The Week The Week
flag of US
US
flag of UK
UK
https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/flexiimages/jzblygzdxr1769609154.gif

SUBSCRIBE

Try 6 weeks free

Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
  • The Explainer
  • Talking Points
  • The Week Recommends
  • Podcasts
  • Newsletters
  • From the Magazine
  • The Week Junior
  • More
    • Politics
    • World News
    • Business
    • Health
    • Science
    • Food & Drink
    • Travel
    • Culture
    • History
    • Personal Finance
    • Puzzles
    • Photos
    • The Blend
    • All Categories
  • Newsletter sign up Newsletter
  • The Week Evening Review
    Smartphone-influenced birth rates, Macron’s G7 plan, and Blanche’s AG nomination

     
    talking points

    Did smartphones cause the baby bust? 

    Apple introduced the iPhone to the world in 2007. That was the same year that birth rates around the world began to decline. And the developments may be related.

    Two new studies suggest smartphones are responsible for the baby bust. One study found the iPhone “caused as much as half of the fertility decline” from 2007 to 2011, said The New York Times. A second study of 128 countries found that teen pregnancies declined “once smartphones became a mass phenomenon.” It may be that people “began to socialize more on their phones and less in person,” or it could be that the technology “made pornography more accessible.”

    ‘Awkward, antisocial puppies’
    Phones have “turned us into awkward, antisocial puppies who can’t handle eye contact,” said Lauren Veldhuizen at the National Review. The rise of smartphone technology has thus created a world in which “fewer people date and fewer babies are born.” Some might see the decline of teen pregnancies, in particular, as a positive development. But that would be true only if the decline were the result of an “increasing respect for the purpose of sex within the confines of marriage” instead of our increasing “inability to speak to one another.”

    The media has glommed onto the new studies because of a collective mood of “total paranoia and doom about smartphones,” said Elizabeth Nolan Brown at Reason. The biggest plunges in the 2007-2011 study were among 15- to 24-year-old females, suggesting more girls and women are “avoiding unintended pregnancy at young ages.” That’s not necessarily a bad thing. 

    ‘No easy fix’
    Maybe smartphones first tarnished dating, but AI “might finish the job,” said Eric Levitz at Vox. Streaming and social media have helped isolate ourselves from each other, yet online platforms can’t discuss “your career anxieties, favorite Civil War battle or debilitating fear of iguanas.” Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini and other artificial intelligence chatbots can. 

    There’s “no easy fix here,” said Axios. Politicians have proposed “baby bonuses, tax credits, or better child care and parental leave policies” to solve the fertility crisis, all to no avail. So “perhaps the solution is that everyone toss their phones into the sea.”

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    ‘Donald Trump isn’t just coming after me because of my mean tweets. He’s coming after me because I am considering running for president.’

    Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-Calif.) in a YouTube video on why he believes he and his wife are being questioned by federal agents, accusing Trump of using the Justice Department to punish a political enemy. “To get me, he’s coming after my wife,” he added. 

     
     
    today’s big question

    What is Macron’s G7 game plan for China?

    Emmanuel Macron has home-field advantage at the ongoing G7 summit in the resort town of Évian-les-Bains, and the French president wants the participating countries to help him address Chinese trade. But while China isn’t a G7 member, it has an advantage of its own, given its power in the global trade market. So Macron may have to perform a delicate balancing act.

    What did the commentators say?
    The French president expects the G7 nations to “converge on the need to tackle a flood of subsidized Chinese exports that’s disrupting global markets,” said Politico. But it’s becoming increasingly clear that “credible action is one deliverable he won’t be able to land.” Macron is pushing for Europe and the U.S. to come together for a solution, but meetings are “unlikely to deliver answers.”

    The problem is two-pronged: Beijing is “curling its lip” at Macron, while Europe and the U.S. are “diverging on how to contain China’s $1.2 trillion trade surplus,” said Politico. Macron wants the EU to present a unified front on China, and Europe has “made strides on its China policy since the Covid-19 pandemic” but “still struggles to align internally,” said the Chicago Council on Global Affairs.

