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Donald Trump Provides Trump Water To East Palestine, Ohio …

Former US President Donald Trump speaks at the East Palestine Fire Department in East Palestine, ... [+] Ohio, on February 22, 2023. (Photo by REBECCA DROKE/AFP via Getty Images)

Take a wild guess as to whos providing Trump Water to residents of East Palestine, Ohio. And take a wild guess as to whos told everyone about it.

Well, you probably dont need 45 guesses. The answer to both of these questions was the 45th U.S. President and current Mar-A-Lago resident Donald Trump. On February 22, Trump visited the Eastern Ohio site of the massive train and environmental accident that Ive described for Forbes. This was one day before U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg was scheduled to visit the town in person for the first time since the Norfolk Southern NSC train derailed on February 3. And in addition to a fresh supply of red Make American Great Again hats and lots of references to himself, Trump did bring some other things: namely bottled water, cleaning supplies, and some Goya beans. In a speech given alongside local officials, Trump declared, Were bringing in thousands of bottles of water, Trump Water, actually. Most of it, uh, some of it, we had to go to a much lesser quality of water, as you can see in the video tweeted by journalist Aaron Rupar:

Bottled water was probably a welcome stopgap sight for East Palestine residents who have been clamoring for more attention from authorities. The whole train wreck of the situation has left many questions about the water quality there. The derailment and subsequent fire and controlled release of hazardous materials have resulted in billow and billows of dangerous chemicals like vinyl chloride going into the air and potentially into the land and water in the surrounding Eastern Ohio and Western Pennsylvania area. It remains to be seen what the longer term effects of all this pollution may be. So you can understand why the residents might be skeptical about drinking the tap water there.

Now, its not clear what would make Trump Water different from other types of water. For example, is it somehow wetter than other types of water? Some on Twitter have suggested that the water may be 13-years old, which may be good for wine but may not be great for water sitting in plastic bottles. For example, heres what Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-New York) tweeted:

And its not clear how many of the bottles provided by Trump actually had Trumps name on it or perhaps something like an image of him with lasers coming out of his eyes.

Nevertheless, a number of East Palestine residents thanked Trump for his visit and the supplies that he brought. He, in turn, couldnt quite keep his delivery bottled up and added, You want to get those Trump bottles more than anybody else. Trump also spent some time mixing with the East Palestine residents as the following tweet from The Associated Press showed:

His visit included a stop at, surprise, surprise, a local McDonalds, where he ordered food for first responders. During his visit, Trump, not surprisingly, criticized the Biden Administration for not doing more for East Palestine because criticize others is what many politicians do. For example, he told East Palestine residents, In too many cases, your goodness and perseverance were met with indifference and betrayal. Various residents did thank Trump for visiting and not forgetting about them.

Meanwhile, various politicians have continued their finger-pointing-from-far that has been going on for the past couple weeks. For example, Senator Marco Rubio (R-Florida) called Buttigieg m.i.a. on the derailment, which presumably meant missing in action rather than Miami International Airport. Buttigieg, in turn, fired back, accusing Rubio of signing a 2021 letter that supports waivers that would reduce visual track inspections, as you can see in the Twitter exchange below:

Trumps visit and deliverance of some bottled water drew praise from many of his supporters on social media. This helped the words Trump Water to trend on Twitter. However, others didnt keep their skeptical opinions about the Trump show bottled up. They blamed the East Palestine crash on the Trump Administration for rescinding rail safety protections that the Obama Administration had put in place. For example, The Lincoln Project called Trumps visit purely political theatre and a sad attempt to mask his failures as a President in the following tweet:

Theres also the question about how much the Trump Administration had weakened the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) during his time in office. After all, Trump wasnt exactly known as the environmental President. Hes the guy who once said, I never understood wind, when arguing against the use of windmills. And when he wasnt trying to break wind, Trump installed energy industry insiders Scott Pruitt and then Andrew R. Wheeler as EPA Administrators during his time in the White House. The Trump Administration also dismantled close to 100 policies that were focused on protecting the air, water, wildlife, and people against pollution and toxic chemicals, as described by Nadja Popovich, Livia Albeck-ripka, and Kendra Pierre-louis for the New York Times NYT .

