With mortgage rates ticking up once again, homebuyers should consider making these three moves right now.
Small adjustments, like maintaining a steady speed while driving, can help maximize fuel efficiency, experts say.
Iran war could escalate further as Trump threatens to hit key oil infrastructure if Tehran doesn't drop its chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz.
Coast guard rescuers pulled all 21 people out of the water, but a 17-year-old student and the captain of one of the boats were later pronounced dead.
Having your wages garnished can cause big issues, but you may have more options to fight back than you think.
President Trump is holding a news conference ahead of meeting of the Kennedy Center board of trustees at the White House.
PM says the UK will not be drawn into wider war as he unveils plans to help with the impact
Keir Starmer is speaking at his press conference.
The war is entering its third week, he says.
First, we will protect our people in the region.
Second, while taking the necessary action to defend ourselves and our allies, we will not be drawn into the wider war.
Moments like this also tell you about leadership … Now, there are others who would have made a different decision two weeks ago.
They would have rushed the UK headlong into this war without the full picture of what they were sending our forces into and without a plan to get us out.
It is no surprise that our closest and most important ally is so disappointed. The Labour government’s response to the crisis in Iran has been shameful.
We should have been supporting our allies, not making it harder for them. Even now Starmer is still trying to sit on the fence, which is a complete failure of leadership.
Continue reading...By imposing costs on the global economy, the Iranian government is ensuring that further attacks are not contemplated
The US and Israeli decision to attack Iran has sent economic shockwaves around the world. About 20% of global oil supplies have been effectively blocked from transiting the strait of Hormuz since Iran began attacking ships, resulting in a huge jump in oil prices. Militarily, while the United States has the firepower to significantly reduce Iran’s capacity to use the strait as leverage, it is unlikely to be able to eliminate the threat entirely.
Reopening the strait, therefore, is not only a question of military capabilities but of diplomacy, and to negotiate it is necessary to understand what each party to the conflict is trying to achieve.
Continue reading...Trump said the long-anticipated reboot of U.S.-China relations could be postponed amid mounting pressure to reopen the critical oil route in the Persian Gulf.
Hummus and pet grooming also join list of goods and services used to help judge the impact of rising prices
The UK’s increasing sobriety will be recognised from next month in the basket of goods used to calculate inflation after alcohol-free beer was added to a list by the Office for National Statistics totalling 760 items.
Hummus and pet grooming were also included in the list of goods and services used to help judge the impact of rising prices on the cost of living.
Continue reading...President accuses court of having ‘unnecessarily RANSACKED’ the US and claims he has ‘absolute right’ to impose new tariffs
Donald Trump drew a backlash on Sunday for suggesting US efforts to protect the Strait of Hormuz were unnecessary – and that “maybe we shouldn’t even be there at all” because his country has plenty of oil of its own.
The president made the contradictory comment to reporters on Air Force One after pleading with European and Nato allies to enter the war in Iran to help the US secure the strait amid the largest oil supply disruption in history.
Continue reading...Pat McFadden unveils £1bn youth employment scheme and appeals to backbenchers who rebelled last year
Labour MPs have no reason to oppose a fresh government attempt to overhaul the welfare system, the work and pensions secretary has said as he unveiled a £1bn youth employment scheme.
The announcement by Pat McFadden – who said the public wanted the system to promote work and “value for money” – is seen as a prelude to a renewed bid to reform the welfare system after plans by his predecessor, Liz Kendall, were blocked by a Labour backbench rebellion last year.
Continue reading...Italy, Germany, UK and Greece react cautiously after Trump threatens failure to do assist would be ‘very bad for the future of Nato’
Continued from previous post:
Japan’s prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, has said she has no immediate plans to send her country’s maritime self-defence forces to help protect tanker traffic in the strait of Homuz.
We have not made any decisions whatsoever about dispatching escort ships. We are continuing to examine what Japan can do independently and what can be done within the legal framework.
I would like to engage in solid discussions based on Japan’s views and position regarding the need for early de-escalation.
Continue reading...US president hinted that his trip could be put on hold if Beijing failed to help secure the strait of Hormuz
China says it is in communication with the US about Donald Trump’s planned visit to Beijing, despite hints from the US president that he might delay the trip if his prospective hosts do not help to unblock the strait of Hormuz.
China’s foreign ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said: “Head-of-state diplomacy plays an irreplaceable strategic guiding role in China-US relations. The two sides are maintaining communication regarding President Trump’s visit to China.”
Continue reading...I have a Onewheel+ XR Hardware 4208 Firmware Gemini 4134. I know it doesn't have heptic buzz and I am good with that. (I may want to upgrade someday) Does this board have pushback? I have written it down to 1% for a battery test with no pushback although I was going very very slow and gentle. I am not interested in pushing the speed until I get or find out the hard way if my board has pushback pushback or not.
A German tourist filed a lawsuit claiming he felt unpleasant symptoms after eating tacos with salsa at Los Tacos No 1
A German tourist’s attempt to pursue $100,000 in damages from a New York City taqueria whose salsa he found to be too spicy has failed after a federal judge dismissed the lawsuit.
In a complaint filed in October 2024, German national Faycal Manz said he was visiting New York City two months earlier when he stopped at the Times Square location of Los Tacos No 1.
Continue reading...Leaders seek a diplomatic solution despite US president’s threat of ‘a very bad future’ for Nato unless it provides warships
European countries have ruled out sending warships to the strait of Hormuz, despite threats from Donald Trump that Nato faces “a very bad future” if members fail to help reopen the vital waterway.
Germany ruled out participation in any military activity, including efforts to reopen the strait. “This is not our war, we have not started it,” said the country’s defence minister, Boris Pistorius.
Continue reading...An animated reboot of Firefly is in early development at 20th Television Animation with Nathan Fillion involved. The project has Joss Whedon's blessing and will be run by writers Tara Butters and Marc Guggenheim, with early concept art already underway. According to the Hollywood Reporter, "The series would be set in the timeline between the original, 11-episode TV run in 2002 and the 2005 feature film continuation, Serenity." You can watch Fillion announce the Firefly reboot on Instagram. When the first episode of the original series premiered in late 2002, Slashdot reader fm6 wrote: "Firefly, Joss Whedon's 'anti-Trek drama' premieres tonight, on Fox, 8 E/P. I normally despise hypespeak, but this time it's the only language that fits: this is groundbreaking, mind-boggling, totally original. I've seen a bootleg of the pilot (which, unfortunately, the network is holding back) and I promise you this is the most geek-friendly SF you've seen in a long time. Yes, more so than Star Trek and B5, and way past Star Wars. I've never seen the future so skillfully, realistically, and lovingly portrayed. Here is the Official Site and a leading fan site." "This is the single new show this season I have added a season pass for to the old Tivo," CmdrTaco said at the time. "But I'll probably watch it live. This looks like it could be as good as we hope."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Money market accounts still offer good rates and other perks right now, but are they the top option to consider?
James Timpson believes many women in prison shouldn’t be there – and a new board aims to bring about change
Pat had been in trouble with the police before, when she was 16 and had been spat out of the care system with no qualifications, no housing and no support. Nearly 50 years later, she heard a knock on the door again.
There had been a fire in the estate where she lived, and another resident said she had seen Pat start it. “I was in the police station for nearly two days before I got to the magistrates court,” she said, worrying one finger over the top of her hand. “The magistrate said he was sending it to the crown court, and sending me to prison, basically.”
Continue reading...Second victim named as Juliette as long queues of students wait for antibiotics at the University of Kent
Tributes have been paid to a sixth-former confirmed as the second person to have died after an outbreak of meningitis in Kent.
The sixth-form student was named as Juliette by teachers at Queen Elizabeth’s grammar school (QEGS) in Faversham, who described her as a kind and intelligent young woman.
Continue reading...Gas prices have jumped almost 79 cents per gallon from a month ago, raising fresh inflation concerns.
Milan-based bank plans to up its near-30% stake in German lender to trigger formal talks despite strong opposition from Berlin
Two European banking powerhouses have become embroiled in a €35bn (£30bn) takeover battle after Italy’s UniCredit stepped up its long-running pursuit of German lender Commerzbank, despite strong opposition from the German government.
UniCredit first took a stake of 9% in Commerzbank in September 2024 and has since built up its holding to just under 30%. It said on Monday it was pushing to increase that holding further and push the rival lender into formal merger talks.
Continue reading...Apple's premium over-ear headphones get their first update since 2020. Available for preorder on March 25, they ship in early April for $549.
President made contradictory comment to reporters on Air Force One after pleading with allies to help US secure Strait of Hormuz
Donald Trump drew a backlash on Sunday for suggesting US efforts to protect the Strait of Hormuz were unnecessary – and that “maybe we shouldn’t even be there at all” because his country has plenty of oil of its own.
The president made the contradictory comment to reporters on Air Force One after pleading with European and Nato allies to enter the war in Iran to help the US secure the strait amid the largest oil supply disruption in history.
Continue reading...Travelers continue to face long lines at airports across the U.S. due to the partial government shutdown affecting TSA agents.
Hey team, I'm looking for a bit of solidarity and a bit of grounding here, because I'm just beyond frustrated with my GT-S and Future Motion's handling of multiple failed attempts to repair it under warranty (and one replaced BMS outside of their miserable 6-month warranty).
I feel like my story is best told in timeline form, so here we go:
November 27, 2023 - I ordered a Onewheel GT S-Series from onewheel.com for $3,215.50.
December 1, 2023 - Delivered
April 29, 2024 - Submitted trouble ticket 900777 after repeated issues with the board nosediving mid-ride, causing personal injury from multiple crashes. After exchanging emails, I was advised the board health was good, but I could pay $80 to ship the board back to California for additional troubleshooting. Being new to the sport and not completely convinced that I wasn't somehow at fault for the crashes, I declined.
August 16, 2024 - After several months of experience, I submitted trouble ticket 920918 after my board died in the middle of a ride again, very obviously and confidently without any failure on my part.
August 27, 2024 - After 6 days in shipping, the board is received at Future Motion, repaired, and shipped back to me.
September 4, 2024 - After 8 more days in shipping, the board is delivered to me.
June 23, 2025 - I submitted trouble ticket 971616 because my board was completely dead and would not power on.
July 2, 2025 - After 7 days in shipping they replaced my Controller Module under warranty, and replaced a loose gasket inside the motor "as a courtesy."
I was also advised that my Battery Module was bad, but would not be covered under warranty, and I was encouraged to pay for a replacement tire because my original was "significantly out of round" and unsafe to ride. The total bill was $905.00.
July 10, 2025 - After 7 days in shipping, the board is returned to me. I submitted another trouble ticket 975392 four days later to report that the replacement tire was significantly worse - my original tire never had a wobble despite their recommendation to buy a replacement. I share a video showing the tire shake, and their response was that no tire is perfectly round from the factory, and to "break it in" for 100 miles.
August 5, 2025 - I submitted trouble ticket 979489 because my board flashed a battery error message, and reiterated my complaint about the bad tire. I was advised the tire was "within spec," and given troubleshooting steps for the battery. I did not get the battery error again for a few weeks.
September 5, 2025 - I contacted support again after receiving the battery error, and I was asked what charger I was using. I have only ever used the OEM charger that came with the board.
October 9, 2025 - After 7 days in shipping, the board is received for repairs and shipped back to me the same day.
October 15, 2025 - Board is delivered to me after 6 days in shipping.
November 8, 2025 - I submitted ticket 994419 asking for a full refund of my original purchase price ($3,215.50), plus the price of the repair that I was charged ($905), which has continued to be an issue multiple times.
December 23, 2025 - After going back and forth for several days with Tyler P, who identified himself as one of the managers and repeatedly denied my request to speak with anyone else with any authority, I received RMA2551BB93 to send it in "one last time" with the following notes:
"Needs juice" error periodically, well above 50% remaining battery. Random click sound of motor disengagement at speeds well above 2mph (I've had it happen while riding straight at 5-10mph). Completely random, but on average happens at least once or twice every ~10 miles. Sometimes it will happen multiple times within 3 miles. Other times it won't happen for several miles. Usually the motor will turn back on and I will continue the ride, but I have had it nosedive before multiple times.
January 20, 2026 - Board was received for service, and as of March 16th, I have received no further contact from Future Motion.
I just don't know what to do. I contacted my Attorney General, but after repeated attempts to contact the manufacturer, they closed my case with zero response from Future Motion. Future Motion was not legally obligated to respond to the Attorney General, so it feels like they simply don't care.
I have never sought any restitution for bodily harm or personal injury due to the numerous failures of my faulty Onewheel. I simply wanted a working board after multiple failed attempts to fix what I purchased. At this point I'm nearly a thousand bucks over my original purchase, I have NO board to ride, and based on my experience thus far, it honestly feels like they're just holding it for ransom out of spite.
I don't know what else to do, and I'm just hoping that if I can't find any help here, then maybe at least my story will help somebody else in their own journey.
DELFT, Netherlands and BOSTON, March 16, 2026 — Today, Qblox and Riverlane announced advancement of their strategic collaboration to bring real-time quantum error correction to the global quantum computing market. The collaboration pairs Riverlane’s QEC technology, utilizing ultra-fast decoders capable of correcting millions of errors per second, with Qblox’s high-performance control hardware, creating a platform for reliable, error-corrected quantum systems.
This collaboration addresses the challenge that inherently error-prone qubits create for commercial utility. Critically, it removes one of the industry’s most persistent speed bottlenecks: the ability to decode and respond to quantum errors fast enough to prevent error accumulation. By combining both companies’ complementary technologies, Riverlane and Qblox offer a single, integrated solution to tomorrow’s fault-tolerant systems without the complexity of sourcing and integrating components independently.
The deployment brings together Qblox’s high-fidelity,ultra-low-latency and high-throughput control hardware required for real-time error correction with Riverlane’s Deltaflow , now directly integrated with Qblox’s control architecture to enable sub-microsecond feedback between detection and correction. This solution jointly pushes capacity to 300 physical qubits and 5 logical qubits, enabling up to 50,000 QuOps. Supported by Riverlane’s Deltakit open-source SDK for teams building error-corrected workflows, the full stack represents a production-ready foundation for fault-tolerant quantum computing at scale. By offloading decoding to a specialized high-performance layer, the architecture frees primary system resources to focus on increasing qubit counts without sacrificing computational fidelity, creating a scalable foundation for long-term growth.
“Real-time quantum error correction is fundamental to scaling quantum computing to commercially useful systems. The integration of Riverlane’s Deltaflow technology into our commercial quantum data centre marked an important milestone on that journey.” said Dr. Peter Leek, CSO and founder of Oxford Quantum Circuits (OQC). ” Through our collaborations with partners such as Riverlane and Qblox, we are demonstrating how tightly integrated control and error-correction technologies can accelerate the path toward reliable, commercially viable quantum computers.”
“By directly integrating Deltaflow 2 into the Qblox control stack, we have moved beyond theory and removed a critical latency barrier to scalable error correction,” said Niels Bultink, CEO of Qblox. “Real-time quantum error correction is the defining challenge of our era, and this is exactly the kind of collaboration that will define the next phase of quantum innovation.”
“Real-time quantum error correction is the cornerstone of making quantum computers truly useful, and this collaboration is proof that we’re no longer just talking about it,” said Steve Brierley, CEO and Founder of Riverlane. “Qblox’s control hardware gives us the ultra-low-latency foundation Deltaflow 2 needs to deliver real error correction across real hardware.”
To learn more about this solution, join Qblox, Riverlane, and other industry leaders for “Building Quantum Together: Quantum Error Correction” at the APS Global Physics Summit 2026 in Denver on Tuesday, March 17. Taking place from 3:10 to 3:30 p.m. MDT at the Qblox booth (#810), the discussion will feature Francesco Battistel, Roadmap Leader at Qblox, Laura Caune, Senior Quantum Scientist at Riverlane, and Linsey Rodenbach, Developer Relations Manager, Quantum Computing at NVIDIA.
About Qblox
Qblox is accelerating the quantum revolution as the global leader in scalable quantum control. The company provides the essential control engine that empowers researchers and engineers to build high-performance, robust, and scalable systems. Trusted by industrial and academic leaders worldwide, Qblox sets the standard for quantum control and delivers the backbone for a new era of computing.
About Riverlane
Riverlane is the world leader in quantum error correction (QEC), the technology that unlocks quantum computing’s promise of a new age of human progress. We partner with over 60% of the world’s quantum computer companies and leading high-performance computing (HPC) centres to solve the error problem blocking their path to ‘utility-scale’ systems that can transform multiple industries. Our real-time QEC stack, Deltaflow, works with all major qubit types and includes proprietary QEC chips, decoders and a compiler. Deltakit, our software platform, helps quantum developers learn, develop and adopt QEC. Founded in 2016, Riverlane is headquartered in Cambridge, UK, and has offices in Boston in the US and Delft in the Netherlands. The company has raised over $120 million in private funding, including an $85 million Series C in 2024.
About Qblox at APS
Qblox will be onsite at APS to showcase its real-time GPU-to-quantum integration and discuss hybrid quantum-classical infrastructure with attendees. To schedule a meeting, contact Juliette de la Rie at juliette.delarie@qblox.com or find Qblox at booth #810.
Source: Qblox
The post Qblox and Riverlane Collaborate on Integrated Quantum Error Correction Solution appeared first on HPCwire.
Electric vehicles reduce exposure to global oil price shocks and shift energy consumption to electricity largely produced domestically, expert says
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Australia could reduce its reliance on foreign fuel by more than 1bn litres a year if we replaced 1m petrol-fuelled cars with electric vehicles, as experts say boosting EV adoption is part of securing the nation’s long-term economic security.
Hussein Dia, a professor of transport technology and sustainability at the Swinburne University of Technology, said electric vehicles can play a meaningful role in improving Australia’s energy sovereignty, as well as contributing to the national net zero emissions goal.
Continue reading...Despite Trump’s claims, California city has found success in lowering deadly violence, thanks to pioneering efforts to steer people down a different path
In the summer of 2025, as Donald Trump rolled out his plan to deploy the national guard to Washington DC and Chicago, he suggested other American cities were overrun with violence and could soon see federal troops: Memphis, Los Angeles, New York.
Oakland, the president argued, was beyond saving. “And then you have, of course, Baltimore and Oakland. They’re so far gone. We don’t even talk about that any more,” Trump said.
Continue reading...A severe weather front has dumped heavy snow on the Upper Midwest, caused thunderstorms in the South and threatens Mid-Atlantic states with rain and possible tornadoes.
US president on social media said he was ‘thrilled’ that Brendan Carr was looking into broadcasters’ licenses
Donald Trump reinforced comments made by Brendan Carr, the chair of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), threatening the broadcast licenses of news organizations that report unfavorably on the war in Iran.
In a Truth Social post Sunday night, Trump said he was “thrilled” that Carr was “looking at the licenses of some of these Corrupt and Highly Unpatriotic ‘News’ Organizations. They get Billions of Dollars of FREE American Airwaves, and use it to perpetuate LIES …”.
Continue reading...Scientists in the US have uploaded a fruit fly to a computer simulation, while an Australian lab has taught neurons on a glass chip to play a 90s video game. How long before we are all living in a sci-fi movie?
It sounds like the opening of a sci-fi film, but US scientists recently uploaded a copy of the brain of a living fly into a simulation. In San Francisco, biotechnology company Eon Systems created a virtual insect that knew how to walk, fly, groom and feed in its virtual environment. Researchers in Australia, meanwhile, have taught a petri dish containing 200,000 human brain cells to play the iconic 90s shooter Doom. One experiment has pushed a brain into a computer; the other has plugged a computer into brain cells.
Both stories have been hailed as scientific breakthroughs, but have also sparked inevitable fears about the prospects of lab-grown humans and digital clones. Should we be concerned?
Continue reading...March 16, 2026 — The UK government is investing £45 million for a 1.4MW mission-focused supercomputer named ‘Sunrise’, a key first step in establishing the country’s first AI Growth Zone at the UK Atomic Energy Authority’s (UKAEA) Culham Campus in Oxfordshire. As announced in the Fusion Strategy, Sunrise is targeted for operation in June this year and is primed to be the world’s most powerful AI supercomputer dedicated to fusion energy.
Funded by the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ), Sunrise will tackle key fusion energy challenges in areas such as plasma turbulence, materials development and tritium fuel breeding, while delivering spillover benefits to other clean energy technologies and the UK’s broader net zero ambitions.
Sunrise will also strengthen essential AI capabilities at Culham Campus and across the UK’s high-performance computing landscape, contributing to the government’s AI Opportunities Action Plan and AI for Science Strategy. Sunrise will see AMD, DESNZ, the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT), Dell Technologies, Intel, UKAEA, the University of Cambridge, and WEKA working together. It will deliver up to 6.76 Exaflops of AI-accelerated modeling, enabling high-fidelity simulations and the creation of digital twins for complex systems.
“We can be proud that Britain will lead the way on research, innovation and skills for a future of limitless fusion energy,” said Lord Vallance, Minister for Science, Innovation, Research and Nuclear. “By backing our fusion industry, we are not only securing our future energy independence, but from innovation and research to engineers, we are also providing the skilled clean energy jobs of the future for British people.”
“UKAEA is taking lessons from the Apollo program: we learn fastest when we can test, iterate, and improve safely in the virtual world before we commit to our real-world mission,” said Dr. Rob Akers, UKAEA’s Director for Computing Programmes. “Sunrise will bring that capability to fusion by combining high-fidelity simulation with physics-informed AI to develop predictive digital twins that reduce the cost, risk and time of learning that would otherwise require expensive and time-consuming physical testing. UKAEA is proud to be working with such a pioneering group of partners to harness AI and high-performance computing at scale to support the UK’s fusion roadmap and Net Zero mission.
Dr. Paul Calleja, Director of the Cambridge Research Computing Service, said: “Cambridge is proud to be working with UKAEA, Dell, AMD and StackHPC, a UK AI software SME, to co-design, deliver and operate Sunrise the UK’s latest GPU accelerated scientific AI supercomputer. Sunrise builds on our long-established collaboration with UKAEA also leveraging Cambridge’s leadership class national supercomputing and sovereign AI portfolio. Sunrise is an important first step in the UK’s bold vision to strengthen its sovereign scientific computing capability, accelerate fusion research, and lay the foundations for the Culham AI Growth Zone.”
“Fusion research pushes the limits of science and computing, demanding massive simulation, complex modeling and advanced AI to accelerate progress,” said Dr. Thomas Zacharia, SVP, Strategy and Development, Public Sector, AMD. “With Sunrise, the UK will have a powerful new capability to rapidly and accurately simulate plasma behavior and fusion conditions, helping researchers advance the development of stable, efficient and economically viable fusion energy. Sunrise brings together AMD EPYC processors and AMD Instinct GPU acceleration, purpose-built on the Dell PowerEdge platform, to deliver breakthrough AI and high-performance computing for the UK fusion community and supporting the Department for Energy Security & Net Zero as it moves fusion from research toward practical impact.
“Sunrise is a bold step in advancing fusion energy and AI innovation, made possible through close collaboration and shared ambition,” said Tariq Hussain, UK Head of Public Sector, Dell Technologies. “At Dell Technologies, we’re helping turn this vision into reality with advanced AI and storage solutions that enable the UK to tackle complex challenges and accelerate a sustainable energy future.”
Simon Wilyman – GM UK/I & Northern Europe, Intel Corporation, said: “There are grand milestones in the evolution of our civilization, and the commercialization of fusion power is set to be one of them. Intel is delighted to partner with organizations such as UKAEA to support this ambitious endeavour. As part of the first AI Growth Zone, the Sunrise supercomputer strengthens the UK’s position as a global innovation hub. By combining advanced AI capabilities and high memory bandwidth with fusion research, Intel is creating the computational foundation necessary to unlock sustainable energy and improve lives worldwide.”
Liran Zvibel, Co-Founder & CEO, WEKA, said: “Building a supercomputer to simultaneously advance fusion energy and grow an AI-native economy is one of the most valuable scientific investments a nation can make, and Sunrise delivers on exactly that. WEKA is proud to partner with the UK Atomic Energy Authority to ensure Sunrise has the storage performance it needs to move at top speed from scientific discovery to real-world impact.”
Sunrise will be used to address real-world challenges from a wide range of UK fusion programs to drive critical advancements for the LIBRTI (Lithium Breeding Tritium Innovation) programme, which is developing tritium fuel-cycle technologies for self-sufficiency in future fusion operations, and for STEP Fusion, the UK’s flagship initiative to demonstrate fusion energy in the 2040s.
In 2023, Dell Technologies, Intel, the University of Cambridge and UKAEA shared plans to use supercomputers and AI to advance the development of the UK’s prototype fusion power plant design capabilities through the ‘Industrial Metaverse’.
In January 2026, £36 million of government investment was injected into the Cambridge supercomputing centre. The supercomputers will support modern AI workloads and simulation demand to turn breakthrough research into practical applications.
Download The Sunrise supercomputer key facts PDF here.
Source: UK Government
The post UK Government Invests £45M in ‘Sunrise’ AI Supercomputer for Fusion Research appeared first on HPCwire.
TORONTO, March 16, 2026 — Xanadu Quantum Technologies Inc., a global leader in photonic quantum computing, and TELUS, a world-leading communications technology company, today announced plans to collaborate on advancing sovereign quantum computing infrastructure in Canada, and to exploring the development of a quantum data centre integrated with TELUS’ secure, Canadian-controlled, sovereign infrastructure.
Under a newly-signed MOU, the two Canadian technology leaders will explore how quantum processors can be combined with high-performance computing systems to create sovereign hybrid quantum–classical computing infrastructure in Canada – one of the first of its kind in the world. By bringing together Xanadu’s expertise in photonic quantum computing with TELUS’ sovereign AI expertise, advanced data centre operations, and coast-to-coast PureFibre network, this initiative will provide Canadian enterprises, researchers, and government organizations with secure access to next-generation quantum computing capabilities. These capabilities are poised to unlock breakthroughs in fields like AI, drug discovery, materials science, cybersecurity, and national security, all while keeping critical data and intellectual property in Canada, under Canadian control.
“Canada has a unique opportunity to lead the world in quantum computing,” said Christian Weedbrook, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Xanadu. “TELUS operates some of the most advanced sovereign, digital infrastructure in the country, and together we are excited to explore how quantum computing could integrate with next-generation data centre environments to create something genuinely historic for Canada.”
Quantum computing represents one of the most consequential technological shifts of our era. Hybrid quantum–classical computing environments, where quantum processors work alongside classical high-performance computing systems, are widely recognized as a critical pathway toward realizing this real-world advantage at scale.
“At TELUS, we strongly believe that Canada’s technological future must be built on infrastructure we own and control – and quantum computing is the next chapter of that story,” said Nazim Benhadid, Chief Technology Officer, TELUS. “Our shared vision with Xanadu – one of Canada’s most exciting quantum technology companies – is to support the growth of Canada’s world-class AI quantum ecosystem and advance sovereign, quantum-ready infrastructure. When Canadian organizations can access world-leading quantum capabilities on Canadian-controlled infrastructure, the innovations, economic value and competitive advantages stay here, building Canadian prosperity for generations to come.”
The collaboration will also explore opportunities across the full quantum computing value chain, including quantum hardware, software, algorithms, applications, services, and education initiatives designed to strengthen Canada’s rapidly growing quantum ecosystem. Additionally, the companies will explore research initiatives, pilot programs, knowledge exchange activities, and broader ecosystem development efforts to accelerate quantum innovation across Canada.
This announcement follows Xanadu’s milestone Project OPTIMISM announcement, in which the Company announced that the Governments of Canada and Ontario are negotiating up to CAD $390 million in combined support for Xanadu to establish advanced semiconductor and photonic manufacturing capabilities for Canada’s quantum technology supply chain.
