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Britain's Social Care Crisis: A History of Failed Promises and the Path Forward
En développement
Politique·17.05.2026Résumé IA

Britain's Social Care Crisis: A History of Failed Promises and the Path Forward

A new Fabian Society collection urges the UK government to establish a "national care service" funded similarly to the NHS, addressing the long-standing failure to reform social care. The article details past failed attempts by Conservative and Labour governments, highlighting the political challenges and voter reluctance to fund the system. It suggests potential solutions like a "care levy" and centralized funding, emphasizing the need for action before the next general election.

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Guardian Business
Labour must offer more than ‘better managed decline’ on economy, MPs urge
ACTU
12.05.2026

Labour must offer more than ‘better managed decline’ on economy, MPs urge

Soft-left Tribune group issues thinly disguised attack on Keir Starmer, calling for bold policy renewalBusiness live – latest updatesUK politics live – latest updatesAn influential group of MPs has said that Labour needs an urgent renewal of economic strategy to offer voters “more than better management of decline” before the next general election.With Keir Starmer fighting to ward off a leadership challenge, the leading backbenchers from the soft-left Tribune group published a series of essays calling for bolder action to salvage its remaining time in power. Continue reading...

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Guardian UK
Why human minds will stay special even as AI advances
ACTU
03.05.2026Résumé IA

Why human minds will stay special even as AI advances

Princeton professor Tom Griffiths argues that human intelligence will remain special despite AI advances because our cognitive abilities evolved in response to specific biological constraints – finite lifespans, limited brain capacity, and communication through speech. While AI systems can process more data and scale their capabilities, they lack the breadth of human experience and struggle with tasks humans find simple. Griffiths contends that intelligence isn't a single scale like height, but rather encompasses many different ways of being smart, and AI will ultimately be better at some things and worse at others rather than universally superhuman.

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Guardian Tech