A place were I can write...

My simple blog of pictures of travel, friends, activities and the Universe we live in as we go slowly around the Sun.



April 26, 2026

Russia sanctions

Beijing lashes out at EU after Chinese firms included in latest Russia sanctions

China’s commerce ministry warns Brussels that Beijing “will take necessary measures to resolutely safeguard” the interests of Chinese companies and individuals included in the 20th sanctions package.

By Milena Wälde

Beijing warned Brussels that the “EU will bear all consequences” after the bloc included Chinese companies in its latest sanctions package against Russia, escalating tensions in an already strained Sino-Europe trade relationship.

In a statement issued late Saturday, China's commerce ministry said it was “strongly dissatisfied” and “firmly opposes” the inclusion of Chinese businesses in the Russia sanctions, accusing the EU of acting “brazenly” despite repeated objections.

“China urges the EU to immediately remove Chinese companies and individuals from the sanctions list,” the ministry said in the statement, warning that Beijing “will take necessary measures to resolutely safeguard” their interests.

The EU’s 20th sanctions package, approved last week after Hungary and Slovakia dropped their veto, targets another 20 Russian banks, cutting them off from euro transactions and business in the bloc. The breakthrough on the sanctions came after a dispute over the Druzhba oil pipeline — which carries Russian crude via Ukraine to Central Europe — was resolved.

The package also targets banks and companies in third countries, including China, as part of a broader push to shut down back channels used to support Russia’s war economy, with a strong focus on anti-circumvention measures across trade, energy and financial networks.

French President Emmanuel Macron warned on Friday that Europe is now under pressure from the United States, China and Russia at the same time.

“We should not underestimate that this is a unique moment where a U.S. president, a Russian president, a Chinese president are dead against the Europeans,” Macron said, speaking alongside Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis in Athens. The French leader called on the EU to “wake up” and defend its own interests.

Merge parties against Netanyahu

2 former Israeli prime ministers agree to merge parties against Netanyahu

Naftali Bennett and Yair Lapid, who served as prime ministers in a rotation agreement under a prior coalition government, now plan to merge into a single faction.

By Associated Press

Two Israeli political heavyweights on Sunday said they would join forces in upcoming elections in a shared effort to unseat longtime Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Naftali Bennett and Yair Lapid served as prime ministers in a rotation agreement as part of a coalition government they formed in 2021. They now plan to merge their parties into a single faction headed by Bennett.

“The move is intended to unite the bloc, put an end to internal divisions and focus all efforts on winning the critical upcoming elections,” Lapid’s Yesh Atid party said in a statement.

Bennett and Lapid scheduled a joint news conference later Sunday.

The 2021 coalition agreement ended 12 years of Netanyahu rule. Bennett served as prime minister for the first year until their coalition fractured. Lapid then held the top job as caretaker prime minister for the final six months until new elections brought Netanyahu back to power.

Lapid has served as Israel’s opposition leader since that time, while Bennett took a break from politics.

The two men have ideological differences. Bennett is an Orthodox Jew with hard-line views toward the Palestinians, while Lapid is secular and seen as more moderate. But they enjoyed a close working relationship during their short-lived coalition.

Their alliance is aimed at uniting a fragmented opposition that appears to have little in common beyond their shared hostility toward Netanyahu.

Life or Death...

4 deadlines that could shape Trump’s next 5 weeks

Trump and the GOP have a series of make-or-break moments ahead.

By POLITICO Staff

The next five weeks could prove pivotal for President Donald Trump and Republicans on Capitol Hill. They face a series of deadlines — some self-imposed — that could shape the party’s fortunes through the midterms.

Some have national security implications, while others involve domestic politics — but what they have in common is they are, by and large, out of Trump’s hands.

Here are four crucial deadlines coming up.

April 30
FISA renewal

Republicans have only a handful of legislative days to reach an agreement to extend Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA, a key spy tool.

Section 702 allows the federal government to surveil the communications of foreigners abroad without a warrant. But it can also sweep up Americans’ communications, and privacy advocates argue the law should be updated to require intelligence officials to obtain a warrant before reviewing that data.

Trump demanded a clean extension of the surveillance law despite well-documented skepticism within his own party. Conservative hard-liners in the House, however, want more guardrails to prevent the warrantless surveillance of Americans.

