World
UK officials recommend yoga and ‘climate cafés’ to combat ‘eco-anxiety’
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Britons’ anxiety about climate change plays a big role in many mental health struggles among the country’s youth and can trigger guilt about having children, a new report has claimed.
The report by the United Kingdom Health Security Agency (UKHSA) also suggests that yoga and visiting “climate cafés” could help stave off this “eco-anxiety” and build emotional resilience in times of change.
“An awareness of climate and environmental change can also lead to emotional or psychological responses, such as eco-anxiety,” it reads, defining the term as distress caused by the threat of climate change.
The authors also reference “solastalgia,” which is the sorrow people feel when their familiar environments are degraded by environmental change.
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A UKHSA report on climate anxiety among British youth faces criticism from Jason Isaac, who calls eco-anxiety a product of climate propaganda. (Reuters)
According to the UKHSA, reactions like this are not irrational but are natural responses to a destabilized world.
The data shown in the report, the Climate change and mental health: thematic assessment, also indicates that many young Britons are struggling with the psychological weight of environmental collapse.
For example, nearly 40 percent of survey respondents said that climate change made them hesitant to have children, citing fears about future safety, resources and quality of life.
“There is evidence that eco-anxiety is influencing reproductive choices for some individuals, as 39% of UK survey respondents described that climate change made them feel hesitant to have children due to concerns over the children’s future quality of life,” the report states.
In response to these findings, the UKHSA went on to recommend activities that promote community connection and resilience.
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The United Kingdom Health Security Agency recommends yoga and climate cafés to help British youth cope with eco-anxiety and build resilience against climate change distress. (CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP via Getty Images)
“Participating in group and community-based activities, including yoga, citizen science, and climate cafés, was associated with reduced psychological distress,” the report notes.
The report has not escaped criticism, with Jason Isaac, CEO of the American Energy Institute, accusing the UK government of institutionalizing climate hysteria.
“The UK’s embrace of fringe terms like ‘eco-anxiety’ and ‘solastalgia’ shows how deeply climate propaganda has seeped into official policy,” he told the National Review.
Isaac argues that these are not legitimate medical conditions but rather the result of fear-driven messaging that makes people feel guilty about prosperity and family life.
“No climate café or government program will solve a mental health crisis created by the Left’s own apocalyptic narrative,” he added.
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Billionaire philanthropist Bill Gates surprised social media users this week when he wrote that climate change does not represent a doomsday scenario for earth. (Bennett Raglin/Getty)
Similarly, Bill Gates, also took a step away from climate alarmism and said he thinks climate change and global warming are both issues that “will not lead to humanity’s demise.”
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Despite the controversy, the UKHSA maintains that addressing the psychological effects of climate change is essential to public health.
World
China Box Office: ‘Dear You’ Leads Again as ‘Masters of the Universe’ Debuts
Jinant Film & TV’s unstoppable family drama “Dear You” comfortably dominated the China box office during the June 5–7 weekend, securing RMB115.3 million ($17 million), according to data from Artisan Gateway.
Directed by Lan Hongchun and starring Li Sitong and Wang Yantong, the low-budget cultural juggernaut has reached a cumulative total of $238.5 million. The story details Grandma Ye Shurou from Chaoshan, whose quiet twilight years are broken when her debt-ridden grandson journeys to Thailand to track down his rumored billionaire grandfather. The investigation unravels a hidden love affair spanning 50 years, showing that the person Grandma had been writing to via the traditional “Qiaopi” mailing method was a complete stranger.
Zhonghe Qiancheng’s crime thriller “Vanishing Point” held firm in the runner-up position, pulling in $2.5 million to stretch its cumulative bank to $75.6 million. Directed by Cheng Wei-hao and starring Zheng Kai and Liu Haocun, the film is adapted from Bei Baokang’s novel “Sea Anemone.” The narrative traces the dark, interlocking secrets exposed within an old apartment block after a young boy vanishes on the winter solstice.
Disney’s “Star Wars” spinoff “The Mandalorian and Grogu” was in third place, adding $1.4 million for a cumulative total of $12.1 million. Debuting in fourth place, Amazon MGM Studios’ fantasy action vehicle “Masters of the Universe” picked up $1.2 million in its opening framework.
Rounding out the top five, StudioCanal’s tense World War II historical drama “Pressure” opened with $1.1 million over its two-day weekend frame, bringing its total to $1.2 million including early previews.
Mainland China’s overall weekend grosses reached $27.8 million, while the 2026 year-to-date revenue stands at $2.36 billion, down 42.3% from the same period in 2025.
World
Hezbollah’s secret ‘kill, wound and maim’ bomb network exposed as Israel strikes Beirut
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Israel launched retaliatory airstrikes on sites it described as Hezbollah command centers in Beirut’s southern suburbs Sunday, hours after Israeli officials said Hezbollah fired rockets into northern Israel. Hezbollah did not immediately claim responsibility.
