Saturday, July 4, 2026

The Rise Of Robots Built To Replace Human Companionship


More Than Machines: The Rise Of Robots Built To Replace Human Companionship
BY PNW STAFF



There was a time when humanoid robots belonged almost exclusively to science fiction. They were distant dreams, movie props, or futuristic concepts that seemed decades away. Today, they are sitting in showrooms, taking pre-orders, holding conversations, recognizing emotions, and being marketed with a promise that strikes at one of humanity's deepest longings.

It will love you unconditionally."

That is not a line from a Hollywood screenplay. It is the sales pitch for a new generation of hyper-realistic companion robots.

Chinese robotics company UBTech recently unveiled its U1 humanoid robot, describing it as the world's first full-sized, ultra-realistic humanoid designed for mass production. Covered in lifelike synthetic skin, complete with expressive faces, realistic eyes, and even manicured fingernails, these robots are engineered to appear as human as possible. Equipped with cameras, microphones, artificial intelligence, and emotional recognition software, they are designed not merely to answer questions—but to build relationships.

The company says the robot can detect stress or fatigue, learn about its owner over time, remind users to take medication, suggest activities, and provide ongoing conversation. Buyers willing to spend more can even customize the robot's appearance to resemble a loved one, a favorite celebrity, or an entirely fictional person.


The marketing is revealing.

UBTech says the robot "will never betray you, will always be loyal to you, and will love you unconditionally."


Those words reveal far more than advances in robotics. They expose the emotional crisis unfolding across much of the developed world.

The company is targeting two enormous demographics in China: roughly 120 million single adults and more than 320 million elderly citizens. It believes both groups share the same unmet need—companionship. More than 13,000 pre-orders reportedly arrived almost immediately despite prices beginning around $17,600 and climbing well above $140,000 for premium versions.

That level of demand should make all of us stop and think.

This is not simply a technology story.

It is a loneliness story.

Across much of the Western world, loneliness has become one of the defining public health challenges of our generation. Governments have created ministries dedicated to combating isolation. Surveys consistently show growing numbers of people reporting few close friendships, declining participation in churches and community organizations, delayed marriage, fewer children, and increasing social withdrawal.

Ironically, we have never been more digitally connected.

We carry devices capable of connecting us instantly with billions of people, yet countless individuals still eat dinner alone, spend evenings talking only to algorithms, and struggle to find someone who genuinely knows them.

Into that vacuum steps artificial intelligence.



Why Western Jews Are Coming Home To Israel


Why Western Jews Are Coming Home To Israel
PNW STAFF


For generations, the West was supposed to be the safe place.

Europe and North America were where Jewish families rebuilt after the Holocaust, where they found opportunity, legal protection, religious freedom, and a sense that the horrors of the past would never again be tolerated. Britain, Canada, France, Australia, and the United States were not perfect, but they were viewed as havens compared to the persecution Jews had known across much of history.

That assumption is now collapsing.

A striking new report from Israel’s Aliyah and Integration Ministry shows that aliyah from Western nations is surging. In 2025, 22,522 new immigrants arrived in Israel. But the most important part of the story is where they came from: immigration from the United States, France, the United Kingdom, and Canada rose by 25 percent, accounting for 38 percent of all new arrivals, compared with 21 percent the year before.

That is not just a demographic statistic. It is a spiritual and civilizational warning.

Why would Jews leave London, Toronto, Paris, New York, or Montreal for a country surrounded by enemies, targeted by Iranian missiles, threatened by Hezbollah rockets, and still recovering from the Hamas massacre of October 7? The answer is painful but obvious: many Jews no longer believe the West will protect them.

In Britain, the Community Security Trust recorded 3,700 antisemitic incidents in 2025 — the second-highest annual total it has ever documented. That followed 4,298 incidents in 2023 and 3,556 in 2024, showing that the explosion of anti-Jewish hatred after October 7 did not simply disappear.

Canada tells a similar story. B’nai Brith Canada reported 6,800 antisemitic incidents in 2025, warning that antisemitism has become “normalized” and should be treated as a national crisis. Canada’s own government has acknowledged that hate crimes against Jewish people rose 71 percent between 2022 and 2023.

In the United States, the Anti-Defamation League said 2025 was the third-highest year for antisemitic incidents since it began tracking them in 1979.

The pattern is unmistakable. The synagogue needs more security. The Jewish school needs more guards. The student wearing a Star of David wonders whether it is worth the risk. The Israeli flag is treated as provocation. Anti-Zionism becomes the socially acceptable mask for something much older and uglier.

And so the great irony emerges: Israel, though under constant threat, increasingly feels safer than the West.

That does not mean Israel is physically safer in every immediate sense. Israelis live with sirens, shelters, terror alerts, and war. But safety is not only the absence of danger. Safety is also the knowledge that your nation will fight for you, that your police and military are not embarrassed by your existence, that your children do not have to apologize for being Jewish, and that Jewish history is not treated as a political inconvenience.

