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“The most important thing is to enjoy your life — to be happy. It’s all that matters.” – Audrey Hepburn

Helena Lopes

Quote of the Day: “The most important thing is to enjoy your life — to be happy. It’s all that matters.” – Audrey Hepburn

Photo by: Helena Lopes

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quote of the Day page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

Helena Lopes

Cruelty-free Way of Making Duck Foie Gras Devised by Scientist: ‘It was always a dream’

Foie gras with toasted brioche - credit SWNS
Foie gras with toasted brioche – credit SWNS

A cruelty-free way of making foie gras has been devised by scientists that includes no unnatural additives or additional ingredients.

In fact, it helps reduce the amount of biological waste during the butchering process, keeping it out of landfills where it produces climate-warming greenhouse gases.

Traditionally made foie gras, or fatty duck liver, has been the subject of protests by animal welfare activists as its production involves force-feeding the birds.

Several countries and regions have laws against production. For example, foie gras has been banned in Switzerland since 1978, and, even where it is legal, some retailers have ceased selling it.

“Everything in our process is controlled, which is a positive thing,” said Professor Thomas Vilgis. “We never considered adding anything additional to the foie gras, because we wanted pure duck—nothing else.”

Professor Vilgis, himself a lover of foie gras, wondered if there was a more ethical way to enjoy the dish. The answer is yes—and he patented the recipe which has described in the scientific journal Physics of Fluids.

The authors and Vilgis explain that foie gras is distinct from regular fowl liver thanks to its high fat content, and that they were able to achieve similar fat content, taste, mouthfeel, and texture by altering the liver tissue after a duck was processed by the butcher.

It was important to the research team not to add external ingredients or additives to the foie gras, but it turned out the perfect additive was actually being manufactured by the liver itself: lipases.

These enzymes help digest fat in the body, mimicking the activities that occur naturally in the duck’s daily life. When used to treat duck liver and duck fat, it replicated the delicacy right there in the laboratory.

ALSO CHECK OUT: Simple Scanner the Size of a Coffee Grinder Will Tell You Exactly How Long Fruit and Veggies Will Last

“At the end of the process, it allows the fat to recrystallise into the large crystals which form aggregates like the ones we see in the original foie gras,” said Vilgis.

He described the recipe as “extremely simple and elegant.” The liver and fat are harvested from the duck or goose, the fat is treated with lipases, both are mixed and sterilised, and it’s good to go.

“We could really see that the influence of these large fat particles,” said Vilgis. “At the beginning of the ‘bite,’ these large clusters have a high resistance, creating a similar mouthfeel of elasticity without being too rubbery as after the collagen or gelatin addition.”

MORE ALTERNATIVE FOOD PREPARATIONS: Tasty Burgers and Steaks Made of Mycelium Are New Healthy Food Alternative to Plant-Based Meats

Professor Vilgis has already filed a patent for the recipe, and he hopes to partner with companies interested in helping scale up the production. He also wants to work with sensory scientists who can help refine the taste and smell of the foie gras.

“It was always a dream to make foie gras more accessible and better for animal welfare.”

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Fluorescent Rocks in Wind Cave National Park May Show How Life Could Exist on One of Jupiter’s Moons

ONLINE EMBARGO 09.00 GMT, 25/03/25 One of SebreeÕs students, Jacqueline Heggen, showing off glowing formations within Wind Cave. Release date March 25 2025. Fluorescent caves deep below America show how alien life could exist on one of Jupiter's moons, say scientists. The chemistry in Wind Cave, South Dakota, mean that, under an ultraviolet (UV) light, chemicals fossilised within shine in brilliant hues of pink, blue and green. Scientists are using the fluorescent features to understand how the caves formed and how life is supported in extreme environments. They say their research, part-funded by NASA, may reveal how life could persist in faraway places, such as on JupiterÕs icy moon Europa. The team explained that the chemistry in the American cave is likely similar to places such as Europa. Astrobiologist Professor Joshua Sebree, of the University of Northern Iowa, went hundreds of feet underground to investigate minerals and lifeforms in the cold, dark conditions.
One of Sebree’s students, Jacqueline Heggen, showing off glowing formations within Wind Cave – credit Joshua Sebree via SWNS

Fluorescent chambers inside South Dakota’s Wind Cave has given scientists a pathway into theorizing how life could exist on one of Jupiter’s moons.

In a cool, NASA-funded experiment, scientists shined an ultraviolet (UV) light around the rocks inside Wind Cave and found that chemicals fossilised within the rocks shine in brilliant hues of pink, blue, and green.

The goal is using the fluorescent features to understand how the caves formed and how life is supported in extreme environments, but the data may also reveal how life could persist underground on worlds such as on Jupiter’s icy moon Europa.

The team explained that the chemistry in the cave is likely similar to places such as Europa.

“The purpose of this project as a whole is to try to better understand the chemistry taking place underground that’s telling us about how life can be supported,” said Astrobiologist Professor Joshua Sebree, of the University of Northern Iowa.

As Sebree and his team began to venture hundreds of feet underground to investigate minerals and lifeforms in the cold, dark conditions, they used black lights to look at the minerals in the rocks within new areas of Wind Cave.

Sebree says that, under the black light, certain areas of the caves seemed to transform into something otherworldly as portions of the surrounding rocks shone in different colors thanks to impurities lodged within the Earth millions of years ago. The hues corresponded with different concentrations and types of organic or inorganic compounds.

“The walls just looked completely blank and devoid of anything interesting,” Sabree told his university press.

“But then, when we turned on the black lights, what used to be just a plain brown wall turned into a bright layer of fluorescent mineral that indicated where a pool of water used to be 10,000 or 20,000 years ago.”

Working on a zebra calcite in Wind Cave – credit Joshua Sebree via SWNS

The team collected the fluorescence spectra, which they say is like a fingerprint of the chemical makeup, from different surfaces using a portable spectrometer. That meant they could take the information with them while leaving the cave intact.

One of the team, Anna Van Der Weide, is using data collected during the fieldwork to build a publicly accessible inventory of spectra to help provide an additional layer of information to the traditional cave map and paint a more complete picture of its history and formation.

