Wednesday 06-05-2026 8:32pm

Nearly one in two young people in Europe have used AI chatbots to discuss intimate or personal matters, as the technology increasingly serves as a source of emotional support, an Ipsos BVA survey showed on Tuesday. Of the 3800 people surveyed, 51% said it was "easy" to discuss mental health and personal issues with a chatbot. Only 49% said the same about healthcare professionals and 37% about psychologists. People close to you were at the top of the list, with 68% saying it was easy to discuss issues with friends and 61% with parents. The survey, commissioned by ?France's privacy watchdog CNIL and insurer Groupe VYV, was carried out among people aged 11 to 25 across France, Germany, Sweden and Ireland in early 2026. The findings showcased growing concerns over young people's mental health. About 28% of respondents met the threshold for suspected generalised anxiety disorder, the survey found. Around 90% of those surveyed had used artificial intelligence tools before, with many citing their constant availability and non-judgmental nature. More than three in five users described AI as a "life adviser" or a "confidant". However, concerns over the psychological impact of AI tools have also grown over the past year, and experts have warned about the limitations of AI in detecting human emotions and safely providing emotional support


 SPORT:

Jets well placed to boom

Lee Hagipantelis admits he didn't expect the Newcastle Jets' fortunes to turn so quickly but the high-profile part-owner believes the club — and the game — are well placed to boom James Gardiner writes in the The Newcastle Herald [click to read more]

Hagipantelis and former Wests Tigers NRL club chief executive Justin Pascoe have a 25% stake in Maverick Sports Partners, which bought the Jets in June 2024.

In less than two years, the Jets have gone from the verge of collapse to winning the Australia Cup, the Premiers' Plate and earning a place in the Asian Championship Elite division, where they will compete against some of the richest clubs in world football.

A chance at a third trophy, the A-League championship, awaits.

The Jets will take on Sydney FC in the first leg of the semi-final series at Allianz Stadium on Saturday night.

The second leg is being played at McDonald Jones Stadium on May 16.

Victory will secure the Jets a home grand final.

Hagipantelis and Pascoe are non-management owners and have been busy expanding their sports ownership with the acquisition of Super Netball franchise Sunshine Coast Lightning and Canadian Elite Basketball League club the Ottawa Blackjacks.

He joined other consortium partners at the Jets awards night last Friday.

Asked if he envisaged such a quick turnaround with the Jets, Hagipantelis said: “Not at all. I don't think anyone could.

“We saw it as a fabulous opportunity. I'm very familiar with the area, of course. We have sponsored the Newcastle Knights for many years. I do a lot of work up in the Newcastle Hunter region. They're very parochial up here.

“The club had its challenges in the past.

“We knew if we could turn around this club, it would garner enormous support.

“What [coach] Mark Milligan has done with them this year has been incredible.

“And as I say, aided and abetted by a really good executive team, led by Taine Drinkwater, and an ownership group that’s all working towards one goal.

“I love the vibe in the club. It’s a really youthful group. There is a new feeling within the club itself.

Everyone’s pulling in the same direction, which is very important for success in any sporting franchise.

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 STOCKMARKET:

The Merry Month of May!

The S&P 500 and Nasdaq notched record high closes on Tuesday, lifted by Intel and other AI-related stocks, as a U.S.-Iran ceasefire held firm and investors focused on strong quarterly earnings, Reuters reports on today's website. [click to continue reading]

Washington said on Tuesday its ceasefire with Iran was intact, allaying worries that attempts by both sides to assert control over the Strait of Hormuz would escalate hostilities.

Investors focused on AI-related companies, and chip designer rallied 4% ahead of its quarterly report after the bell, with analysts expecting a 33% surge in revenue.

Intel surged 13% after Bloomberg News reported that Apple about enlisting the company’s chipmaking services to produce the main processors for its devices.

The PHLX chip index jumped 4.2% to a record high, and the index is now up 55% in 2026.

