Tuesday, 16 December 2025

Smileband News


Dear 222 News viewers, sponsored by smileband, 

Trump Signs Executive Order Declaring Fentanyl a ‘Weapon of Mass Destruction’ in Escalation of U.S. Drug Policy

Washington, D.C. — December 15, 2025 — President Donald J. Trump has signed a sweeping executive order formally designating illicit fentanyl and its core precursor chemicals as weapons of mass destruction (WMDs), a move that dramatically reframes the United States’ approach to the ongoing opioid crisis as a national security issue.  

Speaking at a White House event honoring service members involved in border security operations, Trump said the designation was necessary to confront what his administration views as a deadly onslaught of synthetic opioids entering the United States. “With this historic executive order… we are formally classifying fentanyl as a weapon of mass destruction — because that’s what it is,” the president declared.  

What the Order Does

Under the executive order, illicit fentanyl — the powerful synthetic opioid responsible for tens of thousands of overdose deaths annually — and its chemical precursors are defined as WMDs. The order directs federal agencies, including the Justice Department, Department of Homeland Security, Treasury, and Defense, to take “appropriate action” to eliminate the threat posed by the drug and its supply chains.  

Officials argue the designation empowers U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies to use tools traditionally reserved for countering nuclear, chemical, or biological threats against drug trafficking networks. It also bolsters Trump’s earlier moves to label major cartels as foreign terrorist organizations, a step that has already underpinned military actions against suspected smuggling operations at sea.  

National Security Framing and Military Involvement

The White House has emphasized that the fentanyl crisis is not merely a public health issue but a national security emergency. Trump and allies have cited the relatively small lethal dose of fentanyl and the enormous number of overdose fatalities as justification for the WMD categorization.  

The shift dovetails with an increasingly militant posture toward narcotics trafficking: since early September, U.S. military forces have carried out more than 20 strikes on vessels suspected of smuggling drugs in the Caribbean and Pacific, resulting in at least 90 deaths — actions the administration frames as part of a broader armed conflict with criminal networks.  

Political and Policy Reactions

Supporters of the order, including Senator Jim Banks (R-Ind.), praised the designation as a necessary escalation to protect American families and confront what they describe as narco-terrorism and geopolitical challenges posed by precursor chemical flows from abroad. Banks’ own legislative efforts pushed toward defining fentanyl as a chemical threat in U.S. law.  

However, experts and critics have expressed deep skepticism about both the label and its potential effectiveness. Drug policy specialists and scholars note that fentanyl has not been used as a weapon in the way chemical agents have historically been, and they warn that militarizing a public health crisis could undermine treatment and prevention efforts. “It is not obvious to me that this is a threat,” said one expert on drugs, crime and terror research.  

Legal analysts also caution that expanding military and national security authorities into drug enforcement could strain international cooperation, blur civil-military roles, and raise constitutional questions.  

What Comes Next

It remains unclear how the new designation will play out in practice. While Trump’s executive order does not itself create new laws, it reframes the federal government’s strategic priorities, potentially allowing for harsher prosecutions, broader sanctions, and expanded use of intelligence resources against trafficking networks.  

Public health advocates fear that equating a substance with legitimate medical uses to a weapon of mass destruction may further stigmatize patients and distract from harm-reduction strategies proven to save lives.

As Washington digests the implications of this unprecedented policy shift, lawmakers from both parties and international partners will likely debate whether this new framework strengthens America’s hand against fentanyl trafficking—or whether it conflates two separate crises with far-reaching consequences.

 Attached is a news article regarding trump signing fentanyl as a weapon of mass destruction 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2025/12/16/trump-fentanyl-weapon-mass-destruction/

Article written and configured by Christopher Stanley 


In-- Google tag (gtag.js) --> <script async src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-XDGJVZXVQ4"></script> <script> window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-XDGJVZXVQ4'); </script>

<script src="https://cdn-eu.pagesense.io/js/smilebandltd/45e5a7e3cddc4e92ba91fba8dc

894500L65WEHZ4XKDX36













Smileband News


Dear 222 News viewers sponsored by smileband, 

Trump Faces Backlash Over Xenophobic Tirade Targeting Somali Immigrants

Former US president Donald Trump is facing renewed criticism after delivering a speech widely condemned as xenophobic, in which he launched a verbal attack against Somali immigrants living in the United States. The remarks, made during a recent campaign-style appearance, have sparked outrage among civil rights groups, community leaders, and elected officials, who warn that such rhetoric risks inflaming racial hatred and deepening divisions.

