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Sam Denby doesn't just list headlines; he exposes the strange, often contradictory pulse of a continent teetering between progress and paralysis. In a single sweep across Europe, he reveals how the same nations championing green energy are damming wild rivers, while those preaching digital safety are accidentally leaking their leaders' jogging routes. This isn't a travelogue; it's a diagnostic of a region where the future is being built, broken, and sold off, often in the same breath.

The Green Paradox and Digital Blind Spots

Denby's coverage of the environmental landscape is particularly biting, highlighting the gap between rhetoric and reality. He notes that in Iceland, tourism has "blown up," yet a volcanic eruption near the Blue Lagoon forced evacuations, proving that nature remains the ultimate gatekeeper. But the real tension lies further north. As Denby writes, "In the notoriously environmentally conscious Norway, 2025 saw Parliament pass legislation that opens previously protected rivers to potential damning for the purposes of hydropower." This move is a masterclass in cognitive dissonance. The author correctly identifies that while this increases low-carbon power, critics argue that "damming and effectively destroying wild rivers hardly resembles anything green or renewable to begin with." The commentary here is sharp: it forces the reader to confront the uncomfortable truth that the transition to green energy often requires destroying the very nature it claims to save.

"Damming and effectively destroying wild rivers hardly resembles anything green or renewable to begin with."

The digital security failures Denby highlights are equally stark. He points out that a Swedish newspaper used the fitness app Strava to track Prime Minister Olaf Scholz's security guards, thereby mapping the Prime Minister's jogging routes. Denby calls this an "obvious security blunder," a phrase that feels like an understatement. It underscores a broader vulnerability: the "most innocent seeming social media sharing can create major security breaches." While the author focuses on the blunder, a counterargument worth considering is whether the blame lies with the guards or the government for failing to implement basic digital hygiene protocols for public officials. The lesson is clear: in a hyper-connected world, privacy is often the first casualty of convenience.

One piece of news from every country in the world

Education Wars: Bans vs. AI

The educational landscape in Europe is fracturing along a fascinating fault line. Denby observes that in Finland and Denmark, nations known for top-tier education, policymakers moved to "ban phones from the classroom" to combat self-esteem issues and digitization. Yet, Estonia is doing the exact opposite. As Denby puts it, "Estonia has opted to go the opposite direction. In Estonian schools, cell phones are being embraced as tools." Through the "AI Leap 2025 initiative," the country is leaning into artificial intelligence to enhance outcomes. This contrast is the piece's most compelling narrative arc. It suggests that the solution to the digital age isn't a one-size-fits-all ban, but rather a strategic integration of technology. The author's framing is effective because it avoids the typical moral panic, instead presenting a logical progression for a nation that has "quietly climbed up education rankings."

The Shadow of Russia and Internal Fractures

Moving east, Denby's coverage shifts to the existential threats facing the region. The narrative is dominated by the specter of Russian influence, from espionage in Bulgaria to drone training in Lithuania. He details how Lithuania is educating children as young as eight on drone skills to match its neighbor's capabilities, a grim necessity in the current geopolitical climate. The author also touches on the internal rot within Ukraine, noting that President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's government is "caught up in the middle of corruption allegations" involving kickbacks from a state-owned nuclear company. This is a crucial addition, as it humanizes the political struggle beyond the battlefield. Denby writes that the scandal is "costing Zilinsky important aids who are fleeing or resigning," a detail that adds a layer of fragility to the narrative of Ukrainian resilience.

"The scandal is costing Zilinsky important aids who are fleeing or resigning as investigations continue."

Critics might note that the focus on internal corruption in Ukraine risks overshadowing the external aggression that necessitates such scrutiny, but Denby balances this by juxtaposing it with Moldova's "sweeping victory for the pro-west" party, which serves as a "strong rebuke to Russian efforts." The coverage effectively illustrates that the battle for Europe's future is being fought on multiple fronts: the battlefield, the ballot box, and the courtroom.

Bottom Line

Sam Denby's greatest strength is his ability to weave disparate threads—volcanic eruptions, drone schools, and Eurovision boycotts—into a cohesive tapestry of a continent in flux. The piece's strongest argument is that Europe's identity is no longer monolithic; it is a patchwork of competing priorities where environmental ideals clash with economic needs, and digital innovation battles security fears. The biggest vulnerability, however, is the sheer density of information, which risks overwhelming the reader with the sheer scale of the challenges. Ultimately, the takeaway is clear: Europe is not just reacting to the world; it is actively, and often chaotically, redefining itself in real-time.

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One piece of news from every country in the world

Across the past few decades, tourism in Iceland has blown up. This year, that phenomenon nearly took on a new meaning with a volcanic uption not far from the famed Blue Lagoon. While far from a novelty in the land of fire and ice, the lava spewing fissures opening across the landscape required an evacuation of the area. The nation's tourism board was quick to communicate that the incident would have no implication to the capital city or the international airport.

Though, difficulties in the tourism economy were felt elsewhere in the Northern Atlantic. As for years, humpback whales just off the coast of Ireland paid the bills for cork whale watchers. But recently, the whales have been harder and harder to spot, and thus business has been harder, culminating in the company closing its doors this year. Following food, the whales have simply gone elsewhere, making it another clear sign to activists that the government isn't doing nearly enough to protect its waters from over fishing.

An island away, 2025 has seen much made about how to treat the English Channel. British PM Kier Starmer authored a letter to France's president urging the nation to help stop small boats leaving the French coast headed to the United Kingdom from taking off. The move was made to attempt to slow the arrival of refugees and asylum seekers into the UK as nearly 40,000 had already arrived in 2025 alone, pushing it into a major political issue for the new Labor government. In the notoriously environmentally conscious Norway, 2025 saw Parliament pass legislation that opens previously protected rivers to potential damning for the purposes of hydropower.

That move is controversial, as on the one hand, it opens the door for increased lowcarbon power production, but on the other, critics are quick to point out that damning and effectively destroying wild rivers hardly resembles anything green or renewable to begin with. If one were to closely monitor the movement of Sweden's Prime Minister, Olerson, they'd simply need a bit of creativity and the Strava app. Using the fitness mapping app, an investigation by a Swedish newspaper this year was able to figure out the PM's preferred jogging routes and travel spots by looking at the activities of his security guards. It was an obvious security blunder and another reminder as to how the most innocent seeming social media sharing can create major ...