On Thursday, House GOP leaders unveiled the text of a new three-year extension as Speaker Mike Johnson tries to overcome the ultra-conservative resistance.

The proposed reauthorization of the so-called Section 702 law includes minimal new oversight and penalties for abuses of the spy authority but stops short of warrant requirements sought by GOP hard-liners, mostly restating current law.

The faction that’s been opposing an extension has not yet signed off on the latest plan. GOP leaders plan to continue talks into the weekend to be able to proceed with consideration of the measure Monday at the House Rules Committee, the next step before hitting the floor.

Even if the House can pass this version of the Section 702 extension next week, there’s still no guarantee it will be able to clear procedural hurdles in the Senate by the deadline.

Early May
DHS runs out of money

Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin said this week his department will run out of money to pay employees’ salaries the first week of May, as lawmakers race to end a two-month shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security.

Appearing on “Fox and Friends” Tuesday morning, the secretary outlined that money currently being used to pay salaries during a shutdown comes from the funds Congress allocated to DHS last year via Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill. But DHS has an extensive payroll burden, Mullin said, and if the department isn’t funded, that pot of money will dry up early next month.

The incredibly candid admission about DHS’ financial straits comes as Republicans are trying to put forward a package that would fund most of the agencies under the Department of Homeland Security, while punting funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection, which Democrats have demanded changes to, down the line for a budget reconciliation package.

Mullin added that almost two-thirds of the department’s workforce remains furloughed and called on Democrats to explain why they are “putting [the] homeland at risk” and urged that Democratic holdouts be “held accountable.”

Late May
Iran oil

The U.S. blockade of the Strait of Hormuz has placed a deadline of sorts on the Iranians, who will have to “shut-in” their oil wells in about a month if they are not able to export crude. Once “shut in,” an oil well can’t necessarily be reopened because they risk losing pressure and productivity once closed.

For all of the attacks on energy infrastructure throughout the Middle East from all sides, the Iranians have largely been able to export their own oil for the last two months, mostly to China. The Trump administration even allowed the Iranians to sell their oil in order to ease the global shortages wreaking havoc on U.S. allies around the world.

For the next four to five weeks, the Iranians will be forced to divert their oil production into storage until they reach capacity, according to Gregory Brew, a senior analyst at Eurasia Group, specializing in the geopolitics of oil and gas with a focus on Iran. After that, the Iranians will have to shut-in their oil wells.

“The blockade would need to be aggressively enforced and sustained for at least another month before Iran has to start reducing production,” he said.

June 1
Reconciliation bill

Trump wants a reconciliation bill on his desk by June 1 that would fund Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Border Patrol and other agencies.

Senate Budget Chair Lindsey Graham unveiled a fiscal blueprint Tuesday, and the full chamber advanced its early Thursday morning.

But the resolution needs to clear the House, where some GOP lawmakers, including Budget Chair Jodey Arrington, are still dreaming of expanding the scope of the budget resolution to pave the way for a party-line bill that includes other party priorities ahead of the midterms.

Any changes to the budget resolution would punt it back to the Senate, eating up floor time and forcing more amendment votes — something Senate Majority Leader John Thune and other Republicans are eager to avoid. Thune is intent on keeping the budget resolution narrow, believing that gives them their best opportunity to quickly send a bill to Trump before the June 1 deadline he set.

Some House conservatives also want the Senate to pass the immigration funding bill before taking up bipartisan legislation that would reopen the rest of DHS. That could drag the agency’s full shutdown deep into May.

April 24, 2026

What a dull tool....

Hegseth says fight over Strait of Hormuz is "much more" Europe's "than ours"

By Haley Britzky

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth railed against European allies on Friday morning for not helping the US enough in its war against Iran, saying the US “barely” uses the Strait of Hormuz and that the situation “is much more their fight than ours.”

“We are not counting on Europe, but they need the Strait of Hormuz much more than we do, and might want to start doing less talking and having less fancy conferences in Europe and get in a boat,” Hegseth said during a Pentagon press briefing. “This is much more their fight than ours.”

Hegseth and President Donald Trump have repeatedly bashed US allies, particularly those in NATO, for not coming to the US’ aid after it began combat operations against Iran on February 28.

Trump lashed out against European allies last month, saying the US doesn’t “need any help actually” after insisting other countries should send naval assets to help escort oil tankers transiting the Strait of Hormuz.