Remarks Spark Outrage

During the speech, Trump portrayed Somali immigrants as a threat to public safety and social cohesion, using sweeping generalisations that critics say unfairly stigmatise an entire community. Advocacy organisations described the language as inflammatory and misleading, arguing it reinforces harmful stereotypes and ignores the positive contributions Somali Americans have made to US society.

Human rights groups said the comments echo some of the most controversial moments of Trump’s presidency, when his hardline immigration stance included travel bans and aggressive deportation policies. They argue that the rhetoric is particularly dangerous at a time of heightened political tension, where minority communities already face rising levels of harassment.

Community Leaders Respond

Leaders from Somali American communities — many of whom fled civil war in Somalia and rebuilt their lives in the US — expressed deep concern over the impact of the remarks. In cities such as Minneapolis, home to one of the largest Somali populations in North America, organisers warned that such statements can translate into real-world consequences, including hate crimes and discrimination.

“Words from political leaders matter,” one community advocate said. “When a former president speaks this way, it gives permission to others to treat Somali people as outsiders, regardless of how long they’ve lived here or how much they’ve contributed.”

Political and Legal Criticism

Democratic lawmakers and several Republicans also criticised the speech, accusing Trump of using immigrants as political scapegoats. Some pointed out that Somali Americans serve as doctors, small business owners, teachers, and even members of the US armed forces — a reality they say is erased by Trump’s rhetoric.

Civil liberties organisations warned that the language could violate the spirit, if not the letter, of protections against incitement and discrimination. While Trump has defended his comments as “telling the truth” about immigration, legal experts caution that repeated dehumanising language can undermine democratic norms.

A Familiar Pattern

This is not the first time Trump has been accused of xenophobia. Throughout his political career, he has repeatedly targeted specific ethnic and religious groups, often during campaign periods. Analysts note that such rhetoric tends to resurface when Trump seeks to energise his political base, particularly on issues of immigration and national identity.

Critics argue that focusing on Somali immigrants distracts from broader policy debates and reduces complex social issues to simplistic and harmful narratives.

Wider Implications

The controversy has reignited debate about the responsibility of political leaders in shaping public discourse. Anti-racism campaigners warn that normalising attacks on one community risks setting a precedent that could be turned on others.

As the backlash continues, Somali American organisations are calling for unity and urging political leaders across the spectrum to reject what they describe as divisive and dangerous rhetoric. Whether the criticism will have any lasting political impact on Trump remains unclear, but the episode has once again highlighted the deep fault lines surrounding immigration, race, and power in American politics.

Attached is a news article regarding Trump facing criticism over xenophobic tirade against Somali immigrants 

https://www.reuters.com/world/us/trump-garbage-rhetoric-about-somalis-draws-cheers-administration-silence-2025-12-04/

Article written and configured by Christopher Stanley 


In-- Google tag (gtag.js) --> <script async src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-XDGJVZXVQ4"></script> <script> window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-XDGJVZXVQ4'); </script>

<script src="https://cdn-eu.pagesense.io/js/smilebandltd/45e5a7e3cddc4e92ba91fba8dc

894500L65WEHZ4XKDX36














Smileband News


Dear 222 News viewers, sponsored by smileband, 

Inside the pound-printing factory: how Britain’s currency is made

Cash still matters. Every day millions of coins clink and banknotes change hands across the UK — and behind every coin and polymer note is a tightly controlled, highly technical manufacturing process. Here’s a clear, behind-the-scenes look at how British currency is made: from design and security features to printing, minting, quality control and distribution.

Two factories, two crafts

The UK’s money is produced in two very different kinds of factories:

Banknotes for England and Wales are issued by the Bank of England and printed on its behalf under contract at a high-security printing works in Debden, Essex (operated by specialist security printers). The site handles everything from sheet printing to final cutting and despatch.  

Coins — pennies to £2 pieces, plus commemorative and bullion coins — are struck at The Royal Mint in Llantrisant, Wales, a mechanised foundry and striking plant that converts raw metal into finished legal tender.  

Both operations run to stringent security and quality standards, but the techniques and materials are very different.

The story of the modern banknote: polymer and high tech

Since 2016 the Bank of England’s notes have been produced on polymer — a thin, durable plastic — rather than traditional cotton paper. Polymer allows much tougher, longer-lasting notes and enables advanced security elements such as transparent windows, holograms and complex foils that are extremely difficult to copy. The Bank explains polymer’s advantages in durability and forgery resistance.  