Wind Cave was just one of their destinations. In other caves across the United States, they mapped the rock formations, passages, streams and organisms they found. In the chilly Mystery Cave in Minnesota, they had to bury the spectrometer’s batteries in handwarmers to keep them from dying.

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In other locations, the team had to squeeze through spaces less than a foot wide for hundreds of feet, sometimes losing a shoe in the process. But their efforts have revealed a wealth of information.

In Wind Cave, the team found that manganese-rich waters had carved out the cave and produced the striped zebra calcites within, which glowed pink under black light. The calcites grew underground, fed by the manganese-rich water.

MORE SPECULATION LIKE THIS: This Tiny Moon of Saturn Is the Smallest Case of a Subsurface Ocean Ever Found in the Solar System

Sebree believes that when the rocks shattered, since calcite is weaker than the limestone also comprising the cave, the calcite worked to expand the cave too.

Sebree now plans to investigate how similar, mineral-rich water may support life in the far reaches of the solar system. Scientists have previously predicted that the most likely place to look for signs of life on other worlds will be underground, since there, microbes would be sheltered from solar wind and other harmful effects of living with a minimal or negligable atmosphere.

SHARE This Wild Geology Lesson With Your Friends Who’d Appreciate It… 

Every Golfer’s Dream: New Coating on Ball Makes it Faster When Wet

**ONLINE EMBARGO 09.00 GMT, 25/03/25** This specialized golf ball looks and feels smooth, but a close examination under a standard light microscope reveals tiny crystals of absorbent silica and polymers dotting the surface. A new type of golf ball with a special "water-loving" coating could answer the prayers of every amateur hack - and even some professionals. The coating can slow the roll of the ball on lightning-fast, dry greens and speed it up on sluggish, wet courses, says the American inventor. He explained that the coating works by soaking up water molecules without interfering with the ball’s aerodynamics. Thomas J. Kennedy III, a polymer chemist, is due to present his findings at the spring meeting of the American Chemical Society (ACS) in San Diego, California.
An up-close look at the golf ball’s unique coating – credit, SWNS

A new type of golf ball with a special “water-loving” coating could answer the prayers of thousands of golfers.

The coating helps average out the speed of a rolling ball, slowing it on faster dry greens and speeding it up on sluggish, wet courses, says the American inventor.

Thomas J. Kennedy III, a polymer chemist, is due to present his findings at the spring meeting of the American Chemical Society (ACS) in San Diego, California, and explained that the coating works by soaking up water molecules without interfering with the ball’s aerodynamics.

“I was thinking about a way to help golfers and the game of golf overall by improving the putting process so that having a good round was not a matter of chance but a matter of skill,” said Kennedy III.

Mr. Kennedy, owner of Massachusetts-based Chemical Innovative Solutions Inc., has previously developed state-of-the-art golf balls that optimised long-distance performance in the air. But with his new project, he focused on the interaction between the ball and the grass.

“Golf in many ways is a surface interaction game, with the putter imparting spin rates on the ball, as well as the grass affecting how fast or slow the ball rolls toward the hole.”

Wet weather causes the fairways to become rough, and putting greens to become soft and sometimes soggy, slowing the roll of the golf ball. But hot and dry weather causes the fairways and—especially putting greens—to allow for much greater roll of the golf ball, known in the game as “fast” conditions.

Kennedy III explained that the coating increases the surface energy of the ball, the opposite of what hot wax does when applied to a car windscreen. On dry grass, the coating draws up water to slow down the ball. But on wet grass, the coating helps release the green’s grip on the ball.

Kennedy says the new coating wouldn’t be considered cheating—it would simply shift the focus of the golfer from judging conditions to better judging his strokes.

“The United States Golf Association has set standards for golf balls,” Kennedy said. “There’s a size limit, a weight limit, a symmetry constraint, and there’s even a standard for overall distance travelled.”

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“But within that box, there’s a lot of latitude to do different things that change the playability of golf balls while staying within the confines of the USGA and the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews rules.”

To test the coating’s effect on fast and slow greens, Kennedy used a Stimpmeter—a V-shaped metal rod that applies a known velocity to the ball so that the distance it travels on a dry or wet green can be measured and compared.

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His experiments revealed that the coated golf balls had a “more consistent” speed on both dry and wet simulated greens compared to uncoated ones.

In a strange and unrelated parallel, Kennedy says the coating could also be applied to solar panels to improve their performance.

“It may sound counterintuitive, but the hydrophilic nature of the coating keeps solar panels cleaner by allowing water to soak the surface and wash away sun-blocking dust and debris.”

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Kennedy has provisional patents for the use of the hydrophilic coating on golf balls and solar panels, and believes the balls could be in regular use within “a few months.”

“The game of golf has been around since the 15th century, however, there’s always a new way to look at something as technology evolves,” he said. “Innovation and invention know no bounds!”

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From Sewage-Filled Waters to Crystal Blue: Switzerland Rivers and Lakes Offer Hope for Cleaning Up Other Countries

Beach on Lake Geneva, Switzerland - credit Zacharie Grossen, CC 4.0. BY-SA
Beach on Lake Geneva, Switzerland – credit Zacharie Grossen, CC 4.0. BY-SA

From Phoebe Weston at the Guardian comes the story of the Herculean effort to clean up Switzerland’s waterways, an effort that has transformed the unique European country into one that enjoys the cleanest urban swimming spots on the continent.

In the 1960s, water quality in the form of sewage treatment investment received the smallest share of attention, and rivers and lakes like the famous one at Geneva were covered in algal mats, off-colored foam, and dead fish.

A typhoid outbreak at Zermatt in 1963 led to several deaths, and hundreds fell ill. It was found that raw sewage was the cause of the epidemic, and an outcry from the public led to massive investments in sewage treatment and pollution control.

That was then. Now, as Weston’s photography testifies, the “Blue Gold” of Switzerland’s waterways are the envy of their neighbors, and people of all ages and at all hours flood the beaches to enjoy a swim, even in the nippy early spring.

