All posts by She Seeks Serene

My Journey of Reimagining Life, Love and Education

NATURE MAGAZINE – JANUARY 22, 2026

Volume 649 Issue 8098

NATURE MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘Lost Science’ – The fragile reality of US research today.

Ancient pottery reveals early evidence of mathematical thinking

Symmetrical arrangements of botanical motifs indicate a grasp of spatial division long before the advent of formal written numbers.

HPV vaccine could help to protect the unvaccinated against cervical cancer

A drop in precancerous growths in women who hadn’t received the jab suggests the existence of a ‘herd effect’ against the virus.

Climate trends influence transatlantic flight times

Better understanding of multi-year global weather cycles could help airlines to reduce fuel consumption and cost.

Gifted dogs learn new words by overhearing humans

Particularly talented canines have sociolinguistic skills akin to those of young toddlers.

TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT – JANUARY 23, 2026 PREVIEW

Fluff and puff' at the TS Eliot Prize

TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT: The latest issue features ‘The state of British poetry’ by Tristram Fane Saunders…

Anon and on

The forward march of British poetry

By Tristram Fane Saunders

First class delivery?

A history of childbirth and a defence of the C-section

By Leah Hazard

Portraits of the ‘Black Venus’

Newly discovered photographs of Baudelaire’s muse

By Maria C. Scott

Fathoms deep

The thrill of marine archaeology

By Alan Jenkins

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY – JANUARY 23, 2026 PREVIEW

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY: The latest issue features ‘On Thin Ice’ – Why Trump wants Greenland – and what it means for the western alliance.

The dystopian nightmare of 2026 continued apace this week with Donald Trump seemingly hell-bent on taking over Greenland, either by purchase or military force if necessary, while potentially collapsing the entire western security alliance in the process.

Updates were delivered by the US president to European leaders in a trademark stream of social media insults and invective. As ever with Trump, it’s hard to tell if it all should be read as maximalist positioning ahead of a negotiation, or a genuine precursor to a military attack. But as Patrick Wintour and Jennifer Rankin write in this week’s Big Story, the damage among fellow Nato members already looks to have been done.

Melting sea ice has much to do with Greenland’s increasing strategic desirability. With the help of some great graphics, visuals editor Ashley Kirk explains what’s changing in the Arctic and who lays claim to what.

Spotlight | The man who trusted Trump – and paid with his life
Many Iranian protesters believed a US president would – for the first time – rescue them, but now people can only despair after mass arrests and brutality. Deepa Parent and William Christou report

Environment | Where have all Thailand’s dugongs gone?

The Andaman coast was one of few places in the world with a viable population of the marine mammals, but then dead ones began washing up. Now half have gone. Gloria Dickie reports from Phuket

Feature | Cuba edges closer to collapse
Disillusioned with the revolution after 68 years of US sanctions and a shattered economy, one in four Cubans have left in recent years. Can the regime, and country, survive? By Andrei Netto in Havana

Opinion | Take a lesson from the past, and light the way forward
As Martin Kettle writes his last regular column for the Guardian, his thoughts turn to the examples and hope we can take from history

Culture | Michael Sheen on launching Welsh National Theatre
As the newly founded national company’s first show comes to the stage, the proudly Welsh actor tells Kate Wyver about his plan to bring big productions back to his homeland

HARPER’S MAGAZINE – FEBRUARY 2026 PREVIEW

HARPER’S MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘America Goes For Broke’ – Inside the National Sports Betting Craze…

On Tilt – America’s new gambling epidemic

by Jasper Craven

The Sanctuarium – The Philippines reckons with its war on drugs

by Sean Williams

Another London – Excavating the disenchanted city

by Hari Kunzru

THE NEW YORK TIMES – WEDNESDAY, JAN. 21, 2026

Justices Seem Poised to Reject Trump’s Attempt to Fire Fed Governor

During arguments, the Supreme Court appeared concerned that the president’s efforts to oust Lisa Cook could imperil the central bank’s independence.

Trump Assails Europe and Demands Control of Greenland

U.S. Pivot in Syria Leaves an Old Ally in the Lurch

A Kurdish force that helped defeat the Islamic State is collapsing as the Trump administration turns to back the new Syrian government.