From design to sheet

1. Design & artwork — Artists and security specialists work together on the note’s visual themes (portraits, historical figures, imagery) while integrating security features that must align exactly with printing plates and transparent windows.

2. Substrate preparation — Polymer sheets (the base material) arrive ready for printing — often with features such as the clear window already formed (suppliers and exact steps are tightly controlled).

3. Multi-stage printing — The sheet goes through several specialist printing presses:

Offset/toner printing for colourful backgrounds and images.

Intaglio (raised-ink) plates for tactile ink used in portraits or value numerals — the raised feel helps both authentication and accessibility.

Foiling and patch application for metallic strips and holographic elements.

UV and microprinting steps add covert security elements visible only under special light or magnification.

4. Inspection and cutting — After printing the sheets are inspected (often partly automated with human oversight), then guillotined into individual notes, counted, banded and packed for distribution to banks.  

Security and secrecy

Banknote manufacture is a high-security business: the printing works are in guarded, access-controlled facilities; all staff undergo vetting; movement of sheets is minimised; and quality control processes discard or securely destroy imperfect items. The Bank of England publishes overview material about lifecycle and security, but much of the detailed know-how is confidential for obvious reasons.  

Scale and lifecycle

There are billions of Bank of England notes in circulation and the Bank closely manages supply and replacement. Worn notes are returned, assessed and destroyed; older designs are withdrawn as needed. The Bank publishes figures and explains how new notes are introduced and older ones removed.  

How the Royal Mint makes coins

Coin production is an industrial metal-working process rather than printing.

1. Alloy & casting — The mint starts by creating the correct alloy (e.g., cupro-nickel, nickel-brass) in furnaces and rolling it into large coils.

2. Blanking — The coiled metal is fed into presses that punch out round blanks (the undecorated discs that become coins).

3. Annealing & cleaning — Blanks are heat-treated (annealed) and cleaned so the metal is soft enough and surface-ready for striking.

4. Die making — Master designs are engraved (now often CNC-assisted) and hardened into dies — the negative images that will be stamped onto blanks.

5. Striking — High-tonnage presses strike the blanks between obverse and reverse dies. Modern presses can strike hundreds of coins per minute; commemorative and proof coins are struck more gently and often multiple times for sharp detail.

6. Edge treatment & plating — Some coins get milled edges, edge-inscriptions or plating (e.g., bi-metallic £2), and are inspected, counted and bagged.  

The Royal Mint also runs recycling and sustainability programmes (including recovery of metals and redeploying waste streams) and operates distinct production lines for circulation coins, commemorative pieces and bullion.  

Technology, people and reassurance

Both banknote and coin production blend heritage craft with cutting-edge technology. Intaglio printing, die-engraving and presswork are centuries-old arts; today they sit alongside laser engraving, automated optical inspection, anti-counterfeit nanotechnology and sophisticated supply-chain controls.

For the public the important takeaway is simple: producing legal tender is an expensive, secure, closely supervised national function. The systems are designed so counterfeiters are kept at bay, circulation stays reliable, and cash remains accessible for people who need it most.

Want to go deeper

If you’d like, I can:

produce a step-by-step illustrated explainer showing each stage of a banknote or coin’s journey; or

write a shorter “what you’ll see if you visit” tour-style piece about Debden and Llantrisant (what’s public and what’s always off-limits).

Sources: Bank of England explainer on polymer notes and the Bank’s account of the Debden printing works; official overviews of the Royal Mint’s coin production and recent Royal Mint sustainability reporting.  

Attached is News article regarding inside the pounds printing factory were Britains currency is manufactured 

https://news.sky.com/story/bank-of-england-currency-printer-de-la-rue-in-300m-sale-13233434

Article written and configured by Christopher Stanley 

In-- Google tag (gtag.js) --> <script async src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-XDGJVZXVQ4"></script> <script> window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-XDGJVZXVQ4'); </script>

<script src="https://cdn-eu.pagesense.io/js/smilebandltd/45e5a7e3cddc4e92ba91fba8dc

894500L65WEHZ4XKDX36
















Smileband News


Dear 222 News viewers, sponsored by smileband, 

Starlink pours thousands of satellites into low-Earth orbit — and AT&T is meeting the threat with partnerships, not rockets

SpaceX’s Starlink has reshaped the satcom landscape by doing what few legacy operators ever attempted: mass-producing and launching thousands of low-Earth-orbit (LEO) broadband satellites, at a cadence and scale that is changing who — and how — the world stays connected. That push has left traditional players such as AT&T — a giant in terrestrial telecoms but not a large owner of space assets — scrambling to compete through partnerships, spectrum deals and service integrations. Here’s how the two strategies stack up in late-2025.

