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  • The Week Evening Review
    Beijing’s energy dominance, an extremist group targeting kids, and Trump’s wildest ideas

     
    TODAY’S BIG QUESTION

    Has Iran war boosted China’s ‘electrostate’ power?

    The world is reeling from a war-induced oil shock, and China is poised to take advantage. The country builds nearly every component of the 21st-century electrical grid that will be needed to replace the oil currently bottled up in the Strait of Hormuz.

    European and Asian countries facing oil shortages are realizing that “all paths to renewable power run through China and its exporters,” said The New York Times. Beijing has for decades “poured hundreds of billions of dollars into green energy” in its drive for energy independence, and its companies lead the world in producing solar panels, batteries and other equipment. The U.S. war against Iran will “catalyze even more investment and interest in renewables,” said Cory Combs, of analysis firm Trivium China, to the outlet. If Russia and Middle Eastern countries that produce the world’s oil are known as petrostates, China might be the world’s first electrostate.

    What did the commentators say?
    The U.S. is pushing an “energy-hungry world” into China’s arms, said Paul Krugman on his Substack. President Donald Trump has been unsuccessfully attempting to “stop the renewable energy revolution.” But what he can do is “ensure that the revolution passes us by.” His “debacle” in Iran may bring that future ahead of schedule, led by China. By the time the U.S. escapes Trump’s “fossil fuel obsession,” China’s “lead in the manufacture of renewables will probably be insurmountable.”

    There will be a “long-term psychological impact” from the Iran war, said economist Andy Xie at The South China Morning Post. Other countries will expect more oil shocks in the future, which will “shape national policies for many years.” The upside is that reducing reliance on oil will take away the incentive to wage war against countries like Iran. 

    What next?
    China is inaugurating the “electrostate era,” said Foreign Policy. Beijing spent recent decades plotting an energy strategy “designed precisely for moments like this.” Nearly a third of the country’s energy consumption comes from electricity, and “more than half of the cars sold in China are electric.” That has been the result of policies concerned less with reducing carbon emissions and more with energy independence. 

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    ‘Woe to those who manipulate religion and the very name of God for their own military, economic and political gain, dragging that which is sacred into darkness and filth.’

    Pope Leo XIV, in a speech in Cameroon during his 11-day trip to Africa, on those who use religion to justify war. “The world is being ravaged by a handful of tyrants,” he added. His remarks came after Trump attacked him on social media.

     
     
    the explainer

    764: the online extremist group targeting kids nationwide

    A mysterious, shadowy group has been appearing online recently, and it has parents and law enforcement concerned about potential child exploitation. The group, known as 764, is a decentralized network operating across the U.S. and internationally. And while the FBI has urged parents and kids to be cautious, experts say tracking down the perpetrators is easier said than done.

    What’s 764?
    This international online organization “operates at the intersection of violent extremism, child sexual exploitation and other forms of extreme violence, including animal cruelty, self-harm and assisted suicide,” said the Global Network on Extremism & Technology. Those who identify with 764 are classified by experts as nihilistic violent extremists, “characterized by the encouragement, glorification or engagement in acts of extreme violence without a coherent ideological framework,” said the nonpartisan think tank Vision of Humanity. 

    Victims of 764 are often “pressured to send sexually explicit videos and photos, which are later used to blackmail them into extreme and violent acts,” said The Baltimore Banner. Most are victimized on online gaming platforms and social media websites.

    Many of the victims may be “dealing with one or more vulnerabilities: neurodiversity, eating disorders, social isolation, mental illness, family problems” and are then exploited, said Vision of Humanity. Criminal cases linked to 764 have been opened in numerous states, including Florida, Georgia, Massachusetts, Maryland and Texas, as well as Canada. The latter has since designated 764 as a terrorist group, and New Zealand did the same.

    How’s law enforcement fighting back?
    The FBI and local police organizations are working to shut down the 764 groups, and “every FBI field office in the country is now involved in tracking the network,” said CBS News. At least 450 cases nationwide are “under investigation, with authorities classifying the activity as domestic terrorism.” 