Its not clear how much the Biden Administration has been able to re-bolster the EPA in the two years since President Joe Biden took office. Consumer advocate and environmental activist Erin Brockovich pointed out that the EPA has not exactly been swimming in resources:

So the bigger need is funding to assist with the clean up of all that junk thats been spewed into the environment. The EPA has announced that Norfolk Southern will be responsible for cleanup costs as this tweet from the CBS Evening News indicated:

But dont hold your breath about how much Norfolk Southern will end up paying until it actually happens.

One things for sure, theres been plenty of blame to go around for the current mess in East Palestine. While bottled water, cleaning supplies, and beans may seem to help East Palestine residents in the short term, they can only provide so much relief. They are far from enough to compensate for the lack of railroad safety regulations that could have prevented the derailment in the first place. At the same time, Trump wouldnt have had the opportunity to swoop in on Wednesday had there been more attention paid to the East Palestine residents during the nearly three weeks since the train went off its tracks. Additionally, the EPA needs to have resources to be able to prevent and respond to pollution and environmental disasters. Our environment isnt just some toilet bowl where you can dump some oopsies into and quickly flush them away. The Norfolk Southern accident could have wide-ranging effects on the surrounding ecosystem. In other words, it will be the people of the U.S. who will end up paying for it in many ways.

This Norfolk Southern disaster has gone off the rails in many ways. While providing bottled water may seem like a nice short term stopgap and makes for good photo ops, it doesnt really solve the bigger problems. It doesnt really provide more funding to relief and environmental efforts. It doesnt help prevent a similar situation from happening again. It ends up being essentially a watered down solution rather than one that actually fixes the bigger problems.

Original post:
Donald Trump Provides Trump Water To East Palestine, Ohio ...

Donald Trumps Train Wreck Appearance In Polluted East …

Oh, its wonderful to be here in the town of East Palestine, not a great name, said the James Austin Johnson-portrayed Donald Trump tonight, kicking off Saturday Night Live. Im here and I brought hats, cameras and hats, he added after taking a swipe at Joe Biden for visiting the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv and Volodymyr Zelenskyyearlier this week and had a visit from his own legal troubles.

Woody Harrelsons Chaotic SNL Monologue Includes Covid Crack; Scarlett Johansson Surprises Host With Five-Timers Club Jacket

'SNL' Host Woody Harrelson Suggests The Perfect Jack White Pairing

'America's Got Talent' Star Nightbirde To Release Album On Anniversary Of Her Death

Thats why you need me, the MAGA hat-wearing SNL Trump went on to say. I feel like I could Schitts Creek this place, he added, a reference to the multi-Emmy winning comedy.

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Check out the video above.

Just over three days after the former and looking to be future POTUS made a self-aggrandizing trip to the small Ohio town savaged by a massive chemical burn-off that followed a train derailment, tonights SNL cold open definitely started out timelier than most the show has had this 48th season. Having done double duty for months as both Trump and Biden, Johnson again enthusiastically showed the former is his strong suit.

Modelling what was a train wreck of an appearance by the real-life trump in East Palestine on Wednesday, Johnson riffed on the beautiful rainbows and discoloration of the towns water, Rihannas Super Bowl halftime show and your train exploded and who do we blame?

The answer from SNLs Trump, as in real life, was Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg.

Story continues

This was his responsibility. Unfortunately, he was too busy being a nerd and being gay, Johnsons Trump deadpanned to big laughs. But this would have never happened under my administration. People are saying I made the trains less safe. Not true. Okay, not true. I did a lot for trains. I made them bigger, faster, less safe perhaps.