About Xanadu
Xanadu is a Canadian quantum computing company with the mission to build quantum computers that are useful and available to people everywhere. Founded in 2016, Xanadu has become one of the world’s leading quantum hardware and software companies. The company also leads the development of PennyLane, an open-source software library for quantum computing and application development.
Source: Xanadu
The post Xanadu and TELUS Explore Sovereign Quantum–Classical Computing Infrastructure in Canada appeared first on HPCwire.
TORONTO and SANTA CLARA, Calif., March 16, 2026 — Celestica Inc., a global leader in data center infrastructure and advanced technology solutions, and AMD, a leader in high-performance and AI computing, today announced a strategic collaboration to bring the new “Helios” rack-scale AI platform to market. The collaboration pairs AMD computing leadership with Celestica’s expertise in delivering leading-edge networking switch technologies.
At launch, Celestica will undertake the R&D, design and manufacturing of scale-up networking switches in the AMD “Helios” rack-scale AI architecture, based on the Open Compute Project (OCP), Open-Rack-Wide (ORW) form-factor.
The scale-up switches will utilize advanced networking silicon to enable the high-speed interconnect of the next-generation AMD Instinct MI450 Series GPUs, enabling leading-edge computing, optimized for large-scale AI clusters. Consistent with the open standards-based design of the “Helios” platform, the networking switches will utilize the Ultra Accelerator Link over Ethernet (UALoE) architecture for scale-up connectivity. AMD “Helios” will be available to customers in late 2026.
“Deploying AI at scale requires infrastructure that can be delivered quickly, consistently, and with the performance customers expect,” said Steven Dorwart, senior vice president and general manager, Hyperscalers, Celestica. “Our collaboration with AMD on the “Helios” platform brings together our global engineering, manufacturing, and supply chain capabilities with AMD’s innovation in high-performance computing. Together, we are accelerating access to AI systems optimized for the most demanding workloads of the next era.”
“‘Helios’ represents a new blueprint for AI infrastructure, enabling customers to deploy AI at scale with the performance, efficiency, and flexibility required for the next generation of workloads,” said Forrest Norrod, executive vice president and general manager, Data Center Solutions Business Group, AMD. “We are pleased to work with Celestica, leveraging their expertise in delivering leading-edge networking switch technology with AMD’s leadership in high-performance and AI computing.”
The companies are collaborating to support deployments of “Helios” across cloud, enterprise, and research environments, helping to address a growing need for solutions that reduce time-to-value and improve supply chain resiliency for organizations investing in AI.
About AMD
AMD (NASDAQ: AMD) drives innovation in high-performance and AI computing to solve the world’s most important challenges. Today, AMD technology powers billions of experiences across cloud and AI infrastructure, embedded systems, AI PCs and gaming. With a broad portfolio of AI-optimized CPUs, GPUs, networking and software, AMD delivers full-stack AI solutions that provide the performance and scalability needed for a new era of intelligent computing.
About Celestica
Celestica (TSX: CLS) (NYSE: CLS) is a technology leader dedicated to driving customer success and market advancements. With deep expertise in design, engineering, manufacturing, supply chain, and platform solutions, Celestica enables critical data center infrastructure for AI, cloud, and hybrid cloud and advances technologies in high-growth markets. With a talented team and a strategic global network, Celestica helps its customers achieve competitive advantages.
Source: Celestica
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OXFORD, England, March 16, 2026 — Infleqtion, a global leader in quantum computing and quantum sensing powered by neutral-atom technology, has delivered the UK’s only operational 100-physical-qubit quantum computing system at the National Quantum Computing Centre (NQCC) with its Sqale platform, achieving a milestone the NQCC identified as a critical objective for the UK’s quantum strategy. Achieved in December 2025, the milestone creates foundational infrastructure that will enable researchers and industry to begin working with large-scale quantum systems.
“Infleqtion’s progress is a significant milestone, helping move the UK beyond research toward real-world uses,” said Lord Vallance, Minister of State for Science, Research and Innovation. “These sorts of advances are vital in paving the way for us to be able to use quantum computers to deliver tangible benefits. With the talent and research expertise that we have on offer in the UK, this is an encouraging next step which helps cement our position as a world leader in one of the defining technologies of our generation.”
“The NQCC’s quantum computing testbed is among the first of its kind, advancing innovation at a global level,” said Matthew Kinsella, CEO of Infleqtion. “This latest achievement with Sqale reflects the progress and potential of our neutral-atom architecture and marks an important step toward larger-scale quantum systems. We’re proud to partner with the NQCC on a platform that is critical to advancing quantum computing and reinforces the UK’s leadership in this essential technology.”
Reaching the 100-physical-qubit level represents an important step beyond laboratory prototypes toward quantum computers that can run more complex algorithms, test error-correction approaches and support practical solutions. At this scale, quantum systems begin to support experimentation that connects more directly to real-world challenges. Researchers can begin probing applications in areas such as advanced materials, energy systems and complex optimization. Sqale is the first neutral-atom platform of this scale deployed in an operational national facility, reinforcing its position at the forefront of quantum hardware development.
The NQCC’s installation of the Sqale platform is part of its broader Quantum Computing Testbed Initiative. With Sqale, researchers will be able to evaluate performance, benchmark applications, and study how neutral‑atom systems scale. The platform is also designed to accelerate skills development, supply‑chain readiness and application exploration across the UK quantum ecosystem.
“Having a system of this scale available through the NQCC is a significant step for the UK quantum community,” said Dr Michael Cuthbert, Director of the NQCC. “It allows researchers to move beyond small demonstrations and begin learning what it really takes to operate and scale quantum computers in practice.”
“This is a defining moment for Infleqtion and the UK’s ambition to build world-class sovereign quantum capabilities. Achieving this milestone has been a key goal for the UK’s quantum efforts and seeing it become reality is something we are all immensely proud of,” said Colin Sullivan, Managing Director of Infleqtion UK. “We look forward to expanding our partnership with UK researchers, businesses and government to unlock the full potential of quantum technology.”
Infleqtion’s milestone with NQCC demonstrates continued execution on the company’s technology roadmap. Infleqtion is aiming to exceed 30 logical qubits in 2026 and deliver more than 100 logical qubits in 2028, advancing toward fully fault-tolerant architectures. Because it takes anywhere from 10 to more than 1,000 physical qubits to encode a single reliable logical qubit, physical-qubit performance becomes a key limiting factor. Infleqtion’s 99.73% two-qubit gate fidelity delivers industry-leading performance on the metric that matters most in quantum computing. Higher fidelity means fewer physical qubits per logical qubit, delivering a significant scalability and efficiency advantage.
About Infleqtion
Infleqtion, Inc. (NYSE: INFQ) is a global leader in quantum technology, delivering neutral-atom solutions for quantum computing, networking, sensing, and security. With a product portfolio spanning quantum computers, quantum optical clocks, RF receivers, and inertial sensors, Infleqtion’s full-stack approach combines high-performance hardware with the company’s proprietary Superstaq quantum computing software platform. Infleqtion’s systems are already in use by the U.S. Department of War, NASA, the U.K. government, and in multiple collaborations with NVIDIA. Infleqtion, in collaboration with NVIDIA, published the world’s first demonstration of a materials science application using logical qubits. With operations in the U.S., Europe, and Asia, Infleqtion meets the demands of government and commercial customers across the space, defense, energy, finance and telecommunications sectors.
Source: Infleqtion
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BASEL, Switzerland and SAN FRANCISCO, March 16, 2026 — At the World Agri-Tech Innovation Summit, Syngenta, a global leader in agricultural innovation, today announced it is exploring how quantum computing can help farmers meet the growing demands of food production in a changing climate. The company has partnered with QuantumBasel, Switzerland’s first commercial quantum computing hub, to apply quantum technologies to agricultural research and development.
Farmers worldwide face mounting pressure to produce more food sustainably amid unpredictable weather and evolving pest and disease challenges. Meeting these demands requires new scientific approaches that go beyond what classical computing can deliver, particularly when it comes to understanding the complex molecular and biological systems that underpin crop science.
Developing safe, effective, and sustainable crop protection products requires understanding molecular interactions of extraordinary complexity that classical computers can only approximate. Quantum computing has the future potential to model this complexity with far greater precision, and to predict details about molecular behavior that have previously been out of reach, bringing new insights into product design and opening new pathways for innovation in agriculture.
To help realize this potential, Syngenta is launching a collaboration with QuantumBasel in Basel, Switzerland – a co-located working model that brings together QuantumBasel’s algorithmic expertise and access to advanced hardware and simulators with Syngenta’s scientists and agricultural R&D capabilities. Initial projects will aim to deepen our understanding of molecular behaviour with insights that could unlock new approaches to discovery and crop science.
“Quantum computing could be a catalyst for the next generation of scientific breakthroughs in agriculture,” said Feroz Sheikh, Chief Information and Digital Officer, Syngenta Group. “It has the future potential to give us a deeper understanding of molecular interactions than has ever been possible, delivering insights and solutions that can help growers meet the challenges of a changing world.”
Quantum computing is an emerging technology with significant long-term potential in molecular modeling, AI and beyond. As the technology matures, Syngenta will be well-positioned to explore its application to some of the most complex challenges in crop science, and build the expertise and partnerships needed to apply it meaningfully in agricultural research.
Thomas Landolt, CEO QuantumBasel, said: “Our mission is to apply quantum computing capabilities to industry, and agriculture is one of the most exciting frontiers. By combining QuantumBasel’s quantum computing know-how and infrastructure with Syngenta’s deep agricultural expertise, we can help growers benefit from faster research cycles, better crop resilience, and more sustainable farming practices. We are excited for the chance to create an impact where it really matters.”
About QuantumBasel
QuantumBasel is a competence center for quantum computing and AI and drives access to commercial quantum computing to foster innovation. QuantumBasel is Switzerland’s first and so far only commercial quantum computing hub. QuantumBasel’s team of quantum and data scientists trains and supports companies, conducts projects in quantum computing and AI, and collaborates closely with universities and academic institutions. Through an internationally connected ecosystem, QuantumBasel provides access to advanced know-how and technologies, enabling companies across a variety of industries to achieve innovations through the next generation of information technology.
About Syngenta
Syngenta is a global leader in agricultural innovation with a presence in more than 90 countries. Syngenta is focused on developing technologies and farming practices that empower farmers, so they can make the transformation required to feed the world’s population while preserving our planet. Its bold scientific discoveries deliver better benefits for farmers and society on a bigger scale than ever before. Guided by its Sustainability Priorities, Syngenta is developing new technologies and solutions that support farmers to grow healthier plants in healthier soil with a higher yield. Syngenta Crop Protection is headquartered in Basel, Switzerland; Syngenta Seeds is headquartered in the United States.
Source: QuantumBasel
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From dates to deal tips, here's everything worth knowing about the 2026 Amazon Big Spring Sale.
The song is that of a humpback whale and was recorded by scientists in March 1949 in Bermuda, researchers said.
March 16, 2026 — Deep Green has announced AI-ready colocation capacity deployable in as little as four weeks at its Urmston facility in Manchester. This is one of the fastest AI infrastructure deployments currently available in the UK today. The site provides sovereign, UK-based capacity designed for high-density AI and HPC workloads.
For many organizations, the barrier to scaling artificial intelligence is no longer GPUs or software. It is infrastructure. Power availability, planning delays and legacy data centre designs mean new capacity can take years to deliver. Deep Green’s modular architecture allows AI workloads to be deployed in weeks, rather than years, giving organisations immediate access to secure, UK-hosted compute capacity.
The Urmston facility is purpose-built for modern AI workloads. It supports rack densities of up to 150kW, designed for GPU clusters and high-performance computing. The infrastructure operates at a sub 1.2 Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE), making it substantially more efficient than many conventional data centers. This combination of high-density capability and efficient operation allows organizations to run demanding AI workloads with predictable performance and lower operating costs.
Mark Lee, CEO of Deep Green, said: “The conversations we’re having with customers are remarkably consistent. They don’t have a software problem or even a GPU problem. They have an infrastructure problem. Organizations need somewhere to run AI workloads today, not in two or three years’ time. Our Manchester site allows organizations to deploy high-density AI racks in weeks, and while capacity is filling rapidly, we still have space available for those looking for sovereign UK compute available now.”
Unlike conventional facilities, Deep Green’s infrastructure captures waste heat generated by AI compute and repurposes it locally. The heat can be used by nearby buildings and community facilities. By integrating heat reuse directly into the design of its sites, DeepGreen reduces the environmental impact of high-performance computing while delivering local energy benefits.
About Deep Green
Deep Green builds and operates sustainable, high-density data centres that deliver advanced computing power while capturing and reusing heat for community benefit. By turning data processing into a source of clean energy, Deep Green helps accelerate the decarbonization of heat and power systems worldwide. For more information, visit www.deepgreen.energy.
Source: Deep Green
The post Deep Green Offers High-Density AI and HPC Colocation at Manchester Site appeared first on HPCwire.
We've heard from icons like Jamie Lee Curtis, Steven Spielberg and Serena Williams so far. On Monday, speakers are exploring what's next for the news.
I'm picky about my workout gear. These are the only wireless earbuds I trust to handle my sweaty workouts, stay in place and deliver crystal-clear sound for all my activities.
Springing forward on daylight saving time did a number on my body, but these wellness devices are making the transition easier.
As big tech continues to dominate the film industry, Video StoreAge is a uniquely crafted company that works with film-makers to sell independent films on USB drives
The streaming-skeptical cinephile faces a dilemma in 2026, especially when it comes to watching movies at home. Increasingly, movies are available via rentals that funnel money to mega-corporations including Amazon or Apple; digital “purchases” from those same companies that can actually be revoked at any moment; or, most enticingly but still somewhat inconveniently, well-curated physical media special editions that treat films with the respect they deserve (sometimes even respect they don’t, depending on the title) while taking up a lot of shelf space and hitting your wallet hard. Plus, as vinyl aficionados know, bespoke physical media can also be severely limited in terms of where you can actually play it. Basically, almost everyone in the home-video space is trying to either be Amazon or the Criterion Collection.
Ash Cook, the former Sundance programmer who founded the new distributor Video StoreAge (pronounced like “storage”), is trying to figure out a third way. He described Video StoreAge’s products – indie movies sold on USB drives – as “like a DVD in the present tense. It’s a way to have a physical copy of a movie, but in this case you can play it on your computer. It has digital utility.” Like almost anything else these days, Video StoreAge is available as a subscription, with quarterly collections of five features and five shorts. The first drop includes Vera Drew’s buzzed-about The People’s Joker, a homemade superhero comedy that reappropriates many elements of the Batman mythos into a trans coming-out story. (Honestly, it’s more fun than those Joaquin Phoenix movies and might understand the Joker character better, too.) But they also sell single films, including Drew’s, or any combinations of available films as a sort of digital indie-movie mix tape on those format-flexible USB drives. (The quarter’s shorts package is included with every movie regardless, an automatic special feature.)
Continue reading...‘We’ll see how I feel in practice,’ says world No 2
McIlroy hampered by back injury before Players Championship
Rory McIlroy will weigh up whether to play another event before the defence of his Masters title next month after an underwhelming outing at the Players Championship. He was the defending champion at TPC Sawgrass, but his preparation was hampered by a back injury and he finished in a disappointing tie for 46th on Sunday.
“I’ll see how my body feels,” said the world No 2. “We’ll see how I feel in practice and at home and if I get itchy feet at home maybe add an event at some point.
Continue reading...Cousin of Tech Sgt Tyler Simmons, whose military refueling plane crashed in Iraq, says: ‘We didn’t need to be in this war’
A relative of an Ohio airman who was killed recently in a military airplane crash in Iraq amid the US and Israel’s war in nearby Iran has said the conflict is “uncalled for”.
“This could have been prevented,” Stephan Douglas said of the death of his cousin Tech Sgt Tyler Simmons, 28, in an interview with the Ohio news outlet WCMH. “We didn’t need to be in this war. This is uncalled for – and this is what we get.”
Continue reading...Mohommad Nazeer Paktyawal, 41, died on Saturday in Texas less than 24 hours after being detained
An Afghan immigrant who previously worked with the United States military in Afghanistan and later sought asylum in the US died over the weekend in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody less than 24 hours after being detained in Texas, an advocacy group said on Sunday.
Mohommad Nazeer Paktyawal, who was living in a Dallas suburb with his wife and six children while his asylum case remained pending, was arrested by federal agents outside his apartment on Friday morning while taking his children to school, said a statement from Shawn VanDiver, president of the military veteran-led group AfghanEvac.
Continue reading...US president says it is ‘only appropriate’ for Europe to help, and warns failure to do so would be ‘very bad’ for Nato. Plus, meet the Americans withholding their federal income tax
Good morning.
Donald Trump has ratcheted up the pressure on European allies to help protect the strait of Hormuz, warning that Nato faces a “very bad” future if its members fail to come to Washington’s aid.
What did Trump say? The US president told the Financial Times in an interview: “It’s only appropriate that people who are the beneficiaries of the strait will help to make sure that nothing bad happens there. If there’s no response or if it’s a negative response, I think it will be very bad for the future of Nato.”
Who else won? Here’s all the winners at the 98th Academy Awards.
Who was remembered this year? This year’s Academy Awards featured an extended in memoriam section to honour the considerable number of Hollywood legends who have died over the past year. Diane Keaton, Robert Redford and Rob Reiner were remembered in standalone speeches, while Claudia Cardinale and Catherine O’Hara also had extended moments. James Van Der Beek and Brigitte Bardot were among stars who were not included in the tribute.
Continue reading..."One Battle After Another" took home several big awards, including Best Picture, Best Director and the newly created Best Casting.
The film follows CBS News correspondent Steve Hartman and photographer Lou Bopp through their seven-year journey to document the toll of America's school shooting epidemic.
Food production in many African countries depends heavily on fertiliser imported from the Gulf through the strait of Hormuz
Countries in Africa, where farmers depend heavily on imported fertiliser and a large share of household income goes on food, are particularly vulnerable to supply chain disruptions caused by the war in the Middle East, experts have said.
The conflict has drastically disrupted trade through the strait of Hormuz, a vital shipping lane not just for oil and gas but also for fertiliser, which is produced in vast quantities in the Gulf.
Continue reading...The US men’s national team hated their 2022 World Cup look. Four years later, they were given control over what they will be wearing this year on home soil
US midfielder Diego Luna rocked back and forth, a wide smile plastered across his face. With even wider eyes, Juventus attacker Weston McKennie looked on like a child on Christmas Day, broke out into applause and shrieked with glee. Timothy Weah rubbed his hands together in anticipation.
The US men’s national team had gathered for a team meeting in a hotel conference room in Austin, Texas, with a friendly against Ecuador days away. The get-together had nothing to do with tactics. Rather, they were about to see the kits they’d be wearing at the 2026 World Cup, the first tournament in three decades to be played on home soil.
Continue reading...As the US birthrate has declined dramatically, schools are becoming emptier and districts are getting less public funding
At a February board meeting for Memphis-Shelby county schools in Tennessee, a parent of five children who currently or formerly attended Ida B Wells Academy, an alternative education school, asked board members a question.
“This is a high-performing school. This is not a school in crisis,” she said. “So I respectfully ask, why are we considering closing a school that is working?”
Continue reading...Status of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee’s money will be put to test in Tuesday’s primaries in Illinois
Four Democratic congressional primaries in and around Chicago on Tuesday have turned into the most expensive test yet of a question the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (Aipac) would rather not answer: what happens when your money is so toxic you have to pretend it isn’t yours?
Aipac, one of Washington’s most powerful lobbying forces supporting Israel, and affiliated political action committees have spent at least $13.7m across four Illinois races, according to an investigation by WBEZ, Chicago’s public radio station, funneling it through a pair of Super Pacs so determined to hide their origins that they don’t mention Israel once in their ads, with anodyne-sounding names: Elect Chicago Women, and Affordable Chicago Now.
Continue reading...Apple's new $599 budget phone offers a premium feel, complete with MagSafe compatibility and an A19 chip. That makes the minor trade-offs easier to swallow.
The latest rumors, release timing and features we expect from Samsung's next Galaxy Watch lineup.
If Meta and other smart eyewear makers don't want their products known as "pervert glasses," they're going to have to do better at setting boundaries.
"A new type of battery storage is about to be deployed on the Midwestern grid for the first time," reports Electrek: Sodium-ion battery storage manufacturer Peak Energy and global energy company RWE Americas will pilot a passively cooled sodium-ion battery system in eastern Wisconsin on the Midcontinent Independent System Operator network — the first sodium-ion deployment on that grid. Peak Energy says its technology is specifically designed for grid-scale storage and leverages sodium-ion chemistry's inherent stability. Unlike many lithium-ion systems, sodium-ion batteries don't require active cooling and can operate over a wide temperature range without losing performance. That simpler design could make a meaningful dent in the cost of storing electricity. According to Peak Energy, its system cuts the lifetime cost of stored energy by an average of $70 per kilowatt-hour. That's roughly half the total cost of a typical battery system today. The company says it achieves those savings by removing energy-hungry cooling systems, eliminating routine maintenance requirements, and reducing the need to overbuild storage capacity to account for battery degradation over time... If the Wisconsin pilot proves successful, it could open the door to wider adoption of sodium-ion batteries for large-scale energy storage across the US.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The top 16 seeds in the 68-team women's NCAA field will host first- and second-round games, with the regional rounds being played at two neutral sites for the fourth straight year.
Alan Jay White, nicknamed ‘the professor’, arrested after raid of Indiana home found 78 grams of suspected meth
In a case that calls to mind the plot of the fictional crime show Breaking Bad, a former US educator with the last name White is faced with charges of illicitly dealing methamphetamine.
A 12 March statement from police in the town of Clarksville, Indiana, said officers searched the home of Alan Jay White five days earlier, finding 78 grams of suspected meth and counterfeit cash. They contended that the amount was too big for personal use, booking him with illegally peddling meth, counterfeiting and possessing drug paraphernalia, the agency’s statement added.
Continue reading...The suspect was responsible for transporting Oseguera's romantic partner to a luxurious cabin, the defense ministry said .
A fifth of seven members of the Iran women's soccer team who accepted refugee visas to stay in Australia has changed her mind, a sport official says.
US based Covid vaccine recommendations for children and pregnant people on ideology instead of evidence, critics say
There was scant data behind ending the Covid vaccine recommendation for pregnant people and children, according to internal memos made public because of a lawsuit against the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
The memos overlooked hundreds of studies on the benefits and safety of Covid vaccination and set the precedent for making changes to vaccine recommendations based on ideology instead of evidence, critics say.
Continue reading...Advocates say 24/7 coverage of US attacks will not last for ever – and spotlight will return to Epstein and his crimes
As the US woke to news that Donald Trump had bombed Iran, domestic discord was fast simmering.
There was unrelenting outrage over ICE raids. There was frustration with the rising cost of living. There was fear over rocketing healthcare prices, mounting household debt, not to mention many Americans’ nagging sense of desperation in a country, some warned, where democracy itself was under threat.
Continue reading...Keep messages from unknown numbers away from your inbox and out of sight.
Atlanta United ended a long drought, there were dramatic finishes to a batch of games and Carles Gil finally has some support
On 28 May 2025, Atlanta United thrilled their home fans with a stoppage-time winner against Orlando City. Jamal Thiaré’s match-winner pulled the club within five points of the playoff places after 16 games, and the team hoped to harness the momentum for a rosier second half of the season.
Continue reading...As Tehran continued strikes on targets across the Gulf region, Israel said it would hit Iran for “as long as needed” and expanded ground operations in Lebanon.
Ex-French president, who was jailed last year for criminal conspiracy, to be tried at Paris appeal court on four counts
Nicolas Sarkozy appeared at the Paris court of appeal to face a fresh trial over allegations he conspired to receive illegal election campaign funding from the regime of the late Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi.
The former rightwing French president, who was in office between 2007 and 2012, denies any wrongdoing.
Continue reading...Another weekend of violence compounded global market concerns over war in the Middle East, following US strikes on the vital oil hub
Oil prices have climbed again amid mounting supply fears after the US struck Iran’s vital Kharg Island oil hub and Donald Trump demanded allies help reopen the strait of Hormuz.
Brent crude, the international benchmark, rose 1.8% to $104.98 per barrel during early trading on Monday. Another weekend of violence across the Middle East compounded concerns over the conflict, and its ramifications for global energy markets.
Continue reading...The operation marks the latest joint show of force against drug cartels in the South American country.
The actor led the starry book deals, while publishers assessed whether US-style bans are spreading to the UK
The annual London book fair wrapped on Thursday, marking the end of three days that saw 33,000 people connected to the book industry – agents, publishers, authors, among others – gather at Olympia to make deals and discuss the state of the publishing world, and its future. Here’s our roundup of the biggest deals, trends and takeaways from the fair.
The starriest book deal of the week was a new thriller series co-authored by Idris Elba, featuring an MI6 field operative who gets deployed to Mauritius to investigate an attempted murder. Elsewhere, rights were scooped for Alex Ferguson’s first autobiography in 13 years, broadcaster Mishal Husain’s debut children’s book, and the story of designer Paul Smith’s life.
Continue reading...Watch all the great films you missed.
The war, which shows no signs of ending soon, has disrupted oil exports from the region, driven fuel prices far higher worldwide and upended global air travel.
Magnusson’s 2017 bestseller The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning turned the Scandinavian decluttering practice into a global phenomenon
Swedish author and artist Margareta Magnusson, whose book on “death cleaning” became a global phenomenon, has died aged 92.
Magnusson’s 2017 book, The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning, introduced international readers to the concept of döstädning – the practice of sorting through and giving away possessions in later life so that family members are not left with the burden of doing so after one’s death.
Continue reading...US president says it is ‘only appropriate’ for Europe to help, and warns failure to do so would be ‘very bad’ for Nato
Donald Trump has ratcheted up the pressure on European allies to help protect the strait of Hormuz, warning that Nato faces a “very bad” future if its members fail to come to Washington’s aid.
The de facto closure of the vital waterway by Tehran in retaliation for airstrikes by the US and Israel has proved catastrophic for global energy and trade flows, causing the largest oil supply disruption in history and soaring global oil prices.
Continue reading...Latest observations of L98-59d, about 35 light years from Earth, suggest it could be different to anything seen before
Astronomers have identified a planet composed of molten lava, suggesting the existence of an entirely new category of liquid planet.
The distant world, known as L98-59d, is about 1.6 times the size of Earth and orbits a small red star 35 light years away. Astronomers initially thought the planet might harbour a deep ocean of liquid water, but the latest analysis suggests that it could be fundamentally different to anything seen before.
Continue reading...Crooks is one of college basketball’s most fascinating stars, blending power and touch in a throwback game that could carry the Cyclones deep into March
The basketball gods really have a thing for Iowa. First came Caitlin Clark at the University of Iowa, a scoring sensation who dominated headlines and sparked cultural debates. Now, the state’s other major college program, Iowa State, has been blessed with Audi Crooks – a thunderclap in her own right.
Where Clark dazzled the masses with moon ball shots and moxie off the dribble, Crooks is the kind of talent that makes other players of stature sit up and take notice, the junior center with a feel beyond her years. A 6ft 3in ballast in the paint, Crooks belongs to a protected class of hooper, the velveteen giant – post players who win with touch as much as brute force.
Continue reading...Apologies won’t help the survivors still living with the echoes of abuse. But wealthy people have the resources to make a real impact
Years before there was a call for transparency with the Epstein files, I spent months reading the documents. Not the headlines – the documents: the emails, the financial records, the human suffering, and the internal communications that mapped how one man’s wealth and power built an ecosystem of exploitation that operated for decades. As a sex trafficking expert for more than 15 years, I’ve witnessed many men who abused their power and the system, but rarely have I seen wealth weaponized so effectively and for so long.
