The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side

The Lighter Side

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Photographer Snaps Pics of Animal Scientists Thought Was Extinct
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Photographer Snaps Pics of Animal Scientists Thought Was Extinct

When wildlife photographer and director of conservation and environmental education for La Fundación de Parques y Museos de Cozumel, Rafael Chacón, heard about a small, disoriented fox on the side of a highway in Cozumel, he knew he had to go. According to Smithsonian Magazine, he grabbed his camera and snapped the first photos of the rare and elusive Cozumel dwarf fox in 20 years. “Seeing this fox standing there, calm and beautiful in its natural habitat, felt almost unreal,” Rafael told Smithsonian magazine. “The moment … was truly unforgettable.” Dwarf fox feared extinct for over 20 years photographed for the first timeThe elusive Cozumel dwarf fox was photographed on Mexico's Cozumel Island in 2023 after not being seen since 2001. The first ever image of the rare animal was only recently released pic.twitter.com/47XZ1N89ag— Nature is Amazing (@AMAZlNGNATURE) June 17, 2026 The Cozumel Dwarf Fox is Exceptionally Rare Rafael Chacón and others released more information about the discovery in the May 2026 issue of Neotropical Biology and Conservation. The last time anyone reported seeing a Cozumel dwarf fox was in 2001. “Virtually nothing is known about this population, and no species-specific, systematic survey has ever been conducted,” the paper explains. “However, it is considered critically endangered by scientific consensus and likely on the brink of extinction.” After finding the dwarf fox, skilled individuals took it to a veterinarian and released it back into the wild. Travis Bayer, a founder and executive director of the conservation organization Pathos Wildlife, told Smithsonian Magazine that they’ve installed 84 remote cameras and hair snares to collect DNA samples. “While [the] photographic evidence confirms the existence and survival of the Cozumel fox, it remains unstudied in the wild, undescribed by science, unassessed by the [International Union for Conservation of Nature] and unprotected while at immediate risk of extinction,” he said. “Without efforts to document and describe the species, they risk disappearing before they’re even known.” This story’s featured image can be found here

A new law in Zambia makes free education much harder for future governments to take away
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A new law in Zambia makes free education much harder for future governments to take away

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM There’s a particular kind of law that changes nothing overnight. The classrooms look the same the morning after it passes. The teachers haven’t changed. The children getting on buses are the same children who got on buses yesterday. But something has shifted underneath: what was once a promise has become a right. Zambia passed one of those laws this month. President Hakainde Hichilema signed the Education (Amendment) Act 2026, writing free public education into the country’s legal framework for every child from early childhood through secondary school. The policy has existed since 2022. But now, it cannot be unwound by the next government. A future administration would need parliamentary approval to reverse it. From policy to protection When Zambia abolished school fees in 2022, the results were immediate. More than 2.6 million children returned to school, according to government figures. For many families, the fee had been the barrier. Remove it, and the children show up. But a government policy is only as durable as the government that holds it. Vice-President Mutale Nalumango framed the new legislation as deliberate insulation against exactly that risk: access to education should not depend on the priorities of whichever administration happens to be in power. A legal obligation is a different thing from a political one. That distinction may prove to be the law’s most lasting contribution. The scale of what’s already changed The education figures Zambia has released in recent years are striking. In 2025, the country recorded a 70 percent Grade 12 pass rate, its highest on record. The government has also expanded classroom construction, recruited additional teachers, and grown school feeding programs that now support millions of learners. Officials point to these figures as evidence that access and outcomes can improve together. Education researchers are more measured: the real test is whether investment continues to keep pace with enrolment as more children enter a system that was already under pressure before 2022. What the rest of the continent’s experience suggests Zambia is not the first African country to pursue free education at scale. Ghana’s Free Senior High School program brought a surge in enrolment after 2017, but also created enough overcrowding that authorities introduced a double-track system to manage the load. When Kenya abolished primary school fees in 2003, millions of new pupils arrived almost overnight. Tanzania, Sierra Leone, Malawi, and South Africa have all attempted different versions of fee-free schooling, each confronting the same underlying tension: getting children through the door is the easier half of the problem. The harder half is what happens once they’re inside. Class sizes, teacher quality, whether rural communities are served as well as urban ones: these are the variables that determine whether a legal right to education becomes a meaningful one. What comes next The law is a floor, not a ceiling. Zambia has guaranteed the right. What it builds on top of that guarantee will determine whether 2026 is remembered as a turning point or a paperwork milestone. For the 2.6 million children who came back to school after 2022, the question is less abstract. They are already there. The new law is, among other things, a promise to them that the door will stay open.     Did this solution stand out? Share it with a friend or support our mission by becoming an Emissary.The post A new law in Zambia makes free education much harder for future governments to take away first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.

