Wednesday, 10 June 2026

How do you want to live? Both James Valentine and the pope have offered a challenge to humanity at a crossroads.

Extract from The Guardian

Side by Side composite: James Valentine (left) and Pope Leo XIV (right)

Both public figures have urged us to be active makers of the world we want our children to inherit

James Valentine meets the pope at the Pearly Gates. This is not the lead-in to a punchline delivered too soon, but a match made in heaven that could help those of us left behind preserve our humanity.

While the wave of grief that followed the Sydney presenter’s passing in April may be slowly subsiding, the brio of his departure has settled deeply with those of us who were part of his vast network of goodwill.

I was lucky to be a small part of this world. For a few years I would run the “people’s poll” for afternoon listeners where we explored everything from our showering habits (58% mornings to 42% evenings) to the opening move in rock-paper-scissors (55% rock).

Like so much of his work, this was not just a frivolous way to pass the time with his audience; what James created with skill and intentionality was a living organism that offered to sustain anyone who chose to join in. This was his gift.

While James was effusively equivocal about religion, I couldn’t help thinking about his earthly contribution as I read the papal encyclical Magnifica Humanitas, released a few weeks ago.

Pope Leo XIV’s letter to the Catholic flock and all people of goodwill is a much-anticipated intervention in the hyper-scaling of so-called artificial intelligence.

It builds on the work of his predecessor, Leo XIII, who he named himself after, whose Rerum Novarum on the Industrial Revolution asserted the dignity of labour, a clarion call for believers to join unions and work collectively to civilise capital.

The first US-born pontiff, who grew up on the South Side of Chicago, has been dubbed the “woke pope” for his willingness to push back on the Trump administration’s ICE raids and reckless warmongering. To be clear, he is no progressive saint; he was politicised opposing female reproductive rights, while the church’s dark history of abuse remains his cross to bear.

These caveats aside, read on its merits, Magnifica Humanitas offers a moral clarity that has been absent from a public AI discourse that vacillates between existential doom and naive faith.

In forensic detail the pope audits the risks of this technology, from the concentration of wealth and power in the hands of the few, to the automation of state-sponsored killing, to the erasure of cultural diversity and, most pointedly, to the manifest exploitation of those trapped in its production line, particularly those in the global south.

Leo frames the choices we currently face in biblical terms. On one hand a Tower of Babel where humanity is reduced to a brittle uniformity that neutralises difference under the pretence of a single language model. In contrast, he casts the rebuilding of Jerusalem undertaken by Nehemiah as a shared enterprise driven by returning exiles working in communion.

This is the principle of “subsidiarity” where authority is vested in those participating in their community in service of the common good rather than designated up to governments or, more pointedly, corporations.

The idea of distributed power seems counterintuitive coming from the titular head of a unitary religion, but as Dr Michael Walker explains, “subsidiarity” lies at the heart of Catholic social teaching.

Without conscious rebalancing of power, we are left with technology that dehumanises us all by putting the relentless pursuit of the material at the centre of everything.

The alternative? The pope argues we need to get our hands dirty and build together, not as consumers of product but as active makers of the world we want our children to inherit.

In his wonderful tribute in the Sydney Town Hall, Roy Valentine made the point that his father never asked his kids, “What do you want to be?” but rather “How do you want to live?”

This strikes me as more than just an enlightened model of parenting. It is a challenge to all of us to mindfully choose our path at a time when we are told that both anything is possible and resistance is futile.

How do we want to live? In a world where AI agents and companion bots cater to our every whim until we lose the ability to even discern what we actually want? In workplaces where co-pilots erase friction until they can simply fly themselves? In a culture that synthesises the past until there is nothing left to steal? Where we outsource ideation and connection until we are dragged into lonely universes of one, insulated from the friction of other people by an automated layer of a simulated self.

The sense of inevitability around this digital Babel has already taken hold and will take more than a single government or a law or a consumer boycott to change its course. It will take all of us acting in communion to resist these false idols by seeking joy in each other. As the pope writes: “True progress always stems from a heart open to others, an intelligence willing to listen and a will that seeks what unites rather than what separates.” Sounds like someone we know?

How do we want to live? Leo’s encyclical is the invocation to human composition. Now it’s over to us to tap James’ enduring spirit, step in and join the ensemble.

Peter Lewis is the executive director of Essential, a progressive strategic communications and research company that undertook qualitative research for Labor in the last federal election. He is the host of Burning Platforms, a weekly podcast focusing on the politics of technology. His columns are accredited “Proudly Human

Six countries sanction enablers of settler violence in occupied West Bank.

Extract from aljazeera

News|

Israel-Palestine conflict

The UK, Australia, Canada, France, New Zealand and Norway also say they will take further measures if Israel fails to address the situation on the ground.

The United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, France, New Zealand and Norway have imposed coordinated sanctions targeting networks involved in financing, enabling and carrying out settler violence against Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

The move on Tuesday came in response to record illegal settlement expansion and rising violence by settlers in the West Bank, according to multiple statements.