I read the files because I served as the expert witness for the US Virgin Islands in its litigation against JPMorgan Chase, which alleged that the bank maintained a financial relationship with Epstein despite evidence of his sex trafficking. The case ended in a 2023 settlement; the bank did not admit wrongdoing. I reviewed the messages from men with power and wealth in Epstein’s orbit. I saw what they said, what they didn’t say, and what they saw and didn’t see.
Continue reading...Swing Left is trying to revitalize Democrats’ outmoded ground game with ‘deep canvassing’ ahead of midterms
Pope Leo came top with 42%. Donald Trump was just behind with 41%. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) scored 38% and TV host Stephen Colbert 35%. Trailing behind all of them was the Democratic party, viewed positively by just 30% of voters in a recent NBC News poll. About 52% view the Democrats negatively.
Among the reasons for the distrust, argues Swing Left, a national grassroots organisation, is a broken voter contact model in which Democrats are too transactional, too last minute and too dependent on outdated technology. It is aiming to fix the problem ahead of November’s midterm elections.
Continue reading...The Republican senator from North Carolina will not seek re-election after Trump threatened to primary him
In the last US Senate hearing before Kristi Noem’s ouster, some of the fiercest criticism the homeland security secretary received came not from outraged Democrats, but from an ally of Donald Trump.
“What we’ve seen is a disaster under your leadership, Ms Noem, disaster,” said Thom Tillis, the senior Republican senator from North Carolina, at the outset of a 10-minute skewering of the secretary he dubbed a “performance evaluation”.
Continue reading...Netflix is the sci-fi gift that keeps on giving.
A Democratic candidate for a key House race in Maine oversaw a political action committee that donated thousands of dollars to Republican candidates across the country, Federal Election Commission records show.
Jordan Wood, who is running for the Democratic nomination in Maine’s 2nd Congressional District, is the former executive director of democracyFirst PAC, a group that — despite its left-of-center orientation — donated to at least one Republican PAC, in addition to giving thousands of dollars to at least six GOP campaigns for House and Senate seats during the 2024 election cycle, according to the records.
In total, the group donated $75,000 to various House and Senate races, including Sen. John Curtis, R-Utah; Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb.; and Rep. David Valadao, R-Calif., with contributions ranging from $1,000 to $3,000.
Wood’s PAC also gave $5,000 to Republican Governance Group/Tuesday Group PAC, a group of moderate Republicans that has gradually moved to the right as it aligned with the policy priorities of the Trump administration.
“This is pretty troubling.”
“I don’t necessarily condemn anyone for contributing to left or right candidates as long as they’re actively protecting our civil rights, but this is pretty troubling,” said Maine state Rep. Amy Roeder, a Democrat.
While some of the candidates democracyFirst donated to were running for safe seats in deep-red districts, others, such as Valadao, an incumbent, were considered to be more competitive. Valadao, first elected to the House in 2012, lost his seat to Democrat TJ Cox in 2016 before regaining it four years later.
Though some of the GOP lawmakers supported by democracyFirst have at times voted for President Donald Trump’s agenda items, most are considered moderate Republicans. Valadao, for instance, was one of just 10 House representatives to vote to impeach President Trump.
But at least six GOP lawmakers who received money from democracyFirst, including Valadao, voted along party lines to support Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill,” a sprawling funding bill that realized a wide array of long-standing conservative aims, including cuts to Medicaid, tax cuts for billionaires, and a $75 billion infusion to Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
At the state level, democracyFirst pitched in to help several campaigns for state legislature seats and county commissioner positions in Pennsylvania, including that of County Commissioner Mike Pries, of Dauphin County, who went on in 2025 to vote to reject a resolution that would have restricted local cooperation with ICE.
“democracyFIRST was built to do one thing: defeat Trump-aligned candidates who were trying to seize control of America’s election infrastructure,” Wood said in a statement. “Every Republican candidate democracyFIRST ever supported held an office with direct authority over election administration or certification, and every single one of them was in a primary against an election denier who supported Trump’s false claims of a rigged election. We were trying to take their power away. It was a carefully designed firewall to safeguard future elections.”
Wood is one of several candidates vying for the Democratic nomination in the race to replace Rep. Jared Golden, D-Maine. Golden was already facing a primary challenge from State Auditor Matt Dunlap.
Golden, a centrist who has caught heat from progressives for voting against party lines in several key instances, announced in November that he would not seek reelection. In the wake of the announcement, Wood was months into a campaign to unseat the longtime Republican Maine Sen. Susan Collins, but swiftly pivoted to throw his hat in the ring for Golden’s seat.
In addition to the democracyFirst spending, Wood has been scrutinized for his ties to Mothership Strategies, a liberal-leaning fundraising outfit run by his husband, Jake Lipsett. The firm has gained a controversial reputation in Democratic circles for aggressive tactics, inflammatory and alarming rhetoric, and accusations of self-dealing and other unethical billing practices.
Wood has been scrutinized for his ties to Mothership Strategies, a fundraising outfit run by his husband.
Wood has said he and his husband keep their professional lives separate, but FEC records show that in the months after Wood stepped down from democracyFirst to run against Collins, the new candidate’s old PAC began funneling money to Mothership to the eventual tune of more than half a million dollars.
Dunlap, meanwhile, has earned a chilly reception from national Democratic leadership over his decision to primary Golden, whose district elected Trump in the 2024 election by 9 percentage points, and faced criticism from the right for his role in auditing the state’s Department of Health and Human Services. Trump and his allies have said the agency exercised lax oversight in the disbursement of federal money to other state health care programs. The other main contender, Joe Baldacci, a state senator and the brother of former two-term Maine Gov. John Baldacci, joined the race in January. (Dunlap and Baldacci’s campaigns declined to comment.)
Whoever wins the Democratic primary will likely face up in the general against former Maine Gov. Paul LePage, a proto-MAGA populist. LePage, who occupied the governor’s mansion from 2011 until 2019, is known for his long record of foot-in-mouth gaffes and racially charged statements.
Baldacci and Dunlap are longtime residents of Maine’s 2nd Congressional District. Wood, on the other hand, only announced after pivoting to the House race that he would to move with his family to the city of Lewiston in order to qualify. LePage has spent his years of political exile in the sunny wilderness of Florida.
“I am friends with both Sen. Baldacci and State Auditor Dunlap and have known them to be people of integrity and people who really give a damn,” said Roeder, the statehouse representative. “Jordan Wood was not a CD2 resident until very recently, and I personally look sideways at someone who moves into a district in order to run in that district. And I count Paul LePage as well.”
LePage, who announced his candidacy for the House seat in May, is making his second attempt at a political comeback after badly losing his 2024 bid to retake his old job as governor from incumbent Democrat Janet Mills.
The post Dem in Maine House Primary Funneled PAC Money to Republicans appeared first on The Intercept.

Why Should Delaware Care?
For years, universities have hosted debates on controversial topics. But growing political tensions around free speech; DEI programs; and transgender rights have raised the question of whether such forums should be framed as discussions, rather than debates where one side wins. UD’s recent event on biological sex highlights the question of how campuses should balance academic debate with concerns from students who believe their identities are being attacked.
As transgender rights become a growing political flashpoint nationwide, a University of Delaware event debating whether biological sex is binary has stirred controversy on campus, prompting criticism from LGBTQ students and advocates in the state.
While UD officials say the event, which took place last week, was meant to encourage open discussion of a controversial topic in an academic setting, advocates say it instead framed the existence and legitimacy of transgender and queer people as something up for debate.
“Seeing the faculty put on an event that challenges those queer identities is kind of like a slap in the face,” UD senior Emma Abrams said.
Debates over biological sex and other controversial topics, such as immigration and abortion, have taken place on college campuses for years. Universities frequently frame those as part of their commitment to academic freedom and free speech, arguing that higher education should expose students to competing ideas and encourage open discussion.
But UD’s debate on biological sex comes at a time when universities are navigating growing political pressure around diversity, equity, and inclusion programs, as well as heightened national attention on transgender rights and even free speech.
The UD event was organized and hosted by its Philosophy, Women & Gender Studies, and Anthropology departments and promoted by the university on its website.
Over 100 students and faculty attended the debate, which featured two professors, Agustín Fuentes of Princeton University and Tomás Bogardus of Pepperdine University. The two engaged in a back-and-forth discussion over whether biological sex is restricted to male and female or exists along a spectrum.
Fuentes, a biological anthropologist at Princeton, has argued in his research that human biological sex shows significant variation and cannot always be fully explained by a strict male-female binary.
Bogardus, a philosophy professor at Pepperdine, argued that biological sex is a binary category rooted in reproductive roles. In his academic work, he has argued that philosophical arguments separating gender identity from biological sex do not hold up under scrutiny.
In one academic paper, Bogardus argues that efforts to redefine “woman” solely around gender identity create what he calls a “Trans Inclusion Problem,” arguing that identifying as a woman is not the same thing as being a woman.
During the debate, both professors were given 20 minutes to argue their claims and then additional time to dispute and respond to the other’s arguments.
Joel Pust, chair of the Department of Philosophy, said that controversial topics are often chosen for debates at the university not to antagonize people but to allow individuals to think more deeply about their views and the opposing sides.
“I think part of treating people with respect is not treating them as so fragile that they can’t hear the opposing point of view,” Pust told Spotlight Delaware. “And I realize that some of these topics will be disturbing or controversial, but I think that’s part of a university’s job, to expose students to a variety of views and try to get them to think about them.”
University officials asserted that the event was part of its academic programming and not an endorsement for any position. In a statement to Spotlight Delaware, the university said that “hosting a difficult conversation is not the same as endorsing any particular answer.”
Still, multiple student groups gathered for a separate event, scheduled for the same time as the debate, to provide what they said would be a safe space for students to discuss how it impacted them.
Some argued that the UD-sanctioned event should have been framed as a conversation, saying the word “debate” suggests that one side must ultimately be right.
Others pointed to the power imbalance of the university-backed event, arguing it was unfair to expect vulnerable students to defend their identities in front of professors and their peers.
“It’s unfair for all the students who pay so much money to go here, and it’s unfair for those people who aren’t comfortable doing that to not have their voices heard,” UD senior Erik Zuylen said.
Students reached out to the school faculty and UD President Laura Carlson with their concerns. In emails to students, faculty expressed a willingness to discuss ways to better support gender-diverse students. They also noted the event was intended to challenge controversial views in a public academic setting.
Prior to the event, Pust encouraged the students to come and defend their views, noting that there would be a question-and-answer session after the debate.
“Clearly, you disagree with one of the two. I hope your views will be ably defended,” he said in his email to student advocates.

Rep. Mara Gorman (D-Newark), who represents the area, attended the event to listen to students’ concerns and, as she said, to serve as an ally. She said she didn’t support shutting the event down, but that she didn’t understand why it was a productive conversation for the school to have.
After the student-led event, Gorman said she plans to bring students’ concerns to Carlson.
“I would hope that there would be sort of a larger conversation that the president might engage,” Gorman said.
Carlson officially took office in January, after serving as interim president for nearly six months. Her tenure came after the university’s previous president, Dennis Assanis, had been increasingly under fire from faculty, who criticized his focus on capital development projects.
Since Carlson took office, the university has faced criticism over several changes affecting diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts.
Last March, the Trump Administration launched investigations into more than 50 universities across the country, including UD, for their DEI efforts, with the goal to “end the use of racial preferences and stereotypes in education programs and activities,” according to the U.S. Department of Education.
UD has since rebranded its Office of Equity and Inclusion as the Office of Civil Rights and Title IX Compliance, temporarily removed a university website that featured student research on racial injustice, and has taken down posters for the different diversity-related groups and replacing them with posters that appeared more inclusive, as reported by different news outlets.
Carlson did not respond to requests for comment for this story.
In addition to Trump’s efforts to change DEI initiatives, over the past year and a half, his administration has issued a string of directives and executive orders aiming to alter health care for transgender individuals and pull federal funds from hospitals that provided gender-affirming care.
Beyond pushback from the students, local advocacy groups also criticized how the UD debate was framed, arguing that discussions about gender identity should be handled carefully, particularly during a time when transgender rights are being threatened politically.
Mike Brickner, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Delaware, said that while the organization supports the right to discuss controversial topics, universities should keep in mind how those conversations affect marginalized communities.
“We believe that it is essential for university representatives to reach out and engage with (marginalized groups) to ensure that programming is conducted in thoughtful and compassionate ways,” he said.
The post UD debate on biological sex draws criticism from LGBTQ students appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware care?
Wilmington’s city charter requires at least one minority-party member be elected among the four at-large seats. After City Council’s lone Republican switched to the Democratic Party last fall, that policy goal has been undone.
The Wilmington City Council is considering a resolution that would bar future minority-party members from switching their affiliation during the middle of an elected term.
While the resolution was sparked by Councilman James Spadola’s change of parties five months ago, it would not affect him because it would not apply retroactively.
Still, the conversation around the resolution has brought a wave of criticism against Spadola, including calls for him to resign.
On Thursday, the Wilmington City Council held its first public discussion about the resolution, proposed by Councilman Alex Hackett. The measure asks Delaware’s legislature to change the city’s charter to prohibit a future at-large council member who represents a minority political party from changing their party during their term. If they do, they would be required to forfeit their seat.
During the meeting, all eight council members present expressed support for the resolution. Spadola and four other members did not attend the meeting.
In October, Spadola – then the council’s sole Republican – switched his party registration from Republican to Democrat – altering the makeup of the council to all Democratic members.
Currently, Wilmington’s city charter prohibits the majority party from nominating more than three candidates for the four at-large council seats, essentially guaranteeing that at least one member is from a minority political party. The charter does not explicitly say that council members cannot change their party while in office.
During the meeting Thursday, council members Zanthia Oliver, Coby Owens, and Council president Trippi Congo called that a “loophole” in the charter that Spadola relied on to change his party affiliation.
They argued that the purpose of the charter is to require a member of a minority party on the council at all times.
“It is very clear what the intent of the charter is … and unfortunately, we have an instance where we have a council member who went around that intent,” Congo said during Thursday’s meeting.

Hackett said he proposed the measure to ensure that party switches do not happen in the future, arguing such moves undermine fair representation and the city’s democratic process.
“It just was a slap in the face to all of us,” Hackett told Spotlight Delaware.
A handful of residents also spoke during the meeting, saying Spadola’s party switch disenfranchised voters. They called on the City Council to force him to vacate his seat or take the matter to the Delaware Court of Chancery.
“By switching midterm he has betrayed the very voters who place their trust in him,” Brandon Brice, secretary of the Delaware Republican Party, said.
Following Spadola’s party switch last fall, he told Spotlight Delaware he had considered changing parties since 2021. He finally did so, he said, because he disagreed with several policies associated with President Donald Trump, including tariffs, ICE enforcement, and federal troop deployments into U.S. cities.
Last fall, the city council’s chief of staff Elijah Simmons said Spadola would be able to finish his term, which ends in 2028, He said the city’s charter contained “no written prohibitions against party affiliation changes while in office.”
Since Wilmington’s voter registration is heavily Democratic, three of the four at-large City Council seats have historically gone to Democrats, leaving a single seat for a Republican party candidate.
Spadola was first elected in 2020 and re-elected in 2024.
This week, Spadola took to social media to talk about his fellow councilmembers’ recent actions, including urging him to change his party back, or to vacate his seat.
“You would think in an overwhelmingly Democratic city, with an overwhelmingly Democratic council they would welcome a new Democrat to the fold, but you know there’s politics going on here,” he said in a video posted to Facebook last week.
Spadola did not describe in detail the “politics” that he believed had influenced other members’ actions.
Shawn Dottery, a Republican who ran against Spadola for the at-large council seat in 2024, told Spotlight Delaware that “certain members of council” approached him in January, and urged him to speak out against Spadola’s actions. He said he declined.
But the councilmembers who have criticized his party change say their concerns are not an attack on Spadola specifically, but instead an effort to ensure fair representation.
Congo said he had been looking into the situation since last year. He said he had spoken with other council members, residents, the city’s law department and other attorneys to get advice, which led him to send a letter in February telling Spadola that he had to change his party affiliation back to Republican.
“Should the matter remain unresolved after that date [Feb. 16], we will consider next steps, including declaring your seat vacant,” Congo said in the letter.
Spadola discussed the letter in his social media post, saying that councilmembers were working in an attempt to vacate his seat so that they could replace him with an “unelected, handpicked successor.”
Spadola also hired an attorney to respond to Congo. In a letter to the council president, the attorney William Larson asserted that the city’s charter does not prohibit Spadola from changing party affiliation.
“We reserve all rights to seek declaratory judgment, an injunction, and additional relief in the Court of Chancery should you take any further action to vacate Council Member Spadola’s seat,” Larson said in the Feb. 12 letter.
Larson also accused Congo of breaking Delaware’s open meeting laws by jointly discussing the issue with multiple councilmembers. Congo denied the allegation.
“It’s a distraction,” Congo told Spotlight Delaware.
Congo said he has not responded to Spadola’s attorney’s letter. He is not concerned about a potential lawsuit, he said.
On Thursday, Congo and Hackett also told Spotlight Delaware that they would have further discussions with the City Council and with the community, about their next steps in addressing the issue.
On the other side of the debate, the Wilmington Democratic Committee sent a letter to City Council opposing the resolution, arguing that it is likely to be unconstitutional. They said it ignores the “political reality” that some Republicans may choose to become Democrats.
They also urged council to consider allowing residents to vote for four candidates from the same party.
“Gaining one more Democratic legislative seat in Wilmington is a win for our party, and frankly, a win for Wilmington,” Wilmington Democratic Committee Chair Cassandra Marshall said.
The post Wilmington considers charter change following Spadola’s party switch appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Government works best when its citizens are knowledgeable and engaged. Delaware’s government has scores of commissions, working groups, agencies and legislative committees. All must hold meetings that are open to the public. Below we highlight a few of those meetings that are happening this week.
Below are some of the most important or interesting public meetings happening around the state this week.
Delaware senators will begin formal discussions this week on what has already become the most hotly debated bill of the legislative session.
On Wednesday, the Senate Health and Social Services Committee will consider Senate Bill 1, which would impose limits on the rates some large insurance companies pay to reimburse hospitals for health services.
Already, lobbying against the bill has spilled out of Legislative Hall and into online ads paid for by the Delaware Healthcare Association. In one ad, the hospital industry group calls on viewers to “say no to SB 1.”
This week’s hearing comes months after Delaware ended a fight over another measure meant to rein in hospital costs. Last fall, Delaware agreed to remove a state hospital board’s key enforcement tool that had given it authority to veto hospital budgets officials deemed excessive.
The state agreed to do so as part of a settlement it reached with ChristianaCare, which had sued the state, calling the board’s authority “draconian.”
The hospital system – Delaware largest and most influential – also claimed last year that the board’s veto authority would cause “further erosion to the integrity and viability of the (Delaware) corporate franchise.” The remarks piggybacked on criticism being lobbed at Delaware at the time by Elon Musk and several other executives in tech and finance.

Now Senate Bill 1, introduced by Senate Majority Leader Bryan Townsend, is a new referendum on hospital pricing in a state that has some of the highest health care costs in the country.
The legislation would set reimbursement ceilings on the rates insurance companies carrying plans for state employees and some commercial entities pay to hospitals.
Health care providers generally earn the bulk of their revenue by negotiating with insurers who represent large groups of patients. The negotiations determine how much the insurer will pay for health care services, and in turn the costs that will be passed onto patients.
📍 The Senate Health and Social Services will meet at 10 a.m. Wednesday at Legislative Hall, located at 411 Legislative Ave., in Dover. For more details, including information about virtual attendance, click here.
Lawmakers will also consider 20 other bills or resolutions this week, according to legislative agendas.
Among those in front of various committees is a bill that would incentivize businesses to build gas-turbine electricity generators, and one that would cement rules that limit rent increases at mobile home parks.
Before the full Senate on Tuesday is a bill that would remove a cap on the number of households with solar panels that utilities can pay for excess electricity generated.
To view details of all hearings, scroll through the “What’s Happening” box here.
Delaware’s budget forecasting committee – known by its acronym DEFAC – will release updated projections Monday for the amount of money the state could bring in during the next fiscal year.
The estimates will be used in the coming weeks for budget negotiations among lawmakers and with the governor over how much Delaware should spend of that sum.
In January, Gov. Matt Meyer based his $6.9 billion budget proposal off of DEFAC’s previous revenue estimates released at the end of last year. Those numbers showed a rosier picture than previously estimated – largely because of a change in tax law that insulated Delaware from some of the impacts of President Donald Trump’s federal spending legislation, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
Since then, several significant global events have occurred – most notably the ongoing war between Iran and the United States and Israel. The war is already disrupting global oil supply chains, which could increase costs for Delaware beyond energy.
📍 The full council of DEFAC will meet Monday at 1 p.m. at the state’s Buena Vista property, located at 661 South DuPont Highway in New Castle. Click here for virtual details and for the meeting agenda.
Delaware Education Secretary Cindy Marten will announce Thursday whether the Bryan Allen Stevenson School of Excellence will lose its right to operate as a charter school in the state.
The scheduled announcement follows a months-long investigation by state officials into enrollment issues that have plagued the school. In February, those officials recommended that Marten revoke the school’s charter.
If she follows the recommendation, the closure would be the first for a Delaware charter school in seven years and the first closed by state regulators in a decade.
It would also leave Sussex County with just two charter schools, compared with six in Kent County and 15 in New Castle County.
📍 Marten will present her decision at a meeting of the Delaware State Board of Education, scheduled for 5 p.m. Thursday. The meeting will occur at the John W. Colette Building, located at 35 Commerce Way, Suite 1, in Dover. For information about virtual participation, click here.
The Sussex County Council will discuss a proposal Tuesday to place a temporary moratorium on the construction of what officials call “cluster subdivisions” in rural areas.
Councilman John Rieley told The News Journal last week that the moratorium aims to stop a “land rush,” in which developers race to submit applications before new ordinances governing those denser types of communities can be passed and take effect.
Among reforms being considered in Delaware’s fastest-growing county is a proposal to loosen restrictions on a county program that incentivizes affordable rental units, and one to increase open space requirements in dense developments.
📍 The Sussex County Council will hold its weekly meeting at 10 a.m. Tuesday at the Sussex County Administrative Office Building, located at 2 The Circle in Georgetown. For more information, including about virtual attendance, click here.
It’s budget season for Delaware’s cities and counties too, and this week Wilmington and Kent County will hold public meetings focused on how they will spend money next year.
In Wilmington, Mayor John Carney will formally present his budget proposal for the fiscal year 2027 — which begins in July — in a speech to the City Council.
Last year, the city’s budget included a 6.5% increase in water and sewer fees, and more dollars to the Wilmington Fire Department so it could take over ambulance services in the city. Ultimately, 11 members of the City Council voted to approve that budget while two voted against it.
📍 The Wilmington City Council will meet for Carney’s budget address at 6 p.m. Thursday at the Old Town Hall, located at 512 North Market Street in Wilmington. For more details, including information about virtual attendance, click here.
For Kent Countians, there will be a public workshop hosted by the county to discuss the proposed capital budget and public safety budget for the 2027 fiscal year.
Last year, the county budget passed with no public comments made – neither on the 12 resolutions attached to the budget nor on the budget ordinance itself, according to a report from Delaware Public Media.
Kent County Levy Court President Joanne Masten attributed the lack of public comment to what she described as the county’s careful stewardship of public money, the report stated.
📍 The Kent County Levy Court will meet for the workshop at 6 p.m. Tuesday at the Kent County Administrative Complex, located at 555 Bay Road in Dover. For more details, including information about virtual attendance, click here.
Officials in Wilmington and Dover also will be meeting this week for their cities’ respective police oversight boards.
Such boards were created in Delaware in the months and years after the 2020 police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.
During Wilmington’s meeting, officials will review past community engagement events and discuss a recommendation report, among other agenda items.
In Dover, the board will discuss community meetings, and complaints, according to its agenda. Following the meeting, new members of the Dover Police Advisory Board will participate in a mandatory training session.
📍 The Wilmington Community Police Accountability Board will meet at 1 p.m. Monday at the Third Floor Conference Room in the Louis L. Redding City/County Building, located at 800 N. French St. in Wilmington. For details about virtual attendance, click here.
📍 The Dover Police Advisory Board will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday at the Dover PD’s Hutchison Public Assembly Room, located at 400 S. Queen St. in Dover. No virtual information is listed for the meeting. The agenda states that individuals who wish to be recognized during public comment should notify Rebecca McNamara at 302-736-7100.
The post Get Involved: Hospital cost fight to resume; Sussex charter to learn its fate appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Absurdist video urges policymakers and users to resist deliberate deterioration of platforms and devices
The video’s opening shot shows a man hiding under a bed snipping in a hole in someone’s sock. Seconds later, the same man uses a saw to shorten a table leg so that it wobbles during breakfast. “My job is to make things shitty,” the man explains. “The official title is enshittificator. What I do is I take things that are perfectly fine and I make them worse.”
The video, released recently by the Norwegian Consumer Council, is an absurdist take on a serious issue; it is part of a wider, global campaign aimed at fighting back against the “enshittification”, or gradual deterioration, of digital products and services.
Continue reading...Poll of students of all faiths and none found almost a quarter had seen Jews targeted for their religion or ethnicity
One in five students would be reluctant to, or would never, houseshare with a Jewish student, according to a survey by the Union of Jewish Students (UJS) that says antisemitism has “become normalised” on UK campuses.
A UJS poll of 1,000 students “of all faiths and none” found almost a quarter (23%) have seen behaviour that targets Jewish students for their religion or ethnicity and nearly half (47%) have witnessed justification of the 7 October attacks by Hamas.
Continue reading...Jose Omar Flores-Penaloza was willing to admit that he had entered the United States illegally. He was ready to be deported, according to his attorneys.
But federal prosecutors would not let him go last spring without making him answer for another crime — one he had never heard of.
Weeks earlier, President Donald Trump, to address what he called a national emergency, ordered a stretch of borderland transferred to the military so that troops could help apprehend unauthorized migrants.
Because prosecutors believed Flores-Penaloza had crossed through that zone, now called a national defense area, they charged him with trespassing on military property under statutes including one enacted in 1909 to keep spies away from arsenals.
The added misdemeanors were unlikely to lengthen his sentence; they typically result in time served and deportation. But Flores-Penaloza maintained his innocence in the face of the allegation that could cast him as a national security threat.
So he awaited trial in a New Mexico jail.
One year into the second Trump administration, federal courts are facing a surge of immigration-related litigation, including a record number of habeas petitions from detainees who say they are being unlawfully held.
In Minnesota last month, after a frustrated judge asked why defendants he had ordered released were still in custody, a government attorney blurted out: “What do you want me to do? The system sucks. This job sucks.”
ProPublica and The Texas Tribune spent four months investigating a persistent source of pressure in border districts — one experts say is taxing the courts and challenging long-standing principles of criminal law.
Since last April, at least 4,700 immigrants already charged with entering the country illegally have faced additional misdemeanor counts accusing them of trespassing on military property. Court records reviewed by the news organizations show that more than 90% of cases have been resolved, and that most did not end in convictions on the trespass charges: About 60% were dropped or dismissed.
At least nine judges in West Texas and New Mexico have found the prosecutions legally deficient. Citing the basic requirement of mens rea — a guilty mind — many ruled that defendants could not be found guilty because they did not know they were trespassing on military land.
Yet prosecutors have continued filing the charges and appealing adverse rulings, arguing that knowingly crossing the border is sufficient to prove criminal intent. More than 20 legal scholars and former prosecutors told reporters they could not identify a conventional law-enforcement or military goal that would justify their persistence.


The strain has been visible in crowded federal dockets.
