Entertainment
King Charles ‘very disappointed’ for THIS reason
King Charles is reportedly ‘very disappointed’ that his brother Prince Andrew affair is totally overshadowing his major historical visit to Vatican.
King Charles on Thursday became the first head of the Church of England to pray publicly with a pope since the schism with Rome 500 years ago, in a service led by Leo XIV.
The monarch and his wife, Queen Camilla, joined the US-born pope in the Sistine Chapel for a 30-minute service mixing Catholic and Anglican traditions.
It was the first time a reigning English or British monarch has prayed publicly with a pope since king Henry VIII broke with the Roman Catholic Church in 1534.
King Charles, who is officially supreme governor of the Anglican mother church, earlier had his first meeting with Pope Leo, who took over as head of the world´s 1.4 billion Catholics in May following the death of Pope Francis.
The pope led the Sistine Chapel service with the archbishop of York, Stephen Cottrell, currently the senior cleric of the Church of England, while Charles and Camilla sat next to them.
King Charles and Camilla arrived in Vatican nearly a week after Prince Andrew announced to relinquish royal titles.
According to the Fox News Digital, commenting on it, royal expert Ian Pelham Turner said, “Obviously, King Charles is very disappointed that the Andrew affair is totally overshadowing this major historical event, and it was thought he might face questions from the media, but I think that is very unlikely now as all the media are interested in his thoughts on Andrew.”
Entertainment
Niall Horan sparks health concerns due to absence in ‘The Voice’ finale promo
Niall Horan, who is one of the coaches on The Voice season 28, was absent from the finale promo.
The latest teaser released by NBC featured Reba McEntire, Snoop Dogg, Michael Bublé and Ralp Edwards.
The former One Direction member’s absence was mainly noticed by fans, who flooded the comment section asking about him.
On Monday’s episode, the host of the show Carson Daly mentioned that Niall was “really under the weather” and shared that the Slow Hands singer won’t be joining the live show.
The singer, however, showed up and revealed that he is “feeling a little better”, but his doctors have prescribed him a vocal rest, which means that he will no longer be performing along with his two finalists from his team.
Horan’s fellow coach McEntire praised the Irish singer for prioritizing his health and taking rest.
She told him, “I’m very proud of you, Niall, for making sure you take care of yourself because we want you around with your beautiful voice for many years to come.”
Fans are upset to know that Niall won’t be taking the stage for the finale episode. They are saying that “the finale won’t be the same.”
One of them wrote, “Niall Isn’t singing? Oh we so lost.”
Entertainment
Andrew, Fergie unfazed by King Charles fresh blow: ‘party at Royal Lodge’
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and Sarah Ferguson appear ‘unfazed’ by King Charles’ stern decision as the holiday approaches.
There are high chances that the former Duke and Duchess of York won’t join the royal family at their traditional Sandringham gathering for Christmas after their downfall.
The ex-couple left with no royal perks, and also in the coming days, they will be ordered to leave the massive Royal Lodge.
But, according to a royal author, Andrew Lownie, Andrew and Fergie will not have a “terrible” Christmas as they still have plenty of ways to celebrate it.
As per Cosmopolitan, he said, “I [think] they would take advantage of this last Christmas to do all sorts of entertaining there. They’ve got friends… there are friends that go back a long way, and [have] stuck with them. Andrew still has his shooting friends.”
Andrew and Sarah might throw a ‘party’ at the massive royal house before eviction.
On the other hand, there is a chance that Beatrice and Eugenie’s parents may join their friends at their place and make the most of the special time after being in the negative headlines for too long.
Earlier, the source claimed that their daughters are in a ‘dilemma’ as they will surely get an invitation by the King for Sandringham Christmas, but the Princesses also want to be with their parents in an hour of need.
Entertainment
Fear, fiat and the future
Pakistan has quietly crossed an important threshold. After laying the legal foundations for a regulated digital-assets ecosystem through the Digital Nation Pakistan Act and the Virtual Asset Regulatory Ordinance earlier this year, the Pakistan Virtual Asset Regulatory Authority (PVARA) began accepting licence applications for crypto exchanges on December 2.
That shift was underscored at the highest levels of the state on December 6, when Binance Global CEO Richard Teng met in Islamabad with senior policymakers, alongside Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif and COAS-CDF Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir.
