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Business May 21, 2026

JPMorgan Banker Countersues Accuser, Claims Sexual Assault Allegations Were Fabricated

Investment banker Lorna Hajdini filed a countersuit in Manhattan, asserting that former colleague C…
The Counter‑suit: A JPMorgan Banker Fights BackIn a New York state court filing on Tuesday night, Lorna Hajdini—an executive director at JPMorgan Chase—sought damages against former colleague Chirayu Rana, alleging that his sexual‑assault allegations were false and malicious. Hajdini Accuses Rana of Fabricating Sexual‑Assault ClaimsThe countersuit contends that Rana invented accusations that he was raped and drugged by Hajdini to generate press coverage, cause personal pain, and extract millions of dollars from both her and the bank. It states that Hajdini has been "mocked, ridiculed, and harassed around the clock" and that the false statements have "wreaked havoc" on her life. Rana’s original complaint, filed 27 April, described alleged non‑consensual activity and threats using racial epithets. Hajdini denies any supervisory role, use of racial slurs, or coercion. JPMorgan is also a defendant in Rana’s lawsuit. Financial Stakes and Settlement Offers Highlight Corporate RiskThe bank disclosed that on May 6 2026 it attempted to settle the dispute by offering $1 million to Rana, a figure reported by the Wall Street Journal. No monetary amount is specified in Hajdini’s countersuit, which seeks unspecified damages for defamation and emotional distress. Reputational Fallout Extends Beyond the Two PartiesBoth parties have faced intense public scrutiny, with memes and jokes circulating online. JPMorgan issued a statement supporting Hajdini’s right to defend her reputation and reiterated its belief that the allegations lack merit. Potential Legal Trajectory and Implications for Wall‑Street CultureWith no comment from Rana’s legal team and the case still early in the litigation process, outcomes remain uncertain. The dispute underscores heightened sensitivity around workplace harassment claims in the financial sector and may prompt firms to reassess internal reporting and settlement strategies.
#JPMorgan Chase #Lorna Hajdini #Chirayu Rana
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Tech May 20, 2026

AI Chatbots Spread Misinformation During Scottish Election, Study Finds

A study by thinktank Demos found that AI chatbots, including ChatGPT, Google Gemini, and Replika, p…
The Rise of AI Misinformation in Elections The Electoral Commission has called for new legal controls over misinformation from AI chatbots, after a thinktank found they had made serious mistakes during the recent Scottish election. The Study's Findings The thinktank Demos said its investigation had found that AI services gave voters misinformation to 34% of the questions it posed, which it said raised worrying questions about the lack of regulation of AI platforms in the UK. ChatGPT gave wrong information in 46% of its answers, including making up an expenses scandal. Replika had errors in 56% of its answers, inventing a date for a made-up expenses scandal and accusations of nepotism by a candidate. Google Gemini was wrong in 22% of cases, including saying a candidate had not taken a position on assisted dying when they were a supporter. The Impact of AI Misinformation Vijay Rangarajan, the Electoral Commission’s chief executive, said voters want accurate information to help them engage with democracy and it is concerning that AI tools have made the spread of false or misleading information dramatically faster and more accessible than ever. The Call for Regulation The Electoral Commission is pressing ministers to introduce legislation to make AI companies more accountable, including clearer duties on AI platforms to protect voters against misinformation and ensure algorithms do not mislead voters. The Future of AI Regulation Azzurra Moores, an associate director at Demos, said ministers could quickly introduce legal requirements to make AI companies liable under UK defamation and electoral law, introduce mandatory safeguards on accuracy, and force AI firms to allow researchers to independently test how their internal data and training sets worked.
#ChatGPT #Google Gemini #Replika
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Politics May 20, 2026