A surprising look at how Father’s Day came to be
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A surprising look at how Father’s Day came to be

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Unlike Mother’s Day, which was swiftly embraced and made official in 1914, Father’s Day spent decades in limbo. Though it finally became a national holiday in 1972, the idea faced resistance for years—ironically, in a society dominated by men. Why was Father’s Day controversial? Many men in the early 20th century balked at the idea. At the time, Mother’s Day was framed around femininity and sentimentality, often celebrated with flowers and sweet gestures. But applying the same emotional tone to fathers didn’t sit right. As some historians have put it, men “scoffed” at efforts to “domesticate manliness” and considered the holiday a commercial gimmick. There was also a broader cultural mindset: in a patriarchal society where fathers were seen as authority figures, why dedicate a special day to them? Weren’t they already running the household? The women who fought to honor fathers While many dismissed the idea, two women worked to make Father’s Day real: Grace Golden Clayton proposed the first known Father’s Day service in 1908 after a mining disaster in West Virginia left hundreds of children fatherless. Her tribute, though heartfelt, didn’t catch on beyond the local community. Sonora Smart Dodd, however, made waves in Spokane, Washington, in 1910. Raised by a single father and inspired by Mother’s Day, she advocated for a similar holiday to honor dads. The city organized an official celebration on June 19, 1910, with churches delivering sermons about fatherhood and boys donning roses in tribute. It wasn’t an easy road to national recognition Despite early efforts, Father’s Day remained unofficial for decades. Congress rejected early proposals, and even as presidents from Woodrow Wilson to Calvin Coolidge supported the idea, legislation stalled. Progress resumed mid-century: In 1966, President Lyndon Johnson declared the third Sunday in June as Father’s Day by executive order. In 1972, President Richard Nixon signed it into law. The role of Father’s Day in hard times Economic forces helped the holiday along, too. During the Great Depression, retailers used Father’s Day to encourage spending on “practical gifts.” Later, during World War II, it gained traction as a way to honor men serving in the military and support American families. Rethinking what it means to be a dad Today, Father’s Day is about more than gifts. It reflects how much our view of fatherhood has changed. Fathers are no longer just breadwinners; they’re emotional anchors, caregivers, and partners. Whether a dad likes to barbecue, build LEGO castles, or read bedtime stories, Father’s Day now celebrates the diverse ways men show up for their families. And that’s perhaps the most meaningful part of the holiday: recognizing not just who fathers are, but the many roles they play in shaping their children’s lives.     Did this solution stand out? Share it with a friend or support our mission by becoming an Emissary.The post A surprising look at how Father’s Day came to be first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.