S&P 500 companies are on track to post aggregate earnings growth of 28% year-over-year for the first quarter, the strongest quarterly profit growth since 2021, according to Tajinder Dhillon, head of earnings research at LSEG.

Wall Street’s AI heavyweights account for much of that optimism.

Markets are following fundamentals. Earnings are coming in pretty strong, and the expectation is that will carry forward into the rest of the year, said Tom Hainlin, an investment strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management in Minneapolis.

Business spending remains strong, whether it’s on AI or other productivity tools, and consumers continue to spend, Hainlin said.

The S&P 500 climbed 0.81% to end the session at 7,259.22 points.

The Nasdaq gained 1.03% to 25,326.13 points, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.73% to 49,298.25 points.

All 11 S&P 500 sector indexes rose, led by materials, up 1.67%, followed by a 1.63% gain in information technology.

Brent crude futures fell but still traded at $110 a barrel.

Data on Tuesday showed U.S. job openings dropped to 6.866 million in March, slightly above the 6.835 million estimate. That reinforced the view that labor market resilience could give the central bank room to keep interest rates higher for longer.

The Institute for Supply Management’s Non-Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index for April came in at 53.6, narrowly missing the estimate of 53.7, according to economists polled by Reuters.

Grain trader Archer-Daniels-Midland rose 3.8% after reporting better-than-expected first-quarter profit on higher margins.

DuPont rallied 8.4% after the industrial materials maker lifted its annual profit forecast.

Shares of Pinterest soared 6.9% after the image-sharing platform forecast second-quarter revenue above analysts' estimates.

Advancing issues outnumbered falling ones within the S&P 500 by a 1.7-to-one ratio.

The S&P 500 posted 43 new highs and 23 new lows; the Nasdaq recorded 160 new highs and 79 new lows.

Volume on U.S. exchanges was relatively light, with 16.1 billion shares traded, compared to an average of 17.7 billion shares over the previous 20 sessions.


 NEWS:

🎪 Government
needs to
help not
hinder

Government handouts to households amid an economic crisis sparked by the Iran war will make it harder to temper inflation Reserve Bank governor Michele Bullock has warned, as the RBA lifted interest rates for the third consecutive meeting days before Jim Chalmers' crucial budget, reports The Australian today's website. [click to read more]

The bank lifted interest rates by 0.25 percentage points to 4.35% in an 8-1 board decision and revised up inflation forecasts, as Ms Bullock said rate rises were not going to do anything to affect inflation in the next six months.

The RBA governor also signalled that Australia could face a recession if businesses failed to navigate cost blowouts, as she stressed the nation already had an inflation problem before the outbreak of war.

While fuel shortages were not a central expectation of the bank, Ms Bullock said that, if Australia did move to stage-three rationing under the national fuel security plan, the bank’s forecasts would change significantly and leave the economy in a very different world.

After the latest rate rise, the Treasurer and Anthony Albanese weaved away from questions about The Australian’s revelations of a multimillion-dollar budget cash splash in the form of an earned income offset.

And Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan unveiled a pre-state election budget in Melbourne with debt forecast to hit $199bln and expenditure going up 23%.

In Sydney, Ms Bullock said governments needed to consider how they could help to keep inflation under control.

When governments are spending a lot of money and we're running up against capacity constraints, then they do need to think about whether or not there’s ways they can help the inflation problem by looking for ways to constrain demand, Ms Bullock said at her post-RBA meeting press conference.

That’s one thing that they can do. All I'm saying is that the extent to which government make up the shortfalls for households by giving them more money, it makes it harder to dampen demand.

Ms Bullock said this was essential in the fight against inflation.

Mr Chalmers responded to the RBA’s move to lift rates, saying it would add to the pressure that families and businesses are under.

Australians are already paying a hefty price for the war in the Middle East and this decision will make it tougher, the Treasurer said. We recognise that even though the budget is not the primary driver of prices in our economy or these interest rate decisions, we intend to play a helpful role, not a harmful role, in the fight against inflation.

