardly along the Mall in bulletproof vests as joggers streaked past. (For those unfamiliar with D.C., the Mall—a green expanse frequented by tourists and ice-cream trucks—is not exactly a hotbed of crime, especially on a sunny summer morning.) Near my quiet neighborhood in D.C.’s Northwest quadrant, federal officers have been patrolling a tiny park whose chief menace, in my experience, has been the occasional abandoned chicken bone scarfed down by my dog. Over the weekend, I watched a Secret Service car drive slowly in circles around my block. At first I assumed that the agents had gotten lost.

Trump is fresh off his deployment of National Guard troops to Los Angeles, which he launched with great fanfare in June to intimidate anti-ICE protesters, then quietly withdrew weeks later after grinding down the Guard’s morale with what some service members described to The New York Times as a “fake mission.” On the surface, deploying the Guard and federal law enforcement to D.C., and taking control of its entire police force, is an escalation of this project. In a deeper sense, however, it’s an admission of weakness. D.C.’s unique legal status means that Trump can personally direct the city’s National Guard, and even its police, with far fewer restrictions than he faced in Los Angeles. The same day that Trump announced his crackdown on the capital, a federal judge in San Francisco began a three-day trial over the legality of the Los Angeles deployment, in response to a lawsuit filed by California Governor Gavin Newsom.

The District, which is both heavily Democratic and plurality Black, has long served as a useful boogeyman in the Republican imaginary. During Trump’s press conference, he rambled about crime in not only D.C. but also Baltimore, Chicago, and Oakland, and appeared to suggest in one confusing moment that he was going to get rid of cashless bail in Chicago. (The president cannot do this.) These cities, like D.C., all have Black mayors and significant Black populations—and, for that matter, falling crime rates—but, unlike the capital, they are protected by blue-state governments with significant authority to push back against the president.

The good news, such as it is, is that Trump’s latest seizure of power is probably not the prelude to an autogolpe. The bad news is that, nine years into the Trump era, this sort of thing has become much more familiar: the president identifying a loophole in the law that allows him to wield force with little constraint. To the extent that his D.C. crackdown is real, those who will suffer the most are those who are already vulnerable, especially people living on the streets, whom Trump has declared are no longer welcome in the city. As Trump’s rhetoric heated up last week, the D.C. attorney general, Brian Schwalb, sent out a notice warning local hospitals to expect a surge of patients should law enforcement begin clearing homeless encampments.

After the 2020 National Guard deployment to D.C., congressional Democrats briefly rallied around the idea of finally granting the District statehood. After January 6, they pushed for legislation that would secure mayoral control over the Guard. Neither initiative went anywhere. Any future effort to patch up American democracy should understand that securing D.C.’s autonomy is part of the necessary work of limiting the tools available to malicious interference.

via Best of The Atlantic https://www.theatlantic.com/

August 11, 2025 at 11:17PM

·theatlantic.com·
Trumps Farcical D.C. Crackdown
Extra-strong nicotine pouches packaged like children's sweets
Extra-strong nicotine pouches packaged like children's sweets

Extra-strong nicotine pouches packaged like children's sweets

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cnv75dd3v37o

Extra-strong nicotine pouches packaged like children's sweets

Katie McEvinney BBC Disclosure

BBC

The nicotine pouches are being sold in packaging that looks like children's sweets

Extra-strong nicotine products designed to appeal to children – including some which have ripped off the logos of popular sweet brands – are being openly sold in shops, BBC Scotland has found.

A Disclosure reporter, filming undercover, bought nicotine pouches which mimic the name and branding of the well-known "Millions" sweets in a shop in the east end of Glasgow.

The shop worker who sold the pouches claimed they contained 100mg of nicotine, which would make them about 10 times the strength of a cigarette.

Tests later showed a lower level of 17mg, which would still be defined as extra strong by most legitimate manufacturers.

Trading Standards said they were concerned about products with a "worrying child appeal" as well as flavours and "eye-catching packaging" that mimicked sweets.

However, there is no law restricting the age of sale for nicotine pouches, so any child can legally enter a shop and buy the addictive products.

Getty Images

The pouches are small sachets that contain nicotine

The pouches are small, pillow-like sachets that contain nicotine - a chemical found in tobacco which acts as a stimulant.

There are no restrictions on the strength of the nicotine in the pouches.

They are placed under the top lip, against the gum and deliver a nicotine hit which can be stronger than cigarettes or vapes.