Falklands

Sovereignty of Falklands “rests with the UK,” Britain tells US after leaked Pentagon email

By Christian Edwards and Vasco Cotovio

The sovereignty of the Falkland Islands rests with Britain, Downing Street said today, following a report that the United States could review its position as punishment for Britain’s stance on the war in Iran.

“We could not be clearer about the UK’s position on the Falkland Islands,” a spokesperson for Prime Minister Keir Starmer said. “It is long standing. It is unchanged.”

The spokesperson was responding to an internal Pentagon email reported by Reuters which outlined options for the US to punish NATO allies it believes failed to support the US militarily in its war with Iran.

Those options included reviewing the US position on Britain’s claim to the Falkland Islands, as well as suspending Spain from NATO. Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has been a vocal critic of the US war with Iran.

Responding to the report, Sánchez said Friday: “We do not work off emails. We work off official documents and government positions, in this case of the United States. Spain’s position is clear: absolute cooperation with the allies, but always within the framework of international law.”

President Donald Trump has repeatedly criticized NATO allies – who were not consulted ahead of the US-Israeli strikes on Iran on February 28 – for not sending their navies to help open the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran effectively closed after it was attacked.

The Falklands are a British overseas territory in the south-west Atlantic. Britain and Argentina fought a 10-week war over the islands in 1982 after Argentina’s military dictator, Leopoldo Galtieri, ordered an invasion.

Argentina’s President Javier Milei, an ally of Trump’s, said in 2024 that his government would set out a “roadmap” toward Argentine sovereignty over the islands. The Downing Street spokesperson stressed that the Falklands had voted “overwhelmingly” in favor of remaining a British overseas territory.

Recreates neutron star reaction

Physicist recreates neutron star reaction, reveals how explosive stars forge elements

by Sarah Nicholas, Mississippi State University

A Mississippi State physicist has produced a direct laboratory measurement of a key nuclear reaction believed to occur during explosive bursts on neutron stars. These bursts forge heavier elements—the building blocks of planets and life on Earth. The findings appear in The Astrophysical Journal.

"The universe began almost entirely with hydrogen and helium," said principal investigator Jaspreet Randhawa, assistant professor in MSU's Department of Physics and Astronomy. "Every heavier element—from the oxygen we breathe to the iron in Earth's core—was forged later in stars and stellar explosions. By identifying how stellar explosions build heavier elements, scientists gain a clearer picture of how the elements that form planets and support life are distributed throughout the cosmos."

"We wanted to know whether nature had a built-in roadblock that stopped heavier elements from forming during X-ray bursts on neutron star surfaces," added Randhawa, whose graduate student, Muhammad Asif Zubair, joined the study. "Our measurements show this roadblock is much weaker than expected, meaning the process that builds heavier elements can continue."

Neutron stars are the dense remnants left behind when massive stars explode, Randhawa said. Though only about the size of a city, they can pack more mass than the sun. In some binary systems, they pull in material from a companion star, creating extreme temperatures and pressures that trigger bursts of X-rays.

Scientists have long suspected that the process of forming heavier elements in these bursts could stall at copper-59, a short-lived isotope that decays in less than two minutes. That brief window has made it difficult for researchers to study the reaction in a laboratory, posing a major challenge for direct measurement, Randhawa said.

In this new study, he and his colleagues on the international team produced a beam of copper-59, accelerated it, and directed it onto a frozen hydrogen target before it decayed. The experiment took place at TRIUMF, Canada's national laboratory for nuclear and particle physics, one of the few facilities in the world capable of producing beams of copper-59 in sufficient quantities for study. This was the first direct laboratory measurement of this key reaction.

Precisely date

Astronomers precisely date rare brown dwarf companion, offering new test for how these objects cool

by University of Hawaii at Manoa

Astronomers at the University of Hawaiʻi have precisely measured the age of a nearby sun-like star and its unusual companion, known as a brown dwarf, an object that falls between a planet and a star. The discovery offers new clues into how brown dwarfs grow and change over time.

Using the W. M. Keck Observatory on Maunakea, the team from the UH Institute for Astronomy (IfA) studied the HR 7672 system, composed of a sun-like star and a faint brown dwarf companion. With an instrument called the Keck Planet Finder, they tracked tiny five-minute pulsations in the star's light and used them to estimate its age to be about 2.3 billion years. The study is published in The Astrophysical Journal.