    To protect kids, the FBI is “urging families to look for behavioral changes that could signal a child is being targeted,” said CBS News. The FBI is also encouraging parents to “take proactive steps,” including monitoring children’s activity online and reporting suspicious behavior to authorities.

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    $72 million: The estimated legal fees accrued in a 15-year battle between Australian mining magnate Gina Rinehart and two rival mining families over contracts from the 1960s, according to the Sydney Morning Herald. Rinehart, Australia’s wealthiest person (worth $27 billion), has been ordered to pay past and future royalties in the hundreds of millions to heirs of her father’s business partners.

     
     
    in the spotlight

    The wildest ideas Trump has proposed

    President Donald Trump has nothing if not an active imagination. Since taking office, he has pitched multiple ostensibly revolutionary products and plans to the nation. Some are material planks of his America First agenda, while others are seemingly speculative flights of questionable feasibility. 

    Golden Dome
    As one of the first executive orders of his second term, Trump in January 2025 directed the implementation of a “next-generation missile defense shield” for the U.S. “against ballistic, hypersonic, advanced cruise missiles” and “other aerial attacks,” said the White House. Dubbed the Iron Dome for America at the time, there has been “little progress” made on the since-renamed Golden Dome system, with “internal misalignment on the administration’s plans for the architecture causing delays,” said National Defense. 

    At the heart of this defense system would be “space-based interceptors” designed to “find and destroy enemy missiles and drones in the early stages,” said Gizmodo. That technology, however, “does not exist yet and is deemed theoretically ineffective and impractical.” 

    Freedom Cities
    In the lead-up to the 2024 election, Trump campaigned on establishing what he called Freedom Cities, or tracts of federal land where businesses could “focus on technological innovation,” said Politifact. Trump’s advisers framed the proposal as comparable to “Lincoln’s campaign for the transcontinental railroad” and “Roosevelt’s vision for a national park service,” said Politico. 

    By March 2025, interest groups had begun “drafting Congressional legislation” to advance the development of cities “where anti-aging clinical trials, nuclear reactor startups and building construction can proceed without having to get prior approval,” said Wired. Despite his utopian promises, Trump “hasn’t lent any rhetorical weight to the idea recently,” said Politifact in February. 

    Medbed
    In September 2025, the president shared a since-deleted video to Truth Social promoting “access to new medical technology” in the form of a “cure-all bed” with roots in “conspiratorial corners of the internet,” said CNN. Every American will have “their own medbed card” granting access to medbed hospitals, an AI-generated Trump said in footage “intended to resemble a Fox News segment” hosted by daughter-in-law Lara Trump. But “no one has an actual photo” of a medbed, said McGill University’s Office for Science and Society. “Let’s be clear, they don’t exist.”

     
     

    Good day 🇳🇬

    … for African music. This year, Afrobeat pioneer Fela Kuti will be the first African artist to be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. The legendary Nigerian musician and political activist will be honored in the category of Musical Influence. This follows his Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award last year, another historic first for African musicians.

     
     

    Bad day ✈️

    … for European airlines. Europe could struggle to “find enough jet fuel to put planes in the sky,” said The New York Times. Supplies will run out in “six weeks or so,” said Fatih Birol, the director of the International Energy Agency. The continent is “by far the biggest consumer” of fuel shipped through the effectively closed Strait of Hormuz.

     
     
    Picture of the day

    Flames of war

    A firefighter works to extinguish a blaze following a Russian strike in Kyiv, Ukraine. Russia launched more than 700 drones and missiles into Ukraine overnight, killing at least 18 people in what officials say is the deadliest attack in months.
    Serhii Okunev / AFP / Getty Images

     
     
    Puzzles

    Daily sudoku

    Challenge yourself with The Week’s daily sudoku, part of our puzzles section, which also includes guess the number

    Play here

     
     
    The Week recommends

    The best fantasy movies of all time

    The fantasy genre is hard to define. But to paraphrase Justice Potter Stewart, you know it when you see it. For this list, we have excluded animated films like “Spirited Away,” as well as those that feel more comfortably placed in the science fiction or superhero genres.