“Very high water quality is important to the population,” says Michael Mattle, head of wastewater technology at the engineering company Holinger. “We take a lot of care not to pollute water on its way through Switzerland.”

According to one source, in 1965, only 14% of the population of Switzerland was connected to a wastewater treatment plant. Today it’s 98%, and the government spends €191 on water purification per citizen, compared to just €98 in the UK, for example.

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Since 2016, the Swiss federal government has also been working on a massive pollution control effort for drugs and medications flushed down the toilet when they’re excreted by the body. They include, as Weston details, antidepressants, anti-inflammatories, diabetes medication, and even antibiotics.

Wastewater treatment plants basically work like a human stomach, utilizing bacteria to digest and remove organic matter from water. Alternatively, the treatment for these pollutant drugs requires flushing the water through activated charcoal which can remove 80% of the total pollutant load. What’s left are the famous PFAS compounds referred to as “forever chemicals” by the media.

MORE SEWAGE CONTROL STORIES: Washington, DC Sewage Plant Spins Human Sewage into Fertilizer Gold

That 20%, operators at the wastewater plants say, should be the focus of regulatory legislation, not treatment infrastructure.

Weston also reports that the EU, and Switzerland’s near neighbors, are visiting to learn about and hopefully replicate the country’s success, with the EU considering new legislation that would require any sewage treatment plants that serve areas of more than 10,000 people to treat for the pollutant pharmaceuticals mentioned above.

CLEAN-UP Your Friends’ News Feeds With This Inspiring Victory Over Dirty Water…

“Sometimes the smallest things take up the most room in your heart.” – Winnie The Pooh

By Sketchplanations – CC BY-NC 4.0 (cropped)

Quote of the Day: “Sometimes the smallest things take up the most room in your heart.” – Winnie The Pooh (A.A. Milne)

Photo by: Sketchplanations (CC BY-NC 4.0 – cropped)

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quote of the Day page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

By Sketchplanations – CC BY-NC 4.0 (cropped)

It Took 100 Years After Tutankhamun to Find Another Pharaoh’s Tomb–it Took Just 2 Months to Find This One

The newly found tomb of an ancient, unknown pharaoh, - credit Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities
The newly found tomb of an ancient, unknown pharaoh, – credit Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities

Archaeology was recently sent into raptures when, for the first time since Tutankhamon was found, a pharaoh’s tomb was discovered and confirmed as such.

And despite that happening just one month ago, and ‘King Tut’ being found 103 years before that, archaeologists have confirmed that they have found yet another pharaoh’s tomb.

The banner year that started when Thutmose II’s final resting place was identified in February near the Valley of the Kings has continued as another royal sepulcher has been found—this time in the Mount Anubis necropolis in Abydos.

However, this king’s name hasn’t been identified yet. According to the Smithsonian the tomb dates to the Middle Kingdom’s Second Intermediate Period, which spanned roughly 1630 to 1540 BCE.

Professor Mohamed Abdel Badie from the Supreme Council of Antiquities, stated that studies conducted on the newly found tomb in Abydos indicate that it belonged to one of the kings whose reign predated King Senebkay, whose tomb was discovered in Abydos by the mission in 2014.

He noted that it is much larger than other previously known tombs attributed to the Abydos Dynasty, which was located in the southern part of the Middle Kingdom and which was eventually overtaken by invasions from the north conducted by the “Hyskos,” a western Asian people who brought new culture, technology, and on occasion, strife and turmoil to the timeless ancient lands along the Nile.

“The king’s name was originally recorded in painted scenes on plastered brickwork that decorated the underground entrance to the limestone burial chamber,” Josef Wegner, an Egyptologist at the University of Pennsylvania who led the excavation, tells Live Science. “However, the hieroglyphic texts were damaged by ancient tomb robbers, and not enough survives to read the king’s name.”

It’s possible that sophisticated AI programs could decipher enough of what’s left behind, but the challenge remains that not much is known about the Abydos Dynasty, so there is little to base any guesses or assumptions on.

MORE EGYPTIAN STORIES: Cleaning a Millennium of Sand and Soot Egyptologists Reveal Ancient Creation Myth in Exquisite Artwork

Physically, the tomb was located 20 feet underground in a limestone chamber lined with mud-brick vaults. Very few possessions interred with the numerous dead, most of whom were children, had been left by tomb robbers, but pottery fragments and amphorae indicate that the king was connected to a large local production center of brick and ceramic kilns.

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He’s the Steven Hawking of Drone-based Agriculture, Overcoming Disability with Entrepreneurial Drive

credit - Albertson Drone Service LLC, via Facebook
credit – Albertson Drone Service LLC, via Facebook

A pioneer in utilizing drones for agriculture, a man with the same condition as Steven Hawking has built a flourishing business in just 4 years.

Drones have plenty of use on the farm, and Kyle Albertson has developed services for surveying, crop spraying, and more. Diagnosed with congenital muscular dystrophy (CMD) at just 9 months old, Albertson has never let it get in his way.

Growing up in Indiana with farms as far as the eye could see, riding tractors and combines were activities that he always enjoyed. As a young man he joined both 4H and Future Farmers of America (FFA) and worked hard to develop a goal-oriented mindset to fuel his sense of independence, and the belief that he could do something dramatic with his career.

“It’s a shock to some people that I can do the things I do,” Albertson said. “It’s just old habit to me.”

Graduating from Purdue University in 2021 with a degree in agribusiness, he launched his business Albertson Drone Service LLC. the same year. Drone photography had emerged in his years at university as a hobby, but he found that farmers were really interested in aerial photography, and would pay well for drone-operated pesticide deployment.

His business has doubled its revenue in the most recent fiscal quarter compared to its first year, as well as the number of clients it maintains, and the acreage it covers.

MORE INDIVIDUALS LIKE ALBERTSON:

The as-yet short journey has nonetheless gone a long way in fostering that independent streak, and speaking with WRTV, Albertson noted that he has a driver’s license and cruises around country roads in “a modified van with a joystick.”