Some people use them as a way to quit smoking, though they are not recommended by the NHS.

What are the potential side effects of nicotine pouches?

The pouches are significantly less harmful than cigarettes, and because chemicals do not enter the lungs, they may carry fewer risks than vapes.

However, they can cause a variety of side effects including nicotine addiction, oral health issues and gastrointestinal problems.

People may experience gum irritation and recession. The pouches can also lead to increased heart rate, blood pressure and increase the risk of cardiovascular diseases.

Kate Pike, from the Chartered Institute of Trading Standards, said it was "outrageous" that products were mimicking popular sweet brands in a bid to target children.

A BBC reporter, filming undercover, bought nicotine pouches with branding that mimicked sweets in a shop in Glasgow

For the BBC Disclosure documentary Nicotine Pouches: What's the Problem?, a reporter was secretly filmed buying a tub of orange-flavoured Millions pouches for £7.50.

The shop worker who sold the product told her: "They're special."

The product did not have all of the required hazard warnings, nor did it have traceable manufacturer details.

The design on the tub featured photos of the Millions sweets, made by Scottish confectionery manufacturer Golden Casket Ltd.

It told the BBC it had no connection to nicotine pouches and was "appalled" its branding was being used in this way.

Another brand called "Candys", with pictures of gummy bears, was also for sale.

The makers of the Candys brand did not respond.

Ms Pike told the BBC: "Millions sweets are clearly a product for children and there is no reason to link them with nicotine pouches unless you want to attract children.

"If this was alcohol, there would be an outcry. A child coming across that would think it's for them and nicotine is a highly addictive substance.

"Retailers should be more responsible for what they are offering in their communities."

Prof Crawford Moodie, of the University of Stirling, has been researching the marketing of tobacco and nicotine products for years.

He said: "It makes you question what these companies are trying to do. I mean, clearly, they don't have consent to do that.

"But the fact that companies are putting these on the market and retailers are quite happy to sell them shows that we are not in a good place with respect to controlling the nicotine pouch market and protecting young people in particular.

"There's very little in the packaging to tell you that they're not sweets and the potential for abuse and detrimental effects for young people are clearly there."

When contacted by the BBC, the retailer said it had now taken the Millions product off its shelves.

Alex said he had never tried smoking or vaping before taking nicotine patches

The Disclosure programme spoke to young people who said they had used pouches.

Alex started taking them two years ago when he was 15 in school and became addicted.

He said he had never tried smoking or vaping before.

It was the packaging, how the different flavours were advertised and seeing his friends take the pouches, that made him want to try them himself.

He said: "I think it was just something different.

"It went from one a day to three a day to - at my highest - I was using probably 15 a day.

"If I didn't take them, I'd just get withdrawals and just feel demotivated and like I didn't want to do anything until I took another one."

Nicotine pouches are currently unregulated and can be sold legally to under-18s.

The Tobacco and Vapes Bill is going through the House of Lords but there are calls for government to speed up the legislation to shut down loopholes.

The bill will ban the sale of nicotine pouches to under-18s and will restrict things like where they can be positioned in shops as well as limiting flavours, strengths, packaging and how they are advertised.

"We are receiving widespread reports from across the UK that these nicotine pouches are being sold to children," said Ms Pike, Trading Standards' lead officer for tobacco and vaping.

"Parents are getting in touch assuming we can take action and are shocked when we tell them we can't.

"At the moment it's perfectly legal and there's nothing we can do."

The BBC contacted several of the biggest manufacturers of nicotine pouches and all of them supported forthcoming legislation.

British American Tobacco said its pouches "should never be used by those under-age", manufacturer Phillip Morris said nicotine pouches had proved "hugely successful" for adults to quit cigarettes, and Japan Tobacco International said "minors should never use or access nicotine-containing products".

via BBC News https://www.bbc.co.uk/news

August 7, 2025 at 12:59PM

·bbc.com·
Extra-strong nicotine pouches packaged like children's sweets
Practical English: Responding to good news
Practical English: Responding to good news

Practical English: Responding to good news

https://www.espressoenglish.net/practical-english-responding-to-good-news/

Download lesson PDF Everyday Speaking Course Do you ever hear good news in English… and you’re not sure how to respond? Don’t just say “okay” or “nice” – use one of the natural and expressive phrases from this video! When someone shares their good news, your response matters – and the right phrase shows that […]

The post Practical English: Responding to good news appeared first on Espresso English.

