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Smoke rises from a Thai bulk carrier near the Strait of Hormuz after an attack last week. (Royal Thai Navy/AFP via Getty Images) | Shock to world’s oil market is triple those of the 1970s |
The war in Iran has cost the global oil supply roughly 15 million barrels a day, posing a “major, major threat” to the global economy. |
The U.S. and Israeli war in Iran is posing a “major, major threat” to the global economy, and “no country will be immune” if it continues much longer, said Fatih Birol, executive director of the International Energy Agency on Monday. Those who were old enough to drive in 1973 — during the OPEC oil embargo — or during the Iranian Revolution in 1979 might remember gas shortages and long lines to fill up their tanks.
“Each of those took about 5 million barrels a day of oil supply off of the market,” said Samantha Gross, director of the Energy Security and Climate Initiative at the Brookings Institution. But now, with the Strait of Hormuz largely closed, she said the impact is larger. “We've lost maybe
15 million barrels a day
, or 15% of supply,” Gross said. “So this supply shock is three times bigger than the ones that we saw in the 1970s.” This is also not the 1970s.
“The United States now is less dependent on oil imports than we were 50 years ago,” said Hugh Daigle, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin who studies petroleum.
“But countries like Pakistan, India, Thailand, China, Japan — they are really being hurt by this,” he said. |
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QUOTE OF THE DAY | |
“The fact that the kids themselves are saying that this [AI] is harming critical thinking skills I think should be sort of a canary in the coal mine. No, it's not proof that it is, but if they think it is, I think that's something we should be listening to.” |
— Heather Schwartz, co-director of the American Youth Panel at Rand |
More than 60% of middle, high school, and college students in the U.S. are turning to AI for homework help, according to a new study from Rand, but about two-thirds of them believe it will hurt their critical thinking skills.
Schwartz, one of the study’s authors and a parent herself, suggested AI tools should be introduced after a student writes the first draft themselves. That’s where you use lots of different skills to synthesize information and build up critical thinking muscles. And the ability to interpret information, she said, is a “building block of human agency.” |
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That feeling when standard economy seating gets smaller. Fred Tanneau/AFP via Getty Images | Final note |
Economy cabin fever |
It’s spring break for a lot of American families, just as the indignities of air travel are snowballing.
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