Anthony Albanese refused to rule out introducing an earned -income offset following The Australian’s front-page revelation on Tuesday, and said next week’s budget would be very conscious of putting more pressure on the economy.

Voters can expect that there'll be a budget that’s consistent with Labor values … you're asking a question about a hypothetical which hasn't been announced, the Prime Minister said. [click the intro to return other stories]




🏧 Rent an
account

Criminal groups have targeted thousands of university students with quick-cash scams that turn young Australians into unwitting money launderers for serious financial crimes, the Daily Telegraph newspaper today reports. [click to read more]

Criminal groups are increasingly approaching students ∼ particularly those living away from home or studying internationally ∼ offering easy payments in exchange for access to bank accounts or identity documents.

ANZ scam experts and Griffith University are urging students and young people not to share personal information.

They are warning of increasingly brazen tactics where scammers send DMs on social media and even approach students in person on campus.

Students are asked to use their bank accounts to receive and transfer funds — often keeping a commission — but not realising they're aiding serious financial crime.

Organised crime syndicates are offering several hundred dollars ∼ sometimes with additional commission ∼ for the use of bank accounts, The Australian Federal Police claim.

Identity documents such as passports and driver’s licences are also being sought so criminals can open fraudulent accounts in victims' names.

Between September 2025 and March 2026, ANZ’s mule detection technology proactively identified about 4000 high-risk accounts to be investigated.

Vulnerable young people could find themselves caught up in criminal activity, Marc Broome, ANZ’s senior manager, complex investigations, said.

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🛃 Curbside
caravan
constraints

Australia’s councils are escalating fines for trailers, caravans and boats left on suburban kerbs, with households facing sharper penalties as local governments pivot from education to enforcement, reports news.com.au website today. [click to read more]

The push has taken on national significance amid inconsistent rules across states and territories and growing street congestion in denser suburbs.

In far north Queensland’s Douglas Shire, residents can now be hit with $333 infringement notices if a boat trailer or caravan is left on a council road or area without being attached to a tow vehicle.

The council says the rules banning long term roadside storage have always been in place but a rise in unhitched gear ∼ particularly around Port Douglas ∼ has forced a shift from awareness campaigns to risk based fines.

It’s not one incident — it’s a pattern that has built up over time, particularly in Port Douglas, Douglas Shire Mayor Lisa Scomazzon told Yahoo News.

It’s not just complaints from residents, businesses and tour operators but the issue is about lost parking and neighbourhood impact.

She also cites safety problems, reduced sightlines for pedestrians and drivers and rubbish trucks struggling to access bins as key triggers for enforcement.

However, a resident who has received three fines argues councils can't override Queensland’s road rules without specific signage and maintains that registered trailers and smaller caravans ∼ under 4.5 tonnes and 7.5 metres ∼ can legally remain on residential streets if they don't obstruct traffic.

I find it ridiculous and bordering on the verge of bullying by council to target ratepayers who are rightfully allowed to park smaller trailers outside their property, they said.

The council counters that its approach aligns with state road rules and that enforcement decisions are driven by safety and access risks rather than postcodes.

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🚂 An
incompetent
public
service?

Originally envisioned to run 1700km from Melbourne to a port near Brisbane, the mega rail infrastructure project will now only connect Beveridge in Victoria to Parkes in NSW reports /The Guardian [click to read the rest of the story>.

The Albanese government will drastically scale back the beleaguered inland rail project, abandoning plans to connect country NSW and Queensland by rail, as the price tag blows out to more than $45bln.

Originally envisioned to run 1700km from Melbourne to a port near Brisbane, the mega infrastructure project will now only connect Beveridge, on the outskirts of Melbourne, to Parkes in central-west New South Wales ∼ about half the distance ∼ with the government reallocating $1.75bln of the funding to other national rail upgrades.