“We would do jury selection and trial on a misdemeanor case that would have no bearing on the sentence whatsoever?” West Texas District Judge Leon Schydlower asked a prosecutor in June. He noted that there were about 40 similar cases on his docket and asked the prosecutor what she would do if he scheduled all the trials on the same day.
“We would have to be prepared to move to go forward on all 40, Your Honor,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Patricia “Patti” Aguayo replied, prefacing her position by saying she had no choice in the matter.
“We have not been allowed to do anything but move forward.”
Prosecutors were operating under a directive issued by Attorney General Pam Bondi mandating “zealous advocacy” of the administration’s priorities and warning that attorneys who declined to advance them could face discipline or termination.

Senior officials in the U.S. attorney’s offices handling trespass cases declined repeated interview requests, and a spokesperson in the West Texas office asked reporters to stop contacting prosecutors directly. A Justice Department spokesperson noted that one of the charges carries a longer sentence and claimed the prosecutions have “proven to be a significant deterrent to both illegal crossings and cartel activity along the border,” though the department did not provide supporting documentation.
Had prosecutors accepted his offer to plead guilty to illegal entry in exchange for dropping the trespass charge, Flores-Penaloza would have been processed for deportation to Mexico, his public defenders Amanda Skinner and Victoria Trull said.
Instead, he remained in custody for more than a month, in a county jail where guards have been accused of threatening to use Tasers on inmates’ genitals and bursting into sleeping areas with flash-bangs. (In a court filing, attorneys for Doña Ana County denied the first allegation and wrote, about the second, that guards used “specialized equipment during operations” but disputed they were “terrorizing vulnerable detainees.”)
Hours into Flores-Penaloza’s June 17 bench trial before Chief Magistrate Judge Gregory Wormuth, prosecutors could not pinpoint exactly where he had crossed the border or produce a clear map showing the boundaries of the military zone.
“I also don’t dispute,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Randy Castellano conceded, “that we don’t meet the mens rea requirement the court has indicated in a prior opinion.”
Wormuth, who had dismissed dozens of similar charges, grew frustrated. He noted that Flores-Penaloza had been in custody for 40 days largely because of the unproven allegation.
“The United States has come in here and put not a single bit of evidence that would allow me to find that he even entered the national defense area,” Wormuth said. “It is very, very disturbing.”
He acquitted Flores-Penaloza on the trespass counts while finding him guilty of illegal entry. The young man was deported.
But more cases were coming.

Federal law generally bars the military from detaining civilians on domestic soil. But there was a workaround: Troops could capture intruders on their own bases.
Under orders from Trump last April, federal agencies including the Department of the Interior transferred more than 200 miles of riverbank and desert scrub in West Texas and New Mexico to the armed forces, converting the terrain into extensions of Army installations.
Speaking to troops deployed to one of the new national defense areas, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth suggested that anyone entering them would be on notice.
“You’ve got signs like this one all across the border wall facing into Mexico,” he said — “clear English, clear Spanish.”
The plan appeared straightforward. But once cases reached courtrooms, that clarity evaporated.
Detained migrants said they hadn’t seen signs and had no way of knowing they had crossed military land. Prosecutors often couldn’t prove otherwise.
ProPublica and the Tribune identified 1,300 New Mexico district court records in which the government stated how far from these signs migrants crossed the border or were apprehended. The news organizations found that some were arrested more than 20 miles away from a sign, and that most didn’t come within 1,000 feet of any posting. In at least one Texas case, defense attorneys demonstrated how difficult it was to read the 12-by-18-inch sign from about 10 feet away.
A spokesperson for the U.S. attorney’s office in New Mexico said what matters is not where a defendant was apprehended but where they entered the country. In some cases, such as Flores-Penaloza’s, prosecutors lacked evidence of that as well.
These evidentiary gaps snagged most of the cases that reached judges, underscoring an existential question:
“What is your evidence that he knew he was accessing a restricted national defense area?” a federal magistrate judge, Miguel Torres, asked during an El Paso, Texas, jury trial. Adequate notice was essential, he said, “so that we don’t ensnare innocent people that do not know they are violating this specific law.”
Torres ruled against the government at trial, but many cases didn’t make it that far.


In Texas, many defendants pleaded guilty. To fight the trespass charges meant waiting in jail possibly for weeks or months. They chose to go home instead.
But in New Mexico, within weeks of the first cases, judges began throwing out the trespass charges as soon as they were filed for lack of probable cause.
Prosecutors responded with an unusual maneuver. Rather than abandon the cases, they refiled them using a charging document called an information — a tool commonly used for misdemeanors but, according to the legal experts consulted by ProPublica and the Tribune, rarely deployed to revive cases judges had already deemed unsupported.
Prosecutors used informations to resurrect more than 1,600 military trespass cases, the news organizations found.
“If there is no probable cause, the case is supposed to end,” said Meghan Skelton, a former assistant federal public defender and prosecutor. “They are trying to circumvent that in a way that has not been done in the 30 years I’ve been practicing law.”

The tactic kicked off what one defense attorney called a “ridiculous dance.” Judges would separate the immigration and trespass charges, accept guilty pleas on illegal entry and reiterate that there was no probable cause to detain defendants on the military counts. With deportation imminent, prosecutors would then move to dismiss the trespass charges themselves.
Prosecutors who left the U.S. attorney’s offices in the early months of the second Trump administration told reporters they were alarmed to see the lengths their former colleagues were going to pursue dubious cases. “You’re just losing credibility with the court, and on a bigger picture, credibility with the public,” said Marisa Ong, a former assistant U.S. attorney in Las Cruces.
It was the kind of outcome Matilda “Tilli” Villalobos sought to avoid when she saw the zealous advocacy mandate last February and left the district for private practice. “I don’t want to be the one standing up in court in front of a judge advocating for something that I don’t believe is even legal,” said the decorated former sex crimes prosecutor, who now defends immigrants charged with criminal offenses.
Alex Uballez, who served as U.S. attorney in New Mexico before being fired by Trump last year, called the prosecutions a “flustering attempt to create fear and chaos by whatever means necessary.”
“It would be laughable if it wasn’t so cruel and chaotic and dangerous,” he added, “both for the people involved and for the justice system as a whole.”

The national defense areas were supposed to allow active-duty troops to apprehend unlawful border crossers for the first time. So far, that outcome has largely failed to materialize.
According to a spokesperson for Joint Task Force-Southern Border, about 1,500 deployed troops had made just 68 apprehensions as of last week, leaving the Border Patrol still responsible for the vast majority of detentions.
Even so, the administration has continued expanding the zones from California to Texas.
Prosecutors began filing military trespass charges in South Texas last month, starting with a man caught crossing the Rio Grande, in an area now designated an extension of the Joint Base San Antonio. Along the river, warnings of prosecution are written across floating buoys and blared in Spanish from loudspeakers that can be heard in Mexico.
Border Patrol agents ask migrants detained in national defense areas to sign a form acknowledging they entered without permission, placing the documents in their immigration files, then-interim El Paso Border Patrol Sector Chief Walter Slosar said in a news conference last June. “And so the next time they cross the border unlawfully, there’s going to be no issue” about notice.
In New Mexico, prosecutors have used that written notice and previous military trespass charges to help secure 20 guilty pleas from defendants who reentered. Still, the news organizations’ analysis of court records found that nearly every trespassing charge in the state has been dismissed or dropped.
The Justice Department continues to press its legal theory in appellate court. In May, prosecutors filed trespass charges against Komiljon Toirov, a man from Uzbekistan detained in New Mexico. Toirov does not speak English or Spanish and could not have understood posted warnings. Prosecutors maintain that does not matter. They wanted him held in jail for trial, but a judge released him.
For months since then, prosecutors have fought that decision. As the case bounced between the district court and the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, judges openly bristled at the government’s persistence.


“The defense bar and every judge in the Las Cruces district courthouse disagrees with the government,” U.S. District Judge Sarah Davenport wrote in October. A three-judge appellate panel in December noted that prosecutors had produced “little to no evidence” to support their case for jailing Toirov.
The government has now filed notice that it plans to appeal again, indicating that it will seek a higher court ruling supporting its argument that Toirov didn’t need to know about the military zone in order to trespass onto it.
“We remain confident that our interpretation is consistent with the law and U.S. Supreme Court precedent,” a Justice Department spokesperson said in an email.
Ryan Goodman, a national security law professor at New York University, said the government’s persistence was “jaw-dropping.”
“It appears to be prosecutorial abuse by continuing to bring fatally flawed cases,” he said in an email. “This kind of abuse of the Justice Department’s powers has very significant repercussions for the ability of our democracy to survive.”
Meanwhile, the El Paso courthouse has eased into a new normal. On many mornings, shackled migrants plead guilty to military trespass charges rather than remain jailed awaiting trial.
Occasionally, the routine falters.
On Nov. 3, a young man named Brandon David Munoz-Luna spoke up during his plea hearing. “In my case, I did not know that I was entering a military reservation,” he said through an interpreter.
Federal Magistrate Judge Robert Castañeda turned to Assistant U.S. Attorney Adrian Gallegos. He asked, “Does the government insist on making this a charge you’re pursuing?”
“Yes, Judge,” the prosecutor replied. “Pursuant to DOJ policy.”
Minutes later, Munoz-Luna pleaded no contest, and the court moved on.

The post The Trump Administration’s “Disturbing” New Legal Strategy to Prosecute Border Crossers Is Taxing Courts and Testing the Law appeared first on ProPublica.
Patchwork state policies and limited federal oversight have led to a fragmented system for tracking organ donor status.
Some economists think the Fed, facing inflationary pressures from rising energy prices, may not cut interest rates at all this year.
Starting in September, even Android developers not in Google's Play Store will still be required to register with Google to distribute their apps in Brazil, Singapore, Indonesia, and Thailand, with Google continuing "to roll out these requirements globally" four months later. Even developers distributing Android apps on the web for sideloading will be required to register, pay Google a $25 fee, and provide a government ID. But there's a new theory on what's secretly been motivating Google from an unnamed source in the "Keep Android Open" movement, writes long-time Slashdot reader destinyland: "You can't separate this really from their ongoing interactions with Epic and the settlement that they came to," they argue. Twelve days ago Epic Games and Google announced a new proposal for settling their long-running dispute over the legality of alternative app stores on Android phones. (Rather than agreeing to let third-party app stores into their Play Store, Google wants them to continue being sideloaded, promising in a blog post last week that they'll even offer a "more streamlined" and "simplified" sideloading alternative for rival app stores. "This Registered App Store program will begin outside of the US first, and we intend to bring it to the US as well, subject to court approval.") So "developer verification" could be Google's fallback plan if U.S. courts fail to approve this. "If the Google Play Store has to allow any third-party repository app store, Google essentially has given up all control of the apps. But if they're able to claw back that control by requiring that all developers, no matter how they distribute their apps, have to register with Google — have to agree to their Terms & Conditions, pay them money, provide identification — then they have a large degree of indirect control over any app that can be developed for the entire platform." But that plan threatens millions of people using the alternative F/OSS app distributor F-Droid, since Google also wants to have only one signature attached to Android apps. Marc Prud'hommeaux, a member of F-Droid's board of directors, says that "all of a sudden breaks all those versions of the application distributed through F-Droid or any other app store!" Prud'hommeaux says they've told Google's Android team "You know perfectly well that you're killing F-Droid!" creating an "existential" threat to an app distributor "that has existed happily for over 10 years." But good things started happening when he created the website Keep Android Open: There's now a "huge backlog" of signers for an Open Letter that already includes EFF, the Software Freedom Conservancy, and the Free Software Foundation. He believes Android's existing Play Protect security "is completely sufficient to handle the particular scenarios they claim that developer verification is meant to address"... The Keep Android Open site urges developers not to sign up for Android's early access program when it launches next week. (Instead, they're asking developers to respond to invites with an email about their concerns — and to spread the word to other developers and organizations in forums and social media posts.) There's also a petition at Change.org currently signed by 64,000 developers — adding 20,000 new signatures in the last 10 days. And "If you have an Android device, try installing F-Droid!" he adds. Google tracks how many people install these alternative app repositories, and a larger user base means greater consequences from any Android policy changes. Plus, installing F-Droid "might be refreshing!" Prud'hommeaux says. "You don't see all the advertisements and promotions and scam and crapware stuff that you see in the commercial app stores!"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Exclusive: Revelation comes as company faces mounting scrutiny over use of AI to provide health tips
Google has dropped a new artificial intelligence search feature that gave users crowdsourced health advice from amateurs around the world.
The company had said its launch of “What People Suggest”, which provided tips from strangers, showed “the potential of AI to transform health outcomes across the globe”.
Continue reading...A journalist charts the progress of AI pioneer Demis Hassabis from child chess prodigy to Nobel prize winner
It was March 2016, and at the Four Seasons Hotel in Seoul, the world was gathered to watch the culmination of a battle 2,500 years in the making. On one side was the South Korean Lee Se-dol, the second-highest ranking Go player in the world. On the other was AlphaGo – a computer program developed by London-based artificial intelligence research company DeepMind.
“Chess is the greatest game mankind has invented,” game designer Alex Randolph once said. “Go is the greatest game mankind has discovered.” Something about the ancient Chinese duel, where players place stones on a grid, trying to capture territory, feels fundamental – inevitable, even. Chess had fallen to the robots nearly 20 years earlier, when DeepBlue beat Kasparov, but Go, with its vast decision space (there are far more legal board positions than atoms in the observable universe) remained a plucky holdout.
Continue reading...Latest Android superphone packs great cameras, fast chips, long battery, a stylus and first-of-its-kind privacy display
Samsung’s latest Ultra superphone promises to keep shoulder surfers out of your business with a first-of-its-kind privacy display built into its huge 6.9in screen.
The Galaxy S26 Ultra is Samsung’s top-of-the-line phone costing £1,279 (€1,449/$1,299/A$2,199) and is one of the most feature-packed handsets you can get, with four cameras on the back, an integrated stylus and AI assistance in every corner.
Continue reading...Marianna Spring goes Inside the Rage Machine. Plus: the finale of the brilliant comedy Small Prophets. Here’s what to watch this evening
9pm, BBC Two
“My goal is to not get sued,” says Matt Motyl, a former senior staff researcher at Facebook and Meta. He is one of the ex-employees who give reporter Marianna Spring the inside story of how social media giants have profited from algorithms that perpetuate divisiveness and hate. She also studies whistleblower documents, the arrival of TikTok and charts how events such as the pandemic and the Southport riots played out across various platforms. Hollie Richardson
Covid exposed the lack of data on the country’s 140 million mobile migrant workers, but a new project in Odisha is helping to fill in the gaps
Raja Pradhan is sitting cross-legged, scrolling on his phone in his village in eastern India when a green WhatsApp chat bubble pops up on the screen. “Namaskar! Apana bahare kama pain jauthibe? Apananka suchana diaantu.” (Hello! Are you going outside for work? Please share your information.)
He reads the message twice, unsure whether to respond. “I don’t know where this information would go,” he says. “Would someone use it against me? The internet can be tricky at times. Why should I even share my details in the first place?”
Continue reading...In the Middle East, the occupation is the original sin. And those who banked on this US-backed ‘stability’ now find it giving way beneath them
A war spiralling in the Middle East. A death toll now in the thousands across Iran and Lebanon. Energy prices soaring. The Gulf seized up with Iranian strikes. It’s one of those eras that feels bewildering, incomprehensible, out of control. But there is, at the heart of it, a simple logic: everything that is unfolding is a result of Israel’s occupation of the Palestinians.
As the conflagration spreads, the connection to Palestine becomes obscured. But it is clear how much of the stability of the Middle East was secured at the expense of the Palestinians. Look at the region before 7 October 2023. US policy on the Middle East focused on “integration’’: containment of Iran, signing up more Arab countries to normalise relations with Israel and the creation, therefore, of a bloc of economic and security interests under the US military umbrella.
Continue reading...In 2024 Anthropic was sued over claims it infringed copyrights when training LLMs. But as they try to settle, they may have a problem. The Free Software Foundation announced Friday that Anthropic's training data apparently even included the book "Free as in Freedom: Richard Stallman's Crusade for Free Software" — for which the Free Software Foundation holds a copyright. It was published by O'Reilly and by the FSF under the GNU Free Documentation License (GNU FDL). This is a free license allowing use of the work for any purpose without payment. Obviously, the right thing to do is protect computing freedom: share complete training inputs with every user of the LLM, together with the complete model, training configuration settings, and the accompanying software source code. Therefore, we urge Anthropic and other LLM developers that train models using huge datasets downloaded from the Internet to provide these LLMs to their users in freedom. We are a small organization with limited resources and we have to pick our battles, but if the FSF were to participate in a lawsuit such as Bartz v. Anthropic and find our copyright and license violated, we would certainly request user freedom as compensation. "The FSF doesn't usually sue for copyright infringement," reads the headline on the FSF's announcement, "but when we do, we settle for freedom."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
US supreme court has ‘ransacked’ the country, president argues, in wake of its ruling against his trade agenda
Donald Trump has claimed he has “the absolute right” to impose new tariffs after the US supreme court ruled many of the import duties he imposed last year were illegal.
The president attacked the court in a late night broadside on Sunday, accusing it of having “unnecessarily RANSACKED” the US – and failing to show him sufficient loyalty.
Continue reading... | Hi, my onewheel won’t charge anymore. Not sure what avenues I have to debug and get this thing ruining again. Any advice would be appreciated. [link] [comments] |
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for March 16.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for March 16, No. 539.
And what others can learn from Japan's embrace of American power.
The end of an unnecessary fiction.
The Kremlin is in no hurry to save its closest partner in the Middle East.
As One Battle After Another swept the Academy Awards, Paul Thomas Anderson, Javier Bardem and Conan O’Brien gave a welcome reality check to the glitzy ceremony
In his opening monologue to the 98th Academy Awards, host Conan O’Brien issued a note of caution to easily offended viewers.
“I warn you, tonight could get political,” O’Brien said. “If that makes you uncomfortable, there’s an alternative Oscars being hosted by Kid Rock at a Dave & Buster’s down the street.”
Continue reading...The United States will face the winner of Monday's semifinal between Italy and Venezuela in Tuesday's World Baseball Classic title game.
Americans will play Italy or Venezuela in final
Gunnar Henderson and Roman Anthony homered and the United States limited the Dominican Republic’s electric offense to win a thrilling semi-final 2-1 on Sunday and move one win from capturing its second World Baseball Classic championship.
The Dominican Republic threatened in the ninth when Julio Rodríguez drew a walk and advanced to third against Mason Miller. With two outs, Miller struck out Geraldo Perdomo for his second save but the final pitch – on a full count and with the dangerous Fernando Tatis Jr up next – was several inches below the strike zone. ABS is not a part of the World Baseball Classic, so the Dominicans – who benefited from some missed calls themselves – were unable to challenge. Although the Americans’ excellent pitching won the game rather than the umpiring, it was a dismal way to end what had been an enthralling contest.
Continue reading...This blog is closed
Iraq’s football team will travel to Mexico for a 2026 World Cup playoff match despite calls for it to be postponed due to the Middle East war, the country’s football association has announced.
“The national team will depart at the end of the week to Mexico via a private plane,” said Iraq football association president Adnan Dirjal in a statement, adding they had contacted Fifa to help facilitate the trip during the conflict in the region that has hampered flights.
Continue reading...⚾ USA will play either Italy or Venezuela in final
⚾ Full report: Blown call ends thrilling semi-final
USA 0-0 DR, top 1st
Severino’s sinker is hitting 99 MPH and now his cutter is whipped past the swinging bat of Bryce Harper. Bang! Two up, two down, two strikeouts.
Continue reading...I have an og pint with 1200 miles now, I’m the second owner I was told it had an upgraded battery which is probably true from the ranges I was gettting but I left it at my house for spring break charged at 100 percent and in working order. I come back and have an error 23 message with no new firmware updates to my knowledge. I’m in hydrus 5207 if that helps. I did open the app to check battery before trying to ride it. Did it auto update or did something else happen? Also what is the best way to go about getting this fixed?
The UK's science minister is announcing details of a five-year, £2.5 billion investment in nuclear fusion, reports the Times of London, "including building one of the world's first prototype fusion power plants in Nottinghamshire and developing a UK sector projected to employ 10,000 people by 2030." Despite the potentially transformative impact of fusion, which in theory could provide limitless clean energy and create a £12 trillion global market, no country has managed to use this fledgling technology to generate useable electricity... [T]he UK is backing a spherical tokamak design... investing an initial £1.3 billion into a prototype fusion power plant called Step (Spherical Tokamak for Energy Production) on the site of a decommissioned coal-fired power station at West Burton in Nottinghamshire. Paul Methven, chief executive of the government-owned UK Industrial Fusion Solutions, which is delivering the Step project, said the aim is to get the reactor operating early in the 2040s. "It's quite an aggressive programme," he said. "We need to show that we can achieve genuine 'wall socket' energy — which has not been done before." On Monday, [science minister] Vallance will also announce £180 million for a facility in Culham, Oxfordshire, to manufacture tritium fuel and £50 million for training 2,000 scientists and engineers in fusion-related disciplines. The government is also buying a £45 million fusion-dedicated AI supercomputer called Sunrise to model plasma physics. Scientists at the UK Atomic Energy Authority last year developed an AI model that can rapidly simulate how the ultra-hot fuel in a fusion power plant will behave, cutting calculations that previously took days down to seconds... Vallance will also announce new support and collaboration for the many fusion, robotics, engineering and AI start-ups working in Britain, to develop a strong supply chain for a new fusion sector. One of those companies, Tokamak Energy, which spun out from the UK Atomic Energy Authority in 2009, has already built a smaller reactor that has informed the Step design. In March 2022, it became the first private organisation in the world to surpass 100 million degrees Celsius in its reactor.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Primary school teacher Pavel Talankin’s record of the indoctrination of his pupils to support Russia’s invasion of Ukraine beats contenders
Mr Nobody Against Putin, a primary school teacher’s record of the indoctrination of his pupils to support Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, has won the Oscar for best documentary.
Pavel Talankin, who is now in exile in Europe, picked up the award alongside the film’s US co-director, David Borenstein. It beat favourite The Perfect Neighbor to take the prize, along with other contenders The Alabama Solution, Come See Me in the Good Light and Cutting Through Rocks.
Continue reading...As Kumail Nanjiani took the stage to announce the winner for Best Live-Action Short at the 98th annual Academy Awards, the actor exclaimed: "And the Oscar goes to ... it's a tie."
My Onewheel pint is running out of battery fairly quickly. It's five years old, and has only been used about once a month , so lets say 60 times total.
Not sure if the best course of action is to:
#1 try to get OneWheel to do something?
#2 get the battery changed by mailing it to FutureMotion?
#3 bring it to Onewheel tire guru in Los Angeles to change it in person? (but that's more than an hour drive for me)
#4 order a standard battery and try to replace it myself
#5 order a 21700 battery and try to replace it myself
I'd say the battery last half as long as it used to, maybe slightly more.
Any advice from someone who had the same thing happen is appreciated. it's obviously out of warranty. thank you!
US president’s call for coalition to protect commercial ships gets muted response – key US politics stories from 15 March at a glance
Donald Trump’s call for allies to send ships to the strait of Hormuz to protect commercial shipping vessels and unblock global oil supplies has met a muted response.
In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump called on the UK, China, France, Japan, South Korea and other countries to send ships to the waterway, the world’s busiest shipping route, which is being violently blockaded by Iran.
Continue reading...Rep. Dan Crenshaw, whose term as representative of Texas' 2nd congressional district is set to end following his loss in the Republican primary earlier this month, appeared on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on Sunday.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for March 16, No. 1,731.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for March 16, No. 743.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for March 16 #1009
Rain fell between 1 and 2in hourly in Maui, Molokai and the Big Island while tens of thousands are without power
Rain continued falling in Hawaii on Sunday where a strong storm brought flash flooding, blizzard conditions and landslides to the islands as residents reported collapsed roads and one home washing away in rising waters.
Flash flooding has been a major problem in recent days in places such as Maui, Molokai and the Big Island, where rain had been falling between 1 and 2in (2.5 and 5cm) an hour overnight, according to the Hawaii emergency management agency.
Continue reading...Hello! Long time lurker first time poster :). I have a XR classic with recurve rails. Looking for something different for rail guards that are not the plastic ones FM sells. Anyone have any good suggestions. Unique is always great but welcome all input. Thanks!
Duke is the top overall seed in the NCAA men's college basketball tournament, with Arizona, Michigan, and Florida also landing on the No. 1 line.
Having been nominated in 1986, the actor sets a new record for the longest gap between nominations before a win
Amy Madigan has won the best supporting actress Oscar for Weapons at the 98th Academy Awards,.
Madigan defeated a strong field to take the prize, including Elle Fanning for Sentimental Value, Wunmi Mosaku for Sinners and Teyana Taylor for One Battle After Another. In doing so she set a new record for the longest gap between nominations before a win; she was previously nominated in the same category 40 years ago, in 1986, for Twice in a Lifetime.
Continue reading...Taking down Iran's cheap drones is a drain on the U.S. weapons stockpile. Emerging laser technology may be a cost-effective key to taking them down.
Iranian attacks on ships in the Strait of Hormuz threaten to drive U.S. gas prices to record highs. The attacks could also have a cascading effect on other prices.
The unprecedented Strait of Hormuz closure amid the Iran war has spiked the price of oil and gas. It's also left thousands of crew members stranded on ships as the war rages on.
The Iran war is testing the U.S. military's ability to combat Iran's drones in a cost-effective way. Emerging laser tech, designed to zap drones out of the sky, may help.
In Port-au-Prince, Haiti's gang-controlled capital, there's an orphanage taking in the most at-risk kids. It's run by bestselling author Mitch Albom and his wife Janine.
Haiti's gangs have near-total control of Port-au-Prince. Bestselling author Mitch Albom runs an orphanage in the city. Children there grow up and get an education in a haven behind walls.
The strategic shipping lane carries a fifth of the world's oil. Analysts warn prolonged disruption could send fuel prices soaring and trigger a global economic slowdown.
Correspondent Anderson Cooper spoke to 60 Minutes Overtime about his former math teacher, Yves Volel, who ran for president in Haiti in 1987 and was later assassinated.
Stacy Librandi went to Haiti as a volunteer new to disaster relief in 2010. Sixteen years later, she runs the largest and foremost emergency medical ambulance and medevac service in Haiti.
Europe's EV sales for January and February spiked 21% from last year, according to new data from Benchmark Mineral Intelligence. Electrek reports that just in those two months over 600,000 EVs were sold in Europe. And figures for "rest of world" (which excludes Europe, North America, and China) are up a whopping 84% — with 370,000 EVs sold in January and February. (EVs now represent more than 30% of the vehicles sold in South Korea.) But for the same period China's sales are down 26% from last year, with 1.1 million vehicles sold. And North America showed an even larger drop of 36% from the January/February figures in 2025, now selling just 170,000 electric vehicles, while Canada's EV sales were down 23%. EV sales seem heavily influenced by government incentives, with Germany and France leading Europe's growth: EV sales in Germany are up 26% so far this year, following the country's introduction of a new subsidy program at the start of 2026. France's market is up 30%, supported by its existing incentive program. Italy is also seeing rapid growth. EV sales there jumped 23% month-over-month in February, making it the country's strongest month ever for EV sales. The Italian market is now up 98% year to date. That surge follows the Italian government's October 2025 launch of a new subsidy program, funded by the EU's Recovery and Resilience Facility, to increase EV adoption. Households can receive up to €11,000 ($12,700) in incentives, while smaller businesses can get up to €20,000 ($23,200)... [T]he global EV transition isn't slowing, but it's becoming much more uneven depending on policy, incentives, and trade rules.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Students in Canterbury given antibiotics for fast-acting and invasive meningococcal disease, says UKHSA
Two people have died and 11 are reportedly seriously ill in hospital after an outbreak of a rare form of invasive meningitis at the University of Kent.