Coming a day after the one-year anniversary of Russias brutish invasion of Ukraine, tonights edition of the long-running NBC late-nighter had plenty of material to draw from. Beside the very serious war on the Eastern edge of NATO, there is the crazy and deadly wet weather in California, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greens Presidents Day call for a national divorce, and escalating friction in GOP ranks as ex-pals Trump and Ron DeSantis bicker and foot-stamp over the 2024 nomination and that looming indictment.

The return to the seemingly bottomless pit of Trump, who controversially hosted SNL in the midst of the 2016 campaign, wasnt exactly the most original approach the show could have taken tonight but it was a tried and true tactic that certainly did not seem tired.

Taking the dangerous and absurd turns of Trumpland up a notch, SNL also brought out Emily Kohrs, as played by cast member Chloe Fineman.

If you missed her media tour this week, the chatty Kohrs in the foreperson of the special grand jury looking into Trumps efforts to overturn the 2020 election results in Georgia. Korhs nudge nudge, wink wink interviews on closed-doors deliberations may threaten the case itself. In real life, Trump called the Georgia grand jury a Kangaroo court and mocked Kohrs herself.

On SNL, the mock Trump said: Can you believe that? They almost had me and then this little horse girl comes in and saves the day. Thank you Emily.

Back for the first time since February 4, tonights SNL sees host Woody Harrelson joining the Five-Timer Club. Coming off hosting stints as far back as the Cheers days of 1989 (followed by 1992, 2014 and 2019), White House Plumbers star Harrelson also popped into SNL back in the early days of the 2020 presidential campaign as then-candidate Joe Biden. In what likely no coincidence, tonight is also the fifth time Jack White has rocked 30 Rockefeller Plazas studio 8Has SNLs musical guest.

Next week, Saturday Night Live will see Kansas City Chief tight end and Super Bowl champ Travis Kelce in his hosting debut, with Kelsea Ballerini as musical guest. On March 11, the show will have Wednesday star Jenna Ortega fronting SNL with The 1975 as musical act.

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Donald Trumps Train Wreck Appearance In Polluted East ...

Timeline of the George Zimmerman Murder Trial – ABC News

June 24, 2013— -- The shooting of Trayvon Martin by George Zimmerman and the investigation leading up to the murder trial has spanned 16 months and many legal bombshells.

Here is a recap of how the case has unfolded:

Feb. 26, 2012 At about 7:17 pm George Zimmerman shoots Trayvon Martin as the 17-year-old is walking back from a convenience store in Sanford, Fla., Zimmerman, a neighborhood watchman, had called 911 about the "suspicious teen" and allegedly followed him. He immediately told police he shot Martin in self-defense after a scuffle. He is taken into custody but released that night. No charges are filed.

March 8, 2012 - Tracy Martin and Sybrina Fulton, the teenager's parents, create a Change.org petition calling for Zimmerman's arrest. Within 10 days it would have 200,000 signatures, and would swell at the pace of about 10,000 signatures an hour for several days.

March 9: Two weeks after Martin was killed, Trayvon Martin's family attorney Benjamin Crump demands that police release the 911 tapes or make an arrest. Police declined to comment at the time, but told ABC News the tapes would be released the following week.

March 13: Sanford Police Chief Billy Lee said there is no evidence to dispute Zimmerman's assertion that he shot Martin in self defense. That same day the lead investigator on the case Chris Serino files an affidavit recommending Zimmerman be charged with manslaughter.

March 16: Martin's family first hears 911 calls made the night of the shooting. The cries for help send the boy's mother screaming from the room and prompted his father to declare, "He killed my son," a family representative tells ABC News. In a letter a day earlier Zimmerman's father insists it was George's voice crying for help. Tracy Martin's account is later disputed, when a police officer quotes Martin as saying the voice crying out was not his son.

March 19: The U.S. Justice Department announces it will investigate Martin's death.

March 22, 2012 State Attorney Norm Wolfinger recuses himself from the case, does not provide an explanation. Sanford police chief Bill Lee announces he will resign "temporarily." Rallies calling for George Zimmerman's arrest start taking place across the nation.