How many Starlinks are up there — and how fast are they going

Starlink’s deployment in 2025 continued at a blistering pace. Recent mission reports show Falcon 9 flights through December adding roughly 24–32 satellites per batch, with dozens of launches across the year. Independent trackers and industry reporting put the Starlink constellation at over 9,000 active satellites by December 2025 (with total launched satellites exceeding 9,300 in some tallies). Those launches include the latest Starlink “V2 Mini” batches used to expand coverage and capacity.  

SpaceX’s model is simple and aggressive: build satellites in quantity, fly them frequently with the reusable Falcon 9, iterate design rapidly (V1 → V2 Mini and other variants) and sell broadband directly to consumers, enterprises, airlines and governments. That operational tempo makes Starlink the single largest single-operator satellite constellation on orbit today and accounts for a large fraction of newly launched satellites worldwide.  

AT&T’s approach: partner, integrate, and leverage spectrum — not mass launch

AT&T is one of the world’s largest telecom operators, but it is not competing with SpaceX by building and launching its own mega-constellation. Instead, AT&T has pursued a partnership and integration model:

Commercial agreements with AST SpaceMobile (the “BlueBird” satellites) have enabled AT&T to trial native voice, text and video calls passing over satellite using AT&T spectrum — milestones reported through 2024–2025 included initial commercial BlueBird launches and demonstrator calls.  

AT&T continues to rely on established geostationary satellite providers (ViasatIntelsat) as the backhaul for many aviation and enterprise services; for example, major airline connectivity deals involve Viasat/Intelsat capacity that AT&T can manage or resell in various packages.  

Put simply: AT&T is strengthening its service portfolio with satellite partnerships (direct-to-device trials, FirstNet resilience work, inflight Wi-Fi integrations) rather than trying to replicate Starlink’s vertically integrated launch-and-fleet model. This gives AT&T quicker market entry in niche use cases (first responders, direct handset coverage in underserved areas, aviation customers) without the upfront capital and orbital launch program that SpaceX executes.  

Where the competition actually plays out

The rivalry between Starlink and AT&T isn’t a simple “who has more satellites” contest — it’s a battle across several business axes:

Coverage & latency: Starlink’s LEO network offers low latency and growing global coverage for consumer and enterprise broadband. That makes it attractive for home internet, maritime, and some aviation use cases. AT&T’s satellite play, via partners, focuses on providing continuity for mobile customers, critical voice/text for first-responders (FirstNet), and managed connectivity for airlines and enterprise customers.  

Business model: SpaceX vertically integrates (manufacture → launch → retail service). AT&T leverages partner capacity and integrates satellite links into its broader mobile and IoT service stack — often reselling or managing satcom capacity alongside terrestrial networks.  

Regulatory & spectrum: Starlink needs regulatory approvals globally for spectrum use and services (and faces increasing scrutiny over space debris and radio coordination). AT&T brings spectrum holdings and regulatory relationships to the table, enabling it to repurpose licensed terrestrial spectrum for satellite-passed voice/data in partnership arrangements.  

Customer segments: Starlink has moved aggressively into consumer and enterprise broadband, IoT, and even direct-to-cell smartphone connectivity (new partnerships demonstrate direct-to-mobile ambitions). AT&T targets B2B, government/FirstNet, aviation, and mobile-subscriber continuity — markets where a trusted telco relationship and integrated billing/networking matter.  

Industry implications: scale, congestion and consolidation

Starlink’s sheer scale has shifted market dynamics:

Orbital congestion & policy: Thousands of small LEO satellites raise questions about collision risk, spectrum coordination, and regulatory oversight. Policymakers and space situational awareness groups are more focused than ever.  

Pressure on legacy GEO players: Operators that once dominated in geostationary orbit (Intelsat, Viasat, Eutelsat) now face competition in capacity and latency. Some are pivoting to partnerships, focusing on niche high-throughput GEO services or integrating with LEO players. This market evolution favors flexible providers (including telecoms that can stitch services together) and nimble satellite manufacturers.  