The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) said it had provided antibiotics to students in the Canterbury area after it detected 13 cases of invasive meningococcal disease, a combination of meningitis and septicaemia.
Continue reading...I've got a high roof van and an looking for ways to store the onewheel vertically.
Does any thing exist for this? Some with of rack or holder?
Powerful storm chain to affect 200 million in US as it carries blizzard conditions, damaging winds and thunderstorms
Winter’s grip has yet to release as an erratic patchwork of severe weather moved across much of the US, dumping heavy snow and making roads impassable in the upper midwest while damaging high winds swept across the Plains.
As portions of the mid-south readied for thunderstorms, forecasters said the storms will spread eastward and by Monday threaten a large swath of the eastern US, with mid-Atlantic states and Washington DC at greatest risk for high winds and tornadoes.
Continue reading...American pars 18th for victory after birdie on 17
Fitzpatrick had led at Sawgrass before late slip
The PGA Tour might have lost out in the court of public opinion over whether the Players Championship could be a major. However, the level of drama as shadows lengthened on this Sawgrass Sunday set the tournament aside from most others.
It came down to Cameron Young versus Matt Fitzpatrick. As Fitzpatrick agonisingly missed for par on the 72nd hole, Young had secured the biggest win of his career. He had emerged triumphant from a sporting thriller.
Continue reading...Prime minister expected to set out tens of millions of pounds in help for heating oil users as conflict with Iran drives up costs
Keir Starmer will on Monday announce tens of millions of pounds’ worth of support for Britons hit by a spike in energy prices as a result of the Iran war.
The prime minister will lay out the plans during a press conference in Downing Street on Monday, during which he will also take aim at some suppliers of heating oil for price gouging.
Continue reading...Share of 16- to 24-year-old Neets who report a work-limiting condition up 70% in a decade, says thinktank
There has been a sharp rise in the number of jobless young people in the UK citing health problems as the reason they are not working, according to analysis.
The share of 16- to 24-year-olds not in education, employment or training – known as Neets – who reported a work-limiting condition has surged by 70% in a decade, a charity thinktank found.
Continue reading...Government reluctant to dispatch ships amid concerns complying with Trump’s demands could escalate Iran crisis
Ministers are drawing up plans to send minesweeping drones to the strait of Hormuz amid concerns in Whitehall that complying with Donald Trump’s demand to send ships could escalate the crisis.
The government is considering dispatching aerial minesweepers to help clear the vital waterway of mines in an attempt to allow the flow of oil exports to resume. However, officials said that sending ships, as requested over the weekend by the US president, could worsen the situation given the volatile nature of the war.
Continue reading...Far-right and radical left parties likely to increase their local presence in advance of next year’s presidential race
The first-round of the French municipal elections have seen a strong showing for Marine Le Pen’s far-right the National Rally (RN), as well as for Jean-Luc Mélenchon’s radical left, with both parties likely to increase their local presence ahead of next year’s French presidential race.
The French local elections, which now go to a final round runoff on 22 March, are seen as a crucial test of the political temperature before next year’s presidential election. Emmanuel Macron’s two terms in office come to an end in spring 2027 and there is uncertainty about who will next lead the EU’s second-largest economy.
Continue reading...Slashdot reader SysEngineer does embedded/IoT work, but "I want to pick a single system-on-a-chip architecture family and commit to it across multiple product lines — sensor nodes up through edge gateways... I've been on one platform for years and want to know what embedded engineers are actually running in production before I commit!" And "the family needs to scale — cheap and small at the low end, capable of running Linux on the bigger variants!" Their requirements? WiFi + BLE required LoRaWAN a nice-to-have. Low power modes that actually work in the field, not just on the datasheet. Full peripheral set — SPI, I2C, UART, ADC, timers, CAN. A toolchain and runtime support, support multi threads... Slashdot reader Gravis Zero is skeptical all the requirements can be met. "If you want embedded, you get embedded. If you want to run a big OS, you get one that will run a big OS." But Slashdot reader SysEngineer believes "The obvious architecture candidates are ARM, STM, and RISC-V" — and specifically they want to hear your experiences with the RISC-V choices. "What would you standardize on today if you were starting fresh? And how does real-world toolchain and community support hold up compared to the marketing?" Share your own thoughts and experiences in the comments. What's the best all-purpose RISC-V system on a chip family?
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Zahira Byjaouane, 43, arrested on Saturday after reports baby fell from property on Horseferry Road in Westminster
A mother has been charged with murdering her 18-day-old baby girl, who fell from a height at a property in central London.
Zahira Byjaouane, 43, was arrested on Saturday morning after reports that a baby had fallen from a property on Horseferry Road in Westminster.
Continue reading...World No 1 had lost four finals against opponent
Sabalenka comes back from set down for victory
Aryna Sabalenka snapped her losing streak against Elena Rybakina in a thrilling Indian Wells final on Sunday.
The world No 1 beat Rybakina to win her maiden grand slam title at the Australian Open in 2023 but since then had lost all four finals against the Kazakh, including at the WTA Finals last season and in Melbourne in January.
Continue reading...Patients experiencing raised bedside rails, doors and pathways blocked by furniture and physical interventions
People with dementia are being subjected to restraints and non-consensual sedation while in hospitals in England, according to the first study of its kind.
These restrictive practices were found to be an “embedded aspect of routine ward care”, according to the analysis, with such examples including dementia patients having their bedside rails raised, doors and pathways blocked by furniture, experiencing verbal commands to sit down or go back to bed, and physical interventions such as non-consensual sedation.
Continue reading...Linux gaming "has gotten to the point where some people claim that Linux runs their games better than Windows does," according to the Android site XDA Developers. And there's a new surprise on ProtonDB, an "unofficial" community website with crowdsourced data about videogame compatability with the Linux software/gaming compatability layer Proton: On ProtonDB, one operating system had reigned supreme since 2021: Arch Linux. And I say 'had,' because its streak has just been ended by [Arch-based] CachyOS in an upset that has slowly grown over the past two years. As reported on Boiling Steam, the number of reports coming from CachyOS has topped that of Arch Linux, which held the crown for the most number of reports since 2021... [T]his isn't really a statement that CachyOS is the best gaming distro out there; however, it's seemingly attracting the largest number of gamers who are invested in testing games on Proton and reporting their performance, which is a pretty big milestone if you ask me.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Author says he doesn’t ‘feel symbolic’ and hopes to steer narrative to his books after surviving assassination attempt
Salman Rushdie said he’s tired of being everyone’s “free speech Barbie” four years after the author survived an assassination attempt that left him blinded in his right eye.
“It’s a subject I’m anxious to change,” Rushdie said Friday during a talk with the Atlantic’s George Packer at Tulane University’s New Orleans book festival. “I don’t feel symbolic.
Continue reading...Skier suffered serious injuries in crash at Olympics
Speculation has mounted over possible retirement
Lindsey Vonn said she will retire on her own terms, and not those of anyone else.
The 41-year-old, who is recovering from a serious downhill crash at the Milan Cortina Olympics, is still deciding her next steps, something she made clear in a social media post on Sunday.
Continue reading...NBC News investigates North Korea's "wide-ranging effort to place remote workers at U.S. companies in order to funnel money back to its coffers and, in some cases, steal sensitive information." And working with the FBI, one corporate security/investigations company decided to knowingly hire one of North Korea's remote workers — then "ship him a laptop and gain as much information as possible" about this "sprawling international employment scheme that is estimated to include hundreds of American companies, thousands of people and hundreds of millions of dollars per year." It worked.... Over a roughly three-month investigation, Nisos uncovered an apparent network of at least 20 North Korean operatives including "Jo" who had collectively applied to at least 160,000 roles. During that time, workers in the network — which some evidence showed were based in China — were employed by five U.S.-based companies and allegedly helped by an American citizen operating out of two nondescript suburban homes in Florida... Nisos estimated that in about a year, "Jo", who was likely a newer member of the team, applied to about 5,000 jobs... "They attended interviews all day every day, and then once they secured a job, they would collect paychecks until they were terminated," [according to Jared Hudson, Nisos' chief technology officer]... With the ability to see which other U.S. companies Jo and his team were working for — all remote technology roles — Nisos' CEO, Ryan LaSalle, began making calls to their security teams to alert them of the fraud. "Most of the companies weren't aware of it, even if they had pretty robust security teams," LaSalle said. "It wasn't really high on the radar." NBC News describes North Korea's 10-year effort — and its educational pipeline that steers promising students into "computer science and hacking training before being placed into cyberunits under military and state agencies, according to a recent report by DTEX, a risk-adaptive security and behavioral intelligence firm that tracks North Korea's cybercrime." In one case, a North Korean worker stole sensitive information related to U.S. military technology, according to the Justice Department. In another, an American accomplice obtained an ID that enabled access to government facilities, networks and systems. At least three organizations have been extorted and suffered hundreds of thousands of dollars in damages after proprietary information was posted online by IT workers... Analysts warn that North Korean IT workers are targeting larger organizations, increasing extortion attempts and seeking out employers that pay salaries in cryptocurrency. More recently, security researchers have uncovered fake job application platforms impersonating major U.S. cryptocurrency and AI firms, including Anthropic, designed to infect legitimate applicants' networks with malware to be utilized once hired. The global cybersecurity company CrowdStrike identified a 220% rise in 2025 in instances of North Koreans gaining fraudulent employment at Western companies to work remotely as developers... The payoff flowing back to Pyongyang from these schemes is enormous. Some North Korean IT workers earn more than $300,000 per year, far more than they'd be able to earn domestically, with as much as 90% of their wages directed back to the regime, according to congressional testimony from Bruce Klinger, a former CIA deputy division chief for Korea. The United Nations estimates the schemes, which proliferated after the pandemic when more companies' workforces went remote, generate as much as $600 million annually, while a U.S. State Department-led sanctions monitoring assessment placed earnings for 2024 as high as $800 million... So far, at least 10 alleged U.S.-based facilitators have been federally charged, including one active-duty member of the U.S. Army, for their alleged roles in hosting laptop farms, laundering payments and moving proceeds through shell companies. At least six other alleged U.S. facilitators have been identified in court documents but not named... "We believe there are many more hundreds of people out there who are participating in these schemes," said Rozhavsky, the FBI assistant director. "They could never pull this off if they didn't have willing facilitators in the U.S. helping them...." The scheme itself is also becoming more complex. North Korean IT teams are now subcontracting work to developers in Pakistan, Nigeria and India, expanding into fields like customer service, financial processing, insurance and translation services — roles far less scrutinized than software development.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Mother, father and brothers aged five and seven shot in the head as they returned from Ramadan shopping trip
Israeli police have killed two young Palestinian brothers and their parents in the occupied West Bank, shooting all four in the head and face as the family returned from a Ramadan shopping trip.
Mohammed, five, Othman, seven, who was blind and had special needs, their mother, Waad Bani Odeh, 35, and father, Ali Bani Odeh, 37, were driving through their home town of Tamoun late on Saturday when Israeli forces opened fire.
Continue reading...Senator Ron Johnson pushes back, saying he’s not in favor of government meddling in freedom of speech
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) chair, Brendan Carr, is facing pushback from a Republican lawmaker after warning on Saturday that broadcasters could lose their licenses if they run what the federal agency deems “fake news” over the Iran conflict.
Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin said in an interview on the Sunday Briefing on Fox News that he was not in favor of the government control of private enterprise or efforts to meddle with freedom of speech protected under the constitution.
Continue reading...On this "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" broadcast, Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi and Rep. Dan Crenshaw join Margaret Brennan.
There is little sign of imminent regime change in Iran as its blockade of strait of Hormuz shocks global economy
Few doubt that in the first days of the new war in the Middle East, the initiative belonged to the US and its ally Israel. Now it seems less sure, however.
Mohsen Rezaee, a senior officer in Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, on Sunday said “the end of the war is in our hands” and called for the withdrawal of Washington’s forces from the Gulf and compensation for all damage caused by the assault.
Continue reading...Metropolitan police say they are also investigating chants led by Bobby Vylan at pro-Palestine protest next to Thames
Twelve people were arrested as hundreds joined a pro-Palestinian al-Quds Day demonstration on one side of the Thames, while hundreds more gathered on the opposite bank to back Israeli and American attacks on Iran.
Al-Quds Day is an international demonstration of support for Palestinian rights. The event takes its name from the Arabic for Jerusalem and was established by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini after Iran’s 1979 revolution.
Continue reading...Americans win Para ice hockey final 6-2
US get better of their neighbors once again
Three weeks after the United States beat Canada in the Olympic hockey finals, the Americans overcame their neighbors again to win Paralympic gold and complete the three-peat at Milan Cortina.
Jack Wallace scored a hat-trick to help the US beat Canada 6-2 in Sunday’s Para ice hockey final and become the first nation to sweep the hockey tournaments at the Olympics and Paralympics. There is currently no women’s division at the Paralympics as it is classified as an open-gender sport.
Continue reading...Nearly month-long funding lapse has disrupted US air travel and caused long wait times amid security officers’ absences
The CEOs of major US airlines urged Congress on Sunday to move quickly to end a 29-day partial government shutdown that has forced 50,000 airport security officers to work without pay, warning it could further disrupt US air travel.
Absences by Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers had already disrupted travel at some major airports over the previous week, raising alarm as the busy spring break travel season continues.
Continue reading...The following is the transcript of the interview with Sen. Mark Warner, Democrat of Virginia, that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on March 15, 2026.
The following is the transcript of the interview with Rep. Dan Crenshaw, Republican of Texas, that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on March 15, 2026.
The U.S. became the first nation to sweep the hockey tournaments at the Olympics and Paralympics.
‘I did it for the people,’ says Farbod Mehr, of song drawing lyrics from the work of revolutionary 20th-century poet Aref Qazvini
A stirring song – sung, apparently, by a young woman, with lyrics expressing the hope that sacrifice will lead to a better future – has become a soundtrack for Iranians in the first part of 2026, as the country experienced the brutal crackdown on anti-regime protests and then the US-Israeli air assault, now in its third week.
However, the singer, called Nava, is a product of artificial intelligence, created by a London-based artist of Iranian origin, Farbod Mehr.
Continue reading...Nottinghamshire and Met police made arrests in past year, despite MPs voting to decriminalise in England and Wales
Vulnerable women in England are still being arrested and facing police investigations over suspected illegal pregnancy terminations, despite parliament backing changes to the law to decriminalise abortion.
Responding to a freedom of information request, Nottinghamshire police and the Metropolitan police confirmed they had arrested women suspected of illegal terminations between June last year and this January.
Continue reading...Uber co-founder Travis Kalanick launched a new venture that "will focus on creating 'gainfully employed robots' for the food, mining and transport industries," Bloomberg reports. "I left Uber in 2017 heartbroken," writes Kalanick on the new company's web site. Kalanick resigned under pressure in 2017, and complains he was "torn away from an idea and a movement that I had poured my life into... I bled, but I did not perish. I got back up and fought my way back into the arena, back to my calling. Back to building. Digitizing the Physical World is my life's work... " Kalanick is remaking his real estate company, City Storage Systems, which owns ghost-kitchen operator CloudKitchens, and renaming it Atoms, according to a manifesto posted on the new company's website. [Bloomberg notes that the company's food robotics division "makes a food assembly machine called Bowl Builder, according to its website."] In addition to its work on food, Los Angeles-based Atoms is expanding into robotics technology for mining and automotive transport. Kalanick said on the livestreamed tech talk show TBPN Friday that Atoms has effectively been in stealth for eight years and has "thousands" of employees.... Kalanick wrote on the Atoms website that the company will make "specialized robots with productive jobs that bring abundance to their owners and society at large." That will include "infrastructure for better food," he wrote, as well as "more productive mines to power Earth's industries" in addition to "wheelbase for robots" in transportation. "The industrial thing is probably our main jam," he said on TBPN. "Once you crack movement in the physical world, there are lots of people who want access to that..." Kalanick also said he was the biggest investor in Pronto, a self-driving trucking startup that currently focuses on closed sites like mines.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Israel Defense Forces said Ibrahim Muhammad Ghazali was responsible for managing weapons operations for the unit within the U.S.-designated terrorist group.
Ministers go to Brussels for talks amid tuition fees standoff, almost 10 years after Britons voted to leave EU
This week is “Brexit reset” week for the British government, as ministers engage in a flurry of activity intended to highlight their determination to forge closer ties with Brussels almost 10 years after the country first voted to leave the EU.
On Monday, Nick Thomas-Symonds, the Cabinet Office minister in charge of negotiating the government’s reset with the EU, will arrive in Brussels for a meeting of the joint EU-UK parliamentary partnership assembly. He travels mob-handed, to be joined by the Europe minister, Stephen Doughty, and the trade minister, Chris Bryant.
Continue reading...Afghan government reports zero casualties and accuses neighbouring country of wanting to ‘fuel the fire of war’
Pakistan has targeted militant hideouts in Afghanistan’s Kandahar province overnight, as the fighting that erupted between the two neighbours late last month showed no signs of abating.
The cross-border attacks, which have included Pakistani airstrikes in Kabul, are the deadliest yet between the countries. Islamabad has referred to the conflict as an “open war”, adding to concerns about regional stability as the US-Israeli conflict with Iran engulfs the Middle East and beyond.
Continue reading...Democrat says Congress ‘doing nothing’ may embolden president to attack countries such as Cuba and North Korea
Democratic US senator Cory Booker has criticized both his own political party as well as its Republican counterpart for being “feckless” in ceding congressional war powers to Donald Trump, saying that their decision could embolden the president to unilaterally attack Cuba, North Korea and other countries.
“I’m going to be one of those Democrats [who] say I think both parties have been feckless in allowing the growth of the power of the presidency,” Booker said on Sunday on CNN’s State of the Union.
Continue reading...‘Of course there’s going to be retaliation,’ says one expert. ‘It may be that this is what Trump’s interested in’
For decades, the US and its allies have painted Iran as the world’s biggest sponsor of state terrorism – invoking its Islamic rulers’ supposed revolutionary fanaticism and determined support for militant proxies.
Now a long-standing but mainly latent threat is coalescing, with the war waged on the country by the US and Israel, to raise the risk of an attack on American soil to levels unseen since the murderous al-Qaida assaults of 11 September 2001, experts say.
Continue reading...National Secular Society to launch court action after failure to investigate alleged breaches of academic freedom laws
A university regulator in England has failed to investigate potential breaches of laws protecting academic freedom at a dozen theological colleges and is now facing legal action, the Guardian has learned.
The National Secular Society says it is preparing to pursue the Office for Students (OfS) through the courts to act on complaints first made five years ago, arguing that the colleges are ineligible for public funding or government-backed student loans because of their commitment to theological doctrine.
Continue reading...He's "the most famous anonymous man in the world," suggests Reuters. But investigating Banksy's artworks in a bombed Ukrainian village (and other clues in the U.K. and Manhattan) have led them to "a hand-written confession by the artist to a long-ago misdemeanor charge of disorderly conduct — a document that revealed, beyond dispute, Banksy's true identity." But Banksy's long-time lawyer "urged us not to publish this report, saying doing so would violate the artist's privacy, interfere with his art and put him in danger" and "would harm the public, too." Working "anonymously or under a pseudonym serves vital societal interests," he wrote. "It protects freedom of expression by allowing creators to speak truth to power without fear of retaliation, censorship or persecution — particularly when addressing sensitive issues such as politics, religion or social justice." Reuters took into account Banksy's privacy claims — and the fact that many of his fans wish for him to remain anonymous. Yet we concluded that the public has a deep interest in understanding the identity and career of a figure with his profound and enduring influence on culture, the art industry and international political discourse... As for the risk he might face of retaliation or censorship, Britain's legal and political establishments seem comfortable with Banksy's messages and how he delivers them... His mastery of disguise began as a way of shaking the police, says former manager [Steve] Lazarides. In an interview, Lazarides said anonymity served a practical purpose in Bristol, where authorities enforced "draconian" policies against graffiti... Eventually, keeping the secret became a burden. By the end of their partnership, Lazarides estimates he spent half or more of his time managing and maintaining the artist's mystique. "I think it became a good gag, and then, if you want my honest, honest opinion, I think it then became a disease," he said. Lazarides wrote a two-volume book about managing Banksy from the late 1990s to 2008, including a story about Banksy's arrest in 2000 for this defacing of a billboard. Reuters geolocated that building, then found police documents and a court file including the hand-written confession. This investigation spawned a 7,000-word article with everything from a comic strip Banksy drew when he was 11 to his connections with Robert Del Naja of the trip hop band Massive Attack — and a 2017 podcast interview where a music producer apparently revealed Banksy's real first name. But the article also reveals how protective the art community is of Banksy's secret. Reuters investigated that Banksy auctioned in 2018 for $1.4 million — and then immediately started shredding itself with a device Banksy embedded in its frame: That piece, renamed "Love is in the Bin," sold three years later for about $25 million. Art dealer [Robert] Casterline was at the auction and remembers when the shredder began to beep. He pulled out his phone to take pictures. "Unfortunately, there was one person standing in front of me," blocking the view, he said. It was an eccentric-looking man with a broad neck scarf and thick eyewear. Oddly, the man wasn't watching the painting get shredded. He was looking in the other direction, observing the crowd's reaction. Only later, reviewing what he shot, did Casterline notice that the man's glasses appeared to have a small camera built into the bridge. (Banksy later posted a video of the stunt, including shots of the astonished audience.) Having seen a photo of the man suspected of being Banksy, Casterline confirmed to Reuters that he was "pretty sure" it was the same man. But "I don't want to be the guy who exposes Banksy."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The following is the transcript of the interview with National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on March 15, 2026.
Tehran wants ceasefire but terms ‘not good enough yet’, US president claims, as both sides launch new waves of strikes
Donald Trump has warned he is not ready to seek a deal to end the US-Israeli offensive against Iran, saying that though he thought Tehran was keen to negotiate a ceasefire, the US would fight on for better terms.
Trump’s comments came as Iran launched fresh missile and drone attacks on countries in the Gulf and on Israel, and Israeli and US warplanes launched new waves of strikes on Iran.
Continue reading...The acclaimed filmmaker, who died in February at age 96, revolutionized the art of documentaries with such films as "Titicut Follies." In an interview recorded last year, the pioneering Wiseman talked about his unusual production methods aimed at capturing life.
The Irish actor, an Oscar-winner for "Oppenheimer," is back in a new film, "Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man," a follow-up to his hit TV series about a charismatic gangster who rules post-World War I Birmingham, England.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said that "we don't see any reason why we should talk with Americans" as President Trump has claimed Iran is seeking a deal to end the war between the U.S. and Iran.
Dolby Vision, HDR10, HDR10 Plus and HLG: Here's what every HDR format means and which one you should choose.
The following is the transcript of the interview with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on March 15, 2026.
Response to Donald Trump’s callout for military support in the waterway has so far been vague and reluctant
Countries including the UK, Japan, China and South Korea have said they are still considering their options after the US president, Donald Trump, urged them to send warships to the strait of Hormuz to secure the vital shipping route.
In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump called on the UK, China, France, Japan, South Korea and other countries to send ships to the waterway, the world’s busiest shipping route which is being violently blockaded by Iran.
Continue reading..."Emerging evidence indicates that agential AI might validate or amplify delusional or grandiose content, particularly in users already vulnerable to psychosis," writes Dr Hamilton Morrin, a psychiatrist and researcher at King's College in London, in a paper published last week in the Lancet Psychiatry. Morrin and a colleague had already noticed patients "using large language model AI chatbots and having them validate their delusional beliefs," reports the Guardian, so he conducted a new scientific review of existing media reports on AI-induced psychosis — and concluded chatbots may encourage delusional thinking, especially in vulnerable people: In many of the cases in the essay, chatbots responded to users with mystical language to suggest that users have heightened spiritual importance. The bots also implied that users were speaking with a cosmic being who was using the chatbot as a medium. This type of mystical, sycophantic response was especially common in OpenAI's GPT 4 model, which the company has now retired... Many researchers also think it's unlikely that AI could induce delusions in people who weren't already vulnerable to them. For this reason, Morrin said "AI-assocciated delusions" is "perhaps a more agnostic term".... While in the past, people may have had to comb through YouTube videos or the contents of their local library to reinforce their delusions, chatbots can provide that reinforcement in a much faster, more concentrated dose. Their interactive nature can also "speed up the process", of exacerbating psychotic symptoms, said Dr Dominic Oliver, a researcher at the University of Oxford. "You have something talking back to you and engaging with you and trying to build a relationship with you," Oliver said... Creating effective safeguards for delusional thinking could be tricky, Morrin said, because "when you work with people with beliefs of delusional intensity, if you directly challenge someone and tell them immediately that they're completely wrong, actually what's most likely is they'll withdraw from you and become more socially isolated". Instead, it's important to create a fine balance where you try to understand the source of the delusional belief without encouraging it — that could be more than a chatbot can master.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Oil could pass 2008 record of $147.50 a barrel as damage and field closures risk compounding supply shock caused by Iran war
About 20 miles off the coast of Iran lies the source of the petrostate’s economic lifeblood and the latest target of US military aggression: an 8 sq mile coral island through which nine in every 10 barrels of Iranian crude passes each day.
The US president’s decision to launch a weekend attack on Kharg Island, the home of Iran’s processing hub and the heart of its economy, is an unsurprising counterstrike to the Iranian regime’s ongoing chokehold on the oil market’s trade artery.
Continue reading...More than 150 passengers and crew members on a Princess cruise ship fell ill last week due to an outbreak of norovirus, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.
The luxury property surge fuels growth in Miami, but a poll finds many residents weighing an exit over housing and living costs
To a casual observer, everything in south Florida’s real estate garden is looking rosy. There’s a “gold rush” in Miami as ultra-wealthy buyers snap up mega-mansions and luxuriously appointed condos as soon as they hit the market; and the Guardian has also reported recently on the “Mamdani effect” of elite New Yorkers arriving in the sunshine state with bulging pocketbooks in search of a high-priced escape from the city’s new mayor.
Yet alongside the boom, there are rumblings of a more troubling parallel reality. Undoubtedly, the billionaire class is helping to pump even more dollars into an already thriving Florida economy. But as prices rise and the less affluent find everything from housing and insurance to gas and groceries increasingly expensive, many are considering doing something about it.
Continue reading...British negotiators ‘blindsided’ by Brussels’ demand for a reduction that could cost universities £140m a year
Britain is in a standoff with Brussels over a demand to cut university tuition fees for European students, in a row that threatens to scupper Keir Starmer’s planned EU reset.
EU officials say European students should pay “home” fees of about £9,500 a year in England and Wales as part of the negotiations over a youth mobility scheme, rather than the higher international rate, which can rise above £60,000. European students would also pay the domestic rate in Scotland, which is set at £1,820 a year, although most Scottish students qualify for free tuition. Fees for Irish students In Northern Ireland are generally capped at £4,855.
Continue reading...The streaming app unveils new AI-powered features, including live NBA games in vertical format.