When asked if he had any inspiration for readers, he decided to offer an entrepreneurial perspective, rather than anything to do with his CMD—as good a piece of evidence as any that he has done what all disabled people strive to do: not let their condition define them.

“If you think you can do it and it’s a good business action, give it a shot,” said Albertson.

WATCH the story below… 


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Sense of Honor Transcends Western Tensions with Russia–Tending Graves and Welcoming Cosmonauts

Arkhangelsk Allied cemetery in Russia - credit: Johnny History, via findagrave.com
Arkhangelsk Allied cemetery in Russia – credit: Johnny History, via findagrave.com

Diplomatic channels between the UK and Russia have maintained a centuries-old tradition of grave tending for the fallen of wars long past, proving that there are notions in international relations that transcend even the sternest political policies.

What’s more, news reports say that there is no communication between the nations over maintaining the graves of the other’s fallen soldiers, but various lines of evidence suggest that the Russians have continued to do so even without payment or special request from the British government.

Over the past 200 years, Great Britain and Russia have been allies and enemies, friend and foe, cousins and colleagues.

There are 663 fallen British soldiers behind the borders of the Russian Federation: casualties of operations long forgotten, in Murmansk, Arkhangelsk, and Vladivostok. Typically, the UK’s Commonwealth War Graves Commission relies on a mixture of Russian Federation military and paid contractors to take care of these graves and ensure they are clean and the gardens are maintained.

When Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, efforts by the West to isolate the aggressor nation led to various long-standing agreements being cast into geopolitical limbo.

The Guardian reports, however, that though communication with these contractors and military personnel has ceased, pictures from civilians have shown that even during the last 3 years of the war, British soldiers’ graveyards have been maintained, leading authorities in the UK who tend to 671 Red Army graves in Britain to continue as they have done for so long.

“We haven’t seen the graves but we think they are still being maintained,” said Gareth Hardware, the Commission’s area director for the UK and northern countries. “We are maintaining their graves in our cemeteries.”

“The cemetery looks very well maintained. Someone is taking care of it, even in these difficult times,” an amateur Russian historian, considered by the Commission as a credible source, wrote in a blog post last summer after visiting Arkhangelsk.

The Guardian continued saying that a British diplomat in Moscow visited Murmansk on Remembrance Day last year with a Russian counterpart and reported back that the cemetery there was in good condition.

The same is true for Germany and Russia, who for very obvious reasons have much larger burial enclaves for the other, with graves totaling more than half a million for each.

“We still recover Red Army soldiers in Germany each year and will provide them a proper grave in Germany,” said Dirk Backen, general secretary of the German war graves  commission. 600,000 Soviet soldiers lie in German lands, while the 760,000 Germans who fell on Russian soil during the world wars are also having their cemeteries maintained.

credit NASA, screengrab

US-Russia group hug

The honored dead aren’t the only remaining connections either. Space-bound cooperation remains open between the West and Russia. Since the war in Ukraine began, several Russian cosmonauts have ridden to the International Space Station and worked alongside NASA, ESA, and JAXA astronauts in maintaining the international platform.

Last week, GNN reported that two NASA astronauts stranded on the ISS were finally being allowed to return home. The team that was to be their relief included Kirill Peskov, a Tuvan Russian cosmonaut, whose trip would have involved him arriving in the US, receiving a briefing from NASA mission control, and riding a US-made SpaceX Dragon capsule to the ISS—all massive security breaches if done in any other government department.

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Last March, NASA’s Crew 8 spacecraft arrived at the ISS, and their arrival was recorded with a video of a pile-on group hug in microgravity. Arriving with them was Roscosmos’ Alexander Grebenkin.

In the video, Crew 8 mission commander Matthew Dominic is mobbed by NASA’s Jasmin Moghbeli, but also Belarussian Soyuz 24 mission flight engineer Marina Vasilevskaya.

Dominic then moves to greet Soyuz 24 mission commander Oleg Kononenko, while the rest of his crew follow behind hugging those wearing the red white and blue and the white blue and red.

MORE STORIES OF GOOD DIPLOMACY: Historic Prisoner Swap Frees Americans Held in Russia After Years-Long, Multi-Nation Diplomacy

Astronauts have a unique way of seeing the world, figuratively and literally. Looking down on our home from low-Earth orbit day after day, they realize (and they all say they do) that space is an incredibly harsh environment, and everything we humans have and need is concentrated on this single planet with no alternative.

As regards US-Russia relations, you can see in the video what they think of the current tensions, and perhaps we should all take a leaf out of their books.

WATCH the micrograv group hug below… 

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Klimt Painting of an African Prince Lost for Nearly 100 Years Goes on Show in Austria

Prince William NII Nortey Dowuona, 1897 - credit: Wienerroither & Kohlbacher Galleries.
Prince William NII Nortey Dowuona, 1897 – credit Wienerroither & Kohlbacher Galleries.

A portrait of a stately West African leader painted by famed Austrian artist Gustav Klimt has reappeared in public after being lost before World War II.

Nearly a hundred years have passed since it was last seen, and is now exhibited at Wienerroither & Kohlbacher Gallery in Vienna, with a price tag of €15 million.

The portrait of Prince William Nii Nortey Dowuona—a representative of the Ga people in West Africa, comprising parts of modern-day Ghana, was painted by Klimt in 1897, sold by the artist’s estate in 1923, and lost by 1938.

An art historian who had been searching for the work for 2 decades verified its authenticity for W&K Galleries with the help of a well-faded stamp on the back of the canvas. A wealthy Austrian Jewish family who had converted Klimt’s studio into a villa acquired the painting in 1928 for an exhibition.

That was the last time and place it was seen, for by 1938, the Klein family had abandoned their property and fled the growing anti-semitism in their homeland to Monaco.

“The composition and painterly execution point to Klimt’s turn towards decorative elements, which were to characterize his later work, and are directly linked to his pioneering portraits of the following years,” said Alfred Weidinger, who authenticated the work, in press materials.