For many Jews, aliyah is not only escape. It is return.

This is what secular analysts often miss. Jews are not merely moving from one country to another. They are returning to the land at the center of their history, prayers, identity, and covenant. Every Passover ended with the longing, “Next year in Jerusalem.” Every exile carried within it the hope of restoration.

For Bible-believing Christians, this moment is impossible to ignore. The regathering of the Jewish people to the land of Israel is one of the great prophetic themes of Scripture. Ezekiel saw a people brought back from the nations. Jeremiah spoke of Israel being gathered from the north country and from all the lands where they had been scattered. The modern return of the Jewish people does not remove the dangers ahead, but it reminds us that history is not random.

The nations may rage. Antisemitism may rise. Iran may threaten. Hamas and Hezbollah may attack. Western elites may lecture Israel while failing to protect their own Jewish citizens.

But still, the Jewish people are coming home.

That is the story behind the numbers. It is not merely immigration. It is a warning to the West, a testimony to Jewish resilience, and a reminder that the God of Israel has not forgotten His promises.


God’s Timeline Directing Global Politics: The US-Iran MoU And The Perplexing Shift Of American Foreign Policy


God’s Timeline Directing Global Politics: The US-Iran MoU And The Perplexing Shift Of American Foreign Policy


I have been greatly frustrated as I’ve watched what appears to be the capitulation of the United States to Iran. But in the grand scheme, what I feel doesn’t really matter. We don’t have to like everything that we see, because we know that in many cases it has to happen.

God has not ceded His authority to anyone else. There are times that He will allow events to take place that we will love and celebrate. There are other times when He will permit situations that will sadden us or frustrate us or even cause us anger. But we know that no matter what those occurrences are, they have to take place to move us further along God’s timeline. And every advance on that timeline means we are one step closer to being taken up to meet our Savior in the clouds!
 
That being said, this whole MoU that’s been agreed upon between the US and Iran is a complete balagan! How does a nearly defeated enemy end up in a better position than when it first went to war? It’s absurd. It’s like the Allies making it to Berlin in 1945 but stopping before a final victory, then signing an agreement that leaves the Nazi party in power. Make it make sense!

In my last article, I listed out the many things that have been done by President Trump and the United States that have been such a blessing to Israel. I’ve always held admiration for America’s current leader. But just because you hold someone in high respect, it doesn’t mean you have to always agree with him. And calling him out for some of his decisions does not mean that you’ve suddenly “switched camps” and become an “out there” socialist liberal. I don’t know the heart of the president, so I can only speculate regarding the motives of some of his recent decisions.

As I’ve mentioned before, I believe that his trip to China has had an impact on him. His meeting with President Xi seems to have been a catalyst for a change in his perspective. If I were to guess, I would think that the Chinese president threatened to invade Taiwan if President Trump didn’t bring a close to the war with Iran. But that is based on logic and circumstances rather than solid facts.

I also believe that money has been a factor in recent decisions, particularly Qatari money. Yesterday marked Trump’s first flight in the new $400 million Air Force One, gifted by the Qataris. Described as a “palace in the air” it is the epitome of luxury. But the plane is only the most recent and most visible outpouring of Qatari cash. American real estate, tech, and energy have all been boosted by the funds of the tiny nation. But no realm has been as affected by their money as much as the US education system, particularly in higher education. I explore the maroon taint that Qatari money has poured on American education in my upcoming book, The Elijah Mandate. The Emir of Qatar wanted an end to the war between the US and Iran, and an end is what we have.

More...
 

Why 40 per cent of people are avoiding the news, according to a psychologist


Why 40 per cent of people are avoiding the news, according to a psychologist


During several recent conversations, people have told me that they’ve stopped checking their phones in the morning. Not because nothing was happening, but because everything was. They described the feeling as standing under a waterfall of perpetual bad news.

This experience is far from an isolated one. According to Reuters Institute’s 2025 Digital News Report, 69 per cent of Canadians at least occasionally avoid the news now.

Globally, 40 per cent report they at least sometimes or often do the same, the highest figure ever recorded. People shared consistent reasons for this: the news put them in a bad mood, they felt overwhelmed and powerless to act.

As a researcher in developmental psychology, focusing on social development and psychological well-being, I argue that news fatigue is not laziness, weakness or a generational decline in civic interest. It’s the predictable response of a human brain meeting an environment it was never designed to navigate.

Long before smartphones or even the printing press, our cognitive architecture was shaped by a single problem: stay alive long enough to reproduce. Our ancestors whose attention drifted past the rustle in the grass left fewer descendants than those who froze, looked and listened.

The brain that paid attention to threats was the brain that survived.

This is the foundation of what psychologists call the negativity bias, one of the most replicated findings in cognitive science. Across decades of research, the human mind has been shown to weigh negative information more heavily than positive, attend to it faster and remember it longer.