The cost has increased more than 50% in just three years, since Mr Kerry Schott was commissioned by Labor in 2023 to independently review the project.

Schott estimated the project would be completed by 2031 and cost upwards of $31.4bln ∼ a doubling of the previous estimate ∼ which she called astonishing, adding she was not confident on the figures.

Further independent costings, commissioned by Inland Rail, found the project would now take until 2036.

The decision will effectively see the end of the Inland Rail vision, though the government is still seeking environmental and state approvals and preserving areas of land where the project is intended to be built, through northern NSW and south-eastern Queensland.

Delivering the freight link to Parkes will allow double-stacked freight trains to run west to Perth and east to Newcastle from Beveridge. The government now expects construction between Parkes and Beveridge to be completed in late 2027.

The Coalition announced the project in 2017, with an estimated cost of $9.3bln. In 2020, the project’s estimated cost increased to $16.4bln, with a completion date of 2026-27.

Schott’s 2023 review had pointed to immature preliminary designs and approval requirements, prolonged approval processes and recent escalations as reason for the blow outs.

The government had budgeted just $14.5bln towards the freight link and by abandoning half of the track while reallocating a portion of the funding will deliver a small improvement to the budget bottom line.

In 2024, then Inland Rail chief executive, Nick Miller, insisted the project was not stalled and that the government was still committed to the northern half.

The transport minister, Catherine King, has said repeatedly the government was concentrating on delivering the link between Melbourne and Parkes but had remained committed to building the entire 1700km line.

In February, after the government released a business case for high speed rail along the east coast, King told the ABC: What we've learned from both high speed rail overseas and from rail cases here in Australia, such as Inland Rail, a failed Coalition project … is that you've got to get all of that design work done.

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 COMMENT:

Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi
While cities welcome visitors to Gadigal country", a little girl’s death reveals the devastating truth about life in remote Australia, Peta Credlin writes in the Daily Telegraph today. [click to read more]

It’s all very well welcoming people to Gadigal country in Sydney but how about we talk about the reality of life for so many Aboriginal people living outside our big cities.

Because it is the life lived in town camps ∼ best described as hellholes by Alice Springs local Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price ∼ that’s far more urgent today than who arrived 250 years ago.

We're not supposed to talk about Sharon Granites any more ∼ the sweet little five-year-old abducted last weekend ∼ because she’s dead. Her family want her described as Kumanjayi Little Baby for cultural reasons.

Modern day aboriginal culture

But it’s modern-day Aboriginal culture ∼ the unemployment, family dysfunction, and substance abuse that characterises remote Australia ∼ that’s led to her tragic, premature death.

The bed that this little girl was abducted from was a grotty mattress on a filthy floor, in a room full of empty Jim Beam bottles. Her father was in jail and there'd been a bit of a party before she disappeared. The DNA of two persons has been found on her underwear. Her accused killer was a frequent prison inmate too, not long released.

We talk a lot about reconciliation for the wrongs of the past. But what about rectifying the wrongs of the present? We argue incessantly about the failures of government to end Indigenous disadvantage but what about the failures of Aboriginal people too?

Town camps natorious

The town camps around Alice Springs have been notorious for years. Very few residents have real jobs, very few of the children go to school regularly, the police often feel powerless to enforce the law because they won't be supported by woke magistrates and weak governments and child protection officers feel they can't do what they otherwise would, for fear of creating another stolen generation.

Just because people happen to be Aboriginal doesn't mean that different standards apply.

The government says that this is not the time to talk about policy change. But if it’s not done now, everyone will move on until the next child dies.

Ask yourself this, would the outrage be different if this little girl and her alleged killer were from a nice suburb in the city? Where are the activists?


Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi
That the African slave trade was a monstrosity, inflicting unspeakable cruelty on millions of innocent victims, is beyond dispute. But the resolution the UN General Assembly passed two weeks ago, marking the trade’s commemoration, is nothing less than an appalling falsification of history, Henry Ergas writes in the The Australian today. [click to read more]

Formally, the resolution condemns the African slave trade as a whole. Substantively, every concrete reference targets the transatlantic trade, fixating on a racialised capitalist system and its purported Western antecedents. The cumulative effect is unmistakeable: to brand the trade a distinctively Western crime.