MORE GREAT WORKS LOST AND FOUND: 

Prince Dowuona traveled to Vienna for a late-colonial sing-and-dance called the Völkerschau which exhibited ethnographic displays from colonized people around the world at an urban zoo. This is where a friend of Klimt’s first found the stately African leader, who was one of 120 Ga people who traveled via steamship to Austria for the Völkerschau, according to Art Net.

It’s believed that both Klimt and his friend Matsch painted Dowuona, but being that this work remained unsigned and in Europe, the client, whoever it was, probably selected the one painted by Matsch.

Klimt’s corpus includes many that have fetched 8-figure sums at auction houses, and one that sold for $108 million of an unknown woman holding a fan. There is currently no plan to auction this work.

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“We cannot avoid pain, but we can avoid adding suffering to the pain.” – Pema Chödrön

Quote of the Day: “We cannot avoid pain, but we can avoid adding suffering to the pain.” – Pema Chödrön

Photo by: Jesus Fodulla

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quote of the Day page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

‘Buy Canadian’ Social Media Post Becomes Secret Ingredient to Help Save City’s Condiment Business

Shenul Williams and a selection of her products - credit Aliza Welch, family photo
Shenul Williams and a selection of her products – credit Aliza Welch, family photo

Thanks to a little love in a ‘Buy Canadian’ Reddit room, a small condiment business thinks they’ve found the secret ingredient to success: patriotism.

Aki’s Fine Foods has been manufacturing Indo-African sauces and chutneys out of Pickering, Ontario, for 38 years, but owner Shenul Williams says she’s never seen anything like the sales numbers being put up this year.

After the province’s lockdown orders during the Pandemic sent many of Williams’ key grocery store buyers out of business, it seemed like she was going to follow suit, and the company started originally by her parents wouldn’t make it to the third generation.

Realizing that her mother could lose her business if something didn’t happen, Willams’ daughter Aliza Welch posted a call for help in a Reddit room called Buy Canadian.

“My mom owns a Canadian-made Indo-African sauce company that has been in business for 38 years. It is truly amazing and has been struggling since COVID,” Welch wrote.

“With so much interest in buying from small Canadian companies, I figured I would share her products as an alternative. Your support would change her life. All products have a maple leaf!”

That ‘support’ saw sales on Aki’s Fine Foods‘ website increase 4,000%.

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Williams said the impact is “saving my business.”

“I can’t believe it,” she said. “I can remember one little note. This lady said, ‘Keep it up.’ You know, make Canadian. ‘We want Canadian.'”

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Gary Sands, senior vice president of public policy and advocacy for the Canadian Federation of Independent Grocers, said “he’s never seen anything” like the reorganization of Canadian producers and vendors toward buying, sourcing, and selling local in the wake of US President Trump’s newly imposed 25% import tariffs.

Speaking with CBC, Sands said that Williams’ newfound success is just one manifestation of this all-consuming and rapid business trend sweeping the Great White North.

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South Africa Bans Commercial Fishing at Penguin Breeding Spots Where Food Supply Shortage Could Drive Extinction

African penguins on a Cape Coast beach - credit S Martin, CC 2.0., via Flickr
African penguins on a Cape Coast beach – credit S Martin, CC 2.0., via Flickr

For a critically endangered species of penguin, a recent decision to remove fishing competition from its hunting and breeding grounds may prove to be the key to saving it.

In the rich waters of South Africa’s cape and Atlantic coastlines, 6 key breeding colonies of the African penguin are now no-go zones for commercial sardine and anchovy harvesting, according to a recent court order.

Less than 10,000 breeding pairs of this penguin survive, and conservation groups hailed the court’s decision that will protect the colony’s feeding areas for at least a decade.

“This order of court is a historic victory in the ongoing battle to save the critically endangered African Penguin from extinction in the wild,” said BirdLife South Africa, one of the groups that had called for the protection.

The protected areas include Robben Island where Nelson Mandela was imprisoned for 18 years. Dassen Island, further up South Africa’s Atlantic coast, and the Stony Point Nature Reserve, make up two of the other 6 areas in total where penguin protections are kicking in.

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The court’s decision followed weeks of “exceptionally hard work and negotiations between the conservation NGOs and the commercial sardine and anchovy fishing industry,” according to SANCCOB, one of those very NGOs.

“This case has been first and foremost about improving the chances of conserving Africa’s only penguin species, but the outcome of these closures will also benefit other marine predator species, such as cape gannets, cape cormorants, and other socio-economically important fish that also eat sardine and anchovy, as well as the livelihoods of many who derive benefits from marine ecosystems,” said BirdLife’s Dr. Alistair McInnes.

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Groundbreaking Gene Therapy Cures 21-year-old of His Sickle Cell Anemia: ‘I’m not in pain anymore’

Sebastien Beauzile – By Northwell Health/Cohen Medical Center
Sebastien Beauzile – By Northwell Health/Cohen Medical Center

A New York hospital has declared a patient cured of sickle-cell anemia, a debilitating genetic disorder that mostly affects individuals of African heritage.

Considered to be cured, other genetic treatments have proven successful in reducing or ending the bouts of pain and occasional surgeries that plague the lives of those who suffer from the disease.

Cohen Children’s Medical Center said their patient Sebastien Beauzile, 21, is the first New Yorker to have received the breakthrough Lyfgenia treatment, according to the New York Post.

Developed by Bluebird Bio., Beauzile received the treatment in December of 2024. Since then, the young man has been seemingly cured of the disease which caused him skin ulcers, back pain, hip pain, joint pain, and severe chest pain.

“Growing up with sickle cell, it’s kind of been over all my life,” Sebastien said, according to Gene Online. “So now that I’m cured, I’d say it’s my new birthday, because now nothing’s going to stop me.”

Part of a genetic mutation that humans developed to protect themselves against the malaria parasite, sickle cell disease occurs when blood cells, through forming sickle shapes, have trouble reaching the heart.

Dr. Jeffrey Lipton, the center’s director for pediatric hematology, predicts Lyfgenia will replace bone marrow transplants as the primary method for addressing sickle cell anemia, and called the treatment “a fix.”