Video of students walking into high school in 2006 is bringing Millennials back to a more carefree time
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Video of students walking into high school in 2006 is bringing Millennials back to a more carefree time

Life for Millennials (those born between 1981 and 1996) looked very different during their teenage years than it does for today’s Gen Alpha and Gen Z teens. Millennial high schoolers were still hanging out and shopping at malls, choosing the best ringback tones for friends and family, styling low-rise jeans, and eating at retro Pizza Huts. A nostalgic video shared on Reddit from high school in 2006 captured the simplicity, style, and vibes of the time, prompting many Millennials to reminisce about their teenage years. From the lack of social media to fashion trends, here’s what Millennials had to say: Many Millennials confirmed it really was a simpler time Do you miss it? byu/Sad_Cow_577 inMillennials “Yeah notice not one kid is looking down at a cell phone. We had them back then but not to this level.” – satanssweatycheeks “I miss the simplicity. Not so much school or the people.” – juicytootnotfruit “Plus we lived in much simpler times. Social media wasn’t really a thing. Phones were still phones. New technology like iPods were cool, not creepy and intrusive like tech today. We weren’t tied to subscriptions for everything. We still had plenty of third spaces to just go hang out without spending a ton of money. We were still riding that new millennium high, where everything felt hopeful. Then we hit the recession in 2008 and it feels like everything’s been snowballing downhill since.” – RawBean7 “I remember when you had to be in college to get a Facebook account because you needed a college email address.” – lauvan26 “I miss having no bills and my job at Banana Republic lol.” – Blissfully “Graduated in 2003. Almost no one had a cellphone. Social media didn’t exist yet. The internet was confined to desktop computers. Gas was so cheap, we used to get a few buddies in the car and just drive around for fun all evening on a Saturday night. Just looking for… whatever. It was amazing.” – Polkawillneverdie17 Others commented on the fashion “You know those videos of the high school kids from the seventies and they look super old because of dated hair styles? Dated styles we attribute to old people. Do you think our kids will look at these and think, ‘you look so old!'” – User Unknown “Yes. I teach high school, almost none of my students wear jeans. That alone dates this video. Interesting!” – No9No9No9No9 “I graduated high school in 2006. I watched Mean Girls with a friend and her now high school aged son recently. His comment: ‘Wait, that’s what you guys ACTUALLY wore back then? You ACTUALLY dressed like that??!’ Flared jeans, flip flops, polo shirt. Check!” – AppliedGlamour “Best we can do is 5 layered polo shirts from American Eagle.” – showmenemelda “As someone who was in high school in 2006…there isn’t nearly enough midriffs showing.” – haysus25 @isabelclanc Another thing that would send 2006 us into a coma #nostalgia #millennial #nostalgic #2000s #2006 ♬ Just the Girl – The Click Five Some miss it. Some really don’t. “I feel like I’m one of those rare kids who had a great time in high school. If I could go back and do it again but do it better, I would. I wouldn’t want to be a high schooler in 2025 though.” – jarberry “No. Life was not good for me in those days. I had it hard at school and at home.” – HelgaGeePataki “I graduated 05 but man I’d kill to go back to that age for a weekend. Love my life now but I’d love that carefree feeling again. And my abs. I miss my abs.” – User Unknown “Nope. Got bullied in high school. Glad that is behind me. Couldn’t pay me enough to relive those days.” – brahbocop “I doooooo! I’d enjoy reliving a week in high school, especially if I could go back with my self-confidence as an adult instead of an awkward teen. I graduated in 2006. It feels like just yesterday.” – ExactPanda This article originally appeared last year. It has been updated. The post Video of students walking into high school in 2006 is bringing Millennials back to a more carefree time appeared first on Upworthy.

American shares his 9 realizations about the U.S. after 13 years abroad and it’s eye-opening
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American shares his 9 realizations about the U.S. after 13 years abroad and it’s eye-opening

