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Monday, 11 May 2026

Monday, May 11, 2026

Dr Olga Azarova: “Children Should Learn to Solve Problems”

MINIBOSS BUSINESS SCHOOL is one of the most recognisable international brands in children’s business education. Its mission is ambitious and unusual: to teach children entrepreneurship, invention, leadership and financial thinking from the age of six.

Over the years, the MINIBOSS methodology has helped develop tens of thousands of young entrepreneurs around the world — children who learn not only how to build a business, but how to think independently, solve problems creatively and realise their own potential.

Monday, May 11, 2026

One of the Biggest Risks for Investors 2026


For nearly the entire period following the 2008 crisis, global financial markets operated in an unusual monetary reality: interest rates in developed countries were historically low, liquidity was abundant, inflation was relatively subdued, and central banks moved almost in sync. The U.S. Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank, the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan, and other regulators differed in details, but the overall direction was clear: cheap money, market support, accommodative policy, and a readiness to rescue the system at the first sign of stress.

That era shaped a whole generation of investors who grew accustomed to the idea that market declines were often met with new liquidity, that debt burdens were manageable under low rates, and that growth assets benefited from cheap capital. But today, one of the biggest risks is that investors may still be viewing a new world through the lens of the old era.

Sunday, 10 May 2026

Sunday, May 10, 2026

UK Elections of 7 May 2026: A Fragmented Political Map Emerges

The elections held across the United Kingdom on 7 May 2026 did not constitute a UK general election. Instead, voters went to the polls in English local and mayoral elections, the Scottish Parliament election, and the Senedd election in Wales. Northern Ireland did not hold an equivalent election on that date; the official Electoral Commission timetable listed local government elections, Scottish Parliament elections, Senedd Cymru elections, and mayoral elections in England. (electoralcommission.org.uk)

England: Reform UK breaks through, Greens rise sharply

Sunday, May 10, 2026

A Historic First for the “Green Nobel”: In 2026, All Six Goldman Environmental Prize Winners Are Women

In 2026, the world witnessed a historic milestone in environmental leadership: for the first time in the 37-year history of the Goldman Environmental Prize, often called the “Green Nobel Prize,” all six laureates were women. The Goldman Environmental Foundation announced that the 2026 winners are Iroro Tanshi from Nigeria, Borim Kim from South Korea, Sarah Finch from the United Kingdom, Theonila Roka Matbob from Papua New Guinea, Alannah Acaq Hurley from the United States, and Yuvelis Morales Blanco from Colombia. The Prize, founded in 1989 by Rhoda and Richard Goldman, honours grassroots environmental activists from the world’s major regions; by 2026, it had recognised 239 winners from 98 nations, including 112 women. (Goldman Environmental Prize)

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Péter Magyar’s Inauguration and the Return of a European Nation

The inauguration of Péter Magyar as Prime Minister of Hungary marks more than a change of government; it signals the beginning of a new political era for a country that has spent much of the last century struggling between freedom and domination. On 9 May 2026, Magyar was sworn in after the pro-European, centre-right Tisza Party won a decisive parliamentary victory, ending Viktor Orbán’s 16-year rule and securing a powerful majority in the National Assembly. Reuters reported that Magyar came to office promising systemic reform, an anti-corruption drive, restoration of democratic institutions, and a strategic return toward Hungary’s Western allies. (Reuters)

Saturday, 9 May 2026

Saturday, May 09, 2026

When Could the Era of Wars Begin to End? A Forecast Based on Deep Analysis

Why today’s conflicts may last longer than people hope — and what history, power, corruption, ideology, religion, public fatigue and institutional decay reveal about the real conditions for peace.

There are moments in history when people stop asking who will win the next war and begin asking a darker question: does the world still remember how to stop wars at all? 

That is the true question of our age. We are no longer watching one isolated conflict, nor even two or three separate confrontations unfolding in parallel. We are living through a period in which war, coercion, strategic intimidation, ideological hostility and political radicalisation have once again become acceptable tools of power in too many parts of the world. The result is not only destruction on battlefields. It is the normalisation of tension as a permanent condition of modern life.