Englisch

via Espresso English https://www.espressoenglish.net/

August 10, 2025 at 02:02PM

·espressoenglish.net·
Practical English: Responding to good news
behemoth
behemoth

behemoth

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/behemoth

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for August 9, 2025 is:

behemoth • \bih-HEE-muth\  • noun

A behemoth is something of monstrous size, power, or appearance. Behemoth (usually capitalized) is also the name of a mighty animal described in the biblical book of Job.

// The town will be voting on whether or not to let the retail behemoth build a store on the proposed site.

See the entry >

Examples:

"The author ... recounts how his grandfather turned a family spinach farm into an industrial behemoth, and exposes the greed and malfeasance behind the prosperous facade." — The New York Times, 6 July 2025

Did you know?

In the biblical book of Job, Behemoth is the name of a powerful grass-eating, river-dwelling beast with bones likened to bronze pipes and limbs likened to iron bars. Scholars have speculated that the biblical creature was inspired by the hippopotamus, but details about the creature’s exact nature are vague. The word first passed from the Hebrew word bĕhēmōth into Late Latin (the Latin used by writers in the third to sixth centuries), where, according to 15th century English poet and monk John Lydgate it referred to "a beast rude full of cursednesse." In modern English, behemoth functions as an evocative term for something of monstrous size, power, or appearance.

Englisch

via Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day https://www.merriam-webster.com/word-of-the-day

August 9, 2025 at 06:06AM

·merriam-webster.com·
behemoth
Trump calls for major changes to census amid GOP redistricting effort
Trump calls for major changes to census amid GOP redistricting effort

Trump calls for major changes to census amid GOP redistricting effort

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/08/07/trump-calls-major-changes-census-amid-gop-redistricting-effort/

President Donald Trump said Thursday that he plans to conduct a new census that would not count people present in the country illegally, an order that clashes with the Constitution and would almost certainly face a series of legal challenges.

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Trump wrote on his social media site, Truth Social, that he had “instructed our Department of Commerce to immediately begin work on a new and highly accurate CENSUS based on modern day facts and figures.”

The census takes place every 10 years by law, and was last held in 2020. It is meant to provide a full accounting of everyone present in the United States, including people living in the U.S. without authorization. It is unclear if Trump is ordering a new Census to be conducted immediately, or if he is saying he wants to redesign the process ahead of the planned 2030 census. Neither the White House nor a spokesperson for the Census Bureau responded to a request for comment.

The new Census, Trump wrote, would use the “results and information gained from the Presidential Election of 2024,” and would not count “people who are in our Country illegally.”

Follow Trump’s second term

The order is part of Trump’s broader fight over redistricting. Typically, redistricting — the process that allocates congressional representation — follows a census. The census, which is mandated by Article 1, Section 2 of the United States Constitution, is used to determine how many seats in the House of Representatives each state receives, as well as the disbursement of billions of dollars in federal funding.

Trump has recently spearheaded an attempt by Texas Republicans to force a mid-decade redistricting effort that would consolidate Republican power in the state and likely add seats to the House that are guaranteed to be held by Republicans.

While Trump says Republicans are “entitled” to five additional seats in Texas based on the strength of his showing there in the 2024 election, the redistricting attempt has set off a nationwide fight, with Democrats responding by threatening to redistrict in deep blue states, like California.

A census that excludes undocumented immigrants could shrink the congressional representation of some blue states, many of which have sizable undocumented populations. But it could reduce the caucuses of red states as well.

A Pew Research Center study in 2020 found that removing undocumented immigrants from the Census count would result in California, Florida and Texas — the three states with the largest undocumented populations — ending up with one less House seat than they would have had. Alabama, Minnesota and Ohio would each hold onto one seat they would have otherwise lost, according to the study.

By redoing the census, Trump seemingly believes he will be able to strengthen Republican power further, however. This is not the first time Trump has tried to change the count. During his first term in office, the Trump administration made repeated attempts to influence the 2020 Census, records obtained in a lawsuit by the nonpartisan legal organization The Brennan Center revealed, including an effort to remove undocumented people in the United States from the count.

The United States Supreme Court in 2019 struck down the Trump administration’s plan to include a citizenship question on the 2020 Census form sent to every U.S. household, arguing that the federal government had provided a “contrived” reason for wanting the information. Trump lashed out at the court for the decision, writing that it was “totally ridiculous” that the government “cannot ask a basic question of Citizenship in a very expensive, detailed and important Census.”