There's a surprise in a new documentary about that Bigfoot film shot in 1967 by Roger Patterson, reports the Wall Street Journal. Capturing Bigfoot "builds to a big reveal: freshly surfaced film that appears to show a woodsy dress rehearsal for one of the world's most enduring hoaxes." In the new footage — from a Kodak reel dating to 1966 — Patterson's camera tracks a man in costume, his brother-in-law, moving in a similar fashion to the figure in the 1967 shoot, which featured a different location and a bigger man with a more distinctive stride, according to the documentary. The test-run footage "is the work of a director with a vision," says Capturing Bigfoot director Marq Evans. He says the reel was given to him by a colleague at Olympic College in Bremerton, Wash., where Evans runs a documentary film program. The colleague found the film in a safe that belonged to her late father, who worked in a Boeing film lab and could have developed film discreetly. With the long-buried footage in hand, Evans set out to explore the ripple effects from the Bigfoot film. Patterson, who died in 1972, hailed from the same region of Washington as Evans; the documentarian discovered that the hardscrabble cowboy had also been a gifted craftsman and artist. Patterson illustrated a self-published book, "Do Abominable Snowmen of America Really Exist?", and set out to make a wildlife movie that would feature the ultimate trophy footage. He and his collaborators inadvertently helped spawn "this massive culture and industry" around the Bigfoot legend, Evans says... Roger Paterson presented his footage to America in a traveling show that crisscrossed the nation and climaxed with the hyped Bigfoot sequence on screen. The money poured in, leading to resentment among cohorts who felt they'd been shortchanged, none more so than Bob Gimlin, Patterson's wingman in the field during the infamous shoot.. [Roger's son] Clint Patterson says his mother privately confirmed his suspicions that the family's claim to fame was bogus, but he kept quiet to protect their financial stream. About 10 years ago, when he first wanted to go public with the truth, his mother disowned him. Bigfoot was also a recurring character on the 1970s TV show The Six Million Dollar Man. Which kind of puts the whole thing in perspective...
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Tommy Thompson refused to give up the location of 500 missing coins found in 1988 in a historic shipwreck
A US treasure hunter who was imprisoned for 10 years after refusing to reveal the location of missing gold coins has been released from prison, without officials apparently ever learning where that gold is.
Tommy Thompson – a renowned salvager who in 1988 found the long-lost, so-called Ship of Gold near South Carolina – was freed from federal prison on 4 March, records and reports recently indicated.
Continue reading...Could we be at the beginning of a change never before seen by humans – allowing us to escape the drudgery of work?
The other day I pulled into the parking lot of a client’s offices and in the spot next to me was a woman sitting in her car blasting music. She caught me looking and rolled down her window and said, “I’ll be inside in a minute … Just enjoying my last few moments of freedom!”
Is this way we want to live? No, it’s not.
Continue reading...Jewish and Arab American leaders decry violence at Temple Israel, but US-Israel war on Iran complicates healing
Jewish and Arab American leaders across Detroit and the US strongly condemned the 12 March terrorist attack on a Michigan synagogue and largely aimed to lower tensions against the backdrop of the US and Israel’s ongoing military campaign in Iran.
But in Michigan, where large populations of Arab Americans and Jews live near one another, the complexities of the situation can be difficult to grapple with – and few people had easy or quick answers on how to move forward.
Continue reading...Luke Grimes leads the Yellowstone sequel.
Little is known about the status or whereabouts of the Salvadorans deported by President Donald Trump to CECOT, an infamous megaprison.
Bill faces constitutional hurdles as previous abortion bans were struck down by state supreme court in January
Wyoming’s Republican-dominated legislature passed a six-week abortion ban this week, prompting a new lawsuit and some lawmakers to call it “an insult to voters and our institution”.
Mark Gordon, Wyoming’s governor, signed the bill while simultaneously warning of its constitutional hurdles, noting that prior abortion bans were struck down by the state’s all Republican-appointed supreme court this January. Almost immediately, an identical set of plaintiffs filed suit against the new bill.
Continue reading...Takaichi takes on Trump Expert comment jon.wallace
Iran adds a new layer of difficulty to an increasingly unstable US–Japan relationship, as the Japanese prime minister prepares to visit Washington.
If President Donald Trump is expecting effusive praise for his war on Iran when Japan’s prime minister arrives in Washington on Thursday, he is likely to be disappointed. Sanae Takaichi, re-elected in February in a landslide victory, says she intends to be ‘candid’ in pointing out that Japan’s oil-dependent economy is suffering badly from the conflict.
Takaichi, Japan’s first female prime minister, has won a remarkable mandate and is known for her conservative policies and forthright views. But she cannot afford to be cavalier about this White House visit. Oval Office encounters have become bear traps for many foreign leaders.
She will want reassurance about the US’s security umbrella, the cornerstone of Japanese foreign policy since 1945. Trump is likely to repeat instead his demand for Japan to pay more for its own defence.
That exacerbates the already difficult questions facing Japan: how assertive should it choose to be with China? And how can it make more of its other alliances around the world if the US has become a less reliable partner?
At a Ministry of Finance conference in Tokyo on 9 March, snow falling just days before the first cherry blossom is due, the impact of the US–Iran conflict injected new concern into an already difficult economic picture.
Japan is the fifth largest importer of oil in the world. 95 per cent of that comes from the Middle East. And prices are spiking as supplies are stuck in the Strait of Hormuz, with the weakness of the yen increasing the import bill further.
This potential hit to growth comes as Takaichi plans a 21.3 trillion yen ($134 billion) investment programme to stimulate the economy that is already worrying investors. Bond yields reached record highs in January, reflecting that new concerns have been added to long-standing ones about Japan’s ability to carry its debt with an ageing population.
Takaichi, like other prime ministers (the UK’s included), is finding that a war in which her country has no part is driving up the cost of living and potentially, despite her recent electoral victory, driving down her ratings too.
Takaichi will want to use the good rapport she struck up with the US president at a meeting in October to make the point about the impact of the war on other countries.
After a week of exultant rhetoric from Trump and US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth about killing Iranian leaders, that may strike a jarring note. She is likely to emphasize Japan’s considerable new commitments: accelerating a target to reach 2 per cent of GDP on defence spending, a pledge to develop aerial defences as part of Trump’s ‘Golden Dome’ missile defence plan, and an agreement to invest $550 billion in the US in return for lowering tariffs from 25 per cent to 15 per cent last year.
So far, so predictable. The interest for the wider world hangs more on their exchanges about China. Takaichi provoked a furious response from Beijing when she declared in November that if China moved to take over Taiwan, it could prompt a military response from Japan.
That is little more than a repetition of Japan’s established stance. But China’s fury was audible at the Munich Security Conference in February when Wang Yi, China’s top diplomat, after a stately, scripted speech about relations with the US, lashed out at Japan in answer to a final question, proclaiming it ‘a militaristic nation’ and invoking Pearl Harbour.
Takaichi will want to probe Trump’s stance towards China. Many in the region question whether the US lacks the resources or desire to contest China’s assertiveness in the South China Sea – let alone Taiwan. Japan has noted – as have other regional leaders – that the two US destroyers normally based in Japan were in the Arabian sea last week, according to the US Naval Institute.
Her encounter with Trump comes just two weeks before he visits President Xi in China, a visit whose lack of prepared agenda and unpredictability is attracting widespread comment in the region.
China is balancing the value of US distraction – as Iraq and Afghanistan showed – with Trump’s unpredictability and apparently growing taste for sudden military action.
For Japan, these considerations mark a decisive if unwanted shift in its relations with the US and its wider foreign policy. The US’s defence protection has underpinned Japan’s profound post-Second World War pacifist stance.
Japanese governments had gradually been toughening that stance given China’s expansion of claims in neighbouring waters – but Trump’s conviction that allies have been free-riding on the US and must now pay more has brought an acceleration of that movement.
There is an urgency in Japan’s government about the need to look for more allies, on both economic and security fronts, to uphold the rules-based international order which it has supported and needs.
China’s economic coercion – threatening to withhold critical minerals from companies if they do not relocate to China or from the country overall if it objects to its policy – has led to recent new minerals deals with Australia.
Japan’s role in the CPTPP trade group, where it stepped into the leadership when the US quit, is one prime tool, particularly given the rising influence of Canada (another CPTPP member) in searching for new alliances.
This week's guests include National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett, Democratic Sen. Mark Warner and GOP Rep. Dan Crenshaw.
Singer-songwriter John Mayer and film director-producer McG have teamed up to buy and renovate the legendary movie studio built by Charlie Chaplin, to preserve as a soundstage, recording studio, and a campus for artistic collaborations.
Brand enlists JW Anderson to help brew up 17-piece range of luxury fashionwear, from ‘beer towel’ shorts to branded trousers and tops
You too can look like a pub carpet – and for the bargain price of £1,295. Such sartorial elegance – perhaps an option for anyone stepping out to celebrate St Patrick’s Day this week – is the aesthetic love-child of a partnership between Guinness and the luxury clothing brand JW Anderson.
The tie-up, launched earlier this month, allows fashionistas to get their hands on a range of Guinness wear that exploits the continuing metamorphosis of the “black stuff” from unfashionable pub staple to social media status symbol.
Continue reading...Can Arne Slot's Reds deepen Tottenham's relegation worries?
American wins eighth slalom race of World Cup season
Shiffrin has 140-point lead over Germany’s Emma Aicher
Olympic champion Mikaela Shiffrin won her record-equaling eighth World Cup slalom of the season on Sunday but her main rival in the overall standings was second to maintain pressure on the American star.
Shiffrin dominated the last race before the World Cup finals in Norway to beat Germany’s Emma Aicher by 0.94 seconds, with Switzerland’s Wendy Holdener a second off the pace in third.
Continue reading...Plus, an update on Avengers Campus as it doubles in size.
From Gaza to Iran, the pattern is the same: precision weapons, chosen blindness, and dead children. The cost of failing to regulate AI warfare is already too high
There is an Israeli military strategy called the “fog procedure”. First used during the second intifada, it’s an unofficial rule that requires soldiers guarding military posts in conditions of low visibility to shoot bursts of gunfire into the darkness, on the theory that an invisible threat might be lurking.
It’s violence licensed by blindness. Shoot into the darkness and call it deterrence. With the dawn of AI warfare, that same logic of chosen blindness has been refined, systematized, and handed off to a machine.
Continue reading...The American propelled ahead of frontrunner Michael Kimani Kamau by a fraction of a second
In the final moments of the Los Angeles marathon last weekend, the announcers were already narrating frontrunner Michael Kimani Kamau’s finish when Nathan Martin suddenly propelled forward, shocking newscasters and spectators.
The 36-year-old Martin prevailed in a single stride, stepping across the finish line an almost imperceptible fraction of a second before Kamau and becoming the first Black American to win the contest. He had challenged himself in the final miles of the race to keep putting his all into it, despite physical exhaustion, and finished the 26.2-mile race in 2 hours, 11 minutes and 18 seconds.
Continue reading... | Hiiii I’d like to join the one wheel community ! Currently using a longboard eskate for commute, I’m kinda struggling to climb big sidewalk steps and it looks like one wheel could solve this problem and also seems to be hella fun! I’ve found a used 920km board from 2021. The title says « Onewheel R+ » and I was wondering if it was an old model or someone who doesn’t know much or even an other way of talking about the XR model. The price is 700€ and it looks like a steal but maybe I just don’t know enough and there might be a catch. Also, this is pretty niche in France and I didn’t find a shop to test Onewheels yet, but XR sound like exactly what I’m looking for. Is there anything specific I should ask/check when buying a used board? Thx 🙏 [link] [comments] |
Overwashing, underfiltering and more brewing blunders that could be tainting your morning cup.
After months of wearing both, one deal-breaker tipped the scales, but the answer isn't as simple as you'd think.
Ballots in 35,000 villages, towns and cities will be closely watched for signals about party strategies and alliances
France has begun voting in the first round of municipal elections, seen as crucial a test of the political temperature before next year’s presidential election.
The vote for mayors and councillors in 35,000 villages, towns and cities across France is focused on local issues including security, housing and refuse collection and is very different from national elections.
Continue reading...U.S. intelligence has circulated to President Trump's inner circle that Iran's late supreme leader had misgivings about his son replacing him, viewing Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei as not very bright.
In an exclusive interview with CBS News Saturday, Federal Communications Chair Brendan Carr doubled down on his warning that broadcast licenses could be revoked amid President Trump's criticisms of media coverage of the war in Iran.
Watch scenes from the films nominated for best picture at the 98th annual Academy Awards, as well as interviews with the filmmakers.
Six U.S. service members who were killed in a military refueling aircraft crash over Iraq last week have been identified as members of the Ohio Air National Guard and Florida-based crew members.
Suspects accused of throwing explosive devices at rightwing anti-Islam protesters as tensions rise across US
Early on Monday afternoon, two teens in white plastic jumpsuits were escorted into a Manhattan federal courtroom. Emir Balat and Ibrahim Kayumi, who were shackled and handcuffed, quietly took their seats at the defense table.
If not for the metal restraints and jail garb, Balat, 18, and Kayumi, 19, could have been any number of young men who carry themselves with an aura of discomfort about their place in America.
Continue reading...Humiliating failure now looms, as symbolically damaging to US global standing and national self-esteem as Afghanistan or Iraq
Donald Trump menaces the world. He’s global public enemy number one. He’s steadily losing the illegal war with Iran he started but cannot stop. His violence-addicted Israeli sidekick, Benjamin Netanyahu, is terrorising Lebanon. And ordinary people everywhere, their security threatened, face a huge economic bill for his reckless folly.
Add Trump’s war-making to his daily debasing of democracy, appeasing of Russia, punitive tariffs, climate crisis denial and flouting of international law, and it’s clear this White House travesty has gone on long enough. Americans must put their house in order and act decisively to restrain someone who endangers us all.
Continue reading...The Camp Snap camera is only $70 and promises a screen-free photo experience. The result is one step up from an old-school disposable camera.
Advisers say to ‘assume the cameras are always rolling’ as exchanges can be decoded in seconds and posted online
Royals and celebrities are being warned by their representatives and advisers to watch what they say when they are out of the house – or palace – as a lip-reading phenomenon means videos can be posted online and translated in seconds.
Prince William was recently embroiled after a video of him speaking to Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was translated by an expert lip-reader who was working as part of a forthcoming Channel 5 documentary, Lip-Reading the Royals.
Continue reading...Exclusive: Robin Birley closes in on Sunshine State venue as wealthy Britons flock to area around Donald Trump
A London private members’ club owner is closing in on a deal for a venue in Palm Beach, in the hopes of creating a rival to Trump’s Mar-a-Lago and to take advantage of an influx of wealthy British people to the Florida region.
Robin Birley is understood to be close to securing a property for his latest club, part financed by the billionaire Reuben brothers, who in 2024 were named the third-richest family in the UK by the Sunday Times Rich List.
Continue reading...As platforms make less from advertising, creators are struggling to monetise work – leading to calls for more government investment and tax breaks
On a humid afternoon in Lagos, a shoot for a comedy skit is under way on a set that looks more like a small film production.
Dozens of people mill about: lighting assistants, a sound engineer, a makeup artist and even a content creator recording unscripted behind-the-scenes footage. At the centre is Broda Shaggi, born Samuel Animashaun Perry, who is issuing instructions, rehearsing lines and performing caricatures.
Continue reading...The country’s 900 billionaires have far too much influence over our government and economy. Here’s how we can reduce the power of the ultra-rich
Not a day goes by without some news about billionaires throwing their weight around to bend the system in their favor or about politicians giving them tax cuts, government contracts or pardons. In today’s new Gilded Age, the 900-plus billionaires in the US have far too much influence over our elections, our economy, our government policies and our news media, and it’s urgent for Americans to create a movement to curb their power in order to preserve what’s left of our democracy and assure we have an economy with some basic fairness.
It’s deeply troubling that billionaires have far more power in shaping our nation’s politics and policies than do average Americans, whether they’re auto workers, teachers, nurses, carpenters or supermarket cashiers. What’s more, it’s deeply disturbing that so many billionaires support the most authoritarian president in US history, whether by donating to his campaign or his gilded ballroom.
Steven Greenhouse is a journalist and author, focusing on labour and the workplace, as well as economic and legal issues
Continue reading...Records show DHS tech incubator spending large sums on partnerships that would expand surveillance capabilities
Hacked data from the Department of Homeland Security’s technology incubator shows it funding a variety of companies that would expand its surveillance capabilities with artificial intelligence, the Guardian can reveal.
The projects at the Office of Industry Partnership (OIP) include automated surveillance in airports; adapters allowing agents to use phones for biometric scanning; and an AI platform that ingests all 911 call data nationally and builds “geospatial heat maps” to “predict incident trends”, which appears to be a form of predictive policing.
Continue reading...These common tools could be causing more harm than good.
Want to change your iPhone's Liquid Glass design or get rid of your alarm slider? Look no further.
Energy secretary says government looking at ‘any options’ to get crucial shipping lanes reopened
Britain is considering sending ships and mine-hunting drones to the Middle East in an attempt to reopen the strait of Hormuz, Ed Miliband has said.
The energy secretary confirmed on Sunday that ministers were talking to their allies about how the UK could help secure the vital waterway after the US president, Donald Trump, urged Britain and other countries to deploy ships to the region.
Continue reading...Alford, who also appeared in Grange Hill, was jailed for eight and a half years in January for sexually assaulting two girls
An investigation has been launched into the death of the actor John Alford after he died in prison two months into a sentence for sexually assaulting two teenage girls.
Alford, 54, was jailed for eight and a half years in January after he was found guilty of the assaults, which occurred during a party at a friend’s home.
Continue reading...While AI CEOs worry governments might nationalize AI, others are advocating for something similar. Canadian security professional Bruce Schneier and Harvard data scientist Nathan Sanders published this call to action in Canada's most widely-read newspaper (with a readership over 6 million): "Canada Needs Nationalized, Public AI." While there are Canadian AI companies, they remain for-profit enterprises, their interests not necessarily aligned with our collective good. The only real alternative is to be bold and invest in a wholly Canadian public AI: an AI model built and funded by Canada for Canadians, as public infrastructure. This would give Canadians access to the myriad of benefits from AI without having to depend on the U.S. or other countries. It would mean Canadian universities and public agencies building and operating AI models optimized not for global scale and corporate profit, but for practical use by Canadians... We are already on our way to having AI become an inextricable part of society. To ensure stability and prosperity for this country, Canadian users and developers must be able to turn to AI models built, controlled, and operated publicly in Canada instead of building on corporate platforms, American or otherwise... [Switzerland's funding of a public AI model, Apertus] represents precisely the paradigm shift Canada should embrace: AI as public infrastructure, like systems for transportation, water, or electricity, rather than private commodity... Public AI systems can incorporate mechanisms for genuine public input and democratic oversight on critical ethical questions: how to handle copyrighted works in training data, how to mitigate bias, how to distribute access when demand outstrips capacity, and how to license use for sensitive applications like policing or medicine... Canada already has many of the building blocks for public AI. The country has world-class AI research institutions, including the Vector Institute, Mila, and CIFAR, which pioneered much of the deep learning revolution. Canada's $2-billion Sovereign AI Compute Strategy provides substantial funding. What's needed now is a reorientation away from viewing this as an opportunity to attract private capital, and toward a fully open public AI model. Long-time Slashdot reader sinij has a different opinion. "To me, this sounds dystopian, because I can also imagine AI declining your permits, renewal of license, or medication due to misalignment or 'greater good' reasons." But the Schneier/Sanders essays argues this creates "an alternative ownership structure for AI technology" that is allocating decision-making authority and value "to national public institutions rather than foreign corporations."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
If costs stay high for the next three months, US owner Peter Huntsman says he will close the site on Teesside
The American owner of one of Britain’s last major chemicals plants has said he will close the site if energy prices remain at their current levels for the next three months.
Peter Huntsman, whose family built Huntsman Corporation into a global chemicals empire, said the recent jump in gas prices fuelled by the Iran conflict was “another nail in the coffin” for European heavy industry.
Continue reading...It’s hard to be transported by the glitz and glamour when it’s constantly overshadowed by some white-hot new horror
It’s been a full decade now since I attended the Academy Awards ceremony for this very same publication, and chat, I am feeling, like, totally cooked. I’m so unc’d, it’s cringe, fam.
The article was titled “My first Oscars”, which is a terribly presumptuous statement, because it assumes there will be a second or a third. Despite my best efforts, it remains my only Oscars. I reread the piece to prepare to once again write about the Academy Awards for the Guardian, and I was shocked by how mundane the whole experience came across on the page. As befitting the much younger, more crass version of myself, there was a lot of eyerolling and snark about how soulless the event was. Also, I wouldn’t stop talking about seeing Gary Busey.
Dave Schilling is a Los Angeles-based writer and humorist
Continue reading...Niko Bray, who obtained pilot’s license in January 2025, shares story after averting disaster on busy Jupiter road
A teenage pilot who made an emergency airplane landing on a busy Florida road while averting disaster entirely says “you just execute” when thrust into such life-or-death situations.
“It can happen … so fast,” 19-year-old Niko Bray said in an interview with the Florida news outlet WSVN, nearly a week after authorities say he landed the small airplane he was flying on a six-lane thoroughfare in the community of Jupiter because of an emergency in the skies.
Continue reading...Over 34 years in prison, Shawn Tanner maintained he was not guilty of murder. A legal battle over whether the dead can clear their names will grant his final wish.
Colossal Biosciences’ CEO says its work follows a ‘moral obligation’ while critics say it’s ‘tech bro’ hype that could undermine conservation
Can and should we resurrect animal species that have been extinct for thousands of years? Such weighty, existential questions were once the preserve of science fiction but are now being played out within an unassuming brick building in a Dallas business park.
Colossal Biosciences, valued at $10.2bn after raising hundreds of millions of dollars in funding from investors including celebrities spanning from Tiger Woods to Paris Hilton, has provoked a stampede of acclaim as well as denunciation after announcing last year it had made the dire wolf, a species lost from the world for more than 10,000 years, “de-extinct” via the birth of three new pups.
Continue reading...Experts query ‘mix-up of priorities’ as president plays golf, posts old pictures and repeats details of Bill Maher feud
More than two weeks into the US-Israel war on Iran, and the conflict appears at risk of spiraling out of control.
Back home, Donald Trump’s behavior also appears chaotic. A foreign conflict typically brings somber reflection from leaders: in Trump’s case, it has brought a stream of behavior that has defied norms and raised eyebrows over his state of mind.
Continue reading...The cryptocurrency industry has a new line of attack against candidates who have voted for consumer protections on digital coins: calling them corrupt.
In at least two Illinois congressional primaries, candidates vying for the progressive vote are being accused by a crypto political action committee of corruption. Fairshake PAC is trying to smear one candidate backed by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., as a corporate tool and another candidate who successfully fought a federal indictment as a tax cheat.
“One of the most corrupt actors in the country is trying to appropriate an anti-corruption argument.”
The industry has thrown at least $3.3 million into negative attacks on the campaigns in the 2nd and 7th Congressional Districts thus far, according to an analysis from a Chicago political consultant. That spending represents only a fraction of the PAC’s war chest for the remainder of the primary season.
“Ironically, we’re in a very anti-corruption moment, and you know that is true because one of the most corrupt actors in the country is trying to appropriate an anti-corruption argument,” said Jeff Hauser of the Revolving Door Project, a crypto industry critic. “The threat is that the cynical deployment of an anti-corruption politics undermines the potential for success of a genuine anti-corruption politics.”
Fairshake declined to comment.
In both races, crypto industry interests are attacking Democratic candidates — state Sen. Robert Peters and state Rep. La Shawn K. Ford — who voted for consumer protection regulations on cryptocurrency in the Illinois statehouse last year.
That legislation, supported by Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker, forces crypto companies to register with the state and comply with local rules if they want to serve Illinois residents. Crypto companies have long opposed state-level regulations, preferring a single set of looser regulations at the federal level.
As the congressional elections heated up this year, the crypto industry began delivering payback.
Mailers targeting Peters, for instance, accuse him of being a “corporate pawn” and “bankrolled by special interests,” based on campaign contributions he has received.
Peters has responded by noting that he is endorsed by national progressives including Sanders and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D- Mass., who are fierce foes of corporate interests.
Commenting on the Fairshake mailer, Peters said that it was “paid for by Trump’s top donors, to make sure they buy a lapdog in this congressional seat who will let them avoid all regulation. Nasty work.”
Two of Peters’s top opponents, Jesse Jackson Jr. and Donna Miller, have received A ratings from Stand With Crypto, an industry group, based on their promises to pass industry-friendly legislation. (Their campaigns did not respond to requests for comment.)
Ford, the state representative, has been the target of $2.5 million in attack ads from Fairshake, according to a tally by Chicago political consultant Frank Calabrese.
One TV attack ad highlighted the 17-count bank fraud indictment that federal prosecutors brought against Ford in 2012 — without noting that the case fizzled away and Ford ultimately pleaded guilty to only a misdemeanor tax charge.
Local media have called the ad misleading, a claim that Ford echoed in an interview with The Intercept.
“I think that it’s slander. It’s the reason why we have to have campaign finance reform to get dark money out of races,” he said. “They are misleading voters. Even though they know that, they are advertising that I was convicted of 17 counts of bank fraud and tax fraud, they know that the Department of Justice dropped those charges, and yet they mislead voters.”
Ford’s campaign has sent Fairshake, the crypto PAC, a cease-and-desist letter.
One of Ford’s top opponents in the race to replace outgoing Rep. Danny Davis, City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin, received an A rating from Stand With Crypto. (Her campaign did not respond to a request for comment.)
Ford noted that industry figures including Brian Armstrong, the CEO of Coinbase, a crypto exchange that is one of Fairshake’s major funders, have worked closely with President Donald Trump to win favorable regulations.
Coinbase donated $1 million to Trump’s inaugural fund in December 2024 and has given further donations to Trump’s White House ballroom project.
“It’s funny, because they are cronies with Donald Trump and they want to say that I’m not fit to go to Congress,” Ford said. “Yet Donald Trump was actually convicted on 34 counts, and they support him for president.”
The post Crypto Spends Big in Illinois House Races to Say Consumer Rights Supporters Are Corrupt appeared first on The Intercept.
I started using my air fryer for bacon and making those crispy strips has never been easier.
A split-screen response shows how Pope Leo is navigating a minefield as the Trump administration projects American nativism at home and deadly force overseas.
Wikipedia describes Freenet as "a peer-to-peer platform for censorship-resistant, anonymous communication," released in the year 2000. "Both Freenet and some of its associated tools were originally designed by Ian Clarke," Wikipedia adds. (And in 2000 Clarke answered questions from Slashdot's readers...) And now Ian Clarke (aka Sanity — Slashdot reader #1,431) returns to share this announcement: Freenet's new generation peer-to-peer network is now operational, along with the first application built on the network: a decentralized group chat system called River. The new version is a complete redesign of the original project, focusing on real-time decentralized applications rather than static content distribution. Applications run as WebAssembly-based contracts across a small-world peer network, allowing software to operate directly on the network without centralized infrastructure. An introductory video demonstrating the system is available on YouTube. "While the original Freenet was like a decentralized hard drive, the new Freenet is like a full decentralized computer," Clarke wrote in 2023, "allowing the creation of entirely decentralized services like messaging, group chat, search, social networking, among others... designed for efficiency, flexibility, and transparency to the end user." "Freenet 2023 can be used seamlessly through your web browser, providing an experience that feels just like using the traditional web,"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Self-described UK patriots have spotted an opportunity for advancement and enrichment. That’s why so many outsource their identity to Trump
An underappreciated element of how the “special relationship” between Britain and US emerged in the aftermath of the second world war is that early on, both parties saw themselves as the senior partner. The US’s clear military and economic dominance of the postwar world gave it an obvious claim to seniority; however, there was also a strong strain within English conservatism at the time that saw itself as “Greeks in this American empire”, in the words of former Tory prime minister Harold Macmillan.
In other words, even if the Americans were to be the new Romans, extending their dominion over every corner of the globe, without the intellectual, cultural and political guidance of their wise old mother country they would quickly fall into ruin. As Christopher Hitchens would later describe, the post-imperial UK positioned itself as tutor to its young progeny and, in doing so, assumed the prefix of “Anglo” in “Anglo-American” reflected a subtle primacy of standing.