Lygenia takes a sample of the patient’s bone marrow and introduces healthy adult hemoglobin from a donor. Hemoglobin is a protein that helps transport oxygen through the body via red blood cells, and is at the heart of sickle cell disease. Tinkering the two, they are then infused back into the patient’s body, where the donor hemoglobin is gradually coded for rather than the affected hemoglobin of the patient.

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“Sebastien’s recovery has been amazing, and we hope he is just the first of many patients we treat with Lyfgenia,” said Charles Schleien, MD, senior vice president of Cohen Children’s Medical Center.

In January, GNN reported that base editing, another form of gene therapy that, like Lygenia, doesn’t involve the more famous CRISPR technology, was able to seemingly cure 20-year-old Brandon Baptiste, who is now “going to the gym every day, doing cardio and weight lifting.”

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Baptiste became eligible for an experimental trial of base editing called BEACON. By October 2023, after a year of tests to ensure he was physically capable in his diminished state to handle the procedure, it began with a sample of his blood stem cells.

These were then transferred to a separate facility where the base editing would take place. Using chemotherapy, his team then killed off all the diseased blood stem cells in his bone marrow, after which he was ready to receive his own stem cells back in November.

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Judge Rules Against Cacti Smuggling Ring, Orders Them to Pay for Desert Restoration Under ‘Moral Damages’

Cholla Cactus in San Bernardino National Forest - By Daniel Torok for USFS
The often trafficked Copiapoa cactus in the background – credit: Jardín Botánico Nacional, Viña del Mar, Chile, CC 2.0.

In Italy, a judge has applied a novel legal concept in sentencing two convicted plant smugglers: payment for the damage done to an irreplaceable ecosystem.

Following a trial in the Italian city of Ancona, Andrea Pombietti and Mattia Crescentini were found guilty of trafficking in endangered species; in this case, two rare cactus genera Eriosyce and Copiapoa. 

Endemic to the Atacama Desert in Chile, these highly-sought after species survive in the driest climate on Earth, and the two men were found to be in possession of hundreds and for participating in a criminal enterprise that involved Greek and South American entities.

Being that Italy is a member of the Convention on the International Trade of Endangered Species (CITES), the Ancona court found the two men guilty, but in response to the case put forward by the public prosecutor, sentenced them to pay “moral damages” to an NGO called the Association for Biodiversity and Conservation (ABC), whose resident cacti expert worked alongside authorities to identify the species in Pombietti and Crescentini’s possession.

All were native to the Atacama Desert, and the damages of around $21,500 were paid to ABC for its legal costs and to further its conservation work in the very desert the criminals were exploiting.

A member of ABC said the money would fund cactus research projects to inform conservation strategies.

The Guardian reports that the case is one of the first in the world to order traffickers to pay for conservation in the ecosystems they exploit.

NEW IDEAS TO STOP POACHING: Researchers Test Use of Nuclear Technology to Curb Rhino Poaching in South Africa

Cholla Cactus in San Bernardino National Forest – By Daniel Torok for USFS

“Any remedy that looks at a deeper solution that restores the environment is key … as opposed to only looking at one animal that has been killed or one tree that has been cut down,” said Blair Atwebembeire, an environmental lawyer in Uganda, whose work mainly involves the pangolin—the world’s most trafficked animal.

The Guardian spoke with another environmental lawyer, Rika Fajrini, who said that Indonesia primarily prosecutes under criminal, not civil law. As a result, the debt to society is paid to the state, not the animals or ecosystems damaged by the offenders.

OTHER ANTI-TRAFFICKING STORIES: Nigerian Authorities Seize 2 Tons of Pangolin Scales and Arrest Key Broker in Major Wildlife Trafficking Bust

“The Italian case highlights that harm to wildlife is also harm to the environment – one that requires restoration, not just punishment of offenders,” says Fajrini.

Trafficking in animals and plants is the third most lucrative black market in the world, behind drugs and weaponry. Estimated to be worth over $100 billion in terms of money paid, if a fraction of that value was transferred to conservation, the fragile ecosystems and vulnerable species made victim in these schemes could be significantly fortified.

SHARE This Encouraging Seachange In The Fight Against Trafficking… 

“Success is always a combination of passion, dedication, hard work, and being in the right place at the right time.” – Lauren Conrad

Joshua Earle for Unsplash+

Quote of the Day: “Success is always a combination of passion, dedication, hard work, and being in the right place at the right time.” – Lauren Conrad

Photo by: Joshua Earle for Unsplash+ (Glencoe, Ballachulish in UK)

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quote of the Day page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

Joshua Earle for Unsplash+

Southeast Asia’s Fish Supplies Remarkably Robust Despite Decades of Warnings About Overfishing

Small-scale fisheries in Southeast Asia –Photo by Prof. Matsuishi Takashi Fritz / Hokkaido University
Small-scale fisheries in Southeast Asia –Photo by Prof. Matsuishi Takashi Fritz / Hokkaido Universityocea

For decades, there have been dire warnings about overfishing and the loss of biodiversity in their fisheries, yet this region has largely maintained its ecological health while still meeting the food needs of Southeast Asia’s growing population.

In a new study, Professor Matsuishi Takashi Fritz of the Faculty of Fisheries Sciences at Hokkaido University examined the status of Southeast Asia’s capture fisheries to understand why this particular region is swimming against the tide of overfishing and declining production.

The research provides lessons that can be learned for other capture fisheries around the world.

Southeast Asian fisheries have seen a steady increase in production over the past 30 years, which amounts to the greatest rise among world regions. Though that growth has plateaued since 2018, the region still outperforms many others.

At the same time, the fisheries’ productivity — defined as production divided by the number of fisheries — is the second lowest in the world. That’s because many more people are actively engaged in fishing in Southeast Asia than in many other regions.

The percentage of people fishing there is 3.4 times higher than the global average, because the region has the greatest dependence on aquatic foods for protein—and small-scale and artisanal fishers only catching enough for the local community or their own families.

“Small-scale fishing has various advantages: as its productivity is low, it’s possible to provide many jobs without overfishing,” says Prof. Fritz, author of the study published in the journal Fisheries Science.