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“With our British, Canadian, Australian, New Zealand, and Norwegian partners, we are today imposing new sanctions against those responsible for intensifying colonisation and violence in the West Bank,” French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said in a post on social media.

After issuing the new sanctions, the six Western countries warned that they were prepared to take further measures if the Israeli government failed to adequately address the situation on the ground.

Barrot noted that France has also banned Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, three leaders of settler groups and 21 settlers from entering the country over violence in the West Bank.

Israeli reaction

Israel’s foreign ministry denounced the sanctions shortly after they were announced.

“Israel firmly rejects the disgraceful measures adopted by foreign governments against Israeli citizens, entities, and a government minister,” Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Oren Marmorstein said in a statement.

“The real essence of these steps is the attempt to impose a political stance regarding the right of Jews to settle in the Land of Israel and concerning the Israeli-Palestinian conflict – camouflaged as measures against violence,” added Marmorstein.01:09

  • Israeli settler blindfolds and detains Palestinian in occupied West Bank

    Israeli settler blindfolds and detains Palestinian in occupied West Bank00:49

  •  Palestinians confront Israeli settlers over land grab near Hebron

    Palestinians confront Israeli settlers over land grab near Hebron

The UK government urged British businesses and citizens to refrain from conducting financial activities in Israeli settlements in the West Bank deemed illegal under international law.

“I have strengthened our business risk guidance to make it clear and unambiguous: if you are a British citizen or business, you should not conduct any economic and financial activities in illegal Israeli settlements,” Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper told Parliament.

“We believe that violent settler groups should not be profiting from the land that they have seized from Palestinians,” Cooper added, saying the Israeli “government has condemned some settler violence, but that rings hollow when there is scant accountability”.

In a statement, the British government also repeated its call on the Israeli government to end settlement expansion, clamp down on settler violence, prosecute those responsible, and lift ongoing restrictions on the functioning of the Palestinian economy.

‘Not enough’

Responding to the UK government announcement of the new sanctions, Amnesty International said they were “a step, but they are not enough”.

“If Ministers are serious about sanctioning those ‘who support and sponsor violence against Palestinian communities in the West Bank’, they must act on the reality that settlements and settler violence are state policy – directed and funded from the top,” Kristyan Benedict, Amnesty International UK’s crisis response manager, said in a statement.

“Targeting settler financing networks while the ministers who run this campaign face no consequences is not meaningful accountability – it leaves the architects untouched. The UK must sanction Benjamin Netanyahu, Orit Strock and Israel Katz as well as former defence minister Yoav Gallant,” he said.

Benedict also called for the UK to ban “all trade with settlements and halt cooperation and investment relations enabling unlawful occupation and apartheid”.

In a similar reaction, Christian Aid, a British charity, said “it is pathetic merely to ‘advise’ British businesses against activity in illegal Israeli settlements when there are no real consequences for them”.

“The UK Government must ban all trade and investment with Israeli settlements before Palestine is erased entirely,” Jennifer Larbie, Christian Aid’s head of UK Influencing, said in a statement.

Israel rejects charges that its troops protect settlers during attacks on Palestinians in the West Bank, saying such actions are rogue incidents that violate military protocol and are investigated.

An inquiry by the United Nations has found that Israeli authorities were directly involved in settler attacks that have killed, injured and displaced Palestinians in the West Bank, while Israeli forces provided protection for settlers.

Under Labour Prime Minister Keir Starmer, the UK has paused free trade talks with Israel and suspended some arms export licences. Like France, the UK has also imposed sanctions on far-right Israeli cabinet members Itamar Ben-Gvir and Smotrich.

Last year, the UK joined allies, including France and Canada, in recognising a Palestinian state.

Fuel shock spurs business uptake of green equipment including batteries and EVs.

Extract from ABC News

Crane in the centre of a large construction site. City buildings in the background.

Hamilton Marino powers three cranes from one battery at this Melbourne construction site. (Supplied: Hamilton Marino)

In short:

Volatile fuel prices are accelerating the shift to renewable energy by businesses, including batteries to power equipment or fleets of electric vehicles.

NAB says uptake of loans to finance green equipment between March and May this year was almost double the uptake over the same period a year ago.

What's next?

The Grattan Institute says a lack of support services could be a barrier to faster electrification for some businesses.

The Big Issue celebrates three decades in Australia with special edition.

Extract from ABC News

Feel Good

A group of people wearing fluorescent vests hold 30th anniversary posters with celebratory moods.

The Big Issue launched its 30th anniversary edition in Adelaide's Rundle Mall on Tuesday. (ABC News: Angus Paterson)

In short:

A magazine sold by people experiencing homelessness, unemployment and disadvantage is marking 30 years of operations in Australia.

The Big Issue first launched in June 1996 and its sellers have become a recognisable fixture in CBD strips around the country.

The Big Issue's 30th anniversary edition is out now.