Because the brown dwarf formed at the same time as the star, the star's age also reveals the companion's age, giving researchers a rare chance to check on whether their models of how brown dwarfs cool throughout time are correct.

"This is like finally having a reliable clock for an object we've been trying to understand for years," said IfA Parrent Fellow Yaguang Li, who led the study. "It really helps us place evolutionary models under stringent tests and determine which physical ingredients are correct."

Shaping discovery

For more than two decades, the HR 7672 system has helped shape how astronomers study brown dwarfs. Its companion, HR 7672B, was discovered in 2002 and was one of the first brown dwarfs ever directly imaged around a sun-like star using adaptive optics (AO), a technology that sharpens images blurred by Earth's atmosphere. Those early observations helped reveal how rare brown dwarfs are around sun-like stars at close orbital distances.

Brown dwarfs do not sustain the same energy-producing reactions as stars. Instead, they slowly cool and fade over time. But testing how that happens has been difficult, in part because scientists rarely know their exact ages.

With this new measurement, paired with what is already known about the object's energy output and mass, HR 7672B now stands out as a key reference point. The team compared their findings with several models and found the closest match with newer theories that better describe what's happening inside these objects.

More than 20 years ago, Michael Liu discovered HR 7672B using Keck AO. Today, Li is building on that work with this new high-precision age-dating of the same system.

Trump’s Biggest Scandals

Meet Paolo Zampolli, the Man at the Center of Trump’s Biggest Scandals

From the World Cup to Jeffrey Epstein and ICE deportations, the man who says he introduced Donald and Melania stays busy.

Alex Nguyen

Paolo Zampolli epitomizes why so many people hate the Trump administration.

Zampolli serves as Donald Trump’s US special envoy for “Global Partnership” and is mired in controversies over this year’s World Cup, Jeffrey Epstein, and, according to the New York Times, ICE.

He’s a shining example of people alleged to be scammer and abusers have weaseled their way into using Trump’s global platform for their own nefarious purposes. Let’s take a look.

The World Cup

On Wednesday, Zampolli told the Financial Times he made a suggestion to Trump and FIFA President Gianni Infantino that Iran be replaced by Italy at this summer’s World Cup. The soccer tournament will be played in the US, Canada, and Mexico, and both the US and Iran have expressed concerns that it would not be possible for Iran, which is currently at war with Israel and the United States.

“I’m an Italian native and it would be a dream to see the Azzurri at a US-hosted tournament. With four titles, they have the pedigree to justify inclusion,” Zampolli said to the Financial Times (“Azzuri” is a nickname for the Italian national sports team, which has won the competition four times, but has failed to qualify for three successive tournaments). Zampolli is an Italian-American but has no apparent association with Italian soccer or the World Cup.

The Financial Times suggested that Zampolli’s idea was designed to improve US and Italy relations after Italy’s Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni condemned Trump’s bizarre remarks about Pope Leo XIV over the war in Iran.

You may be wondering: Why is an American envoy attempting to lobby on behalf of Italy instead of the US?

Zampolli reposted the Financial Times‘ Tuesday story on X and, late Wednesday night, posted two screenshots of the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera reporting his World Cup proposal. 

“Firstly, it is not possible, secondly it is not appropriate,” Italy’s sports minister, Andrea Abodi, told LaPresse. “You qualify on the pitch.”

“The attempt to exclude Iran from the World Cup only reveals the moral bankruptcy of the United States, which is afraid even of the presence of eleven young Iranians on the field of play,” the Iranian embassy said. A spokesperson for Iran’s government said Wednesday that Iran is prepared to play at the World Cup, according to the Associated Press. 

According to the BBC, FIFA is not planning to replace Iran with Italy. 

In other words, everyone hates the Trump administration. 

Jeffrey Epstein

Zampolli, a former head of a modeling agency in the ’90s, claims that he introduced Donald and Melania Trump and helped the first lady obtain a work visa in the mid-’90s. He even told the Daily Mail he was prepared to testify before Congress following Melania’s public denial earlier this month of close connections to Jeffrey Epstein, including that it was the convicted sex offender introduced her to Donald Trump. Melania Trump called for a congressional hearing to allow survivors of Epstein’s abuse to testify. 