“The small scale of the fishing gear has a low impact on the ecosystem; and the small amount of fish caught at one time ensures that the quality and freshness of the catch is high, and it is sold at a relatively high unit price.”

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An unusual feature of Southeast Asian capture fisheries is that while the percentage of overfished stocks is similar to the global average, the region has a three-fold higher ratio of under-fished stocks compared to the global average — the key finding of this study.

The capture fisheries tend to be multi-species rather than overfishing a few key species, which preserves the already high level of marine biodiversity.

GREAT CATCH: Number of Fish on US Overfishing List Reaches All-Time Low–Led by Mackerel and Snapper

“To maintain biodiversity, it’s essential to encourage the practice of non-species-selective multi-species fisheries and management,” Prof. Fritz concludes. “Protecting, promoting, and controlling small-scale artisanal fisheries that do not destroy habitats is also essential.”

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She’s a Dopamine Dresser: ‘Get Happier and More Productive With Color, Yellow is a Big Mood Booster’

Kerry Jones is a colorful dopamine dresser -SWNS
Kerry Jones is a colorful dopamine dresser -SWNS

An artist says she’s a “dopamine dresser” and picks her bold-colored outfits to ward off feeling grumpy.

Dopamine dressing is a fashion trend which involves wearing clothing that makes you feel good and confident, based on the idea that outfits can affect your mood and happiness.

Kerry Jones has always loved color and says she dresses to express herself. She enjoys being experimental with her outfits and loves orange, yellow, red, pink, and lilac.

She reaches for her boldest colors if she wakes up “grumpy” and has a room with “thousands” of pieces of clothing in it.

“It’s very mood orientated,” said the 40-year-old from Manchester. “The actual process of getting dressed alters my mood.

“If I’m feeling low, I play dress up and go for a bold rich tone. The bolder the better. It helps transform me into a bolder and better version of myself.

“Bright bold colors always feel better on gloomy days, so be your own sunshine. Yellow is a favorite color of mine and a big mood booster.”

Kerry Jones with orange hair and colorful clothes fashion – SWNS

Kerry’s been a fashionista all her life, recalling that her mom always described her daughter as “adamant” about knowing what she wanted to wear.

“When I wake up in the morning I get dressed and I think it is the best part of the day. I love color drenching.”

Kerry, whose daughter is 16, was feeling like she lost her identity shortly after becoming a mum when she packed away her colorful clothes.

A few months later she got it all out again, realizing “I can be me”.

Now she has orange hair and doesn’t shy away from any color. (See the video below to check out more of her style…)

Kerry Jones (via SWNS)
Kerry Jones (SWNS)

Kerry finds lots of her clothes in thrift shops, and her late grandmother was her biggest “style icon”, the creator of one her favorite items—a turquoise jumper with pastel pompoms on it.

FAMILY MEMORIES—> FASHION: She Upcycled Her Late Grandpa’s Shirts Into Cute Tops to Keep Him Close to her Heart –See How

She wants to encourage others to dopamine dress—and says you can start small.

“Earrings or socks are a great way of adding color without it being too imposing. If you think it looks good, it looks good.”

She also believes color boosts her productivity.

“When I’m working from home I still get fully dressed. If I don’t, I don’t feel as productive and I’m a bit slobby.

“Getting dressed is a pleasure we should all feel uplifted by, it’s our sacred moment of joy in the morning. Have fun!” (See more of her outfits in the video…)

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Harley-Davidson Founder’s Home Saved from Demolition by Devoted Bikers and Their Favorite Company

Davidson Cottage in Scotland, the ancestral home of Harley-Davidson co-founder (via SWNS)
Davidson Cottage in Scotland, the ancestral home of Harley-Davidson co-founder (via SWNS)

The ancestral home of the co-founder of Harley-Davidson motorcycles has been saved from demolition after it went on the market and was about to be scooped up by developers who would tear it down.

The Davidson Cottage, located in the Angus village in Scotland, was home to William C. Davidson, who emigrated to America in 1857, where three of his children (Arthur, Walter and William) joined 20-year-old William Harley to create the iconic Harley-Davidson company.

The once-derelict property was painstakingly restored over many years by biker aficionados who transformed it into a re-creation of a mid-nineteenth century dwelling.

However, the property went on the market once again, which required another push to save the building.

The Davidson Legacy Preservation Group was formed and won a matching grant from the UK government Community Ownership Fund. But the group needed to raise more than £300,000 to obtain keys to the cottage.

After a three year campaign, and many individual donations, the Harley-Davidson Company stepped in at the last minute to provide the final funding to get the team over the line.

In a statement on their GoFundMe page, Nyree Aitken of the Davidson Legacy Preservation Group said, “This incredible milestone would not have been possible without the dedication and generosity of so many.

Davidson cottage with Harley donations plaque (via SWNS)

“We extend our heartfelt thanks to everyone who contributed to the fundraising efforts, especially the Harley-Davidson riding community and our supporters worldwide. Your enthusiasm and commitment has been truly inspiring.”

Davidson Cottage with bikers (via SWNS)

“We are also deeply grateful to the UK Government for their contribution through the Community Ownership Fund, which has played a crucial role in helping us in the road to preserving this important piece of Harley-Davidson history.”

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“The final funding, generously provided by Harley-Davidson, reinforces our shared commitment to honoring the Davidson heritage, and we are excited to collaborate with them as we move forward.

“Our immediate focus is to complete the purchase process and begin laying the groundwork for some exciting plans in 2025.

“Together, we are keeping the Davidson legacy alive.”

LOOK: Great-Grandma Gets 90th Birthday Wish to Ride a Harley Again, Courtesy of a Biker Gang

Cottage interior via SWNS

In 1901, 20-year-old mechanical engineer William S. Harley drew up plans for a small engine designed for use in a regular pedal-bicycle frame.

Over the next two years, he and his childhood friend Arthur Davidson worked on their motor-bicycle using the Milwaukee machine shop at the home of a friend. It was finished in 1903 with the help of Arthur’s brother Walter Davidson. Most of the major parts were made elsewhere, including some probably fabricated at the West Milwaukee rail shops where oldest brother William A. Davidson was toolroom foreman.