U.S. Starts Moving ISIS Detainees From Syria to Iraq

Israeli Strikes in Gaza Kill 11, Including Three Journalists

THE NEW YORK TIMES – TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 2026

European Leaders Push Back as Trump Reinforces Greenland Threats

President Trump fired off a series of mocking social media posts overnight that underscored his designs on Greenland and risked damaging a longstanding diplomatic alignment.

A Venezuelan Political Prisoner Finally Comes Home

Ángel Godoy was jailed after writing columns that angered the government of President Nicolás Maduro. Now his family is trying to make up for lost time.

With Threats to Greenland, Trump Sets America on the Road to Conquest

After a century of defending other countries against foreign aggression, the U.S. is now positioned as an imperial power trying to seize another nation’s land.

Trump’s First Year Could Have Lasting Economic Consequences

President Trump’s policies have so far done little to change the state of the American economy, but economists warn they will ultimately weaken the U.S.

Supreme Court to Hear Case Testing Limits of Hawaii Gun Law

The justices will hear arguments over whether a Hawaii law that imposes restrictions on carrying concealed weapons violates the Second Amendment.

THE NEW YORKER MAGAZINE – JANUARY 26, 2026

A woman in the subway is looking at her vacation memories under the gaze of onlookers.

THE NEW YORKER MAGAZINE: The latest cover features Adrian Tomine’s “Post-Vacation” – Staying warm.

Why Trump Supports Protesters in Tehran but Not in Minneapolis

During the President’s second Administration, universal principles such as self-determination and due process are wielded only opportunistically.

By Benjamin Wallace-Wells

The Lights Are Still On in Venezuela

After the ouster of President Nicolás Maduro, some residents fear that one unelected despot has been swapped for another.

By Armando Ledezma

THE NEW YORK TIMES – MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 2026

Starmer Tells Trump Tariff Threat Over Greenland Is Wrong

Prime Minister Keir Starmer of Britain told President Trump that it would be wrong for him to tariff NATO allies as part of a campaign to control Greenland.

After Trump Reignites a Trade War Over Greenland, Europe Weighs Hitting Back

Europe’s dependence on the U.S. for NATO security limits its options. Its strongest response would be a trade “bazooka,” and other options are possible.

Noem Denies Use of Chemical Agents in Minnesota, Then Backtracks

Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, said officers had not used pepper spray and similar measures before being confronted with a contradictory video.

Pentagon Tells 1,500 Troops to Prepare for Possible Deployment to Minnesota

n+1 Magazine – Winter ’26

n+1 Magazine: The latest issue features the ‘Winter 2026 issue, CLOSE ENCOUNTERS’ – H is for hawks. Trump’s cleavage: a semiotic investigation. Haters, waiters, trash containers. Emily Callaci and Dayna Tortorici on intra-feminist debates. Matthew Porges on new space odysseys.

Sinophobic Sinophilia

In the contemporary Chinese context, the idea that crucial parts of the central government could simply cease to operate for more than a month, as part of a procedural standoff between rival governing factions, would beggar belief. And in turn, to an American observer, the thought that miles of new high-speed rail lines could simply materialize by bureaucratic fiat, unencumbered by years of legislative horse-trading, environmental review, suburban backlash, and budgetary overshoot, is no less astonishing.

City of Meh

Adams will be remembered for his petty corruption, his self-mythologizing, and his ignominious dealmaking with the Trump White House; but he should also be remembered as the mayor who got New Yorkers to stop tossing giant bags of trash onto city sidewalks as if there were no alternative. You can laugh at a New York mayor who walks into a press conference wheeling out a trash can, beaming as if he invented the contraption, while “Empire State of Mind” blares triumphantly in the background. But truly, Adams’s proclaimed “trash revolution” represented a tremendous advance over abysmal past practice.

Mere Domination

“Men make their own history,” Marx wrote, “but they do not make it as they please; they do not make it under self-selected circumstances, but under circumstances existing already, given and transmitted from the past.” That may be broadly true, but Dick Cheney got to make history under the exact circumstances he would have chosen.