Trump's Influence on US Primaries: Massie Defeated in Kentucky

Congressman Thomas Massie, a vocal critic of Donald Trump, lost his primary race to Trump-backed Ed…
The Fall of a Trump Critic Congressman Thomas Massie, one of the most vocal critics of United States President Donald Trump, has lost his primary race to Trump-backed former Navy SEAL Ed Gallrein in a major political victory for the Republican leader. Trump's Influence on the Republican Party Massie had angered Trump by publicly opposing military action against Iran and sponsoring a bill that resulted in the release of files linked to convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein and resisting parts of the president’s agenda. His defeat in the most expensive US House of Representatives primary race in history highlighted Trump’s continued influence over the Republican Party and the political risks faced by Republicans who break with him. Record-Breaking Campaign Spending The race between Massie and Gallrein was the most expensive congressional primary in US history, reaching more than $34m in publicity spending. More than $19m was spent to benefit Gallrein, with nearly $9.4m of that coming from American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) and other pro-Israel interest groups. Massie's Warning Against Absolute Party Loyalty Massie delivered an unusually long concession speech where he criticised unquestioning loyalty to the president. Arguing for constitutional principles over party loyalty, Massie warned the crowd, “If the legislative branch always votes with the president, we do have a king.” Other Primary Election Results The results also highlighted the continuing political risks for Republicans who openly break with Trump, who still falsely claims the 2020 election was stolen. Georgia’s closely watched Republican race for governor is heading to a June 16 run-off after no candidate secured a majority of the vote on Tuesday.
#Donald Trump #Thomas Massie #Ed Gallrein
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Lifestyle May 19, 2026

Tracey Emin and Frida Kahlo: Transforming Pain into Artistic Autonomy

Tracey Emin's unflinching documentation of her post-cancer body has inspired a new generation to fi…
The LeadIn a photographic self-portrait taken not long after she was diagnosed with squamous cell bladder cancer in 2020, Tracey Emin's iPhone shrouds her right breast as our line of vision descends from her catheter to her urostomy bag to her disposable knickers. Her body is fragile here in this hospital mirror, yet her gaze is anything but. It looks us dead in the eye as if to say: I matter, this matters – a sureness that challenges the notion of subjugation in times of ill-health.The Art of Bodily AutonomyEven now, six years after her life-saving surgery, Emin refuses to conform to what may, or may not, make us feel comfortable when it comes to her post-operative body. As well as losing her bladder, Emin also lost her uterus, ovaries, lymph nodes, part of her colon, her urethra and part of her vagina. And yet she has found a striking autonomy in documenting the changes in her body. "This is mine, I own it," she affirmed in an interview not long after her surgery.The Personal Becomes PoliticalWould I have taken these photographs if it wasn't for Emin? Probably not. In the weeks that led up to my own life-saving surgery, I became increasingly fixated on the ways in which her no-holds-barred Polaroids, like the squares of her autobiographical blankets, were urging us to look at her in ways that perhaps we'd rather not. Twenty-seven years after her sculptural work My Bed catapulted her to tabloid fame in the late 1990s, Emin is still challenging us to acknowledge the things we tend to pull away from. Only these days her bleeding nudes are centred squarely on the presence of non-visible disability and what Harry Weller, creative director of Emin's studio, calls "her wild scramble for existence".Challenging the "Confessional" Label"Back in the 90s, people used to say it was confessional art," Emin recently mused to Maria Balshaw, director of the Tate. Only it wasn't. "I wasn't confessing anything at all to anybody," she corrected her past critics – and maybe even her present fans. I thought of Emin's vital reframe only a few weeks ago when I visited her landmark show at Tate Modern and contemplated her 2023 painting, I watched Myself die and come alive. In it, her red-swabbed body is splayed out on a table, she is watched over by the black cloak of death, and her mother's ashes are resting in a casket behind her bloody hair. Like most of Emin's artworks, this painting isn't asking for a certain kind of gaze from us – it exists for itself alone, and that's what makes it so corporeally present.The Legacy of Frida KahloCall it visceral, call it personal. But, like Emin, I too struggle with the word "confessional" in relation to women's expression of their experiences. The implication being that there is something guilt-inducing and therefore even shameful about a woman drawing attention to herself both in her life and art. As if by doing so, she needs to beg pardon for it. Only Emin has never subscribed to this falsehood. Come to think of it, neither did Frida Kahlo over the course of her all-too-short life (Kahlo died when she was only 47) – another autobiographical artist whose retrospective is set to appear at Tate Modern next month.Transforming Trauma into TranscendenceWith an anatomical eye on her wounds, Kahlo would redraw what she called her "body's landscape" on her own terms, making her disabilities into something transcendental, a devotional act that helped her transform the mundanity of her physical limitations into something extraordinary. As Kahlo's biographer Hayden Herrera remarked in 1983, Kahlo's art has a particular intensity and strength "that can hold the viewer in an uncomfortably tight grip". We can see this for ourselves in her 1944 artwork, The Broken Column: a valiant self-portrait of chronic pain that evokes the Saint Sebastian paintings of the Christian faith.
#Tracey Emin #Frida Kahlo #Art
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Business May 18, 2026