March 23, 2012 - President Obama comments on the case, saying he thinks the shooting should be investigated and telling reporters: "If I had a son, he'd look like Trayvon."

Florida Gov. Rick Scott appoints state attorney Angela Corey as a special prosecutor to look into the case. He also creates a task force to look into the state's "stand your ground" self-defense law.

March 26, 2012 - Martin's family confirms that Martin had been in Sanford visiting his father because he was suspended from school after school officers found a plastic bag containing traces of marijuana in his backpack.

March 28, 2012 ABC News obtains surveillance video from the Sanford Police station showing George Zimmerman in police custody and without significant visible injuries approximately an hour after the shooting is released. Later, enhanced video show marks to his head and a swollen nose.

April 3, 2012 - The FBI announces it has opened its own investigation into the Martin shooting.

April 9, 2012 - Zimmerman launches TheRealGeorgeZimmerman.com, replete with a paypal account for donations for his legal fund.

April 10, 2012 In a bizarre press conference, Zimmerman's attorneys, Hal Uhrig and Craig Sonner, announce they have lost contact with their client and no longer represent him.

April 11, 2012 - Special prosecutor Angela Corey announces that Zimmerman is being charged with second-degree murder in the shooting and that he is in police custody. Mark O'Mara, an Orlando defense attorney is retained.

April 20, 2012 ABC News obtains a photo of Zimmerman taken moments after the shooting. The photo shows Zimmerman with a bloodied head. His lawyers allude to the photo during his bail hearing later that morning. Judge Kenneth Lester grants Zimmerman $150,000 bail provided he wear electronic monitoring devices.

April 29, 2012 Zimmerman's attorney creates a website called GZlegalcase.com promising to continuously update the site with content. A donation tab is also placed on the site

June 1, 2012 Zimmerman's bond is revoked after the state provides evidence indicating that he and his wife were speaking in code concerning their finances. Zimmerman claimed during his bail hearing that he was financially indigent. However, it was revealed that he knew that he had at least $135,000 in his bank account after receiving donations from supporters online.

June 3, 2012 - Zimmerman wearing a bullet proof vest is booked back behind bars

June 12, 2012 Shellie Zimmerman is arrested and charged with one count of perjury for lying under oath about the state of her finances during her husband's initial bail hearing.

June 21, 2012 A trove of information including video re-enactments are released on GZlegalcase.com showing relatively consistent statements provided to police by Zimmerman in the initial days after the shooting. Among them: "He took my head and slammed it against the concrete several times, and each time I thought my head was going to explode."

July 5, 2012 Judge Kenneth Lester once again gives Zimmerman bond. But this time he sets the amount at $1 million.

July 13, 2012 Zimmerman legal team files a motion to disqualify Judge Lester from the case.

Aug. 30, 2012 Following the ruling of the 5th District Court of Appeal, Circuit Judge Kenneth Lester disqualifies himself from the bench and is replaced by Judge Debra Nelson

April 30, 2013 Zimmerman waives a hearing under the states "Stand Your Ground" Law. This means the state will not see the defense presentation of its evidence until the trial.

May 23, 2013 Zimmerman defense releases new photos taken from Trayvon Martin cell phone including a picture of what appears to be a marijuana plant and gun. The controversial images are met with outrage by the Martin family and others who claim they are meant to tarnish the reputation of Martin and are irrelevant to the case.

June 20, 2013 Both sides agreed on an all-women jury plus four alternates.

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Timeline of the George Zimmerman Murder Trial - ABC News

Why George Zimmerman was acquitted – MSNBC.com

For the six Florida jurors who decided the fate of George Zimmerman, four minutes likely proved crucial. Saturday night, after hours of deliberation, a jury found Zimmerman not guilty of second-degree murder or manslaughter in the death of Trayvon Martin. Zimmerman claimed he shot the unarmed teen in self-defense following a confrontation in Sanford, Fla., in February of 2012.

