Sustainability
From Loss to Harvest
Today we took down our pigeon pea tree. After the recent freeze, it simply couldn’t hold on. The cold wrapped itself around its branches, and what once stood tall and green slowly surrendered to brittle stems and fading leaves. It’s strange how quickly a shift in weather can change the fate of something that felt so steady. But three weeks before the freeze, I gathered its final harvest. And for that, I am grateful.
By Debbie's Reflection11 days ago in Earth
Contrary Global Power Rankings: Who Really Leads Today?
Contrary Global Power Rankings: Who Really Leads Today? When we talk about the “most powerful countries in the world,” many people immediately think of military strength or economic size. But real global power is complex and multidimensional. A country may have the largest economy, while another may have the strongest army, and yet another may wield outsized cultural influence. Different ranking systems lead to different leaders — and sometimes surprising results.
By Wings of Time 14 days ago in Earth
Could AI Trigger World War III?
Could AI Trigger World War III? Artificial Intelligence is changing how wars are planned, predicted, and possibly started. Unlike past technologies, AI does not only build weapons—it makes decisions. This is why many experts now ask a frightening question: could AI trigger World War III? The danger does not come from evil machines, but from how humans are using speed, automation, and data in a world full of mistrust.
By Wings of Time 16 days ago in Earth
When Algorithms Hold the Trigger
When Algorithms Hold the Trigger Nuclear weapons were designed to prevent war, not to be used. For decades, the fear of total destruction forced world powers to act carefully. Human judgment, long chains of command, and political hesitation acted as natural brakes. Today, those brakes are weakening. Artificial Intelligence is slowly entering the most dangerous space on Earth: nuclear command and control.
By Wings of Time 16 days ago in Earth
AI, Surveillance, and Future Control System
AI, Surveillance, and Future Control Systems Artificial Intelligence and advanced surveillance technologies are rapidly changing how power is exercised in the modern world. What once required armies, police forces, and physical borders can now be done through data, algorithms, and invisible systems. Governments and corporations increasingly rely on digital tools to monitor behavior, predict actions, and influence decisions. This shift is creating a new kind of control—quiet, efficient, and deeply powerful.
By Wings of Time 16 days ago in Earth
Why India's Water Is Vanishing
Imagine standing in a vast field that once bloomed with lush green crops, now reduced to a mosaic of deep cracks under a relentless sun. A farmer tilts his head back, sipping the last drops from a clay pot, his face etched with worry. This isn't a scene from a distant dystopia it's the reality for millions in rural India today. Groundwater, the invisible lifeline that sustains over 60% of India's irrigated agriculture and provides drinking water to countless households, is disappearing at an alarming rate. India is the world's largest user of groundwater, extracting more than the United States and China combined. Yet, this precious resource is being depleted faster than nature can replenish it, creating a silent crisis that threatens food security, livelihoods, and the environment.
By Arjun. S. Gaikwad17 days ago in Earth
Water as Fuel: The Invisible Engine Inside Us
In most health and wellness discussions, the spotlight invariably falls on food. We meticulously track grams of protein, percentages of carbohydrates, types of fats, and the intake of vitamins and minerals. Yet, in our quest to optimize our diet, we often overlook the most fundamental "tool" without which not a single molecule in our body could be utilized. There is a hidden medium, a universal catalyst, and an invisible laborer that transforms the raw materials of food into pure energy: water.
By Pavel Pavlov17 days ago in Earth
Death On Death
A petrol sheen glimmered on the water’s surface, where all the ripples of my units passage through the dead swamp had long since dissipated. It was deep as my calves, but like most water it was such a murky, toxic brown I couldn’t see the bottom. It stank more than most, though, like ammonia and chlorine.
By I. D. Reeves17 days ago in Earth
Violent Winds Could Strike Without Warning — Officials Urge Extreme Caution*
**Violent Winds Could Strike Without Warning — Officials Urge Extreme Caution** Meteorologists have issued an urgent warning as violent winds are expected to develop rapidly, posing a serious threat to public safety. Weather experts say conditions are becoming increasingly unstable, with sudden gusts capable of causing damage within minutes. Unlike typical windy days, this event is marked by unpredictability, making it especially dangerous for residents, travelers, and outdoor workers.
By America today 20 days ago in Earth
Thermal Desorption Recovery Pathways for Oil-Based Drilling Mud
Oil-based mud (OBM) is indispensable in complex drilling environments, yet it generates waste streams with high hydrocarbon loading and regulatory sensitivity. Thermal desorption has emerged as a technically mature recovery route, enabling separation of hydrocarbons from solids while reducing environmental liability. Its value lies not only in waste minimization, but in material reclamation and compliance assurance.
By Wayne Shen21 days ago in Earth