Proponents Call for Pause on Gambling Affordability Checks as Industry Faces £250m Revenue Threat

Key figures behind the proposed affordability checks for gamblers, including James Noyes and former…
James Noyes, an early advocate of affordability checks for gamblers, has issued an urgent call for a pause in their rollout, a stance echoed by former gambling minister Stuart Andrew MP. The British Horseracing Authority warns the checks could strip the industry of up to £250 million in annual revenue as punters may avoid providing personal financial data and shift to unregulated markets. Rising Calls to Halt Affordability Checks from Within the Gambling Reform Movement April 13 2026 – Noyes publicly urges a pause via Guardian article. Thursday (date of board meeting) – Gambling Commission expected to approve the checks despite opposition. Stuart Andrew, former gambling minister, aligns with Noyes on the need for a rethink. £250 million Annual Revenue Risk Highlighted by British Horseracing Authority The BHA estimates that mandatory financial risk assessments could divert a significant share of betting spend, potentially costing the racing sector £250 million each year. Potential Shift to Unregulated Black Market Threatens UK Racing Industry If punters are required to disclose salary or asset details, many may turn to offshore or black‑market operators, undermining the industry's financial stability. The Guardian notes that betting on racing is among the safest products, yet the checks are designed primarily for high‑risk casino gaming, risking false‑positive exclusions for bettors. Regulatory Uncertainty Sets the Stage for Future Policy Revisions The Gambling Commission’s history – including the poorly managed Football Index collapse that cost users over £100 million – raises doubts about its capacity to oversee the new checks. With the pilot data showing less than 3 % of accounts would trigger action, but no clear split between gaming and betting customers, the Commission faces pressure to reconsider before a Thursday vote.
#James Noyes #Stuart Andrew #Gambling Commission
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Health May 18, 2026

Infectious Disease Outbreaks Increasing in Frequency and Severity as Global Preparedness Declines

Experts warn that infectious disease outbreaks are becoming more frequent and damaging worldwide, w…
The Growing Threat of Infectious Diseases The world is becoming less resilient to outbreaks of infectious diseases, experts have warned, as health authorities in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda scramble to contain an outbreak of Ebola. The Global Preparedness Monitoring Board (GPMB) said in a report published on Monday that "as infectious disease outbreaks become more frequent they are also becoming more damaging", warning that pandemic risk is outpacing investments in preparedness and "the world is not yet meaningfully safer". Climate Crisis and Conflict Driving Disease Spread Disease outbreaks are becoming more likely due to the climate crisis and armed conflict, while collective action is being undermined by geopolitical fragmentation and commercial self-interest, the report said. The GPMB is a group of experts established in 2018 by the World Bank and the World Health Organization (WHO) after the first large scale Ebola outbreak in west Africa and just before Covid-19. Its latest findings come amid global attention on the hantavirus outbreak on a cruise ship and a day after the declaration of an international public health emergency after at least 87 Ebola deaths in the DRC. Current Global Health Crises The two outbreaks "are just the latest crises in our troubled world", WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told the opening of the UN agency's World Health Assembly in Geneva. WHO's representative in the DRC, Anne Ancia, told Reuters that in responding to the Ebola outbreak it had emptied its stocks of protective equipment in the capital, Kinshasa, and was preparing a cargo plane to bring additional supplies from a depot in Kenya. The International Rescue Committee and Médecins Sans Frontières aid groups said they had teams responding to the outbreak. Global Preparedness Shortcomings In Geneva, Prof Matthew Kavanagh, director of the Georgetown University Center for Global Health Policy & Politics, said aid cuts may have played a role in leaving the world "playing catch-up against a very dangerous pathogen". He said: "Because early tests looked for the wrong strain of Ebola, we got false negatives and lost weeks of response time. By the time the alarm was raised, the virus had already moved along major transport routes and crossed borders." Advances in Medical Technology vs. Equity Challenges The GPMB report finds that new technologies, including novel vaccine platforms such as mRNA, have "advanced at unprecedented speed" and billions of dollars have been invested in pandemic preparedness and response. But the world is "moving backwards" on measures such as ensuring equitable access to vaccines, tests and treatments, it found. During recent mpox outbreaks, vaccines took almost two years to reach affected countries in Africa, which is even slower than the 17 months it took for Covid-19 vaccines to be distributed. Trust and Global Cooperation Eroding Outbreaks have damaged trust in government, civil liberties and democratic norms, amplified by politicised responses and attacks on scientific institutions, the GPMB warned. These had outlasted the crises themselves and left societies "less resilient to the next emergency", it said. Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović, GPMB co-chair and former president of Croatia, said: "The world does not lack solutions. But without trust and equity, those solutions will not reach the people who need them most." Call for Action and Future Preparedness Countries failed to meet a deadline to finalise the pandemic agreement treaty before this week's World Health Assembly in Geneva, after disagreements over guarantees of access to medical tests, vaccines and treatments in exchange for sharing information on any pathogens emerging on their territories. The GPMB called on political leaders to establish a permanent, independent monitoring mechanism to track pandemic risk, conclude the pandemic agreement to ensure equitable access to vaccines, diagnostic tests and medicines, and put in place financing to secure preparedness and immediate responses to outbreaks. Joy Phumaphi, the GPMB co-chair and a former health minister in Botswana, said: "If trust and cooperation continue to fracture, every country will be more exposed when the next pandemic strikes."
#Ebola #Hantavirus #Global Preparedness Monitoring Board
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World Wide May 18, 2026