The escalation came days after the U.S., Israel and Lebanon announced a renewed conditional ceasefire framework requiring Hezbollah to halt fire and withdraw from parts of southern Lebanon. It also followed the release of IDF footage that Israel said showed troops dismantling a Hezbollah explosives facility, where an outside expert said components appeared consistent with anti-personnel shrapnel devices designed to wound or kill people on foot.
The strikes mark a major cross-border escalation days after the U.S., Israel and Lebanon announced a renewed conditional ceasefire framework requiring Hezbollah to halt fire and withdraw from parts of southern Lebanon.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office announced the military action was direct retaliation for the group’s violation earlier in the day.
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An explosion erupts from a building following an Israeli strike in central Beirut, Lebanon, on March 18, 2026. (Hussein Malla/AP Photo)
Concurrently, footage released by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) showed troops locating and dismantling a hidden, booby-trapped explosives warehouse.
The multipurpose assembly hub appeared to contain materials that could be used in makeshift shrapnel and propane tanks to create a distributed, lethal network.
Nick Reese, an adjunct professor at NYU’s Center for Global Affairs and a former U.S. national security adviser, told Fox News Digital that the captured weapons cache suggests a deliberate emphasis on personnel casualties, which could be military or civilian targets.
“Given the current situation, they probably targeted more military personnel. Shrapnel bombs are intended to hurt and kill people on foot,” Reese said.
“The video cuts between the IDF entering the building and showing the contents. It’s at this moment that they probably cleared any booby traps,” Reese added. “It would be standard practice to look for and disable any booby traps in a facility like this before going inside and before filming anything.”
“It’s possible the booby traps could be using shrapnel methods, but I can’t see evidence of that in the video. It shows what appears to be a shrapnel bomb, but it is not hidden so likely not a booby trap unless the IDF disarmed it off camera,” he said.
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Hezbollah worked to build facilities below private residential buildings and houses. (Benoît Durand / Hans Lucas / AFP via Getty Images)
Among the items found in the raid was a container filled with nails and other sharp objects, which Reese noted are specific indicators of anti-personnel targeting.
“This video shows what appears to be a container with nails or other sharp implements in it,” Reese noted. “This is likely for creating shrapnel bombs intended to kill, wound, and maim targets.”
“Such devices are both effective and cause significant fear among the population, which was likely the intent,” Reese continued. “The method is not particularly sophisticated but shows that they were targeting humans, not simply hardware or infrastructure.”
“Making shrapnel bombs also tends to be cheap, easily concealed, and effective, especially against personnel. These types of bombs would likely have been in significant use.”
“The video shows a variety of materials that could have been used to create bombs, from makeshift shrapnel to what appears to be a propane tank,” Reese explained.
“These components would be used for very different purposes, so the location seems to have been a central general-purpose explosives-making facility.”
“Propane tanks would be used for larger targets like tanks or buildings, while shrapnel would be used against infantry or in public places,” Reese said.
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Smoke billows over Beirut’s southern suburbs following reported strikes amid escalating conflict involving Hezbollah and Israel, as seen from Baabda, Lebanon, on March 6, 2026. (Mohamed Azakir/Reuters)
The dismantling of the factory follows a high-profile decapitation strike against the leadership running these hidden networks.
The IDF announced Friday that an airstrike in Lebanon killed Hezbollah’s chief explosives engineer, Abed Harb, the commander of Hezbollah’s engineering unit, after he “attempted to harm” Israeli soldiers.
The military said Harb was a veteran commander responsible for “numerous attacks against IDF soldiers” over the decades.
When considering the expertise required to manage such operations, Reese observed: “Over a 20-year career, this is difficult to say. Given Iran’s well-known funding and support to Hezbollah and its experience fighting the Israelis in multiple conflicts, he likely had a mix of internal and external training combined with combat experience.”
“Harb was targeted as part of an effort to disrupt Hezbollah’s war-making infrastructure and limit its ability to continue to plan and execute large bombing operations against the IDF and civilian targets.”
“The loss of Abed Harb by Hezbollah is not just a loss of leadership but of institutional knowledge,” Reese added.
“His two decades of battlefield experience were significant to Hezbollah not only because of his bomb-making abilities but because of how he understood the IDF, Hezbollah, and the junior ranks.
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“As a member of Hezbollah since 2006, Harb likely had significant skills in making and disguising bombs over a 20-year career, which will be a blow to Hezbollah’s operational capabilities and infrastructure,” Reese said.
World
Peru’s Sanchez visits jailed ex-president as votes are counted
Peruvian presidential candidate Roberto Sanchez visited jailed former president Pedro Castillo as officials counted ballots from the closely contested runoff election against conservative rival Keiko Fujimori.
Published On 8 Jun 2026
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