Evan Edinger moved to London over 14 years ago to study abroad but never planned on staying overseas permanently. His goal was to get his degree, return to the United States, start his career, and make a life for himself. He thought of his time in London as a “temporary adventure.” But when he finished his degree, he found himself in an unexpected situation: He didn’t want to go back. “The longer I stayed in London,” Edinger shares on his YouTube channel, “the more I began to notice all of the assumptions that I’d grown up believing in America, the things I was brought up to believe were undeniably true and just the way the world worked. It turns out they weren’t true at all.” One of the benefits of living in another country is seeing your country of origin through different eyes. That perspective can cause you to appreciate some things and question other things. Edinger shares nine realizations he’s had about the U.S. since he left, starting with one of the most quintessentially American realities he found himself questioning. Starting with the hardest one: guns 1. Guns Edinger grew up in New Jersey and describes it as “quite a blue state,” but he was still immersed in the gun culture that views gun ownership as a fundamental part of being an American. “I was raised in a very pro-gun household,” Edinger says. “In my family home in America, we had a 12-gauge shotgun, a 10-gauge, a black powder rifle, and a .410 shotgun for the children. My dad would take us out some days to shoot empty cans of beer or clay pigeons or sometimes go hunting for pheasants or deer.” He says the notion of not owning a gun was unthinkable in his upbringing. “The idea that other countries do not allow guns is viewed more like these other countries are missing a fundamental right,” he says. His ideas about guns have changed dramatically since moving to London and living in a society without ubiquitous access to guns. “Visiting Philadelphia when I was younger was always scary to me because I never knew who had a gun, who wanted to rob me,” Edinger shares. “Visiting New Orleans a couple years ago, I was told by my hotel staff that a few days prior, a tourist was shot and died in the local Popeye’s Chicken because he caught a stray bullet of two people having an argument in the restaurant. So, that’s just something that people just have to deal with. This constant fear of I could just die being caught in a crossfire and there’s nothing I can really do about it because freedom. I’ve pretty much never felt that level of fear in London at all. And that alone was enough to sway my opinion on guns.” 2. Government “One thing that’s really drilled into you pretty much every year of American school is that American democracy is the end-all be-all of government and that it is the beacon of freedom other countries look to emulate. Then, once you become an adult and you see how dysfunctional the U.S. government is, you search for anything to feel better about it and usually settle on ‘Well, at least it’s not a third world dictatorship.'” But those aren’t the only two options. Edinger explains how the parliamentary system in the U.K. is far from perfect, but it tends to be more effective at actually getting things done because lawmakers aren’t constantly stymied by the inherently destructive two-party gridlock we have in the U.S. “It’s messy, yes, but after 13 years away, I’ve come to the belief that no system of government is perfect,” he says. “But most systems in Western Europe are far more effective than what I grew up believing was the ‘best in the world.'” 3. Walkability and Public Transport Mass transit has its perks. Photo credit: Canva In the U.S., having a car is practically a symbol of freedom, but Edinger says he’s never felt the need to have a car in his 14 years living in London. He says it’s been incredibly freeing to be able to walk and take public transit everywhere, and not just in the city. He’s been able to travel all over Europe, in larger cities and small towns, and the focus on walkable neighborhoods and public transportation is everywhere. “After having spent some time living in walkable neighborhoods, I would never ever choose to live in a car dependent place ever again,” Edinger says. “It is truly one of the most life-changing parts of living over here. And because I’m always walking everywhere, because I’m always cycling everywhere, it’s so much easier to be healthy and physically fit without even trying.” 