    France and Macron’s ultimate goal is to “make the reduction of global imbalances and inequalities the priority and position the G7 as a space for dialogue among the major advanced industrialized democracies,” said the Chicago Council. Macron also believes that talks between China and France “signal a ‘new willingness’ by China, the U.S. and Europe to coordinate economic approaches,” said Bloomberg. President Donald Trump, however, appears “ready to use the G7 stage to berate allies for what he views as inadequate support,” said the Council on Foreign Relations.

    What next?
    The Évian-les-Bains summit will be Macron’s last, as his term expires in 2027. The U.S. is hosting next year’s G7 summit. China, meanwhile, maintains that it’s ready and willing to engage in economic cooperation with the EU, said Bloomberg, even as these discussions come “against the backdrop of talks in Europe over possible new restrictions to counter China’s export surge.”

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    5.9 billion: The number of aquatic animals killed by France’s nuclear facilities every year, according to a report by the Sortir du Nucléaire (Getting Out of Nuclear) network of NGOs. Fish, crustaceans and jellyfish get sucked into reactor cooling systems, and the construction of four new reactors is expected to raise the number to 7.7 billion a year.

     
     
    in the spotlight

    Todd Blanche is no sure thing in AG nomination fight

    President Donald Trump’s preference for personal loyalty in his subordinates may pose an insurmountable problem for a White House in search of a permanent attorney general. Nominee and acting AG Todd Blanche, the president’s onetime personal lawyer, faces a steep nomination process, as concerns grow over Blanche’s alleged willingness to subvert the role of attorney general for the president’s political purposes. Is Blanche’s nomination dead on arrival? Or does Trump still command the senatorial clout to ensure his longtime consiglieri survives a bruising nomination battle?

    ‘Prepared to defy Trump’
    Blanche will test whether a “handful of increasingly restive Republican senators” are “prepared to defy Trump on a high-profile nominee,” said The Washington Post. As acting attorney general, Blanche “played a central role in setting up” Trump’s $1.8 billion Department of Justice weaponization reparations fund — a move that “triggered a rare revolt by Senate Republicans” before the courts froze the project entirely.

    In the Senate Judiciary Committee, “just one GOP rebel could stop the whole thing,” said Semafor. Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina has had “no issue gumming up Trump’s nominees” in the past, said ABC News. Blanche has “told us and the world that we are not going to do” the fund, and “I believe him,” said Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) to reporters, per Semafor. Whether Blanche remains as committed as he has indicated will “obviously impact the story.”

    ‘Corruption’ and ‘competence’
    There are “two stories” playing into Blanche’s nomination, said MS NOW legal analyst Andrew Weissmann to Slate. The first is a “story about corruption” and the “complicity he’s willing to engage in for the president.” The second is a “question of competence” about someone who has “made a series of serious missteps.” 

    Having voted in lockstep for Bondi during her nomination, “by contrast, Republicans seem noncommittal on Blanche,” said The Independent. In a “healthier political climate,” there would be “dozens” of GOP senators who would “immediately pronounce Blanche unqualified for the job,” said The New York Times. Today, the list of senators who “may have the courage to do so is shorter yet plenty long enough.”

     
     

    Good day 🎾

    … for pro tennis. Serena and Venus Williams are returning to Wimbledon together after the sisters were “handed a wildcard to compete in the women’s doubles,” said the BBC. Serena made a comeback at the Queen’s Club last week, four years after playing what many expected to be the final match of her career at the 2022 U.S. Open.

     
     

    Bad day 🍪

    … for mental clarity. Eating ultraprocessed foods could make it harder to stay focused and may contribute to factors linked to dementia, even if you otherwise eat healthy, according to a study published in the journal Alzheimer’s & Dementia. Even modest increases in ultraprocessed food consumption are associated with declines in attention and mental processing speed. 

     
     
    Picture of the day

    Doom and bloom

    A National Park Service worker dumps bottles of hydrogen peroxide in the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool in an attempt to mitigate an algae bloom just days after the completion of the Trump administration’s $13.1 million renovation of the National Mall landmark in Washington, D.C.
    Jonathan Ernst / Reuters

     
     
    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 video games to dip into this summer

    New video game releases have been scant this year, as developers wait for the Grand Theft Auto VI drop date. But the next few months still have a few gems to eye. This season, original games reminiscent of classic favorites are being released, along with a remastered collection of Metal Gear Solid entries.