To sustain that impression, the resolution parades a sequence of decrees, starting with the papal bulls of 1452 and 1455, which it casts as the founding charters of the enslavement and structural racism that still unjustly impoverishes Africa, thereby grounding a claim to substantial reparations.

Text turns conspicuously evasive

Yet, having been forensically specific about blame, the text turns conspicuously evasive when it confronts the forces that brought the Atlantic trade to an end. The Enlightenment, the abolitionist movements, and the Western legal and political campaigns that culminated in the trade’s eventual demise are, it appears, unmentionable.

While the offending decrees are named, dated and indicted, the tide of opposition to slavery, which gathered momentum in the 17th century, is dismissed as certain legal challenges and judicial developments in the 18th century that questioned the legality and morality of chattel enslavement.

That descent into vagueness reflects a deliberate strategy: to particularise the guilt while diluting the credit. Merely cataloguing the misrepresentations, confusions and factual errors this strategy produces would require far more space than is available here. What is especially striking, however, are the omissions.

Intellectually dishonest

It is, for example, intellectually dishonest to invoke the papal bulls of 1452 and 1455 while ignoring Pope Paul III’s bull of 1537, which denounced as an invention of the devil the idea that native peoples should be treated as dumb brutes created for our service, and affirmed that they may and should, freely and legitimately, enjoy their liberty.

Paul III’s exhortations had limited immediate effect; so too did Cartwright’s Case (1569), which declared that England’s air was too pure for slaves to dwell in. What matters is what they reveal: an unceasing moral interrogation of slavery within the West itself — an interrogation that gave abolitionism the bedrock on which to build.

Intellectually dishonest

Here, too, the resolution’s selectivity is purposeful. It allows it to avoid an obvious and crucial comparator: the long history of slavery under Islamic rule, which it ignores altogether. From the Arab conquests to the early 20th century, some 14 million black slaves were transported into the lands of Islam via the trans-Saharan, Red Sea and Indian Ocean routes, with nearly a million more carried beyond the East African coast. Add to these more than a million white slaves, and the total comfortably exceeds the 10 million to 12 million who landed in the Americas.

Yet the numbers are not what is most significant. The salient fact is the absence of any sustained doctrinal or institutional challenge to the morality and legality of the slave trade within the Islamic world — even where it starkly contradicted the Koranic prohibition on enslaving Muslims. As Bruce Hall shows in his study of Saharan and Sahelian slavery, by the 19th century ∼ when the West was vigorously suppressing chattel slavery ∼ the operative presumption among Maliki jurists was that black Africans, routinely described as savages, were enslavable by default, whatever their faith.

Muslims still slaved away

There were individuals who objected strenuously to chattel slavery, such as Syrian reformer Abd al-Rahman al-Kawakibi (1855-1902); but no Muslim opponent of slavery ever forged those concerns into a mass movement. Bernard Lewis’s verdict that even the most radical Muslim modernists fell well short of matching the fervour and effectiveness of Western abolitionists retains all its force.

It is therefore unsurprising that Islam’s leading theologians, far from championing abolition, actively resisted it — beginning with the infamous 1855 fatwa, issued with the full authority of Mecca’s Shaykh Jamal, which declared any prohibition of the slave trade contrary to the holy law of Islam and any official who attempted to enforce it lawful to kill.

Nor is it surprising that Saudi Arabia and Yemen abolished slavery only in 1962, the United Arab Emirates in 1964, Oman in 1970, and Mauritania ∼ after repeated ineffectual measures ∼ in 2007. Moreover, even where slavery was formally abolished, forms of vassalage have remained firmly in place: of the 10 countries with the highest incidence of modern slavery, eight are majority-Muslim.