Zampolli has his own ties to Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. He and Epstein discussed and later failed in their bid to purchase the agency Elite Model Management in 2004, and according to the Daily Beast, became a partner of Maxwell’s environmental charity and nonprofit organization, the TerraMar Project, that described itself as focused on protecting oceans. Maxwell launched the project in 2012 but the organization was dissolved in December 2019, following Epstein’s arrest in July of that same year.

ICE

Last month, the New York Times reported that Zampolli sent a request to David Venturella, an ICE official, to put his ex-girlfriend Amanda Ungaro, who is Brazilian and was arrested on charges of workplace fraud, in ICE detention. Zampolli had been in a custody battle with Ungaro over their son.

The Times obtained communication records demonstrating that Venturella contacted ICE’s Miami office to make sure agents would take Ungaro from a Miami jail where she was being held, an order that Venturella said was important to an individual closely connected to the White House. Ungaro was placed in ICE custody and deported, but, according to the Times, it remains unclear whether Zampolli’s request led to Ungaro’s deportation.

Mr. Zampolli denied asking ICE to detain Ungaro, saying he only asked Venturella about the status of her case.

The Department of Homeland Security said in a statement to the Times that Ungaro was detained and deported due to an expired visa and her fraud charges. “Any suggestion that she was arrested and removed for political reasons or favors is FALSE.”

Neither the US State Department nor the Kennedy Center immediately responded to a request from Mother Jones for Zampolli’s comment on the Financial Times and New York Times stories. (The Office for Global Partnerships is an office within the US State Department and Zampolli is on the board of trustees of the Kennedy Center, as appointed by President Trump.

Sensing a pattern? If Zampolli does get a role in organizing the World Cup, fans, players, journalists, and other travelers may be subjected to the Trump administration’s brutal immigration policies. 

School phone ban movement

California tests limits of school phone ban movement

Smartphone ban tensions boiling over in California reflect a broader, national debate that crosses party lines.

By Tyler Katzenberger

Nearly two years after passing a law to restrict students’ use of smartphones at school, California’s fight over the issue is getting messier — and it’s part of a heated national debate.

At the local level in the Golden State, parents, educators and school boards are clashing over how strict tech bans should be ahead of a mid-summer deadline to clamp down on phones in the classroom. In some places, those spats are triggering scrutiny over technology’s wider role in education, marking a drastic shift from when districts raced to stick iPads and Chromebooks in students’ hands during the Covid pandemic.

And in the California Legislature, an effort to outright ban phones during the entire school day is pitting tech-skeptical Democrats against colleagues who argue that stringent rules imposed from the Capitol undermine local control.

The conflict bubbled up Wednesday during a state Assembly Education Committee hearing, where Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi was forced to pare back his bill that called for a strict school smartphone ban, AB 1644, after it received pushback from school administrators, school boards and committee chair Darshana Patel.

While Muratsuchi wanted a bell-to-bell ban for students from kindergarten through high school, arguing that kids’ focus will slip if they’re allowed to whip out phones between classes or during lunch, he “reluctantly” agreed during the hearing to exempt high schools from the ban. Committee members voted to advance the scaled-back measure.

“I feel passionately that the evidence is overwhelming, that bell-to-bell smartphone bans across the country have proven to be effective,” the Los Angeles Democrat told POLITICO in an interview after the hearing.

The California debate reflects a national split on phone bans that crosses party lines. While 41 states have enacted laws seeking to restrict phones in classrooms, according to a Ballotpedia analysis, they offer school districts drastically different amounts of flexibility, ranging from “encouraging” local restrictions to outright bans on phone use during the school day.

Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, likely a 2028 Democratic presidential candidate, has called on lawmakers in his state to pass a bell-to-bell phone ban, and Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signed a full-day ban in 2025.

But other state leaders have been hesitant to include high schoolers in a blanket ban, arguing that it would impede online classwork, prevent students from coordinating after-school activities and pose safety risks during emergencies like a fire or school shooting.

In Florida, Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a law last year that gave high schools greater discretion in setting student phone use policies. Gov. JB Pritzker, a Democrat and likely 2028 presidential contender, is supporting similar legislation in Illinois this year.