4. Food Quality and Price Europe has different regulations than the U.S., Edinger explains, with an approach that leads to a lot less additives and chemicals being added to foods. “Europe’s food agency focuses on possibilities and the U.S.’s focuses on probabilities. Is it possible an unnecessary additive could be harmful? Europe prohibits it just to be safe. The US agency, the FDA, they only step in if the probability of it being harmful is high. So, that risk is passed on to the average American consumer.” Edinger also points out that the ability to walk down to the store to get fresh ingredients regularly makes it a lot easier to eat well. “It’s one of those things where once you experience both, there is no contest. No contest. So, it’s much easier to be healthy in Europe than in America.” The social safety net ones hit hardest 5. Healthcare in the U.S. vs. Europe “If my health does have issues, I am glad it’s not something that would ever bankrupt me or cause me to ever think about how much it would have to cost me just to be sick,” says Edinger. Americans often hear horror stories about socialized medicine, but Edinger’s experience with going to the doctor and even going to the hospital have been positive, and barely cost him anything. “There are only two types of people that are against the freeing social safety net that is universal healthcare,” says Edinger. “People that have never experienced socialized healthcare and people that profit from the broken system. That’s it.” Most Americans want it, but “most Americans” is not where the money is. 6. Consumer Protections in the U.S. vs Europe Edinger shares that he bought a MacBook Pro in 2019 that didn’t work right, and he hadn’t purchased AppleCare because he knew he didn’t have to. “If you buy a tech product in Europe, you have a reasonable expectation that it should last you at least two years free of defects,” says Edinger. “And if it’s not up to your expectations or breaks down before then, you can demand a return or replacement. This law protects consumers from shady business practices.” He ended up getting his full money back on the computer due to those consumer protections. “It’s laws like this where you really begin to notice a pattern that life in Europe is one that gives more rights to the everyday person over giant corporations and shared benefit over private,” says Edinger. 7. Worker Rights “A quick summary would be 28 days minimum paid holiday, one year paid maternity leave, two weeks paid paternity leave, sick leave, even the right against unlawful termination,” said Edinger. “When working part-time at Urban Outfitters in London, even though I worked less than 20 hours a week, I still got two days paid holiday per month. That’s insane, right? No, that’s just life over here. Meanwhile, I worked five years at a Pizza Hut in New Jersey for over 30 hours per week. Never got a single day of paid vacation.” Indeed, there’s more than a handful of European countries that guarantee at least a month of paid days off, with some countries actually requiring a certain number of days or weeks off. Europeans get far more generous paid leave than Americans do. Photo credit: Canva Edinger points out the irony that he was always taught that the U.S. was for the individual, for individual freedoms. But in his experience, in Europe individuals have more rights than those with money or power, while it’s the opposite in the U.S. 8. Money (Live to work or work to live?) Edinger says that most things are more affordable in Europe, from groceries to data plans, but Americans do earn higher salaries. “So if you earn a lot of money and money is your sole defining metric of success, then you can feel a lot more successful in the U.S.,” he says. “But because the culture in Europe is work to live and not live to work, you might find that the stress and cost tradeoffs and quality of life erode the value of that higher salary quite quickly.” What does he actually miss about America? 9. On Romanticizing Europe People often wonder if Americans romanticize Europe too much, and Edinger says the same question used to be asked of Europeans romanticizing America. But now that we have YouTube and social media and a better ability to see the realities of both places, he says what Americans “romanticize” about Europe is really just the things we want and don’t have. “I think most Americans who are eyeing up Europe are doing so because of the things that America is lacking. Nearly two in three Americans want universal healthcare. Well, America doesn’t offer that. Again, two in three Americans want European style vacation policies. America doesn’t offer that. And 53% of Americans would prefer to live in a walkable neighborhood, but sorry, America doesn’t offer that. The list goes on. If America were an actual democracy, I don’t think many of these people would be having romanticized views of Europe at all because they wouldn’t need to. They could have everything they wanted in the country they were born and raised.” Every place has tradeoffs, he admits Of course, every country has its problems and there are certainly downsides to moving abroad. Edinger acknowledges that but says it really boils down to what you value in life. Americans are taught to romanticize the U.S., and leaving it helps you see the reality, what’s good about your country and where it has room for improvement. “I think the main thing though out of everything that I miss about the U.S. that I can’t really get here is not rights, not freedoms, not anything that’s big on quality of life improvements,” says Edinger. “It’s just Mexican food and good ice cream.” You can follow Evan Edinger on YouTube for more on his experiences as an American living abroad. This article originally appeared last year. It has been updated. The post American shares his 9 realizations about the U.S. after 13 years abroad and it’s eye-opening appeared first on Upworthy.