“I have asked the lawyers if they can delay the Census,” he added. It ultimately went ahead.

The 2020 Census, which the Government Accountability Office found cost over $13 billion, was impacted by the coronavirus pandemic, and the Census Bureau announced in 2022 that the survey undercounted Hispanics, Blacks and other minority groups and overcounted Whites and Asians.

Any attempt by the Trump administration to conduct a new Census would be met with swift legal challenges, especially because the Constitution explicitly states the Census is to be made “every subsequent term of ten years” and the 14th Amendment to the Constitution requires states count “the whole number of persons in each State.”

Adriel I. Cepeda Derieux, the deputy director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s voting rights project, said the organization is prepared for a legal fight if Trump tries to go forward with dropping the undocumented population from the Census count. The ACLU successfully sued to block the first Trump administration’s 2019 attempt to add a citizenship question to the Census.

“Our reaction is, ‘We’ve been here before with President Trump trying to weaponize the Census against immigrant communities and particularly against undocumented immigrants,’” said Adriel I. Cepeda Derieux, the deputy director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s voting rights project. “The goal, of course, is erasing millions of immigrants from the country with the idea they would take political power away from diverse communities where they live. Any attempt to threaten these communities in the way the first administration did … we would be ready to meet them in court.”

None of this means Trump won’t attempt to conduct a new Census or that a protracted fight over a new Census couldn’t happen, but because Congress codified the Census in the 1950s, it is likely the legislative body would need to be involved, too.

Trump has yet to nominate a candidate to lead the Census Bureau after Robert Santos, who had been nominated by former president Joe Biden and confirmed by the Senate in 2021, resigned from the position earlier this year. Ron S. Jarmin is currently the acting director of the Census Bureau.

Whether Trump can initiate an updated Census or not, he will be able to influence the 2030 Census even though his term ends in 2029. Because the process takes years to plan, the Census Bureau is required by federal law to submit the questions it plans to ask Americans no later than two years in advance, well before Trump leaves office.

via Washington Post - Politics https://www.washingtonpost.com

August 7, 2025 at 06:59PM

·washingtonpost.com·
Trump calls for major changes to census amid GOP redistricting effort
Trump Administration to Require Universities to Submit Data on Applicants Race
Trump Administration to Require Universities to Submit Data on Applicants Race

Trump Administration to Require Universities to Submit Data on Applicants’ Race

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/07/us/politics/trump-schools-race-data.html

Trump Administration to Require Universities to Submit Data on Applicants’ Race

nytimes.com

via News - Trending on BuzzSumo https://app.buzzsumo.com/rss/trending/MGtqaGFrc2RoYWto/bmV3c2tqaGFrc2RoYWto

August 8, 2025 at 08:54AM

·nytimes.com·
Trump Administration to Require Universities to Submit Data on Applicants Race
Classic Stories: Oliver Twist
Classic Stories: Oliver Twist

Classic Stories: Oliver Twist

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0lpjrp7

Enjoy a classic story in English and learn 7 uses of ‘light’ - in 5 minutes.

FIND BBC LEARNING ENGLISH HERE:

Visit our website ✔️ https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish Follow us ✔️ https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/followus

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Englisch

via Learning English Stories http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p02pc9s1

July 11, 2025 at 12:00PM

·bbc.co.uk·
Classic Stories: Oliver Twist
Time expressions
Time expressions

Time expressions

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0lq0rhz

Neil and Catherine look at time expressions with 'in', 'at' and 'on'.

FIND BBC LEARNING ENGLISH HERE: Visit our website ✔️ https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish Follow us ✔️ https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/followus

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Englisch

via Learning English Vocabulary http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p02pc9xz

July 14, 2025 at 10:30AM

·bbc.co.uk·
Time expressions
What is degrowth?
What is degrowth?

What is degrowth?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0lryq8x

Should we shrink the economy to save the planet? Today, Phil is joined by Hannah from BBC podcast What in the world who explains the idea of degrowth.

Find a full transcript, worksheet and interactive quiz for this episode at: https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/features/6-minute-english_2025/ep-250724

Watch episodes of What in the World on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UxxrFOqY6Iw&list=PLz_B0PFGIn4eMOlGZclzdcHmv7s8BFQE6 Or listen here https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w13xtvrv

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TRY LEARNING ENGLISH FROM THE NEWS:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/features/learning-english-from-the-news_2025

FIND BBC LEARNING ENGLISH HERE:

Visit our website ✔️ https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish

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Try some of our other popular podcasts including: ✔️ Learning English Stories ✔️ Learning English from the News ✔️ Learning English for Work

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Englisch

via 6 Minute English http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p02pc9tn

July 24, 2025 at 10:21AM

·bbc.co.uk·
What is degrowth?
The past perfect
The past perfect

The past perfect

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0lswx3j

Where had John already gone when Mary rang his doorbell? We give you the answer.