How to Survive the Information Crisis: Guardian Podcast Explores the New Reality of Fake News

The Guardian released a new podcast titled “How to survive the information crisis,” highlighting th…
The Guardian Launches a Podcast on the Deepening Information CrisisThe British news outlet The Guardian published a podcast on May 18, 2026 that frames the current "information crisis" as a step beyond traditional fake‑news debates. The title, “How to survive the information crisis: ‘We once talked about fake news – now reality itself feels fake’,” signals a growing sense that the problem is no longer isolated false stories but a pervasive doubt about reality itself.Why the Perception of Reality Is Shifting Toward ‘Fake’Social‑media algorithms amplify sensational content, making it harder for users to distinguish fact from manipulation.Deep‑fake technology and AI‑generated text have lowered the barrier for creating convincing false narratives.Continuous news cycles and information overload create cognitive fatigue, leading audiences to dismiss even accurate reporting as suspect.Implications for Public Trust and Democratic DiscourseThe podcast warns that eroding trust in information sources threatens the foundations of democratic debate. When citizens feel that "reality itself feels fake," policy discussions become fragmented, and collective action on issues such as climate change, public health, and elections grows more difficult.Looking Ahead: Strategies for Navigating an Era of Uncertain TruthsWhile the episode does not prescribe a single solution, it highlights several emerging approaches:Media‑literacy programs that teach critical evaluation of sources.Transparent fact‑checking collaborations between newsrooms and independent auditors.Platform‑level interventions, such as labeling AI‑generated content.By foregrounding these tactics, the podcast aims to equip listeners with practical tools to maintain a foothold in an increasingly ambiguous information environment.
#The Guardian #Information Crisis #Fake News
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Entertainment May 17, 2026