Consolidation and partnerships: Expect more alliances like AT&T + AST SpaceMobile, airline carriage deals, and national telecom collaborations with LEO providers — because owning a satellite fleet is no longer the only route to satellite-enabled services.  

So who’s “winning”

If winning means owning the most satellites and rapidly expanding global LEO coverage, Starlink is indisputably ahead — the constellation grew into the thousands in a few years and continues to add capacity. If winning means delivering integrated services to mobile subscribers, enterprise clients and governments without large space-program investment, AT&T’s partnership model is very competitive: it leverages existing infrastructure, regulatory licenses and customer relationships to deliver satellite-enhanced services quickly.  

Bottom line — different plays for different problems

Starlink’s mass-launch, in-house model is rewriting expectations for satellite broadband: speed of deployment, retail reach and the growing use of LEO for consumer internet. AT&T, while not launching thousands of satellites, is not absent from the market — it is pursuing a pragmatic route of partnerships and integrations that play to a telco’s strengths (spectrum, billing, network integration, relationships with enterprises and governments). The near future will be less about a single winner and more about who can best combine terrestrial and satellite assets to meet customers where they are.

Attached is a news article regarding the amount of starlink satellite entering in to space and the competition between AT&T 

https://www.space.com/space-exploration/satellites/spacex-buys-usd17-billion-worth-of-satellite-spectrum-to-beef-up-starlink-broadband-service

Article written and configured by Christopher Stanley

In-- Google tag (gtag.js) --> <script async src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-XDGJVZXVQ4"></script> <script> window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-XDGJVZXVQ4'); </script>

<script src="https://cdn-eu.pagesense.io/js/smilebandltd/45e5a7e3cddc4e92ba91fba8dc

894500L65WEHZ4XKDX36












Smileband News


Dear 222 News viewers, sponsored by smileband, 

China Turns Ocean Water Into Fuel: A Potential Energy Breakthrough

China has announced a major scientific advance that could reshape the future of energy: the ability to extract fuel directly from ocean water. The development centres on producing hydrogen from seawater, offering a vast new energy source drawn from the world’s oceans.

With global demand for cleaner and more secure energy accelerating, scientists say this breakthrough could reduce dependence on fossil fuels while unlocking a virtually limitless supply of fuel.

How Does Turning Ocean Water Into Fuel Work. 

At the core of the technology is seawater electrolysis — a process that splits water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen using electricity. While electrolysis has existed for decades, seawater presents a major challenge due to salt corrosion and toxic by-products such as chlorine gas.

Chinese researchers have developed new catalysts and membranes that can:

Separate salt from water efficiently

Prevent corrosion of equipment

Produce hydrogen safely and at scale

The result is clean-burning hydrogen fuel that can be stored, transported, and used in power generation, vehicles, and industrial processes.

Why This Is a Big Deal

The oceans cover more than 70% of Earth’s surface, making seawater an almost inexhaustible resource. If commercialised successfully, this technology could:

Reduce reliance on oil, gas, and coal

Strengthen energy security

Cut carbon emissions dramatically

Support the transition to renewable energy

Hydrogen fuel produces only water vapour when burned, making it one of the cleanest energy sources available.

Military, Industrial, and Civilian Uses

Experts believe the technology could have wide-ranging applications:

Naval vessels generating fuel at sea

Remote islands and coastal cities producing local energy

Heavy industry replacing fossil fuels

Hydrogen-powered cars, ships, and aircraft

For a country with vast coastlines and growing energy needs, the strategic advantages are significant.

Global Implications

China’s progress has sparked global interest, with energy analysts warning that nations failing to invest in hydrogen technologies could fall behind. If scaled successfully, ocean-derived fuel could reshape global energy markets and weaken the dominance of oil-producing states.

However, challenges remain — including cost, infrastructure, and ensuring the electricity used in electrolysis comes from renewable sources rather than coal.

A Glimpse of the Future

While still in its early stages, turning ocean water into fuel represents a bold step toward a cleaner and more sustainable energy future. If proven viable on a mass scale, the oceans may soon power the world — not just connect it.