Have you tried our podcast 'Real Easy English'? Find it with a free worksheet and transcript here: ✔️ https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/features/real-easy-english

Subscribe to our newsletter ✔️ https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/newsletters

FIND BBC LEARNING ENGLISH HERE: Visit our website ✔️ https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish Follow us ✔️ https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/followus

For more of our podcasts, search for these in your podcast app: ✔️ Learning English for Work ✔️ Learning Easy English ✔️ Learning English from the News ✔️ Learning English Stories ✔️ 6 Minute English ✔️ Learning English Conversations ✔️ Learning English Vocabulary

Englisch

via Learning English Grammar http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p02pc9wq

July 29, 2025 at 11:16AM

·bbc.co.uk·
The past perfect
BBC Learning English - 6 Minute English / What is the manosphere?
BBC Learning English - 6 Minute English / What is the manosphere?

BBC Learning English - 6 Minute English / What is the manosphere?

https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/features/6-minute-english_2025/ep-250731



Try more episodes of 6 Minute English:


Introduction

Have you heard of 'the manosphere'? Recent years have seen an increase in social media content that promotes controversial ideas about masculinity, and vulnerable young men are falling under its influence. Phil and Georgie discuss this and teach you some new vocabulary.

This week's question

According to men's self-help group the Movember Foundation, what proportion of British young men regularly engage with masculinity influencers online?

a)    two thirds b)    three quarters c)    eight tenths

Listen to the programme to hear the answer.

Vocabulary

easy target someone who is vulnerable or easily taken advantage of

bravado show of bravery or confidence to impress other people

quote unquote used to show you are repeating someone else's words, especially if you do not agree

distorted changed and misshapen so that it looks strange or unnatural

us versus them phrase used to show hostility between two opposing groups

paint everyone with the same brush (idiom) unfairly think that everyone has the same bad qualities as another person

TRANSCRIPT

Note: This is not a word-for-word transcript.

Phil Hello, this is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English. I'm Phil.

Georgie And I'm Georgie.

Phil We hear a lot about the difficulties young men face growing up in the modern world, and how many of them are looking online for answers. This has created a situation which has been given the name 'the manosphere'. What exactly is the manosphere? Here's Anita Rani, presenter of BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour, with one definition:

Anita Rani The manosphere consists of online communities and influencers that promote the idea that emotional control, material wealth, physical appearance and dominance, especially over women, are markers of male worth.

Phil The manosphere describes attitudes expressed online that men are superior. You won't find any website named www.manosphere.com, but in social media posts, TikTok videos and other online content, ideas about how to be a man are finding a young male audience, sometimes with damaging results.

Georgie In this episode we'll hear from Will Adolphy, a young British man who followed the manosphere until, in his mid-twenties, he suffered a breakdown. And as usual, we'll learn some useful new words and phrases. And remember – you'll find all the vocabulary from this episode on our website, bbclearningenglish.com.

Phil But first, I have a question for you, Georgie. According to men's self-help group the Movember Foundation, a majority of British young men regularly engage with masculinity influencers online, but how many exactly? Is it:

a)    two thirds, b)    three quarters, or c)    eight tenths?

Georgie I'm going to guess a) two thirds.

Phil OK. Well, we'll find out the answer later in the programme. The manosphere includes the idea that the world is biased against men. According to the social media influencers who promote these views, being a man means being strong, rich and controlling others, especially women.

Georgie As a young boy, Will Adolpy was unlike other boys at school, and as he grew into a teenager, he started engaging with some of these ideas. Here, he tells BBC Radio 4 programme Woman's Hour how it all started:

Will Adolphy I didn't quite fit in the box – you know, I was doing ballet, I wanted to be an actor, I wrote poetry – and I was an easy target. By the time I got to 14 years old, if you look at pictures of me, you can see bravado, you can see a mask – I see it. I unknowingly did my best to adhere to what we call the 'man box', which is a kind of rigid set of ideals and rules that I may feel pressure as a boy to follow, in order to be a quote unquote 'real man'.

