In a day and age when 53% of adults receive their news from social media sites that promote negative information far more often than any good news, it’s important to remember that the world isn’t actually ending.
While the environment is facing dangers due to human interference, there are people helping to protect it as well. Many individual organizations are working to remove plastic from the ocean in light of increased pollution. The Ocean Cleanup is currently the world’s largest company working to remove litter from the planet’s oceans.
This can protect the sea life that is harmed by the plastics that pollute their environment, which in turn, allows the animals and plants in the ocean to continue to provide food, clean water, and air to the rest of the planet.
Along with private organizations, the government of Papua New Guinea plans to create a Marine Protected Area that is roughly 200,000 km²; this will prevent any harmful human actions such as overfishing and pollution.
Along with protected waters, many animals have been taken off of the critically endangered list over the past few years. In just the United States, both the American Alligator and the Bald Eagle have been steadily recovering from decades of endangerment due to poaching and habitat loss.
The environmental protections have been increasing over the years, in both direct and indirect ways. Artificial Intelligence centers have been banned in 69 jurisdictions across the United States.
These centers can damage the water, local plants and animals habitats, and people’s access to internet and water in the areas they are built. Along with legal restrictions, seven in ten American citizens oppose the construction of the data centers in their towns. This can promote further actions from local governments.
A less well-known, and rather morbid, form of pollution is the soil pollutant of many forms of burials. While the human body returns to the Earth over time, many types of caskets and coffins do not. However, new types of burial choices have both been discovered and have become more popular over time.
While environmental news is not entirely negative, it is not the only area of the world that tends to go viral when discussing its negative aspects. Political news has taken a positive turn for working class individuals as well.
New York City’s mayor Zohran Mamdani balanced the city’s $125 billion budget by raising taxes on citizens who own housing in New York that they do not use year round. This has set a new precedent for local governments to make earnings without removing public services or damaging job markets.
Many workplaces are targeted by Immigration and Customs Enforcement. In response to this, multiple companies have claimed the title of “Fourth Amendment Workplaces”.
Fourth Amendment Workplaces are businesses that use the rights listed in the Fourth Amendment: “The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures”.
The inclusion of “papers” protects immigrants from being searched or detained unless a viable warrant is obtained. Companies that use these rights as a signifier of their business help to protect wrongfully detained individuals.
While features like politics and environment are ever-changing throughout the world, one aspect has been progressing year after year: medical sciences.
With so many different types of cancer, it has been incredibly challenging to find ways to prevent and cure it. However, some of the biggest breakthroughs in the past twenty years have been discovered in head and neck cancers.
In terms of preventing cancer before it can spread, Protein Biomarkers have been found to be able to help detect cancer. The earlier most cancers are discovered, the higher the chance of recovery, making this an incredibly important breakthrough.
While much of the information in the world can be negative because of its relevance, learning about the positive news can be equally as important to maintain favorable mental health and to continue to achieve progress in the world.