Dr Kojo Koram is professor of law and political economy at Loughborough University, and writes on issues of law, race and empire. He is the author of Uncommon Wealth: Britain and the Aftermath of Empire
Continue reading...A buddy of mine just got himself a one wheel pint and lives in an apartment with a roof top, he is planning to charge it there but he’s has a barbecue oven with propane tanks for it next to where he is planning to charge it. Is it still safe? Will it catch on fire easily? Should he charge it at an outdoor parking lot next to his apartment? Thanks!
Jocelyn Peters, a beloved third grade teacher in St. Louis, Missouri, was shot to death in her sleep. The crime scene held an unusual clue – something one detective says he had never seen before.
In 2023, what were thought to be Nazar Daletskyi’s remains were buried in his home village and his mother, Nataliia, visited the grave every week. Three years later, he spoke to her on the phone
Nazar Daletskyi was declared dead in May 2023. The DNA match left no room for doubt, officials told his mother, Nataliia. A Ukrainian soldier who volunteered for the front in the early weeks of the war, Nazar had become one more casualty of Russia’s invasion.
Nazar’s remains were laid to rest in the cemetery of his home village. In the months after the funeral, Nataliia visited the grave at least once a week, at first to cry and later to stand in quiet contemplation, remembering her only son.
Continue reading...Lib Dem leader will tell spring conference Britain can no longer rely on US while Donald Trump is president
Britain should have a completely independent nuclear deterrent as it can no longer rely on the US, Ed Davey is expected to say on Sunday.
In a speech at the Liberal Democrats spring conference, the party leader will argue that the UK should manufacture and maintain its nuclear weapons in Britain, a move that Davey acknowledges will cost billions.
Continue reading...Alexandre Dumas was wowed by it and Burt Lancaster starred there. Now the Cirque d’Hiver has a new spectacle
For more than 170 years the Cirque d’Hiver, the world’s oldest circus, has been the scene of many a breathtaking act.
In 1859, gymnast Jules Léotard – whose name would become synonymous with the one-piece – captivated audiences by launching himself from one swinging trapeze to another without a safety net for the first time in public.
Continue reading...Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for March 15.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for March 15, No. 538.
Got my X7LR running and really liking the mission clone. VESCMAN “all around” is also good. What are you all riding or what are your setting you would be down to share?
Trump also questions whether Iran’s new supreme leader ‘is even alive’ while deflating hopes of a deal with Tehran to end conflict – key US politics stories from 14 March 2026 at a glance
Donald Trump says US strikes have “totally demolished” much of Iran’s Kharg Island oil export hub and threatened that “we may hit it a few more times just for fun”.
In comments to NBC News, the president also questioned, without attribution, whether Iran’s new supreme leader “is even alive”, while deflating hopes of a deal with Tehran to end the conflict.
Continue reading...Long-time tech journalist Clive Thompson interviewed over 70 software developers at Google, Amazon, Microsoft and start-ups for a new article on AI-assisted programming. It's title? "Coding After Coders: The End of Computer Programming as We Know It." Published in the prestigious New York Times Magazine, the article even cites long-time programming guru Kent Beck saying LLMs got him going again and he's now finishing more projects than ever, calling AI's unpredictability "addictive, in a slot-machine way." In fact, the article concludes "many Silicon Valley programmers are now barely programming. Instead, what they're doing is deeply, deeply weird..." Brennan-Burke chimed in: "You remember seeing the research that showed the more rude you were to models, the better they performed?" They chuckled. Computer programming has been through many changes in its 80-year history. But this may be the strangest one yet: It is now becoming a conversation, a back-and-forth talk fest between software developers and their bots... For decades, being a software developer meant mastering coding languages, but now a language technology itself is upending the very nature of the job... A coder is now more like an architect than a construction worker... Several programmers told me they felt a bit like Steve Jobs, who famously had his staffers churn out prototypes so he could handle lots of them and settle on what felt right. The work of a developer is now more judging than creating... If you want to put a number on how much more productive A.I. is making the programmers at mature tech firms like Google, it's 10 percent, Sundar Pichai, Google's chief executive, has said. That's the bump that Google has seen in "engineering velocity" — how much faster its more than 100,000 software developers are able to work. And that 10 percent is the average inside the company, Ryan Salva, a senior director of product at the company, told me. Some work, like writing a simple test, is now tens of times faster. Major changes are slower. At the start-ups whose founders I spoke to, closer to 100 percent of their code is being written by A.I., but at Google it is not quite 50 percent. The article cites a senior principal engineer at Amazon who says "Things I've always wanted to do now only take a six-minute conversation and a 'Go do that." Another programmer described their army of Claude agents as "an alien intelligence that we're learning to work with." Although "A.I. being A.I., things occasionally go haywire," the article acknowledges — and after relying on AI, "Some new developers told me they can feel their skills weakening." Still, "I was surprised by how many software developers told me they were happy to no longer write code by hand. Most said they still feel the jolt of success, even with A.I. writing the lines... " A few programmers did say that they lamented the demise of hand-crafting their work. "I believe that it can be fun and fulfilling and engaging, and having the computer do it for you strips you of that," one Apple engineer told me. (He asked to remain unnamed so he wouldn't get in trouble for criticizing Apple's embrace of A.I.) He went on: "I didn't do it to make a lot of money and to excel in the career ladder. I did it because it's my passion. I don't want to outsource that passion"... But only a few people at Apple openly share his dimmer views, he said. The coders who still actively avoid A.I. may be in the minority, but their opposition is intense. Some dislike how much energy it takes to train and deploy the models, and others object to how they were trained by tech firms pillaging copyrighted works. There is suspicion that the sheer speed of A.I.'s output means firms will wind up with mountains of flabbily written code that won't perform well. The tech bosses might use agents as a cudgel: Don't get uppity at work — we could replace you with a bot. And critics think it is a terrible idea for developers to become reliant on A.I. produced by a small coterie of tech giants. Thomas Ptacek, a Chicago-based developer and a co-founder of the tech firm Fly.io... thinks the refuseniks are deluding themselves when they claim that A.I. doesn't work well and that it can't work well... The holdouts are in the minority, and "you can watch the five stages of grief playing out." "How things will shake out for professional coders themselves isn't yet clear," the article concludes. "But their mix of exhilaration and anxiety may be a preview for workers in other fields... Abstraction may be coming for us all."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
| So idk this boards kind of weird. Sometimes when I power it on there is no issue and it rides great. And other times on start up it will give me the error 16 on the app and it takes me about 5 power cycles for it to go away. It usually happens when I charge it. I have it locked at 90percent, having only let it charge up to 100 percent one time. I have left it charging over night to see if that fixed the issue but as of now the Board has a “once charged to 90 percent, boot me up a couple of times then Il work fine” - when starting the board the app will show the battery at 100 percent charge even though it’s locked at 90. Then after a power cycle it will drop to down low percentage like 17 percent. After 2 more cycles it goes back up to 100 then finally in the final cycle it will go back to its true 90percent charge. -I’ve ridden it more miles after it runs and it has no issue. The problem only returns once I turn it off and on again after a ride. [link] [comments] |
Hamas called on Iran to refrain from targeting neighboring countries, while affirming Tehran's right to defend itself.
Economists predict RBA will raise interest rates this week and in May – days before treasurer unveils budget
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Households can expect significant additional cost-of-living pressures because of the war in the Middle East, with Jim Chalmers confirming that the government expects inflation to rise beyond 4.5% in Australia.
But the treasurer said he did not expect the economy to fall into recession because of the war sparked by US and Israeli bombings in Iran.
Continue reading...Within days of their firings, two former federal workers launched a support group for fellow colleagues in the same situation. What started out as 20 people has grown to almost 5,000 members nationwide.
It's America's first large-scale offshore wind project, reports WBUR — enough clean energy to power 400,000 homes in Massachusetts from 62 offshore wind turbines generating 800 megawatts. But it took a while... The plant's first construction delay happened back in 2019, they point out — and then "Just three months ago, when the project was 95% complete, the U.S. Interior Department issued a stop-work order." But after successfully challenging that order in court, and "with a stretch of good weather offshore, the developers behind the $4.5 billion project managed to get over the finish line." The Associated Press notes it was "one of five major East Coast offshore wind projects the Trump administration halted construction on days before Christmas, citing national security concerns." Developers and states sued, and federal judges allowed all five to resume construction, essentially concluding that the government did not show that the national security risk was so imminent that construction must halt. Another one of the five, Revolution Wind, began sending power for the first time to New England's electric grid on Friday and will scale up in the weeks ahead until it is fully operational. "That project is nearly complete as well," notes WBUR, "and will eventually be capable of powering up to 350,000 homes."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for March 15, No. 1,730.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for March 15, No. 1,008
Another three members of the Iran's women's soccer team who accepted refugee visas to stay in Australia have decided to return to their homeland, an Australian government minister said.
Hi Onewheel owners!
I’m currently looking for a good cordless air pump to fill my onewheel tire.
Does anyone have experience with a specific portable air inflator they recommend?
World No 1 sitting outside the top 20 with one round to go
Åberg takes three-shot lead into final 18 holes at Sawgrass
There is a robotic element to Scottie Scheffler during periods of success but observing the world No 1 in times of adversity is far more intriguing. There is more – much more – to the American than meets the eye.
This is a golfer who was once reduced to tears after a Ryder Cup trouncing. While all charges were eventually dropped, the mere fact Scheffler found himself in a prison jumpsuit before a round at the 2024 US PGA was highly unusual. Last summer, he was filmed in long and histrionic discussion with his coach amid struggles at the US Open.
Continue reading..."Just the anachronism of seeing Doom, one of the poster children for the moral panic around violent video games, on a Nintendo console is novel," writes Kotaku — especially with the console's underpowered "Super FX" coprocessor Hampered by a nearly unplayable framerate, especially in later levels, and mired by sacrifices, like altered levels, no floor or ceiling textures, and the entire fourth episode being cut, [1995's] Doom on the Super NES was not a good version of the game, but it was Doom running on the Super NES, and, for that alone, [programmer Randal] Linden's genius deserves recognition. But then in 2022 when Audi Sorlie interviewed Linden on the YouTube show DF Retro, "Not really knowing where fate was going to take us, I asked [Linden] a throwaway question regarding the source code for Doom." If you ever worked on this again, Sorlie asked, would you make any improvements or do anything differently?" "Yeah," Linden replied. "I have plenty of ideas if I could go back, but, you know, I don't think anyone's asking me to go back to Super Nintendo Doom and improve it." A few years passed, and Sorlie joined Limited Run Games as lead producer for their development department. When LRG asked him to run down his craziest ideas, a new, improved release of Randal Linden's Doom loomed large. Convincing Linden was easy, and Sorlie said even the folks at license holder Bethesda were more amused than anything. "You want to go back and develop for Super Nintendo?" they asked Sorlie. "Like, for real...?" "The trick was actually pretty cool," Linden said. "It's right here." He pointed to a chip on the prototype SNES cartridge, similar to the one Limited Run sent me to test out the game. "It's a Raspberry Pi 2350." Super FX chips are no longer in production for obvious reasons, but with a clever bit of programming, Linden was able to load software onto the Raspberry Pi that fools the SNES into thinking the game has one. "The Super Nintendo doesn't know that it's not talking to a Super FX," he explained. When he programs for it, he writes code almost identical to what he'd write for an authentic Super FX chip. "I had to go back and reverse-engineer my own code from 30 years ago," Linden laughed. "It's like, what was I doing here? And what was I doing there? Yeah, it was pretty tricky, some of the code. I was like, wow, I used to be very smart." The result of Linden's work? It's Doom, running right on a Super Nintendo, but it's smoother, packed with new content, and even includes rumble.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
"Just the anachronism of seeing Doom, one of the poster children for the moral panic around violent video games, on a Nintendo console is novel," writes Kotaku — especially with the console's underpowered "Super FX" coprocessor Hampered by a nearly unplayable framerate, especially in later levels, and mired by sacrifices, like altered levels, no floor or ceiling textures, and the entire fourth episode being cut, [1995's] Doom on the Super NES was not a good version of the game, but it was Doom running on the Super NES, and, for that alone, [programmer Randal] Linden's genius deserves recognition. But then in 2022 when Audi Sorlie interviewed Linden on the YouTube show DF Retro, "Not really knowing where fate was going to take us, I asked [Linden] a throwaway question regarding the source code for Doom." If you ever worked on this again, Sorlie asked, would you make any improvements or do anything differently?" "Yeah," Linden replied. "I have plenty of ideas if I could go back, but, you know, I don't think anyone's asking me to go back to Super Nintendo Doom and improve it." A few years passed, and Sorlie joined Limited Run Games as lead producer for their development department. When LRG asked him to run down his craziest ideas, a new, improved release of Randal Linden's Doom loomed large. Convincing Linden was easy, and Sorlie said even the folks at license holder Bethesda were more amused than anything. "You want to go back and develop for Super Nintendo?" they asked Sorlie. "Like, for real...?" "The trick was actually pretty cool," Linden said. "It's right here." He pointed to a chip on the prototype SNES cartridge, similar to the one Limited Run sent me to test out the game. "It's a Raspberry Pi 2350." Super FX chips are no longer in production for obvious reasons, but with a clever bit of programming, Linden was able to load software onto the Raspberry Pi that fools the SNES into thinking the game has one. "The Super Nintendo doesn't know that it's not talking to a Super FX," he explained. When he programs for it, he writes code almost identical to what he'd write for an authentic Super FX chip. "I had to go back and reverse-engineer my own code from 30 years ago," Linden laughed. "It's like, what was I doing here? And what was I doing there? Yeah, it was pretty tricky, some of the code. I was like, wow, I used to be very smart." The result of Linden's work? It's Doom, running right on a Super Nintendo, but it's smoother, packed with new content, and even includes rumble.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
US Central Command says crash followed unspecified incident, and second refueling tanker landed safely in Israel
The names of the six US service members who died when a military refueling aircraft crashed over Iraq on Thursday have been released.
The Pentagon on Saturday identified the crew members as Maj John “Alex” Klinner, 33, of Auburn, Alabama; Capt Ariana Savino, 31, of Covington, Washington; Tech Sgt Ashley Pruitt, 34, of Bardstown, Kentucky; Capt Seth Koval, 38, of Mooresville, Indiana; Capt Curtis Angst, 30, of Wilmington, Ohio; and Tech Sgt Tyler Simmons, 28, of Columbus, Ohio.
Continue reading...Bahrain circuit only 20 miles from targeted US base
Races unlikely to be replaced because of logistics
Formula One has cancelled the Bahrain and Saudi Arabia grands prix because of the war in the Middle East.
The races were due to take place on 12 April in Bahrain and 19 April in Saudi Arabia but the sport was approaching the point at which a decision on cancellation needed to be made to prevent more freight being sent to Bahrain.
Continue reading...The Trump administration has proposed the construction of an underground facility to screen visitors to the White House.
Plug-in (or "balcony") solar panels can also be hung out a window or be set up in a backyard, reports NPR. They channel energy from the sun straight into a home's electrical outlet, generating enough electricity to power a refrigerator or microwave while "displacing electricity that otherwise would come in from the grid..." But what's holding up their adoption in America? For the panels to become more widely available in the U.S., state lawmakers are proposing bills that eliminate complicated utility connection agreements, which are required for larger rooftop solar installations and, most utilities say, should apply to plug-in solar too. Those agreements, along with permitting and other installation costs, can double the price of solar panels. Utah enacted the first law, last May, supporting plug-in solar, and now some 30 pieces of similar legislation have been introduced around the United States. [And Virginia seems poised to pass a similar law.] But the drive toward plug-in solar is facing pushback from electric utilities. They are raising safety concerns and prompting legislators to delay votes on the bills. So far, utilities have won over lawmakers in five states and convinced them to delay votes on plug-in solar bills... Plug-in solar advocates say that safety concerns about the new technology have been addressed and that utilities are really just worried about losing business, because every kilowatt-hour generated by a plug-in solar panel is one less the utility sells to a customer... There are safety risks with any electrical appliance, and it's true that plug-in solar panels present some unique problems. But safety experts also say those issues can be managed.... German utilities expressed many of the same concerns nearly a decade ago when plug-in solar started to become popular in Germany. But with more than a million systems installed, no safety incidents have been reported for customers who used the panels as instructed, according to a research paper funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Brendan Carr posts that he may cancel spectrum permits of ‘mainstream news’ outlets for ‘misleading’ coverage
The Trump administration’s communications licensing chief fired a warning shot over the US broadcasting industry on Saturday, threatening to cancel the spectrum permits of broadcasters pushing what he termed “hoaxes and news distortions”.
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) chair Brendan Carr posted on social media that broadcasters running “fake news – have a chance now to correct course before their license renewals come up. The law is clear. Broadcasters must operate in the public interest, and they will lose their licenses if they do not.”
Continue reading...U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright invoked the Defense Production Act to restore the Sable Offshore Corp.'s Santa Ynez unit and pipeline off Santa Barbara's coastline.
What if you have a very modern machine that is entirely UEFI-only, meaning it has no compatibility support module and thus no way of enabling a legacy BIOS mode? Well, install a CSM as an EFI application, of course!
CSMWrap is an EFI application designed to be a drop-in solution to enable legacy BIOS booting on modern UEFI-only (class 3) systems. It achieves this by wrapping a Compatibility Support Module (CSM) build of the SeaBIOS project as an out-of-firmware EFI application, effectively creating a compatibility layer for traditional PC BIOS operation.
↫ CSMWrap’s GitHub page
The need for this may not be immediately obvious, but here’s the problem: if you want to run an older operating system that absolutely requires a traditional BIOS on a modern machine that only has UEFI without any CSM options (a class 3-machine), you won’t be able to boot said operating system. CSMWrap is a possible solution, as it leverages innate EFI capabilities to run a CSM as an EFI application, thereby adding the CSM functionality back in. All you need to do is drop CSMWrap into /efi/boot on the same drive the operating system that needs BIOS to boot is on, and UEFI will list it as a bootable operating system.
It does come with some limitations, however. For instance, one logical core of your processor will be taken up by CSMWrap and will be entirely unavailable to the booted BIOS-based operating system. In other words, this means you’re going to need a processor with at least more than one logical processor (e.g., even a single-core machine with hyperthreading will work). It’s also suggested to add a legacy-capable video card if you’re using an operating system that doesn’t support VESA BIOS extensions (e.g. anything older than NT).
This is an incredibly neat idea, and even comes with advantages over built-in CSMs, since many of those are untested and riddled with issues. CSMWrap uses SeaBIOS, which is properly tested and generally a much better BIOS than whatever native CSMs contain. All in all, a great project.
Apple's long-rumored first foldable phone could come in 2026, and rumors are finally giving insight to what it could look like.
Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr did not name specific networks, but his post included a reference to a Saturday morning Truth Social post from the president.
"A few developers found a way, for now, to turn a few of these increasingly mediocre Amazon Show devices into friendly, useful, open computers," writes the co-founder of the gaming/tech news site Aftermath. For under $50 each, he bought some used versions of the devices and tested their instructions, partly to escape the full-screen ads Amazon began showing late last year, and also to overwrite Amazon's locked down Android fork "Fire OS" (and "a similarly neutered version of Linux called Vega OS") Customers who bought these devices and used them for several years were not used to them showing full screen ads, and now they do. People were justifiably pissed. So what do you do when an already evil device gets shittier...? I wiped Fire OS from the device and used ADB sideload to directly load two packages on the device: LineageOS and MindTheGapps. MindTheGapps lets you turn the device into something resembling a traditional Android device, for both good and bad.... It took a few times of wiping the device, but after a few tries it finally worked as intended... I immediately installed the Home Assistant app... Not only can the hacked Echo Show 8 control my entire smart home, it now plays back my entire local music library as well as any internet radio channels like The Lot Radio and NTS. It can also synchronize with any additional Echo Show running LineageOS in my house using the SendSpin protocol... I would gladly take it any day of the week over most of the devices these companies offer, especially Amazon. It may not be as intuitive as out-of-the-box smart home products, but I don't need my devices to be intuitive, I need them to behave. I had finally found a smart display that wasn't a cop... The hardware is old and creaky, and after the hack it can only use 1GB of the 2GB of ram. And yet it still manages to feel snappier than the stock hardware. "The amount of telemetry, ads, and general bloat Amazon shoves down our throats definitely doesn't help performance," [XDA Devs Forum user] Rortiz2 told me. "That's actually another reason why we did LineageOS, it kind of gives the device a second life. Even though it's still a bit buggy, it feels way better to use than the stock firmware...." If you want a smart speaker with a display that just runs a stripped-down version of Android that you have full control over, you're going to have a hard time finding it outside of these three specific models unless you cobble something together yourself. It is a deceptively simple thing to desire — the kiosk computer from science fiction that isn't a narc — yet few companies really offer it. "It should be against the law to not give an end user the ability to consensually load whatever OS or program they want on their device..." the article concludes, arguing that "If we budge on the inalienable right to modify our hardware then we forsake a key part about what makes computers special." And in the mean time, "There are so many devices that could be put to use rotting in e-waste facilities and thrift stores..."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Hello everyone I just have a question
Is onewheel app cure for counting miles? i’m asking that because I another GPS app and was reading 3.5 miles and onewheel app reading 7 miles so I am very confused which app is correct
TSA officers faced their first full missed paycheck Friday.
Met police says woman, 43, was detained after newborn girl in Westminster taken to hospital and pronounced dead
A woman has been arrested on suspicion of murder after an 18-day-old baby girl fell from a property in central London.
The Metropolitan police said officers attended Horseferry Road in Westminster after reports on Saturday morning that a baby had fallen from a residential property.
Continue reading...Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for March 15, No. 742.
US president calls on China, France, Japan and the UK to send vessels after US strikes Kharg Island oil facilities
Iran threatened on Saturday to further escalate the war raging in the Middle East by targeting any facility in the region with US ties, after Donald Trump predicted “many countries” would send warships to support a US bid to reopen by force the strait of Hormuz, a critical waterway closed to virtually all maritime traffic by Tehran since the beginning of the war.
Iran has responded to the joint US-Israeli offensive, which is entering its third week, with daily attacks on oil and other infrastructure around the Gulf region, as well as against Israel.
Continue reading..."The new MacBook Air and MacBook Pro models feature a keyboard change," reports MacRumors: On the U.S. English version of the new MacBook Air and MacBook Pro keyboards, the tab, caps lock, shift, return, and delete keycaps now have glyphs on them. On previous-generation models, these keys are labeled with text instead... Given the U.S. English keyboard layout is the default option for MacBook Air, MacBook Pro, and MacBook Neo models sold in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Singapore, this change effectively extends to those countries and a few others. "Apple already uses glyph-based key labels on several European keyboard layouts," notes The Mac Observer, "including British English versions of the MacBook. Because of this, the design will feel familiar to many users outside the United States." The change was noticed last week by Chicago-based X.com/YouTube user "Mr. Macintosh", who makes how-to videos about now and old Macs.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
| I purchased a craft&ride fender for my GT from somebody online but it came with the wrong mounts. I got the ones for the XR I think. Does anybody have a spare set I can buy? [link] [comments] |
The attack hit four districts, damaging residential buildings, educational institutions and critical infrastructure, officials said.
Last week System76 CEO Carl Richell criticized age-verification laws for operating systems — but he now sees a "real possibility" Colorado's law might exclude open-source. Phoronix reports that the System76 CEO met with the state Senator who co-authored Colorado's bill, and then posted on X.com that the Senator "suggested excluding open source software from the bill." Richell: This appears to be a real possibility. Amendments are expected... It's my hope we can move fast enough to influence excluding open source.. No illusions, it's an uphill battle, but we have an open door to advocate for the open source community. Vague language has been a recurring problem with new state age-verification legislation. Richell pointed out later that "In one proposed bill, Garmin would have to verify the age of their watch customers at device setup." Richell also sees New York's bill as "unlikely to be applicable to Linux distributions," since its language calls for "commercially reasonable age assurance" that free operating systems could use — and Richell isn't sure one exists as described by the bill. "As written today, it's extremely broad and vague and that makes it scary." Richell answered several follow-up questions about operating system age-verification laws. "What about California?" someone asked... Richell: We hope to make sensible, strong arguments for excluding open source which then becomes a standard for other states. It's going to be difficult. Q: Open source is not the only target to exclude. Please ensure that the bill is amended so that it does not require applications that have no possible use for the age bracket to ask about it. Richell: We discussed this as well. I proposed that apps that do not require age to modify app behavior or access by some other legislation be barred from reading age brackets to better protect privacy.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
SNP leader hails prospect of success for parties in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland that want to break up union
The UK is facing an “absolutely seismic moment”, John Swinney has said, with the prospect of the election of first ministers in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland in May who are all committed to the break-up of the union.
Speaking at the Scottish National party’s campaign conference ahead of the Scottish parliament elections, the first minister told delegates: “For people watching around the world, there could be no clearer sign that Westminster’s time is up.”
Continue reading...The attorney for former U.S. Sen. Kyrsten Sinema says she shouldn't be subject to a lawsuit by the ex-wife of her former lover.
Joshua Nass, of alleged $600,000 extortion plot, played role in pardon of man convicted of failing to pay $40m in taxes
A New York lobbyist and attorney connected to a presidential pardon issued by Donald Trump in November has been charged with attempting to extort a former client and the client’s son over an alleged $500,000 debt.
Joshua Nass, 34, was arrested on Friday after being charged in federal court in Brooklyn with attempted Hobbs Act extortion. US justice department prosecutors contend that Nass threatened a client for payment that he claimed he was owed for his services.
Continue reading...I experienced nose that once, and it was what I would easily consider my worst wreck. I had recently and elbow pads, but no helmet for some reason it didn’t even dawn on me. I made a post about it. You guys are like OK yeah duh you’re supposed to wear a helmet on The so forth I get it so I bought a helmet and I wore it for a while…
I have a new method and it’s probably going to be a very hard sell for most of you.
So now that it’s getting warmer instead of wearing pads and a helmet, I don’t wear the pads and the helmet and I take a gummy and actively drink liquor while I’m riding now. This has decreased my incidents by 100%.
Palantir’s CEO says the platforms will have a vast effect on the electoral landscape … especially women. Is it a warning or a sales pitch?
Don’t you just love AI? It has inundated the internet with slop, destabilized the concept of truth, and made it much easier to bomb people. And that’s just the beginning. As we look towards the future of our brave new world, AI might also disrupt all those pesky highly-educated female voters who keep casting a ballot for Democrats.
To be clear: that assessment isn’t coming from me, a highly exhausted female who wishes the Democrats would work a little harder for people’s votes. Rather, it’s coming from one of the key architects of our glorious AI-driven economy: Alex Karp, the co-founder and CEO of tech firm Palantir.
Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist
Continue reading...Ohio representative Joyce Beatty, an ex officio member, may access documents and speak, but may not vote
A federal judge ruled on Saturday that a Democratic lawmaker is entitled to participate at a board meeting about Donald Trump’s plan to close down the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts for two years of renovations.
But the judge is not forcing the board to let the Ohio representative Joyce Beatty, an ex officio member through her position in Congress, vote at Monday’s session.
Continue reading...In his top post at the Department of Homeland Security, David Harvilicz sets policy on protecting the nation’s elections infrastructure, including voting machines.
He’s also the co-founder of a company with James Penrose, who helped hatch debunked conspiracy theories blaming hacked voting machines for Donald Trump’s loss in the 2020 presidential election. Penrose assisted in a push to seize voting machines to overturn Trump’s defeat.
On social media, Harvilicz has called for doing away with voting machines, saying they are “eminently vulnerable to exploitation.” In a March post, he wrote that “DHS needs to ban voting machines for all federal elections. The time is now.” He also has repeatedly questioned the validity of Democratic electoral victories and pushed for Republicans to overhaul electoral systems to their advantage.