During those four minutes the 29-year-old Zimmerman claimed he was attacked by the teenager and brutally beaten before he reached for his concealed nine-millimeter handgun and shot Martin in the chest in order to save his own life.

Zimmerman's defense attorney Mark O'Mara set aside four minutes of his closing remarks during which the jurors heard only silence. While prosecutors claimed that Zimmerman spent that four minutes stalking Martin, Zimmerman claimed he followed a police dispatcher's advice to abandon pursuit and headed back to his car when Martin attacked him.

Prosecutors sought to sow doubt in jurors' minds about Zimmerman's honesty, pointing to inconsistencies in his story they claimed were designed to concoct a narrative of self-defense Zimmerman allegedly knew would be necessary to prove his innocence. But even if the jury did not trust Zimmerman, the burden of proof was on the state to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that his story was untrue. The defense needed only to sow enough doubt for an acquittal, not prove that everything Zimmerman said was accurate or honest. The defense didn't have to prove that Zimmerman was a good person or model citizenor even that he was telling the truth about what happenedthey only needed to prevent the state from ensuring that the jurors felt certain beyond a reasonable doubt about what happened during that four minutes.

Removing reasonable doubt was what the prosecution believed the testimony of Rachel Jeantel, who was speaking to Martin on the phone before his encounter with Zimmerman, would do. Jeantel testified that Martin was frightened because he was being followed, and that she heard Martin ask someone why that person was following him, before shouting "get off." After that, Jeantel said, the call went dead.

There were prior inconsistencies in her account regarding her age, and whether she had attended a wake for Martin, leading observers to speculate on whether the jury would find Jeantel believable. Given the jury's verdict, it seems likely that they did not, or that even if they did, it was insufficient to account for those four minutes during which only two people truly know what happened.

Only one of them is still alive.

See the article here:
Why George Zimmerman was acquitted - MSNBC.com

Quantum Could Solve Countless ProblemsAnd Create New Ones | Time

One of the secrets to building the worlds most powerful computer is probably perched by your bathroom sink.

At IBMs Thomas J. Watson Research Center in New York States Westchester County, scientists always keep a box of dental flossReach is the preferred brandclose by in case they need to tinker with their oil-drum-size quantum computers, the latest of which can complete certain tasks millions of times as fast as your laptop.

Inside the shimmering aluminum canister of IBMs System One, which sits shielded by the same kind of protective glass as the Mona Lisa, are three cylinders of diminishing circumference, rather like a set of Russian dolls. Together, these encase a chandelier of looping silver wires that cascade through chunky gold plates to a quantum chip in the base. To work properly, this chip requires super-cooling to 0.015 kelvinsa smidgen above absolute zero and colder than outer space. Most materials contract or grow brittle and snap under such intense chill. But ordinary dental floss, it turns out, maintains its integrity remarkably well if you need to secure wayward wires.

But only the unwaxed, unflavored kind, says Jay Gambetta, IBMs vice president of quantum. Otherwise, released vapors mess everything up.

Photograph by Thomas Prior for TIME

Buy a print of the Quantum cover here

Its a curiously homespun facet of a technology that is set to transform pretty much everything. Quantums unique ability to crunch stacks of data is already optimizing the routes of thousands of fuel tankers traversing the globe, helping decide which ICU patients require the most urgent care, and mimicking chemical processes at the atomic level to better design new materials. It also promises to supercharge artificial intelligence, with the power to better train algorithms that can finally turn driverless cars and drone taxis into a reality. Quantum AI simulations exhibit a degree of effectiveness and efficiency that is mind-boggling, U.S. National Cyber Director Chris Inglis tells TIME.