    ‘The Wizard of Oz’ (1939)
    In MGM’s cultural juggernaut, young Dorothy awakens after a tornado strike to find her house moving through the air and into the magical Land of Oz. This seemingly ageless classic “genuinely hits on childish delights” and fears with “effortless grace, warmth and imagination,” said Alan Morrison at Empire. (HBO Max)

    ‘The NeverEnding Story’ (1984)
    Director Wolfgang Petersen’s film (pictured above), adapted from the first half of Michael Ende’s 1979 novel, follows Bastian Balthazar Bux, who starts reading a book about a malevolent force (The Nothing) devouring the realm of Fantasia, only to have the narrative come to life. The film also contains an important lesson: “Keep going, keep forging onward, don’t stop to mope, or you will sink into the slough of despondence,” said Peter Bradshaw at The Guardian. (Tubi)

    ‘The Princess Bride’ (1987)
    Director Rob Reiner’s often-hilarious adventure uses a familiar story-within-a-story structure. Peter Falk plays a man reading a story to his grandson, about Princess Buttercup, who falls in love with her farmhand, Westley. The movie is “generally well-received by everybody who has ever seen it but given the august profile of a universal cultural touchstone by those of a certain age,” said Tim Brayton at Alternate Ending. (Disney+)

    Read more

     
     

    Poll watch

    Among workers who don’t use AI tools at work, 46% say it’s because they prefer to keep doing their work the way they do now, according to a Gallup survey of 23,717 U.S. employees. About two in five people are ethically opposed to AI, concerned about data privacy or don’t believe AI can be helpful.

     
     
    INSTANT OPINION

    Today’s best commentary

    ‘GOP food stamp work requirements hit just as jobs dry up’
    Whitney Curry Wimbish at The American Prospect
    Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill, trade wars and actual wars are coming together to maximize hunger” in the U.S., says Whitney Curry Wimbish. The GOP’s “new work requirements for food stamps began in February, forcing more people to work at least 80 hours a month to get the benefit.” At the “same time, jobs are harder to find,” especially “low-wage jobs that food stamp beneficiaries should be able to turn to for the new requirement.”

    ‘Massachusetts health reform at 20: a model for what government can do’
    Maura Healey and Mitt Romney at The Boston Globe
    In 2006, Massachusetts politicians “came together to answer a question that long seemed unthinkable in Washington: Could we make health care coverage a reality for all?” say Maura Healey and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney (R). The state “proved to the nation that the answer was a resounding yes.” The “lessons of that day went well beyond the policy.” It was a “demonstration of what’s possible when leaders of all perspectives come together, set aside partisanship and focus on solving real problems.”

    ‘Jackie Robinson’s legacy is more than a symbol. It’s a responsibility.’
    Scott Reich at the San Francisco Chronicle
    Jackie Robinson Day is “one of the most powerful traditions in American sports,” says Scott Reich. For “one day, the number is the same.” Jackie Robinson’s number, 42, “becomes everyone’s number.” But “while it’s easy to honor a number, it’s harder to fully appreciate what it signifies.” Robinson “did not simply break baseball’s color barrier,” he also “stepped into a country that had not yet decided whether it was ready for him.” His uniform “gave him a platform; he chose to use it.”

     
     
    WORD OF THE DAY

    patsas

    The Greek name for a soup made of “bovine bellies and legs” believed to cure stomach ulcers, hangovers and other ailments. In Turkish, it’s called iskembe. A Greek restaurant owner is trying to register the tripe soup with Unesco as a traditional Greek dish, sparking a dispute with age-old rival Turkey, which claims the soup as its own.

     
     

    Evening Review was written and edited by Theara Coleman, Nadia Croes, Scott Hocker, Anya Jaremko-Greenwold, Justin Klawans, Joel Mathis and Rafi Schwartz, with illustrations by Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images;  Stock Photo / Getty Images; Al Drago / Getty Images; kpa / United Archives / Getty Images
     

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