Attached is a news article regarding china turning ocean water into to fuel a new technology breakthrough 



Article written and configured by Christopher Stanley 

In-- Google tag (gtag.js) --> <script async src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-XDGJVZXVQ4"></script> <script> window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-XDGJVZXVQ4'); </script>

<script src="https://cdn-eu.pagesense.io/js/smilebandltd/45e5a7e3cddc4e92ba91fba8dc

894500L65WEHZ4XKDX36



















Smileband News


Dear 222 Mews viewers, sponsored by smileband, 

Nick Reiner Arrested After Fatal Stabbing of Parents, Hollywood Director Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner

Los Angeles, December 2025 — In a shocking and deeply tragic incident, Nick Reiner, 32, the son of renowned filmmaker Rob Reiner and photographer-producer Michele Singer Reiner, has been arrested and charged in connection with the deaths of his parents.  

On Sunday afternoon, December 14, emergency responders discovered Rob Reiner (78) and Michele Singer Reiner (70) dead inside their Brentwood, Los Angeles home, with apparent stab wounds. The discovery came after a welfare check by authorities, who were called when the couple failed to respond to contacts from family members.  

Their daughter, Romy Reiner, 28, is reported to have found her parents’ bodies and later assisted law enforcement in identifying Nick as a person of interest.  


Arrest and Charges

Nick Reiner was arrested Sunday night in Los Angeles by the Los Angeles Police Department shortly after the deaths were discovered. He was booked on two counts of first-degree murder with special circumstances, including the alleged use of a deadly weapon.  

The charges carry the possibility of life imprisonment without parole or, in extreme cases, the death penalty, though prosecutors have said no final decision has been made on seeking capital punishment.  

Nick remains held without bail at the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department and is awaiting medical clearance before his next court appearance.  

Background: A Family Struggling

The Reiner family’s tragedy has layers of loss and earlier struggles behind it. Nick had been open about a long and difficult battle with addiction—a struggle that began in his teenage years, led to periods of homelessness, and inspired the semi-autobiographical 2015 film Being Charlie, which he co-wrote with his father.  

Friends and acquaintances have described him as having a troubled history with substance abuse and volatility.  

In the hours before the killings, Nick and his father were also seen involved in a heated argument at a holiday party hosted by comedian Conan O’Brien, an interaction that friends said drew concern.  

Reactions and Legacy

The deaths of Rob and Michele have elicited an outpouring of grief and tributes across Hollywood and beyond. Rob Reiner was widely respected for his work in film and television—directing beloved classics such as Stand by MeThe Princess Bride and When Harry Met Sally…—and for his activism and political commentary. Michele was known for her photography and advocacy.  

Family members and friends have asked for privacy as the legal process unfolds. The case now moves to the courts, where prosecutors will present evidence and determine the next steps in the prosecution of Nick Reiner.  

Attached is a news article regarding Nick Reiner killing his parents 

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cvgj14l3v8vo.amp

Article written and configured by Christopher Stanley 

In-- Google tag (gtag.js) --> <script async src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-XDGJVZXVQ4"></script> <script> window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-XDGJVZXVQ4'); </script>

<script src="https://cdn-eu.pagesense.io/js/smilebandltd/45e5a7e3cddc4e92ba91fba8dc

894500L65WEHZ4XKDX36











Smileband News


Dear 222 News viewers, sponsored by smileband, 

Scot’s Dad Shot Dead in Horror Attack at Motherwell Home

A Scottish family has been left devastated after a father was shot dead with a shotgun inside his own home in Motherwell, in what police are treating as a murder.

Emergency services were called to a residential address in Motherwell after reports of a serious disturbance. Officers arrived to find the man suffering catastrophic gunshot injuries. Despite urgent medical efforts, he was pronounced dead at the scene.

Shock and Fear in Quiet Neighbourhood

Neighbours described scenes of disbelief as armed police sealed off the street, with forensic teams working late into the night. Residents said the area is usually quiet, making the violence all the more shocking.

One local said:

“You never expect something like this to happen here. It’s absolutely horrifying.”

Children and families living nearby were advised to remain indoors while officers secured the area, with police vehicles and cordons remaining in place for hours.

Major Murder Investigation Launched

Police Scotland confirmed a major investigation is under way, with specialist detectives leading the inquiry. Officers are working to establish the circumstances surrounding the killing, including how the firearm was obtained and whether the victim knew his attacker.

Detectives are appealing for anyone who may have seen or heard anything unusual in the area to come forward, stressing that even small details could prove crucial.

Community in Mourning

Tributes have begun to emerge for the victim, described by those who knew him as a devoted father and family man. Support services have been offered to relatives and neighbours affected by the incident, as grief counsellors assist those struggling to come to terms with the tragedy.