TV Highlights: Timothy Spall's Murder Mystery Comedy Returns With New Season

Tonight's television lineup features the return of Timothy Spall's quirky murder mystery comedy 'De…
The Return of Quirky Detective DuoDeath Valley returns to BBC One at 8.15pm, bringing back the enjoyably quirky murder mystery comedy featuring retired actor John Chapel (Timothy Spall) and Welsh detective Janie Mallowan (Gwyneth Keyworth). This season, John has a new goatee and girlfriend, which doesn't sit well with Janie, especially since he's now dating her mother. Despite this family complication, they reunite as an unlikely detective duo when a man doing community service is found dead at an outdoor rave site.Adventure in Russia's Far EastAt 7.15pm on BBC Two, Expedition With Steve Backshall begins its second thrilling series at the Kronotsky River in Russia's far-east Kamchatka Peninsula. The explorer and his team of top kayakers attempt a descent that's never been done before, facing additional challenges from active volcanoes and brown bears in this remote wilderness.Documentary on Justice for Rape VictimsBelieve Me airs on ITV1 at 9pm, offering an unrelenting look at the gaslighting and retraumatisation of rape victims as they seek justice. The show continues to follow the case of John Worboys as he continues his attacks while police make glacial progress. Viewers witness the ongoing effects on victims such as Sarah, who has given birth to her second child while navigating the justice system.Amateur Singing Competition Reaches Grand FinalYour Song: The Grand Final on Channel 4 at 9pm brings the amateur singing competition hosted by Alison Hammond to its climax with a sold-out concert at London's Hackney Empire. After heartstring-tugging public heats in Liverpool, Edinburgh, London and Birmingham, five finalists compete for the title. Supportive mentors Sam Ryder and Paloma Faith face the difficult task of deciding the winner.Jools Holland Marks Milestone with New SeriesThe eternal live music show Later … With Jools Holland begins its 68th series on BBC Two at 10pm, coinciding with host Jools Holland turning 68. Despite his age, his passion for new sounds that can be decorated with boogie-woogie piano remains undimmed. The opening episode welcomes Niall Horan, Tomora, Aja Monet, Getdown Services and Jools's old muckers Squeeze to the Ally Pally theatre.Australian Thriller Explores Neighborhood SecretsAt 10.20pm on ITV1, The Family Next Door presents an aesthetically pleasing Australian thriller about secrets hidden in an otherwise idyllic suburb. When Isabelle (Teresa Palmer) rents a home on Pleasant Court cul-de-sac in a seaside town, she becomes obsessed with her neighbors and discovers a mystery to solve.Film Choices Explore Complex Family DynamicsOn BBC Three at 10.40pm, God's Creatures examines how far a mother's love can go when Emily Watson's Aileen faces a life-changing question after her prodigal son, Brian (Paul Mescal), returns home from Australia. When Sarah (Aisling Franciosi), her young colleague at the seafood processing factory, is raped and accuses Brian, Aileen provides him with a false alibi. The claustrophobic drama reveals how tight-knit communities often respond to challenges with denial and exclusion, with women typically bearing the consequences.Following that, at 10.50pm on BBC Two, Brother presents a heartfelt sibling drama about the long reach of trauma. Directed by Clement Virgo, the film follows Lamar Johnson's young Jamaican-Canadian Michael as he ekes out an existence with his grief-numbed single mother, Ruth (Marsha Stephanie Blake). In a parallel timeline, the teenage Michael is guided to adulthood by his older brother, Francis (Aaron Pierre), a charismatic would-be hip-hop musician struggling to rise above police racism, gang violence, and homophobia.Live Sport Action Across Multiple ChannelsSports fans have multiple options tonight, beginning with Women's Six Nations Rugby: Wales v Italy at noon on BBC Two, followed by France v England at 4.25pm on BBC One. Football enthusiasts can catch Premier League matches with Man United v Nottingham Forest at noon on Sky Sports Main Event and Newcastle v West Ham at 5pm.
#Timothy Spall #BBC One #ITV1
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Sports May 16, 2026

West Ham and Tottenham Fans Fume Amid Relegation Panic

West Ham and Tottenham Hotspur fans are facing potential relegation from the Premier League, leadin…
The Relegation Battle Fury. Grief. Embarrassment. Horror. Resignation. The emotions run hot for supporters of West Ham and Tottenham right now as the two grand old clubs stare at potential relegation from the Premier League. The Impact of Mismanagement With their spiritual homes demolished at the altar of progress and profit, first Upton Park in 2016 and then White Hart Lane in 2017, both clubs had visions of glory days ahead. Instead they have been consumed by greed, mismanagement and false promises. Key perpetrators such as Karren Brady at West Ham and Daniel Levy at Spurs have exited the scene, but David O’Sullivan is still the Hammers chairman and the damage remains. The Current State of Affairs The London Stadium – which West Ham now rent for a knock-down price – is universally panned as stale and unsuited to football, while the sparkling Tottenham Hotspur Stadium looks like a monument to hubris. One of these 60,000 seater stadiums will be hosting Championship football in August. The Fans' Perspective Defeats on the pitch this season have been calamitous and bruising (they’ve endured 34 league losses between them); protests have been loud and fuming. Two points separate the teams, with two games remaining. The equation now is very simple: it’s either them or us. The Future Outlook As the Tottenham Supporters Trust put it on their website: “The arithmetic is stark, the stakes unmistakable. This is no longer a conversation about style or long-term trajectory; it is a question of survival.”
#West Ham #Tottenham Hotspur #Premier League
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