    The Adventures of Elliot: The Millennium Tales
    Square Enix’s latest 2D role-playing game arrives soon. As the eponymous main character, you explore the land of Philabieldia across four time periods to fulfill a 1,000-year mission. The game is a “faithful homage to the Legend of Zelda games of old,” said PCMag. (June 18; Nintendo Switch 2, PC, PS5, Xbox Series X|S)

    D-Topia
    Fans of more chill games will likely enjoy the new puzzle adventure from publisher Annapurna Interactive. It’s an “experience that’s laid-back” but with a “dark undercurrent,” said Comics Gaming Magazine. And its “blend of cozy charm and subversive darkness” has critics “eager to see more.” (June 18; Nintendo Switch & Switch 2, PC, PS5, Xbox Series X|S)

    Marvel Tokon: Fighting Souls
    Superhero fans can rejoice, as last spring's Invincible VS isn’t the “only tag-team fighter for comic book readers this year,” said Polygon. From the developer behind Dragon Ball FighterZ, Marvel Tokon: Fighting Souls (pictured above) features classic Marvel heroes like “Spider-Man, Iron Man and Black Panther” with “new anime-inspired designs.” It gained attention online “thanks to its art style and the pedigree of its developer,” said Gizmodo. (Aug. 6; PC, PS5)

    Read more

     
     

    Poll watch

    Nearly half of Americans are not interested in the FIFA World Cup, according to an Emerson College survey. Out of 1,200 adults polled, 33% are somewhat interested, while 22% are very interested. The U.S. team is competing in Group D, with its next match against Australia on Friday.

     
     
    INSTANT OPINION

    Today’s best commentary

    ‘Trump celebrates while America capitulates’
    Tom Nichols at The Atlantic
    On Sunday, Trump announced that the U.S. and Iran have “reached a deal to end their war,” but the U.S. has “little to celebrate.” Trump and his team “in record time just lost a war to a militarily mediocre, but nonetheless extremely dangerous, adversary,” says Tom Nichols. The U.S. president “failed to achieve every one of the goals he put forward for this war of choice, and now he’s determined to sign, seal and deliver America’s capitulation.”

    ‘What the Knicks’ championship means to New York’
    Sean Gregory at Time
    The New York Knicks’ NBA championship “means everything to New Yorkers because we play this game, hoops, everywhere,” says Sean Gregory. New Yorkers “take the lumps of a sweltering train stranded under the East River and, like these Knicks, come out on the other side.” Fans “love the Knicks but especially these Knicks,” because though they are a “big-market team with the second-highest payroll in the NBA, they fight like underdogs.” The Knicks have “formed a true brotherhood.”

    ‘Why Chicagoans should welcome, and care for, the Obama Presidential Center’
    Chicago Tribune editorial board
    There’s an “absurd prejudgment” about the Obama Presidential Center that a “museum celebrating a presidency could not coexist with an institution also focused on offering art, basketball and a plethora of gathering spaces to a community that has suffered from disinvestment,” says the Chicago Tribune editorial board. But the center will be a “major new tourist attraction” for Chicago by “drawing people to a part of the city they likely would not have otherwise visited.”

     
     
    WORD OF THE DAY

    magnetosphere

    The region of space around a planet in which charged particles are affected by its magnetic field. Astronomers have proposed firing chemicals from satellites at the edge of the Earth’s magnetosphere, according to a study published in the journal Space Weather, to act as space “airbags” to shield the planet from potentially devastating solar storms.

     
     

    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; Ludovic Marin / Pool / AFP / Getty Images; Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images; Marvel
     

    Recent editions

    • Morning Report

      Trump declares peace deal ‘all signed’ at G7

    • Evening Review

      The UK’s new social media ban explained

    • Morning Report

      ‘Let the oil flow’: Trump announces Iran peace deal

    VIEW ALL
    TheWeek
    • About Us
    • Contact Future's experts
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Cookie Policy
    • Advertise With Us
    • FAQ
    Add as a preferred source on Google Add as a preferred source on Google

    The Week UK is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

    © Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury, Bath BA1 1UA. All rights reserved. England and Wales company registration number 2008885.