Appeal for Information

Police have urged anyone with information, CCTV footage, or dashcam recordings from the area around the time of the incident to contact them immediately.

As the investigation continues, the killing has reignited concerns about gun violence in residential communities and left Motherwell grappling with the aftermath of a brutal and deeply disturbing crime.

Attached is a news article regarding Scot’s man shot dead at his Motherwell home 

https://www.thescottishsun.co.uk/news/15692280/police-swarm-scots-estate-streets-sealed-major-incident/

Article written and configured by Christopher Stanley 


In-- Google tag (gtag.js) --> <script async src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-XDGJVZXVQ4"></script> <script> window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-XDGJVZXVQ4'); </script>

<script src="https://cdn-eu.pagesense.io/js/smilebandltd/45e5a7e3cddc4e92ba91fba8dc

894500L65WEHZ4XKDX36


















Smileband News


Dear 222 News viewers, sponsored by smileband, 

UK Unemployment Rises to 5.1%: Why Britain Is Not Working

Unemployment in United Kingdom has climbed to 5.1%, marking one of the most worrying signals yet that the labour market is losing momentum. While the figure may appear modest on paper, it represents hundreds of thousands of people out of work and points to deeper structural problems in Britain’s economy.

A Labour Market Under Strain

The rise to 5.1% reflects a combination of job losses, hiring freezes, and reduced working hours across key sectors. Employers facing higher costs and weaker demand are cutting back, while many workers who lose jobs are finding it harder to re-enter the workforce.

Industries hit hardest include:

Retail and hospitality, squeezed by falling consumer spending

Construction, slowed by high borrowing costs and stalled projects

Manufacturing, impacted by weak exports and supply chain pressures

Technology and professional services, where layoffs and hiring pauses are becoming more common

Who Is Most Affected

Unemployment is not evenly distributed. Certain groups are being hit harder than others:

Young people (16–24): Entry-level jobs and apprenticeships are shrinking, leaving many struggling to get a first foothold in work.

Older workers (50+): Redundancies combined with age discrimination concerns make re-employment more difficult.

Low-skilled workers: Automation and reduced demand have cut opportunities, particularly in manual and service roles.

Long-term sick and economically inactive: Health issues and inadequate support are keeping many out of the labour market altogether.

Why Britain Is Not Working

Several factors explain why more people are unemployed or inactive:

1. High interest rates – Businesses are borrowing less and delaying expansion.

2. Cost-of-living pressures – Consumers are spending less, reducing demand for staff.

3. Post-pandemic health impact – Long-term illness continues to keep large numbers out of work.

4. Skills mismatch – Many available jobs do not match the skills of those unemployed.

5. Business uncertainty – Firms remain cautious amid weak growth and global instability.

The Wider Impact

Rising unemployment places additional pressure on public finances, welfare systems, and the NHS, while also weakening consumer confidence. Communities already struggling with deprivation are often the first and worst affected, deepening regional inequality across Britain.

What Comes Next

Economists warn that if growth remains sluggish, unemployment could rise further. Calls are growing for:

Targeted job creation programmes

Expanded retraining and skills schemes

Support for people with long-term health conditions

Measures to encourage business investment and hiring

At 5.1%, unemployment is more than just a statistic — it is a clear sign that Britain’s economy is faltering, and without decisive action, many fear the country risks drifting into a period of prolonged job insecurity and social strain.

Attached is a news article regarding unemployment that hits 5.1% why Britain isn’t working 

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-52660591.amp

Article written and configured by Christopher Stanley 


In-- Google tag (gtag.js) --> <script async src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-XDGJVZXVQ4"></script> <script> window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-XDGJVZXVQ4'); </script>

<script src="https://cdn-eu.pagesense.io/js/smilebandltd/45e5a7e3cddc4e92ba91fba8dc

894500L65WEHZ4XKDX36





















Monday, 15 December 2025

Smileband News


Dear 222 News viewers, sponsored hy smileband, 

Man Dies in West Croydon as Police Launch Investigation

A man has died following a serious incident in West Croydon, prompting a major police response and renewed concern among local residents.

Emergency services were called to the area after reports of a medical emergency involving a man in a public location. Paramedics attended the scene alongside police officers, but despite their efforts, the man was pronounced dead shortly afterwards.

Officers from the Metropolitan Police sealed off parts of the surrounding area while initial enquiries were carried out. Forensic teams were seen examining the scene, and detectives are now working to establish the circumstances leading up to the man’s death.