The engagement reflected not market curiosity, but institutional intent: an acknowledgement that questions of money, payments and digital value now sit alongside national economic and security priorities.
In practical terms, this means that, in due course, buying bitcoin through regulated local payment rails will become easier, cleaner and compliant.
This is a notable development, arriving at a familiar moment of fear. Bitcoin prices are down again. Critics are loud. Headlines speak of exhaustion, excess, and the end of the cycle. Cash-outs accelerate. Confidence wobbles. Fear, once again, dominates the conversation.
But history offers perspective. Similar periods of pessimism marked the closing phases of the previous four-year bitcoin cycles: from 2014 to 2017, and again from 2018 to 2021. Viewed through that lens, the currency cycle that began in 2022 is not collapsing; it is maturing.
Focusing solely on price action obscures the deeper issue. The real risk is not bitcoin’s volatility. It is the financial system that bitcoin was created to question. Nowhere is that system’s failure more visible than in Pakistan. At its core, that failure manifests through inflation: a process widely misunderstood and routinely misdescribed. Inflation is often explained as prices going up.
That description is convenient and incomplete. Prices are not the cause of inflation; they are its effect. Inflation begins with the continuous expansion of the money supply. When currency is created year after year, the purchasing power of every unit declines. Savers lose quietly. Salaries lag. Living standards erode.
In Pakistan, the consequences are everywhere. Food, fuel, rent and education cost more each year: not because they have become intrinsically more valuable, but because the currency measuring them buys less. The result is a population trapped in short-term thinking: working harder, saving less and feeling perpetually behind.
Crucially, this erosion occurs without transparency or consent. A small group controls the monetary system. Everyone else must ask permission to use their own money through banks and intermediaries. Profits are privatised. Losses are socialised. Asset bubbles form, crises follow and wealth concentrates further at the top.
No matter how hard most people work, the value of their earnings continues to erode unless they gain access to assets ahead of inflation or become part of the system itself. Pakistan’s recurring economic crises are not isolated national failures; they are local expressions of a global monetary order that rewards access over effort. This is the quiet failure of money.
Which brings us to the alternative. Bitcoin enters this landscape not as an investment pitch, but as a monetary alternative. It is decentralised and returns agency to individuals. It functions as an equaliser in societies increasingly fractured by economic stress and resentment. Its properties are straightforward.
Bitcoin has a fixed supply of 21 million coins, permanently capped. No central authority can expand it. No political emergency can dilute it. Its rules are enforced by code rather than discretion, and its security rests on energy and mathematics, not faith in institutions.
While bitcoin is often dismissed as volatile, that volatility has unfolded within a clear long-term upward trajectory, while its underlying fundamentals have remained unchanged. Over longer horizons, it has been the best-performing asset of the past decade. More revealing, however, is what happens when goods are priced in bitcoin rather than local currency.
Housing, technology and productive assets often become cheaper over time: not because value disappears, but because the money measuring them improves.
In 2012, a modest home in Islamabad priced at a few million rupees would have required thousands of bitcoins. Today, that same property may cost tens of millions of rupees, yet only a single-digit amount of bitcoin. The house did not change. The currency did.
For Pakistan, a country where money not only underperforms but also routinely collapses as a store of value, and where debasement is felt long before it is formally acknowledged, this distinction matters. Regulation does not validate bitcoin’s price, nor does it eliminate risk.
What it does is legitimise access. As compliant frameworks take shape and local rails develop, bitcoin is increasingly encountered not as a speculative instrument but as a savings technology, competing directly with a currency that has struggled to preserve purchasing power.
This matters most for a younger generation priced out of real estate, excluded from traditional asset classes and increasingly sceptical of institutions that promise stability but deliver erosion. Bitcoin does not require property deeds, brokerage accounts or political proximity. It requires only time, discipline and a long-term horizon.
Bitcoin offers no guarantees. It carries real risk. But it restores something modern money has quietly taken away: the choice to opt out of a system designed to dilute by default. In a world where money has quietly failed its most basic functions, that choice may be the most powerful feature of all.
Disclaimer: The viewpoints expressed in this piece are the writer’s own and don’t necessarily reflect Geo.tv’s editorial policy.
The writer is an Islamabad-based lawyer and Strategic Legal Counsel at HP | FKM. She can be reached at: [email protected]
Originally published in The News
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