Suffering olympics

But the resolution does not merely distort history by pretending Islamic slavery didn't exist. It declares the slave trade the greatest crime against humanity ever committed. Although not explicitly stated, a central purpose of this travesty ∼ which converts the horrors of the past into a suffering Olympics ∼ is again transparent: to relativise the Holocaust.

It is frankly obscene to degrade moral evaluation into a body count, with medals of ignominy awarded by a show of hands. Yet even in so repulsive a spectacle, realities should have been allowed to intrude. Those realities are well known. Death rates in the Holocaust ∼ whose unrelenting aim was the complete extermination of Jews ∼ were close to or above 90%. So complete was the indifference to fatalities that the German railways were paid whether the Jews being shipped by them lived or died during their transport — and the few who survived the journeys were killed, on average, within days of arrival.

In contrast, as investor Thomas Starke wrote to Captain James Westmore in 1700, the whole benefit of the voyage lyes in your care of preserving negroes' lives. As a result, strenuous efforts were made to ensure slaves remained alive and saleable, including by granting handsome bonuses to captains for high survival rates and imposing stiff penalties for excess mortality.

Black deaths declined dramatically

Although those efforts hardly eliminated the trade’s horrors, they did mean that by the late 18th century, death rates for black slaves on the middle passage had declined dramatically, to the point where they were only marginally greater than those for crews. To pretend otherwise is to erase the distinction between exploitation and extermination: for there was nothing in the slave trade even remotely comparable to the systematic mass murder at the heart of the Holocaust.

But to acknowledge those facts ∼ which flatly contradict the assault on the standing of the Holocaust ∼ might have eroded the overwhelming support the resolution secured. And the composition of that support says everything one needs to know about the resolution.

Thus, every one of the 20 countries that have the highest incidence of modern slavery and forced labour cynically voted in its favour; so did all the authoritarian states that participated in the vote, with the exception of Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan; and, again with the exception of Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, it received the active backing of every Muslim-majority country.

Yet that is not the real tragedy. Rather, it is that only three Western countries ∼ the US, Israel and Argentina ∼ had the decency to vote against the falsification of history, instead of abstaining, as Australia and the European Union did. Those three were willing to oppose this charade. Why weren't we?



 OVERSEAS:

Activists attempted to raid Ridglan Farms, near Madison, Wis., to rescue the beagles last month. Photo: Taylor Glascock

Jacey Fortin writes in The New York Times about 1500 beagles in Wisconsin that have been at the center of a fierce fight waged by animal rights activists are moving to new homes. The state-licensed facility, Ridglan Farms, outside Madison, breeds the beagles for biomedical research aimed at improving veterinary medicine. Last fall, a special prosecutor found that Ridglan had performed procedures on the beagles that constituted animal mistreatment. The company has denied that it abuses animals. Big Dog Ranch Rescue, which has campuses in Florida and Alabama, has bought 1000 of the dogs and is working to find homes for them, said Lauree Simmons, the president and founder of the rescue service. The Beagle Freedom Project, an animal rescue and advocacy group, is working to find homes for the other 500 dogs. The special prosecutor had let Ridglan Farms avoid prosecution on the condition that it surrender its breeding license by July, which would end its ability to sell dogs to outside labs. But the company was permitted to continue experiments on the beagles, even though former employees testified that the dogs had undergone eye surgeries without general anesthesia. Over the past few months, protesters have tried on separate occasions to enter the facility and steal the beagles. In March, some activists were successful and took 22 beagles, which were subsequently adopted. In April, activists trying to take more beagles from the facility were thwarted by the police and private security guards, who fired tear gas and rubber bullets on an estimated 1000 protesters, witnesses said. Dozens of people were arrested, activists said. In an emailed statement, Ridglan Farms said it was finalizing arrangements for the remaining dogs and that "the decision to sell the dogs is not related to any specific event."






The Murrurundi Times is owned, compiled and written by Des Dugan. Email