At this stage, police have not confirmed whether the death is being treated as suspicious. A post-mortem examination is expected to take place in due course to determine the exact cause of death. The man’s next of kin have been informed and are being supported by specialist officers.

Local residents described seeing emergency vehicles arrive rapidly, with some reporting a heavy police presence throughout the evening. “It was shocking to see the road closed and so many officers around,” said one witness. “West Croydon is usually busy, so it really stood out.”

Police are appealing for anyone who was in the area at the time or who may have relevant information, including mobile phone footage or dashcam recordings, to come forward. Detectives believe even small details could prove vital in piecing together the man’s final movements.

The incident has once again raised questions around safety and emergency response in busy urban centres like West Croydon, where thousands of people pass through daily. Authorities have reassured the public that there is no immediate wider risk, while investigations remain ongoing.

Attached is a news article regarding a man he died in west Croydon 

https://www.standard.co.uk/topic/west-croydon

Article written and configured by Christopher Stanley 


In-- Google tag (gtag.js) --> <script async src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-XDGJVZXVQ4"></script> <script> window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-XDGJVZXVQ4'); </script>

<script src="https://cdn-eu.pagesense.io/js/smilebandltd/45e5a7e3cddc4e92ba91fba8dc

894500L65WEHZ4XKDX36












Smileband News


Dear 222 News viewers, sponsored by smileband, 

China Unveils Nuclear Battery Capable of Lasting 50 Years

China has announced a major technological breakthrough after researchers revealed a nuclear-powered battery capable of operating for up to 50 years without recharging. The innovation, developed by the Beijing-based company Betavolt, has sparked global interest and debate over the future of long-life power sources.

How the Nuclear Battery Works

Unlike conventional lithium-ion batteries, the new device is a betavoltaic battery, which generates electricity from the radioactive decay of isotopes. In this case, the battery uses Nickel-63, a low-energy radioactive material that emits beta particles. These particles are safely converted into electricity using advanced semiconductor layers.

According to Betavolt, the battery:

Can operate continuously for up to 50 years

Requires no maintenance or recharging

Produces no combustion, no emissions, and minimal heat

Remains stable in extreme conditions, from freezing cold to high temperatures

Crucially, the company claims the battery is safe, with radiation fully shielded and levels far below what could harm humans. Once the radioactive material decays, it reportedly transforms into stable copper, reducing long-term environmental risk.

Potential Uses and Applications

While the battery’s power output is currently small, its longevity makes it ideal for specialised applications rather than everyday consumer electronics. Experts say the technology could be transformative for:

Medical devices, such as pacemakers and implants

Space exploration, including satellites and deep-space probes

Remote sensors, used in oceans, deserts, and polar regions

Military and aerospace technology, where battery replacement is impossible

Internet of Things (IoT) devices requiring decades-long operation

Betavolt has stated that future versions could be scaled up to power smartphones, drones, or other consumer devices, though such applications remain years away.

Why This Matters Globally

The announcement positions China at the forefront of next-generation battery technology, an area dominated until now by lithium-based systems. As the world searches for alternatives amid resource shortages, battery degradation, and environmental concerns, nuclear batteries offer a radically different solution.

However, the technology also raises ethical and regulatory questions, particularly around the use of radioactive materials, international safety standards, and public acceptance.

Skepticism and Next Steps

While scientists acknowledge the promise of betavoltaic batteries, many urge caution. Independent verification, mass-production feasibility, and long-term safety data will be essential before widespread adoption.

Betavolt says it has already begun pilot production and is working with industrial partners to commercialise the technology within the next few years.

A Glimpse Into the Future

If successfully scaled and regulated, China’s 50-year nuclear battery could reshape how the world powers critical devices—ushering in an era where batteries are no longer replaced every few years, but once in a lifetime.

Attached is a news article regarding china developing a nuclear battery that can last up to 50 years 


Article written and configured by Christopher Stanley 

In-- Google tag (gtag.js) --> <script async src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-XDGJVZXVQ4"></script> <script> window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-XDGJVZXVQ4'); </script>

<script src="https://cdn-eu.pagesense.io/js/smilebandltd/45e5a7e3cddc4e92ba91fba8dc

894500L65WEHZ4XKDX36









Smileband News

Dear 222 News viewers, sponsored by smileband,  Key Facts (Verified Reports) • A 15-year-old boy has been charged with the murder of a n...