Read More: DeepMinds CEO Helped Take AI Mainstream. Now Hes Urging Caution

Quantums earliest adopters are asset-management firmsfor which incorporating quantum calculations involves few increased overhead costsbut commercial uses arent far behind. Spanish firm Multiverse Computing has run successful pilot projects with multinational clients like BASF and Bosch that show its quantum algorithms can double foreign-exchange trading profits and catch almost four times as many production-line defects. Quantum deep-learning algorithms are completely different from classical ones, says Multiverse CEO Enrique Lizaso Olmos. You can train them faster, try more strategies, and they are much better at getting the correlations that matter from a lot of data.

Quantum chandeliers may look spectacular but they arent practical for next generation computers. IBM has instead designed flexible cabling to replace the looped wires.

Thomas Prior for TIME

Data received from quantum computers must be fed to rack of classical control electronic systems to process the calculations.

Thomas Prior for TIME

Tech giants from Google to Amazon and Alibabanot to mention nation-states vying for technological supremacyare racing to dominate this space. The global quantum-computing industry is projected to grow from $412 million in 2020 to $8.6 billion in 2027, according to an International Data Corp. analysis.

Whereas traditional computers rely on binary bitsswitches either on or off, denoted as 1s and 0sto process information, the qubits that underpin quantum computing are tiny subatomic particles that can exist in some percentage of both states simultaneously, rather like a coin spinning in midair. This leap from dual to multivariate processing exponentially boosts computing power. Complex problems that currently take the most powerful supercomputer several years could potentially be solved in seconds. Future quantum computers could open hitherto unfathomable frontiers in mathematics and science, helping to solve existential challenges like climate change and food security. A flurry of recent breakthroughs and government investment means we now sit on the cusp of a quantum revolution. I believe we will do more in the next five years in quantum innovation than we did in the last 30, says Gambetta.

But any disrupter comes with risks, and quantum has become a national-security migraine. Its problem-solving capacity will soon render all existing cryptography obsolete, jeopardizing communications, financial transactions, and even military defenses. People describe quantum as a new space race, says Dan OShea, operations manager for Inside Quantum Technology, an industry publication. In October, U.S. President Joe Biden toured IBMs quantum data center in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., calling quantum vital to our economy and equally important to our national security. In this new era of great-power competition, China and the U.S. are particularly hell-bent on conquering the technology lest they lose vital ground. This technology is going to be the next industrial revolution, says Tony Uttley, president and COO for Quantinuum, a Colorado-based firm that offers commercial quantum applications. Its like the beginning of the internet, or the beginning of classical computing.

Quantum chips are extremely sensitive. This decade-old IBM quantum processor was used in an experiment that proved how background microwaves affect qubits.

Thomas Prior for TIME

If anything, its surprising that traditional computing has taken us so far. From the trail-blazing Apple II of the late 1970s to todays smartphones and supercomputers, all processors break down tasks into binary. But life is so complex that rendering information in such a rudimentary manner is like playing a Rachmaninoff concerto in Morse code.

Quantum is also more in tune with nature. Moleculesthe building blocks of the universeare multiple atoms bound together by electrons that exist as part of each. The way these electrons essentially occupy two states at once is what quantum particles replicate, presenting applications for natural and material sciences by predicting how drugs interact with the human body, or substances perform under corrosion. Traditional manufacturing takes calculated guesses to make breakthroughs through trial and error; by mirroring the natural world, quantum should allow advances to be purposefully designed.

Read More: Column: How Our Cells Strategize To Keep Us Alive

While the worlds biggest companies, alongside hundreds of startups, are clamoring to harness quantum, IBM has emerged in recent years as the industry leader. Today, the firm has over 60 functioning quantum computersmore than the rest of the world combinedand a roster of collaborators that include titans of practically every industry from Exxon-Mobil to Sony. Its a welcome return to technologys zenith for the storied firm, founded over a century ago to produce tabulating machines fed with punch cards. In recent years, IBM had fallen behind rivals like Apple and Microsoft by not seizing the initiative with cloud computing and AI. Quantum offers some redemption. Its great to be back at the top again, says one executive. Its no secret that we let things slip by not jumping on cloud.

