The Economist
Also: Why Israel continues to batter Lebanon
Illustration of a tree shedding its leaves. The leaves are picture of emplyees, human and robot ones. Once they fall on the ground, they become anonymous.
Code red
The tech jobs bust is real. Don’t blame AI (yet)
Why technology firms are shedding workers
Israeli security forces gather at the site of a Hezbollah missile strike that targeted a house in the northern Israeli town of Kiryat Shmona near the border with Lebanon
The other front
Why Israel continues to batter Lebanon
Even as the first official talks between the countries in decades are set to begin
People celebrate in the streets after Peter Magyar, leader of the pro-European conservative TISZA party, addressed supporters at their election night party in Budapest during the general election in Hungary.
Viktor and the victor
How Hungary can now lead the fight against illiberalism 
Having vanquished Viktor Orban, Peter Magyar must get to work
A worker in fluorescent jacket at a futuristic structures, these are the first of their kind in the U.K. and will mute the “sonic booms” created by HS2 trains entering the high speed railway’s Chilterns tunnel.
In-no-vation nation
A new report questions Britain’s innovation prowess
The report is flawed, but the problems are real
A line of missiles increasing in size.
Blundering to Armageddon
A third world war is plausible. Here’s how to avoid one
The key is to understand that great wars can happen by accident