Georgie The teenage years can be difficult for someone who's different. Will enjoyed poetry and ballet, and he says this made him an easy target – someone who's vulnerable and easily taken advantage of.

Phil Will responded with bravado – a show of bravery to impress other people but which often hides someone's true feelings.  He felt pressure to present himself as a quote unquote 'real man'. The phrase quote unquote can be used to show you're repeating someone else's words, especially if you don't agree with them.

Georgie But behind the bravado, Will struggled to get a girlfriend or hold down a job. Offline, his life seemed to reflect messages he saw in the videos he was watching online: that his problems were caused by women. Here's Will again, sharing more with BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour:

Will Adolphy When I went online to search for answers, I had an influencer telling me, "The world hates men," which really felt true. And it, kind of, distorted my worldview, where it got painted over – this whole brush… where I started to feel that was really true: that everyone hates men, so it was an us versus them.

Phil Will's view of the world became distorted – twisted out of shape and unrealistic. He started seeing everyone as an enemy. Will says he painted everyone with the same brush – an idiom meaning to unfairly think everyone has the same bad qualities as a certain person.

Georgie Will saw the world as us versus them – a phrase which is used to show hostility between two opposing groups: in this case, the men in the manosphere and everyone else, especially women, progressives and the mainstream media, who he believed wanted to limit their power.

Phil Luckily for Will, his experiences in the online world of the manosphere ended, but not before his mental health had declined to the point of a breakdown. Now, he visits schools around the UK telling his story to young people, reminding them always to question what they see and hear online.

Georgie OK. Phil, I think it's time to reveal the answer to your question.

Phil Yes, I asked you how many British young men regularly engage with masculinity influencers online?

Georgie And I said a) two thirds.

Phil …which was the correct answer. Well done!

Georgie Thank you. OK. Let's recap the vocabulary we've learned, starting with an easy target – a vulnerable person who is easily taken advantage of.

Phil Bravado is a show of bravery or confidence to impress people.

Georgie The phrase quote unquote can be used to show you are repeating someone else's words, especially if you do not agree.

Phil Something which is distorted has become misshapen so that it looks strange or unnatural.

Georgie The phrase us versus them is used to show hostility between two opposing groups.

Phil And finally, if you paint everyone with the same brush, you unfairly think everyone has the same bad qualities of one person. Once again, our six minutes are up, but if you enjoyed this episode, why not check out the worksheet and quiz, both available now at bbclearningenglish.com! Goodbye for now!

Georgie Goodbye.

 

Next

If you liked this topic, try this episode about making male friends.

Have you tried Learning English from the News?

Englisch

via BBC Learning English - Feature: 6 Minute English https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/features/6-minute-english

July 31, 2025 at 09:55AM

·bbc.co.uk·
BBC Learning English - 6 Minute English / What is the manosphere?
palimpsest
palimpsest

palimpsest

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/palimpsest

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for August 2, 2025 is:

palimpsest • \PAL-imp-sest\  • noun

Palimpsest in its original use refers to writing material (such as a parchment manuscript) used one or more times after earlier writing has been erased; the underlying text is said to be “in palimpsest.” Palimpsest in extended use refers to something that has usually diverse layers or aspects apparent beneath the surface.

// Scholars believe the motive for making palimpsests was often economic—reusing parchment was cheaper than preparing a new skin.

// The ancient city is an architectural palimpsest.

See the entry >

Examples:

“My aim was to trace the course of … the Aqua Marcia, built between 144 and 140 B.C. by Julius Caesar’s ancestor Quintus Marcius Rex. … The original tuff arches carried the Marcia across a steep ravine. Subsequent retaining walls and buttresses have transformed the bridge into a palimpsest of building styles.” — David Laskin, The New York Times, 24 Apr. 2024

Did you know?

Long ago, writing surfaces were so highly valued that they were often used more than once. Palimpsest in its original use referred to an early form of recycling in which an old document was erased to make room for a new one when parchment ran short. (The word is from the Greek palimpsēstos, meaning “scraped again.”) Fortunately for modern scholars, the erasing process wasn’t completely effective, so the original could often be distinguished under the newer writing. De republica, by Roman statesman and orator Cicero, is one of many documents recovered from a palimpsest. Nowadays, the word palimpsest can refer not only to such a document but to anything that has multiple layers apparent beneath the surface.

Englisch

via Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day https://www.merriam-webster.com/word-of-the-day

August 2, 2025 at 06:05AM

·merriam-webster.com·
palimpsest