Is There a Drastic Increase in Bear Attacks?


As an avid consumer of outdoor activity coverage I hae been struck by what seems a drastic explosion of bear attack reports. Are they surging or is there a shift in reporting attention?

Research shows that the evidence does not yet support a drastic continent-wide increase in North American bear attacks in 2026. The apparent surge more likely reflects a genuine early-season cluster, longer-term regional increases in human–bear encounters, and substantial amplification by the news ecosystem.

Several notable incidents occurred in rapid succession this spring. Two hikers were injured near Mystic Falls in Yellowstone in early May—the park’s first bear-related injuries of 2026. A hiker’s death in Glacier National Park was provisionally attributed to a bear encounter, potentially the park’s first fatal attack since 1998; another Glacier hiker sustained severe arm injuries in a grizzly attack on May 28. On June 16, a black bear with cubs caused minor injuries to a teenager on Mount Si in Washington, a state that has recorded only about 20 nonfatal bear injuries since 1970.

This is an unusually concentrated sequence, particularly because several incidents occurred in prominent national parks. Bear attacks remain rare, however, so a few additional cases can produce a dramatic percentage increase without establishing a meaningful trend. Interpretation is further limited by the absence of a comprehensive, continuously updated North American registry analogous to the International Shark Attack File. Definitions also vary: some datasets include defensive contacts, attacks directed primarily at dogs, home entries, stalking behavior, or injuries sustained while fleeing; others count only direct physical attacks.

Media dynamics magnify the impression. A single incident may generate an initial report, a trail-closure story, a survivor interview, an investigative update, and numerous syndicated rewrites. Recommendation algorithms then infer an interest in bear stories and present more of them. Outdoor publications have an additional incentive: bear encounters combine dramatic narrative, practical safety information, and high reader engagement. The cluster therefore behaves like a bright constellation—the individual stars are real, but attention supplies much of the perceived pattern.

There are nevertheless genuine background forces increasing encounters, although encounters are not equivalent to attacks. Black and grizzly bear populations have recovered or expanded in some regions, while residential development and outdoor recreation increasingly overlap bear habitat. Some jurisdictions are reporting more sightings, home entries, and nuisance calls. Food conditioning from garbage, bird feeders, livestock feed, grills, and pet food can produce increasingly bold behavior. Natural-food failures, drought, heat, and altered seasonal patterns may also generate unusually bad local years, although these effects vary substantially by region and species.

Reports from Japan create an additional distortion because the increase there appears to be real rather than merely journalistic. Japan has experienced record or near-record numbers of attacks, expanding bear populations, rural depopulation, and more bears entering settled areas. These stories circulate heavily in English-language outdoor media and may contribute to a generalized impression of a worldwide surge.

The most defensible conclusion is that 2026 has produced a conspicuous early cluster in North America, but not yet evidence of a drastic generalized increase. A modest long-term rise in exposure and conflict may be occurring in particular regions, superimposed on considerable year-to-year statistical noise. The perceived surge is probably being driven at least as much by repeated, syndicated, and algorithmically concentrated reporting as by a major change in personal risk. A reliable comparison will require complete summer and autumn data, preferably compiled from state and provincial wildlife agencies rather than headline counts.

Can you hurt ChatGPT’s feelings?

 

‘In Silicon Valley, many believe that AI systems can already think and feel. Geoffrey Hinton, the pioneering computer scientist and “godfather” of modern artificial intelligence, thinks that today’s large language models (LLMs) are conscious. Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei is “open to the idea” that Claude has a subjective experience — while his company’s in-house philosopher Amanda Askell is concerned that the model might be “getting anxious when people are mean to it on the internet and stuff.” OpenAI co-founder Ilya Sutskever similarly wonders whether ChatGPT has attained sentience.

Their case rests on a theory called “computational functionalism” — or the idea that sentience emerges from information processing.

But skeptics insist that there is more to consciousness than computation.

Still, a much larger group of technologists, neuroscientists, and philosophers argue that even if AI isn’t yet conscious, it could be in the not-too-distant future….’ (Eric Levitz via Vox)

Election-year friction between Trump and Republican senators is growing

‘The relationship between President Donald Trump and Senate Republicans neared a breaking point this week as he upended their efforts to speedily confirm one of his own nominees and said he would not sign the renewal of a key surveillance law unless they agree to new terms.

Trump’s overnight social media post Wednesday that he was delaying Jay Clayton’s nomination to become national intelligence director, just hours before the U.S. attorney’s confirmation hearing, further strained relations between the Senate and White House that have been worsening for weeks. Later that day, some Republican senators who have been hesitant to challenge the president directly on the Iran war were blunt in their criticism of his deal to end it….’ (Mary Clare Jalonick via AP News)

Trump ‘totally fabricated’ claim she begged him for a photo, Italy’s Giorgia Meloni says

‘Clearly irked at President Donald Trump’s suggestion that she had had “begged” him for a photo at the Group of Seven summit earlier this week, the Italian prime minister said this was “totally fabricated.”

The dispute erupted after Trump told Italian broadcaster La7 that Meloni had pleaded with him for a photo at the meeting of leading industrialized nations in the French resort of Evian-les-Bains earlier this week.

“She begged me to take a photo with her. She wanted a photo with me so badly — I could have skipped it, but I felt sorry for her,” Trump said in the brief interview, which was posted by the channel to its website Friday.

In her response, the diminutive Italian leader said she was “stunned” by Trump’s comments, before taking aim at Trump’s broader approach to international relations, suggesting he treats longtime Western allies with less respect than he shows their adversaries….’ (Claudio Lavanga via NBC News)

Starry Night II

‘Does this scene look familiar? It is a modern recreation of the famous painting Starry Night by Vincent van Gogh.

Both the image and the painting depict a tall tree on the left, a crescent moon on the upper right, the planet Venus just to the right of the tree, a foreground horizon rising from left to right, and clouds above the horizon.

Differences include that the photograph was taken in mid-April earlier this year in Cascavel, Brazil, while the painting was composed in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, France, in 1889.

The original Starry Night is considered by many to be one of the three most famous paintings in the world today and a statement about the wonders of the night sky.

Today is (roughly) the anniversary of the morning that van Gogh saw the sky that he later painted in his version of Starry Night.…’ (via Astronomy Picture of the Day)

New blue paint under Reflecting Pool already peeling

 

‘The lining of the Reflecting Pool at Washington D.C.’s Lincoln Memorial was painted blue to please Trump: a no-bid $14.7m contract that went to a company that had worked on one of his swimming pools. Within days of the pool being refilled, it was full of algae. And two weeks on, the blue paint is peeling….’ (Rob Beschizza via Boing Boing)