Back in California, gubernatorial candidate and San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan said during a FOX 40 candidate debate Wednesday night that he would “ban cell phone use during the academic day in public schools all the way through high school” if elected. Nonprofit groups such as Common Sense Media and Mothers Against Media Addiction also support a statewide full-day ban, as does tech industry trade group TechNet.

“Other states are keeping cell phones out of school for all students — California should too,” Common Sense founder and CEO Jim Steyer said in a statement. “Limiting these protections to K-8 leaves high schoolers behind at exactly the age when the risks are greatest.”

But California groups representing school administrators and board members take issue with a blanket ban — as does Patel, a San Diego Democrat and former school board president.

“There are many legitimate uses of the smartphone,” Patel said during Wednesday’s hearing. “It has now become a handheld computer that has very powerful purposes to help us organize our very busy lives.”

A spokesperson for Gov. Gavin Newsom, who in 2024 signed a school smartphone law that stopped short of mandating bell-to-bell restrictions, declined to comment on the issue.

Local control by design

California’s prolonged battle over phone bans is a predictable byproduct of how the state’s “Phone-Free Schools Act” was designed.

The 2024 law, authored by Muratsuchi and Republican Assemblymember Josh Hoover with backing from Newsom, was left open-ended to balance tech restrictions with safety and local control concerns. It ordered schools to pass “a policy to limit or prohibit” phone use by July 2026 but included few details about what those policies should look like. Instead, it told districts to conduct vigorous public outreach and craft rules that incorporated community feedback — an approach that placated school boards and administrators.

“In as diverse a state as California is,” California School Boards Association spokesperson Troy Flint told POLITICO, “a one-size-fits-all, blanket policy is not the right solution.”

That compromise left California’s more than 1,000 districts to their own devices on what to do about devices, teeing up a series of local fights as school officials scrambled to comply with the law. In some communities, parents and school board members have clashed over which smartphone restrictions to implement ahead of the July deadline.

Some rules, like those adopted for the Tamalpais Unified School District in Marin County, strictly order students to lock phones in sealed pouches during the entire school day, but other policies in places like Santa Barbara allow older students to use their phones between classes and during lunch periods.

A few school districts are going even further to restrict tech: Los Angeles Unified School District, the state’s largest, just this week approved a resolution to limit students’ screen time. It calls for keeping kids entirely off screens until second grade, tracking and limiting screen time for older students, and prioritizing “paper-and-pen” assignments. (Muratsuchi called LAUSD’s move “a step in the right direction.”)

With the policies still being finalized at the local level, grassroots organizations have joined forces in hopes of swaying the debate. Parent-led groups like MAMA, Distraction-Free Schools and Schools Beyond Screens are campaigning district-by-district, calling on school boards to approve K-12 bell-to-bell bans.

Julie Frumin, a mom and family therapist from Westlake Village who co-leads Distraction-Free Schools, said that advocates have biweekly calls to draft letters to school board members, coordinate talking points for board meetings and share updates on phone policies pending in different districts.

“We are really doing this as a coalition across the whole state,” Frumin said. “Phone-free schools will happen. We will continue pushing until it does.”

California parents also appear split on the issue: A Public Policy Institute of California poll released last week found that a majority of those with school aged-children — 52 percent — support school phone policies that permit students to use their devices between classes and during lunch, while 40 percent back an all-day ban.

For now, state lawmakers are widening their scope beyond the Muratsuchi legislation. Hoover is authoring a bill this year that would require districts to adopt “digital wellness” instructional plans, and Democratic state Sen. Henry Stern has proposed a separate measure that would direct California’s Department of Education to publish model guidelines dictating “age-appropriate use” of electronic devices issued to students.

“We’re going to look at all the ways that we need to address this,” Democratic state Assemblymember Josh Lowenthal, another proponent of stricter tech rules for kids, told POLITICO. He said he thinks the group of lawmakers seeking more restrictions “is growing because more and more parents and communities are speaking out.”

Frumin said advocates are encouraged by the recent developments and plan to step up their involvement in Sacramento, with goals to place a temporary moratorium on AI use in elementary and middle schools, mandate paper testing for young learners and pivot back to computer labs and Chromebook carts.

Still, she said it’s a knotty issue.

“It is incredibly difficult for families to navigate,” she said. “You’ve got your 11-year-old flipping back and forth between YouTube or Roblox or whatever, on the same screen in which they’re supposed to be doing their homework.”

Not Funny