A predator nearby mattered more than a beautiful sunset. The cost of missing a real threat was death, while the cost of overreacting was a few minutes of wasted vigilance. The asymmetry made this bias adaptive.

Here is the problem: the human brain has not changed since then. We are the same species as we were thousands of years ago. What’s changed is the size of the world it’s asked to scan for threats.

News fatigue is not laziness, weakness or a generational decline in civic interest. It is the predictable response of a human brain meeting an environment it was never designed to navigate. (Unsplash)

For most of human history, the threats our nervous system processed were local. A neighbouring tribe. A drought. The illness of a child we personally knew. Information about distant places would barely arrive, and if it did, it was mainly irrelevant.

n 2026, the same neurological system is being asked to absorb a war in one region, a financial shock in another, a climate disaster in a third and a violent crime in a fourth, all before lunchtime.

A study published in the scientific journal Nature Human Behaviour examined more than 105,000 real news headlinesviewed nearly six million times. Each additional negative word increased click-through rates, while positive words had the opposite effect.

Recent studies suggest people around the world demonstrate measurably stronger physiological responses to negative news than to positive news. The body is reacting before the mind has decided whether the threat is relevant.

It’s crucial to recognize the tactics meant to exploit our negative biases and create cognitive distance. (Unsplash) 

Some researchers have introduced a clinical framework for what happens in this instance called Problematic News Consumption (PNC) — a pattern of news engagement that results in preoccupation, dysregulation and disruption to daily functioning. In their 2022 study, the researchers found that 17 per cent of American adults qualified as having severe levels of PNC. Among that group, 61 per cent reported feeling unwell quite a bit or very much, compared with six per cent of those who didn’t.

Many adults already cite the spread of misleading information as a major source of stress. Withdrawing from accurate, trustworthy information only deepens the problem. We’re wired to pay more attention to bad news, and that kind of content will find its way to us one way or another.

More...

Friday, July 3, 2026

Iranian power struggle widens, threatening US peace talks – report


Iranian power struggle widens, threatening US peace talks – report
World Israel News Staff


A widening rift between Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps is threatening to complicate US-Iran negotiations, as Tehran’s civilian leadership prioritizes sanctions relief and frozen funds while the IRGC presses to retain control over the Strait of Hormuz, according to a report published by The Wall Street Journal.

The dispute has emerged as US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner arrived in Doha for talks with Qatari mediators on implementing parts of a recent US-Iran memorandum of understanding. Iranian officials said no direct high-level meeting with the American side was planned.

“No meeting at any level with the American side has been scheduled for the coming days,” Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei said.

Baghaei said the Doha contacts would focus on implementation issues, including blocked Iranian assets.

“What will take place in Doha tomorrow is a discussion with the Qatari side about implementing parts of the memorandum of understanding, including the release of Iran’s blocked assets,” he said.

Pezeshkian has been seeking the release of $6 billion in Iranian funds held in Qatar, part of a larger pool of frozen assets.

During a visit to Qom, where he met Grand Ayatollah Mousa Shobeiri Zanjani, the president described the US-Iran memorandum as “a great victory” for the Iranian people and said the first half of Iran’s $12 billion in frozen assets in Qatar would be returned.

But the IRGC’s focus is reportedly elsewhere: keeping command over traffic through Hormuz, one of the world’s most important energy corridors.

The Wall Street Journal reported that Iranian military officials have pushed for a toll system that could generate as much as $40 billion a year and reinforce Iran’s leverage over Gulf shipping.

The issue has become a central obstacle in the talks. Iranian officials have argued that Tehran and Oman have sovereign authority over the strait, while Washington has rejected any arrangement that would allow Iran to collect tolls from commercial vessels.

“The sovereignty of the Strait of Hormuz lies with Iran and Oman, and traffic in the Strait is subject to arrangements determined by Iran,” Iran’s top negotiator, Mohammed Baqer Qalibaf, said on state television.

Vice President JD Vance rejected that position, saying, “This is not going to end in a place where the Iranians are collecting tolls on ships going through the Strait of Hormuz.”

The internal Iranian disagreement has reportedly drawn in senior clerics, with hardline religious figures siding with the IRGC’s demand that Tehran use Hormuz as a bargaining chip.

Iran’s Assembly of Experts said the strait should remain closed unless Israel halts its attacks in Lebanon.

The Hormuz dispute comes as the broader US-Iran framework remains fragile. The memorandum signed in June set a 60-day window for talks on a final agreement, including nuclear issues, sanctions relief and regional conflicts. But implementation has been slowed by indirect diplomacy, maritime clashes and competing interpretations of what Iran agreed to do in the strait.

Shipping has partially resumed through Hormuz, but traffic remains politically sensitive after recent attacks and threats disrupted tanker movement. Before the war, roughly one-fifth of global oil moved through the strait.