In 1906, Harley and the Davidson brothers built their first factory on Juneau Avenue, at the current location of Harley-Davidson’s corporate headquarters, where the company produced its first 50 motorcycles that year.

By 1920 Harley-Davidson was the largest motorcycle manufacturer in the world, with over 28,000 machines produced and dealers in 67 countries.

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Being Kind–and Believing Others are Kind–Makes you Happier Than Wealth: Happiness Report Ranks 150 Countries

Believing that a wallet will be returned if dropped in public is one of the most important indicators of well being and happiness. In fact, it’s 7 times more impactful that doubling your income, according to the World Happiness Report 2025 just released this week.

Jeffrey Sachs conceived of the report that would measure wellness in 2012 and Gallup began interviewing people in 150 countries, and compiling those comparisons every year.

While analyzing the results for 2024, the researchers found that belief in the kindness of others is much more closely tied to peoples’ happiness than previously thought.

For instance, evidence across the world from the perceived—and actual—return of lost wallets shows that people are much too pessimistic about the kindness of their communities compared to the reality. The actual rates of wallet return are around twice as high as people expect.

Believing that others are willing to return your lost wallet is shown to be a strong predictor of population happiness—and the Nordic nations once again top the ranking of the world’s happiest countries. They also rank among the top places for expected and actual return of lost wallets.

“The wallet dropping experiments are so convincing because they confirm that people are much happier living where they think people care about each other, even if perceptions are everywhere too pessimistic,” said long-time lost-wallet researcher, John F. Helliwell, an economist at the University of British Columbia, and co-editor of the World Happiness Report 2025.

Finland tops the list of world’s happiest country for the eighth year in a row, with Finns reporting an average score of 7.736 (out of 10) when asked to evaluate their lives. In comparison, the U.S. ranked 24th, with Americans averaging (6.724 out of ten)—the lowest self-reported level since the poll began 13 years ago.

World Happiness Report 2025

The Finnish Ambassador to the US, Leena-Kaisa Mikkola, attended the launch event for the report in Washington, DC, and proposed that a big reason for their consistent ranking was the Finns’ trust that both “people and politicians mean well.” The homogenous population made that easier for Finland, she said.

“Americans smile and laugh more than we do,” she continued. “But for us, happiness means being content.” She also quipped that “weekly sauna sessions for most of us” also contributed.

Costa Rica and Mexico both enter the top 10 for the first time (#6 and #10 respectively), while continued upward trends for countries such as Lithuania (16th), Slovenia (19th) and the Czech Republic (20th) underline the convergence of happiness levels between Eastern, Central, and Western Europe.

Launch event in DC – GNN

The United States, at 24th, fell to its lowest-ever position in the 13 years of polling. The United Kingdom ranked just higher at 23rd, with Brits reporting their lowest average life evaluation since their reports from 2017. All country rankings are based on a three-year average of each population’s average assessment of their quality of life.

Experts from economics, psychology, and sociology then seek to explain the variations across countries and over time using factors such as GDP per capita, healthy life expectancy, having someone to count on, a sense of freedom, generosity and perceptions of corruption. These factors help to explain the differences across nations—but the rankings themselves are based solely on the answers people give when asked to rate their own lives. Here are the top 25:

1. Finland
2. Denmark
3. Iceland
4. Sweden
5. Netherlands
6. Costa Rica
7. Norway
8. Israel
9. Luxembourg
10. Mexico
11. Australia
12. New Zealand
13. Switzerland
14. Belgium
15. Ireland
16. Lithuania
17. Austria
18. Canada
19. Slovenia
20. Czech Republic
21. United Arab Emirates
22. Germany
23. United Kingdom
24. USA
25. Belize

Further results around the theme of “caring and sharing”:

  • Sharing meals with others is strongly linked with wellbeing across all global regions, but the number of people dining alone in the United States has increased 53% over the past two decades.
  • Household size is closely linked to happiness. Four to five people living together enjoy the highest levels of happiness in Mexico and Europe, but many people in Europe are living on their own.
  • In 2023, 19% of young adults across the world reported having no one they could count on for social support. This is a 39% increase compared to 2006.
  • In countries where benevolent acts are more frequent, despair is less frequent.
  • Declining happiness and social trust in the US and parts of Europe combine to explain the rise and direction of political polarization and anti-system votes.
  • The cost-effectiveness of charities varies dramatically. Some charities are hundreds of times better at increasing happiness per dollar than others.

“Human happiness is driven by our relationships with others,” said Lara Aknin, a professor of social psychology and one of the report’s editors. “Investing in positive social connections and engaging in benevolent actions are both matched by greater happiness.”

Gallup CEO Jon Clifton concluded, “Happiness isn’t just about wealth or growth — it’s about trust, connection and knowing people have your back. This year’s report proves we underestimate how kind the world really is.”

“This year’s report pushes us to look beyond traditional determinants like health and wealth. It turns out that sharing meals and trusting others are even stronger predictors of wellbeing than expected. In this era of social isolation and political polarization we need to find ways to bring people around the table again, said Professor Jan-Emmanuel De Neve, director of the University of Oxford’s Wellbeing Research Centre, which published the report with Gallup. “Doing so is critical for our individual and collective wellbeing.”

AMERICAN OPTIMISM: 82% of U.S. Adults Are Hopeful About Their Own Future and Their Community’s Future

GNN caught up with journalist and author E.J. Dionne, who spoke at the Launch Event on the panel addressing political polarization. When asked what could be done about the problem, he said paying attention to the regions where people feel left behind would help—like rural or urban areas where young people have moved away after industrial jobs and small businesses closed. Loneliness could also be addressed, as well making government work better for the people. (On that last point, he recommended the book, Abundance, by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson.)

CHECK OUT: Optimist Pollster Finds Americans Are Far More Alike Than Different, With Shared Values Bridging Political Divides

One suggestion he proposed is for churches on both sides of the political aisle to come together for socializing and charity work. It could build-up the social trust in institutions and people—which is what helps Finland stay atop the Happiness mountain.

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