In November, IBM unveiled its new 433-qubit Osprey chipthe worlds most powerful quantum processor, the speed of which, if represented in traditional bits, would far exceed the total number of atoms in the known universe. IBM has more than 20 quantum computers available on its open-source quantum tool kit Qiskit, which has been downloaded more than 450,000 times to date. In order to build an industry around quantum, some machines are free to use, while paying clients such as startups and scholars can access more powerful ones remotely on a lease basis. IBM has a bold road map to launch a 1,121-qubit processor this year and, by 2025, surpass 4,000 qubits by creating modular quantum circuits that link multiple processor chips in the same computer. Modularity is a big inflection point, says Dario Gil, IBM senior vice president and director of research. We now have a way to engineer machines that will have tens of thousands of qubits.

Inside the IBM research lab in Yorktown Heights, New York

Thomas Prior for TIME

IBM research lab in Yorktown Heights, New York.

Thomas Prior for TIME

Quantums industrial uses are boundless. Inside BMWs headquarters in Munich there stands a wall that gives vehicle designers sleepless nights. Creating a new car model from scratch takes at least four years. First, designers use computer-aided styling to sketch an exterior that combines beauty with practicality. Next, a scale model is carved in clay and placed in a wind tunnel to assess aerodynamics. After countless decisions on interior, engine performance, and so on comes the ultimate test: a prototype is driven at 35 m.p.h. into that fabled wall to test how it performs in a crash. Should the car fail to meet various safety criteria, its back to the drawing board.

This is where quantum can help by accurately predicting how complex materials of different shapes will perform under stress. Robust simulated crash tests can save up to six months in the whole process, says Carsten Sapia, vice president of strategy, governance, and IT security at BMW Group, which has partnered with French quantum firm Pasqal. Quantum computing will also help us find the new optimum between design, maximum interior space, and best aerodynamics.

Thats just the start. Modern business teems with optimization problems that are ideally suited to quantum algorithms and could save time, energy, and resources. Were not just building the technology, we have to enable the workforce to use it, explains Katie Pizzolato, IBMs director of quantum strategy and applications research.

Sapia says finding uses for the technology is easy; the challenge will be ensuring that all divisions of BMW are able to utilize it. Already, BMW is unable to communicate from Europe to its cars in China for driving software maintenance and monitoring because of increasingly strict curbs on the transfer of data across borders. In the future, we will rely on everywhere in the world having access to quantum technology to run our business, Sapia says. So how can we set it up so no matter what happens on a geopolitical scale that we still have access to this technology?

The full chandelier inside a quantum computer.

Thomas Prior for TIME

Over the past few years quantum has moved from a footnote to the top of the global security agenda. To date, 17 countries have national quantum strategies and four more are developing them. China has invested an estimated $25 billion in quantum research since the mid-1980s, according to Quantum Computing Report. Its top quantum scientist, Pan Jianwei, led the launch of the worlds first quantum satellite in 2016 and in 2021 unveiled a then record-breaking 56-qubit quantum computer. Chinas 14th Five-Year Plan, published in March 2021, made mastery of quantum a policy priority. The blurred line between industry and national security in China gives them an advantage, says David Spirk, former chief data officer at the Department of Defense.

In response, the White House in May published a National Security Memorandum that ordered all federal agencies to transition to post-quantum security owing to significant risks to economic and national security. Given that upgrading critical infrastructure can take decades, and literally everything connected to the internet is at risk, the impetus is to act now. We realized that while [quantum is] wonderful for humanity, the first thing people are going to do is weaponize these systems, says Skip Sanzeri, founder and COO of QuSecure, a post-quantum cybersecurity firm enlisted by the U.S. military and federal government to handle what he says could be a $1 trillion cybersecurity upgrade.

Still, Spirk worries that the U.S. risks falling behind and is calling for a Manhattan Projectlike focus on quantum. Of the over $30 billion spent globally on quantum last year, according to the World Economic Forum, China accounted for roughly half and the E.U. almost a quarter. The U.S. National Quantum Initiative, meanwhile, spent just $1.2 billiona figure Spirk calls trivial against $1 trillion in total defense spending. This is not a coming wave, he says, its here.

Read More: The World Economic Forums Klaus Schwab on What Lies Ahead

The stakes couldnt be higher. Today, practically all cybersecuritywhether WhatsApp messages, bank transfers, or digital handshakesis based on RSA, an asymmetric cryptography algorithm used to safely transfer data. But while a regular computer needs billions of years to crack RSA, a fast quantum computer would take just hours. In December, a team of scientists in China published a paper that claimed it had a quantum algorithm that could break RSA with a 372-qubit computer (though its conclusions are hotly debated). The race is now on to devise postquantum securitya job that falls to the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology, or NIST. In 2016, NIST announced a competition for programmers to propose new post-quantum encryption algorithms. The results were mixed: one of the finalists announced on July 5, 2022, has since been cracked by a regular laptop in a little over an hour.

In some ways, its already too late. Even though quantum computers powerful enough to crack RSA are a few years away from being openly available, hackers are already seizing and storing sensitive data in the knowledge that they will be able to access it via quantum very soon. Every day that you dont convert to a quantum-safe protocol, theres no recovery plan, Gil says.

The glass shell around the quantum computer allows IBM to tightly control the temperature inside. This is critical for the quantum chip, which has to be kept at a fraction above absolute zero.

Thomas Prior for TIME

The war in Ukraine has also served as a wake-up call. It is historys first hot conflict to begin with cyber-attacks, as Russia targeted vital -communications and infrastructure to lay the groundwork for its military assault. Public services, energy grids, media, banks, businesses, and nonprofit organizations were subjected to a cyberblitzkrieg, impacting the distribution of medicines, food, and relief supplies. Modern warfare and nationalsecurity mechanisms are grounded in the speed and precision of decisionmaking. If your computer is faster than theirs, you win, its pretty simple, says Spirk. Quantum is that next leap.

Read More: Exclusive: OpenAI Used Kenyan Workers on Less Than $2 Per Hour to Make ChatGPT Less Toxic

But malign intentions are just one hazard. With the U.S. embroiled in a new Cold War, its also unclear if China and Russia would adopt new NIST protocols, not least since in the past, RSA cryptography has allegedly been breached by the U.S. National Security Agency. In September, National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said quantum would have an outsized importance over the coming decade, adding that export controls could be used to maintain U.S. advantage. Competing post-quantum security standards across Washingtons and Beijings spheres of influence have the potential to cleave the world into divergent blocs, with grave implications for global trade. [The] balkanization of what we know today as a free and open internet is distinctly possible, Inglis says.

The trepidation surrounding quantum doesnt stem solely from security risks. We trust classical computers in part because we can verify their computations with pen and paper. But quantum computers involve such arcane physics, and deal with such complex problems, that traditional verification is extremely tricky. For now, its possible to simulate many quantum calculations on a traditional super-computer to check the outcome. But soon will come a time when trusting a quantum computer will require a leap of faith. Trust building across the entire ecosystem right now is really important, says Uttley.

Boeing, for one, has been working with IBMs quantum team since 2020 on designing new materials for its next generation of aircraft. But given the colossal reputational stakes, the firm is in no rush. The modeling tools that we use to design our airplanes are closely monitored, says Jay Lowell, chief engineer for disruptive computing and networks at Boeing. To turn [quantum] into an operational code is a huge, huge hurdle.

One that IBM knows only too well. But by making its quantum computers open source, and welcoming academics and entrepreneurs from all over, the firm hopes to mitigate the hesitancy. As Gil puts it, this is a new frontier of humanity.

With reporting by Leslie Dickstein

Correction, Jan. 28

The original version of this story misstated the name of a French quantum firm. It is Pasqal, not Pascal.

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Write to Charlie Campbell at charlie.campbell@time.com.

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Quantum Could Solve Countless ProblemsAnd Create New Ones | Time