Election experts as well as current and former DHS officials say Harvilicz’s central role in overseeing the security of electoral systems and voting machines is especially concerning at a time when the administration is taking unprecedented steps to relitigate Trump’s baseless claims that the 2020 election was stolen. That includes the FBI’s seizure of 2020 voting records from Fulton County, Georgia, and having a team working for Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, take custody of voting machines used in Puerto Rico in 2020.
“The security of our election infrastructure depends on leadership that is trusted, impartial and grounded in evidence — not individuals who have promoted conspiracy theories about the very systems they are now responsible for protecting,” said Danielle Lang, vice president for voting rights and the rule of law at the Campaign Legal Center, a nonpartisan pro-democracy organization. “Placing someone with that background in charge of policies affecting election security can undermine public confidence in our elections at a time when trust is already fragile.”
DHS didn’t answer detailed questions about Harvilicz or his team, providing a more general statement about the work done by the agency. “DHS and its employees are focused on keeping our elections safe, secure, and free,” it said. “Every single day appointees at the Department of Homeland Security work to implement the President’s policies and keep our Homeland safe.”
Harvilicz didn’t respond to questions about his DHS role. Harvilicz’s X account notes his post as DHS’ assistant secretary for cyber, infrastructure, risk and resilience policy but says he’s been detailed to the Defense Department. (Such temporary assignments are typically done in 120-day increments.)
Harvilicz was appointed to the DHS job around July, taking on a role that in the past has largely focused on shaping policy to protect the nation’s critical infrastructure, including its election systems.
But current and former DHS officials say Harvilicz and his team have transformed their functions to become more hands-on. They’ve been deeply engaged with facilitating multiple administration data-gathering efforts aimed at scouring voter rolls for noncitizens, the officials said. ProPublica has reported on one such effort, which has led to hundreds of citizens being incorrectly flagged as potential noncitizens.
Harvilicz’s team includes Heather Honey, the deputy assistant secretary of election integrity. ProPublica has reported that Honey was previously a leader in the Election Integrity Network, a conservative group that has challenged the legitimacy of American election systems. Honey worked closely with Cleta Mitchell, the network’s leader, who played a prominent role in helping Trump try to overturn his 2020 loss.
Also reporting directly to Harvilicz is Samantha Anderson, a data specialist who previously worked to elect Trump through the advocacy arm of the America First Policy Institute, a think tank closely associated with the president.
Multiple officials and elections experts said they were worried that Harvilicz and Honey would have prominent parts in assessing and describing the cybersecurity of the coming election, both to the public and to administration leaders. They also expressed concern that if Trump again wanted to get control of voting machines after the election, perhaps if Republicans lose seats in the midterms, that Harvilicz is ideally positioned to help them do so.
“It would be super easy for them to get the voting machines,” a current DHS official said, adding they can “describe it as they want, if they don’t like the results.”
Harvilicz co-founded Tranquility AI, which has developed an artificial intelligence tool for law enforcement, with Penrose, and they are listed on its 2025 patents as developing its systems together.
Penrose, a former intelligence officer, played a leading role in the campaign to help Trump in his failed bid to overturn the 2020 election, ProPublica has reported. Penrose also participated in multiple attempts to clandestinely seize voting machines, including in Michigan, where prosecutors accused him of breaking into some of the machines. (Penrose wasn’t charged in the case.) He appeared to be an unindicted co-conspirator in the failed Georgia prosecution in which Trump was accused of conspiring to overturn the election results, according to The Washington Post.
Penrose didn’t respond to a request for comment for this article.
One of the purported uses of Tranquility AI’s product is for “election integrity,” according to the company’s website. It didn’t provide more details in response to a question from ProPublica.
Tranquility AI’s tools, which help law enforcement agents process data and assemble cases, have been employed by New Orleans’ district attorney, and the company says it has partnered with dozens of law enforcement agencies nationwide. In July 2025, a large government IT contractor announced a partnership with Tranquility AI.
Harvilicz started his career working at law firms on Wall Street and in tech. Then, in 2004, when he was 29, he launched a losing bid for a Maryland congressional seat. After that, he helped lead a crowdfunding company, a movie marketing business, a film production business that worked with former intelligence officers and several cyber security ventures (including one at which he worked with Penrose). He also did a stint in the first Trump administration, serving as cybersecurity official in the Department of Energy.
In advance of Harvilicz getting the DHS position, Tranquility AI made a $100,000 donation to Trump’s inaugural fund through a newly created nonprofit based at Harvilicz’s home address, according to The Intercept. In response to questions from The Intercept, Harvilicz said the donation was designed to help them meet administration policymakers. The Intercept first reported his ties to Penrose in connection with the donation.
Harvilicz has posted prolifically to social media, sharing hundreds of posts of conservative content. After Trump won a second presidential term, he wrote: “We will now dismantle the near communist takeover of America and return her to greatness.”
In 2020, Harvilicz purchased a $3.3 million home outside of Los Angeles.
After the Palisades Fire destroyed it around the beginning of Trump’s second term, Harvilicz stood on a roadside to greet the president’s tour of the disaster area with his young son on his shoulders. His son held aloft a picture of a bloodied Trump punching the air after surviving an assassin’s bullet.
Even then, elections were not far from his mind. He told a reporter for the Los Angeles Times that he supported Trump making disaster aid conditional on the Democratic state implementing voter ID.
“I hope he saw us,” Harvilicz told the Times reporter.
The post This DHS Official Oversees the Security of Federal Elections. He Wants to Ban Voting Machines. appeared first on ProPublica.
Commentary: Don't Look Up is the beginning of the Oscar winner's schlubby era. It's an overlooked dark comedy, with an urgent moral, that has only gotten better with age.
Exclusive: Senior party figures conclude outsiders or existing senior staff deemed more suitable should take over from current permanent secretaries
A Reform UK government would expect to dismiss the top civil servant in every government department and replace them with people seen as more likely to implement the party’s priorities, the Guardian has learned.
Senior Reform figures have concluded that the current crop of permanent secretaries, the lead civil servant in each department, are not up to the necessary standard. Some would be replaced by outsiders, and others by existing officials viewed as more suitable.
Continue reading...Royal couple criticise Tom Bower’s ‘fixation’ on them and describe released extracts as ‘conspiracy and melodrama’
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have launched a scathing attack on a “deranged” author whose new book claims Queen Camilla once told a friend: “Meghan’s brainwashed Harry.”
The royal couple hit out at Tom Bower, the author of Betrayal: Power, Deceit and the Fight for the Future of the Royal Family, criticising his “fixation” on the pair.
Continue reading...The deal to take control of TikTok's U.S. business came with an unusual condition, according to people familiar with the matter. The investors — which include Oracle, Abu Dhabi investor MGX, and private-equity firm Silver Lake — "paid the Treasury Department about $2.5 billion when the deal closed in January," reports the Wall Street Journal, "and are set to make several additional payments until hitting the $10 billion total." The $10 billion payment would be nearly unprecedented for a government helping arrange a transaction, historians have said... Investment bankers advising on a typical deal receive fees of less than 1% of the transaction value, and the percentage generally gets smaller as the deal size increases. Bank of America is in line to make some $130 million for advising railroad operator Norfolk Southern on its $71.5 billion sale to Union Pacific, one of the largest fees on record for a single bank on a deal. Administration officials have said the fee is justified given Trump's role in saving TikTok in the U.S. and navigating negotiations with China to get the deal done while addressing the security concerns of lawmakers... The TikTok fee extracted from private-sector investors is the administration's latest transaction involving the nation's largest businesses. Trump took a nearly 10% stake in semiconductor company Intel and has agreed to take a chunk of chip sales to China from Nvidia in exchange for granting export licenses. The administration has also taken equity stakes in other companies and has a say in the operations of U.S. Steel following a "golden share" agreement with Japan's Nippon Steel in its takeover. Reuters notes earlier this month, a lawsuit was filed by investors in two of TikTok's social media rivals, seeking to reverse the approval of the deal. Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader schwit1 for sharing the news.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Have an original pint, battery is super sluggish. Even with a full charge, it's struggling to get up hills on-road that it could usually chew up pretty easily. Tire pressure is around 20 and I'm 195 lbs. I have tried to rehab the battery by keeping it on the charger for conditioning but it hasn't helped.
Looking for inspiration. Glad to totally modify the board, so open to ideas for what to do with the unit, recognizing that just replacing the battery might not be the best use of $. My usually use is on-road cruising with occasional trails.
I don't have a ton of milage on the board, but can't quote you miles since I don't want to connect to the app for fear of "upgrading" the firmware.
Thanks for any thoughts!
His predecessor, Pope Francis, lived in a simple apartment in the Santa Marta guesthouse in the Vatican.
Habermas’s political consensus-building theory argued formation of public opinion vital for democracies to survive
The influential German philosopher and sociologist Jürgen Habermas has died at the age of 96, his publisher has said.
Habermas, a towering figure in the intellectual history of postwar Germany, is best known for his theory of political consensus-building. Widely considered one of most influential philosophers of the 20th century, he also helped to shape the discourse around European integration and the formation of the EU.
Continue reading...Rare action began peacefully but ‘degenerated into vandalism’ according to state-run newspaper
Five people have been arrested in Cuba for acts of “vandalism” after a small group of protesters broke into a provincial office of the Cuban Communist party and set fire to computers and furniture.
The incident, which also affected a pharmacy and another shop, took place in the town of Moron, a little more than 300 miles (500km) east of Havana.
Continue reading...Just got my ubox100 72v pint build done. First time messing with vesc setting on one wheels. Since I upgraded the battery to 72v what settings should be changed to adjust to that? Seems like it's having weird haptic buzzs and push backs I see the settings just wanna know safe parameters to set!
California saw its worst drought in 10,000 years between 2012 and 2015, remembers the Washington Post. And yet genetic analyses of California's scarlet monkeyflower "found that many rapidly evolved... allowing them to cope with water scarcity and rebound from decline." "The fact that certain organisms are able to adapt just because of genetics that are already present is a great source of hope," said Daniel Anstett, a plant biologist at Cornell University and lead author on a new study on the issue. "It's one more arrow in the quiver of different ways that populations might be able to survive the massive climate change we're inflicting on the planet." The recovery of [Sequoia National Park's] scarlet monkeyflowers offers rare, real-world evidence of what scientists call "evolutionary rescue," according to the study published Thursday in the journal Science. It suggests that some species may be able to evolve quickly enough to keep up with the accelerating consequences of human-caused warming — essentially saving themselves from extinction. This discovery could help people decide how to distribute limited conservation funds by pinpointing which species have enough genetic diversity to be resilient, ecologists Mark Urban and Laurinne Balstad, who were not involved in the study, wrote in a separate analysis published by Science. "The challenge going forward is to identify when evolutionary rescue is possible, when it is not, and how to rescue those species that cannot rescue themselves," Urban and Balstad wrote.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The war is deeply unpopular, and the spike in oil prices will mean long-term high prices across the board for Americans
Donald Trump is still high on the capture of Nicolás Maduro. The easy abduction of the Venezuelan president didn’t just grant Trump control of the nation’s oil and critical minerals resources. It allowed him to throttle the government of Cuba by denying it access to energy, raising the tantalizing prospect that he might bring down a communist regime that has annoyed Washington since 1959.
Trump is confident that his joint venture with Israel in Iran will do just as well. The barrage of Iranian missiles and drones aimed at Israel and Iran’s Arab neighbors has done nothing to change Trump’s mind that he can win, regardless of how he defines “winning”.
Continue reading...Kharg Island is a small, heavily fortified, and strategically valuable island off Iran's northern coast.
Watch scenes from the performances nominated for best supporting actress at the 98th annual Academy Awards, as well as interviews with the nominees.
Watch scenes from the performances nominated for best supporting actor at the 98th annual Academy Awards, as well as interviews with the nominees.
Watch scenes from the performances nominated for best actress at the 98th annual Academy Awards, as well as interviews with the nominees.
The strikes destroyed more than 90 military targets, including missile facilities, but preserved oil infrastructure, U.S. Central Command said Saturday.
A Chevron station just outside downtown charges more than $8 a gallon – nearly $3 more than the city’s average
It’s tempting to think that a gas station charging more than $8 a gallon is a glamorous Los Angeles curiosity. Sort of like shopping at Erewhon, the healthy grocery chain that wows with a premium experience – and commands up to $22 a smoothie.
But there’s no glamour at the 901 N Alameda Street station. It’s just a dingy Chevron on the edge of LA’s Chinatown, regularly featured in news stories to illustrate the high cost of fuel in California. Midday on Tuesday, the station charged $8.31 for a gallon of regular gas.
Continue reading...US president urges nations to deploy vessels to keep key oil shipping route open amid conflict with Iran
Donald Trump has said the UK should send warships to help keep the strait of Hormuz open.
In a post on his Truth Social platform, the US president urged the UK and other countries to deploy vessels to the strait amid the conflict with Iran.
Continue reading...Defense secretary appeared to endorse killing prisoners, a violation of international law, during press briefing
A top Democratic lawmaker with a military background has reacted strongly to US defense secretary Pete Hegseth’s call for “no quarter” for US enemies during a Friday press briefing at the Pentagon, calling such an order – if followed by troops – a potential violation of international law.
The US senator Mark Kelly, of Arizona, posted on Friday on X that “‘No quarter’ isn’t some wanna be tough guy line – it means something. An order to give no quarter would mean to take no prisoners and kill them instead.”
Continue reading...U.S. Navy Seaman 1st Class Clyde C. McMeans, 26, was one of the 103 USS California crewmen killed during attacks on Pearl Harbor in 1941.
"A new study suggests the productivity boost from AI may be far smaller than executives claim," writes Slashdot reader BrianFagioli: According to research cited in Foxit's State of Document Intelligence report, while 89% of executives and 79% of end users say AI tools make them feel more productive, the actual time savings shrink dramatically once people account for reviewing and validating AI-generated output. The survey of 1,000 desk-based workers and 400 executives in the United States and United Kingdom found executives believe AI saves them about 4.6 hours per week, but they spend roughly 4 hours and 20 minutes verifying those results. End users reported a similar pattern, estimating 3.6 hours saved but 3 hours and 50 minutes spent reviewing AI work. Once that "verification burden" is factored in, executives gain just 16 minutes per week, while end users actually lose about 14 minutes.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The facility was attacked on Friday night, bringing the toll of medical staff to 31 killed in past 12 days
Israel killed 12 medical workers in a strike on a medical centre in south Lebanon on Friday night, bringing the toll of healthcare staff killed in the country by Israel to 31 over the past 12 days.
A primary healthcare facility in the town of Burj Qalaouiyah was hit by an Israeli strike late on Friday, setting it ablaze and causing the structure to collapse on top of the staff inside. The strike killed doctors, paramedics and nurses on duty, according to the Lebanese ministry of health, which said it “violated all international humanitarian laws” in a statement.
Continue reading... | I have a pintX for sale 554 miles. Come with- -lifesavers and enduro installed. -extra stock tire that came with the pintX -small electric pump from FM (works super fast) -2 extra carbon fiber fenders from FM -super fast charger from FM -assorted footpads and fangs -all the tools you need to fix and maintain your pintX Asking $800 Located in Hayward CA. Thank you [link] [comments] |
Motaz Malhees is an actor in The Voice of Hind Rajab, a film about a Palestinian girl killed by the IDF in Gaza in 2024
Palestinian actor Motaz Malhees said a travel ban imposed by Donald Trump is preventing him from attending Sunday’s Academy Awards, whose nominees include a movie in which he has a starring role.
The Voice of Hind Rajab, a film about a five-year-old Palestinian girl killed by Israeli forces in Gaza in 2024, has been nominated for best international feature film.
Continue reading...I thought Wi-Fi 7 routers were overhyped and overpriced. But after personally testing them and analyzing the data, I stand corrected.
Stretching E Ink to the size of a monitor sounds great in theory, but the reality has room for improvement.
It turns out your car's tire pressure monitoring system may be a gold mine for hackers.
Former Oldham East and Saddleworth MP remained in Westminster for New Labour’s entire 13 years in power
The former Labour MP minister Phil Woolas has died of brain cancer, his family and close friends have announced.
Woolas, 66, was elected to parliament to represent Oldham East and Saddleworth as part of Labour’s landslide victory in the 1997 general election. He remained in Westminster for New Labour’s entire 13-year stretch in power.
Continue reading...Founder Jonah Peretti said at SXSW that the goal is to follow Nintendo's model of creating surprising new things with existing tech.
Last June Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller said in a statement that Texans "have a God-given right to know what's on their plate, and for millions of Texans, it better come from a pasture, not a lab. It's plain cowboy logic that we must safeguard our real, authentic meat industry from synthetic alternatives." But California company Wildtype sells lab-grown salmon — and is suing Texas over its ban on cell-cultivated meat, the Austin Chronicle reported this week. The company's founder says lab-grown salmon eliminates the mercury, microplastic, and antibiotic contamination commonly found in seafood. And one chef in Austin, Texas says lab-grown salmon is "awesome" and "something new"-- at the only Texas restaurant that was serving it last summer: Just two months after the salmon hit the menu, Texas banned the sale of cell-cultivated meat... A lawsuit from Wildtype and one other FDA-approved cultivated meat company [argues] it's anti-capitalism and unconstitutional... This law "was not enacted to protect the health and safety of Texas consumers — indeed, it allows the continued distribution of cultivated meat to consumers so long as it is not sold. Instead, SB 261 was enacted to stifle the growth of the cultivated meat industry to protect Texas' conventional agricultural industry from innovative competition that is exclusively based outside of Texas...." [according to the lawsuit]. It was filed in September, immediately after the ban took effect, and cell-cultivated companies are awaiting judgment. That Texas ban would last two years, notes U.S. News and World Reports, adding that Alabama, Florida, Indiana, Mississippi, Montana, and Nebraska have also passed bans, some temporary "on the manufacturing, sale or distribution of cell-cultured meat." Meanwhile, a new five-year moratorium on lab-grown meat was signed this week by the governor of South Dakota "after rejecting a permanent ban last month," reports South Dakota Searchlight: The new law bars the sale, manufacture or distribution of "cell-cultured protein" products from July 1 this year through June 30, 2031. Violations are punishable by up to 30 days in jail, a fine of up to $500, or both. "But supporters of lab-grown meat are not going down without a fight," adds U.S. News and World Reports, with another lawsuit also filed challenging a ban in Florida: When Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed the ban in Florida, he described it as "fighting back against the global elite's plan to force the world to eat meat grown in a petri dish or bugs to achieve their authoritarian goals." He added that his administration "will save our beef."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Jan ‘Jay’ Carey torched the Stars and Stripes to protest against Trump’s executive order banning flag burning
The prosecution of a man who burned the American flag near the White House in protest of an executive order against flag burning has been dropped by the US Department of Justice.
On Friday, the justice department moved to dismiss charges against Jan “Jay” Carey, 55, a military combat veteran who set the flag on fire in Lafayette Square in Washington DC in August, the day that Donald Trump signed a presidential order to crack down on flag burning.
Continue reading...Closure of strait of Hormuz puts pressure on region’s economies amid growing resentment about conflict started by US and Israel
An eerie quiet hangs over Ras Al Khaimah’s industrial port. Usually a thriving maritime hub of the United Arab Emirates, now ships stand docked and silent. Not far out along the hazy horizon, a backlog of hundreds of tankers have lined up in recent days, halted along a waterway flooded with danger.
Any vessel heading past Ras Al Khaimah out to the Arabian Sea must traverse the world’s most treacherous strip of water for shipping today: the strait of Hormuz. Just over 20 nautical miles from Ras Al Khaimah, two oil tankers heading for the strait were attacked by Iranian missiles this week, one catching fire.
Continue reading...EU citizens with post-Brexit settlement status in UK will not have to present British passport to airlines
British dual nationals who are EU citizens with post-Brexit settlement status in the UK will not have to use a British passport to return to the UK, the Home Office has said in a significant U-turn on its controversial dual national border rules.
The change, which critics say was “hidden away” on a government webpage, comes weeks after controversy erupted over the new rules that came into effect on 25 February. They require British dual nationals to present a British passport or certificate of entitlement, costing £589, before they board a plane to the UK.
Continue reading...Suspect Christian Barrios, 32, shot two people multiple times Friday night, St. Johns County Sheriff Rob Hardwick said.
Stanley McChrystal said White House has a ‘we should do because we can’ approach to international relations
The retired US army general who once led Nato forces in Afghanistan says the bellicose foreign policy Donald Trump has pursued during his second presidency can be summed up as “we should do because we can” – invoking the lyrics of the Dolly Parton classic Jolene to emphasize the point.
Stanley McChrystal delivered those remarks on Friday at Tulane University’s New Orleans book festival during a fireside chat hosted by the editor-in-chief of the Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg, who asked in part about US military strikes Trump has ordered in Nigeria, Venezuela and Iran since Christmas.
Continue reading...Police find suspect after incident near course
Third round began on time despite delays
Police have captured a man who they say killed two people on Friday night about a mile from TPC Sawgrass. The incident led the Players Championship to delay opening the gates to the public for the third round by a couple of hours.
The St Johns County sheriff, Rob Hardwick, said the suspect, whom he identified as Christian Barrios, shot two people multiple times about 10:30pm on Friday in the parking lot of Walgreens in a domestic violence situation. The store is located about a mile away from the course.
Continue reading...I've been wanting to buy a Onewheel for a bit of time but they are a bit out of my budget. I would use it to get to work, and I cant substitute it for a bike or a scooter. So I was wondering if there is anyway for me to get a usable Onewheel form a reliable source. Maybe a product similar to a Onewheel. Any of them could get me to work besides the pint. All the money I can spare is $300 maybe 400. I was looking in Facebook and places like that but im not that comfortable buy form those.
| Picked up Amazon packages and saved 10 percent by fetching them. All smiles here ! [link] [comments] |
| I noticed my tire looked like this this week. I have been riding a lot more this year than ever. You mind looking at my tire and seeing if it's safe to ride still? (I'm ordering a new tire right now and just want to know if I need to find a different way to commute this week? I would hate to fall at 18-20mph ever again.) Tire info: I've done about 1000 miles on the future motion controller and recently I put about 560 miles on vesc. So there's close to 1600 miles on this original vega. Before I get all the posts that vega tires suck and I should have done this long ago. For me I planned on upgrading to an XRV and get some miles on it, then change my tire. Future: 18s battery. Also very nervous about my first tire change. I'm going to do it but super nervous a beed won't pop at a lower pressure or something. [link] [comments] |
Wife of former PM also says she is mentioned in Epstein files and coverage not focused enough on victims of abuse
Peter Mandelson’s critics should remember that he is “still a human being”, Cherie Blair has said in an interview.
Blair added that the former Labour minister was “entitled to a fair trial” after he was arrested on suspicion of misconduct in a public office. He denies criminal wrongdoing and has been released under investigation.
Continue reading...The wild boar sparked a police response that drew in officers and veterinarians equipped with a tranquilizer gun, shields and even a blowgun.
Greenhouse gases dropped just 0.1% last year as environment minister criticises lack of improvement
Greenhouse gas emissions in Germany have again missed targets set by the Climate Protection Act and barely fell at all in 2025.
Emissions decreased by just 0.1% last year compared to the previous year, according to data from the German Environment Agency.
Continue reading...Videos posted by the US president on Truth Social show strikes on the Iranian island of Kharg. The US president said on Friday that US forces had 'obliterated' military targets on the island and that crucial oil infrastructure there could be next
Continue reading...From wills and guardianship papers to advance healthcare directives, parents are anticipating dying in custody or being deported without warning
She called it the “end times”.
In a quiet living room in south Florida, a 42-year-old South American woman sat at her kitchen table signing her will. Her hands trembled, and the ink smeared when tears fell hard enough that she had to reprint the pages.
Continue reading...Spencer Laird was diagnosed with colon cancer at 26. At 30, he was told it had returned and spread to his lungs, with one tumor the size of a golf ball.
Demonstrators on Sunday will be arrested for expressing support for Palestine Action or for intifada chants, says Met
Police have warned demonstrators that they will be arrested for expressing support for Palestine Action or making intifada chants at a protest in London on Sunday.
About 12,000 people are expected to take part in the annual al-Quds Day rally, an international demonstration of support for Palestinian rights. The event takes its name from the Arabic version of Jerusalem and was created by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini after Iran’s 1979 revolution.
Continue reading...Jason Hughes died after falling and being struck by a car driven by a student who had just pranked the teacher
A Georgia prosecutor has decided to drop charges against a teenager who police say was driving the truck that struck and killed a beloved high school teacher when a prank turned deadly, the teen’s lawyer said. The victim’s family had urged authorities not to compound the tragedy by prosecuting the teen driver and his friends.
The 40-year-old teacher, Jason Hughes, died after slipping and falling into the street as the teens started to drive away after participating in a community tradition of pranking teachers by throwing toilet paper on to his front lawn.
Continue reading...Not all meal kits are created equal. We compared recipes from seven leading services against supermarket prices to find out which ones are worth the cost -- and which aren't.
Amsterdam's mayor said police have CCTV footage of a person placing the explosive device against the school's exterior wall.
“I always get really emotional when the pebbles go in,” said Rebecca Parr, who works for the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland.
We sifted through the rumors to find the upgrades most likely to make it to Apple's next smartwatch.
The Pixel 10A's cameras are similar to those on the 9A, but it still performs quite well compared to other phones in its price range.
Officials sent out repayment letters to about 1,400 people relying on discredited guidance that had been scrapped
Unpaid carers have been issued with demands to repay thousands of pounds for allegedly breaking benefit rules even though officials knew the decisions were based on unlawful and discredited policy guidance.
About 1,400 carers are understood to have been sent letters by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) in January asking them to repay sums relating to breaches of carer’s allowance earnings rules that had been scrapped four months previously.
Continue reading...Features woven into the fabric of platforms have been central to landmark social media harm case in US. How do they work?
It was as “easy as ABC”, claimed the lawyer prosecuting a landmark social media harm case against Meta and Google which heard closing arguments this week. The defendants were guilty, said Mark Lanier, of “addicting the brains of children”. Not true, replied the tech companies. Meta insisted providing young people with a “safer, healthier experience has always been core to our work”.
Features such as autoplay videos, infinite scrolling and constantly chirruping alerts woven into the fabric of online platforms were central to the six-week trial in Los Angeles, which has been compared to the cases against tobacco companies in the 1990s. But how do these features work and what are their consequences? Are they creating addicts rather than users or are they just giving consumers more of what they want?
Continue reading...US workers are finding it difficult to afford basic necessities as the president claims ‘the economy is roaring back’
US workers are still struggling with the cost of living despite Donald Trump’s campaign promises to fix the US affordability crisis.
The Guardian spoke to workers as an exclusive poll showed cross-party concerns about the Trump administration’s handling of the US economy.
Continue reading...Race to fill Marjorie Taylor Greene’s seat provides glimpse into midterms with Iran and immigration on voters’ minds
Earlier this week, a steady trickle of voters casting ballots in Dalton at Georgia’s City Hall offered a glimpse into what may be changing fortunes for Democrats in Marjorie Taylor Greene’s former congressional district.
The district hasn’t elected a Democrat since it was created after the 2010 Census. But the party’s candidate Shawn Harris drew the most votes district-wide – about 37% – on Tuesday and now faces Clay Fuller, a Trump-endorsed former prosecutor as his opponent in an April runoff election. The winner will finish Greene’s term until November, when a whole new election will take place.
Continue reading...Alexandria airport center would hold migrant families and children inside converted barracks before deportation
The Trump administration is poised to expand immigration detention operations at a controversial site inside a rural Louisiana airport, the Guardian has learned.
The administration is seeking to establish a “first of its kind” short-term facility that would hold migrant families and unaccompanied children next to a runway that has become a central node for the White House’s mass deportation agenda.
Continue reading...The State Department is seeking information on Iran's new supreme leader and nine other "key leaders" in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
Filmmaker Mode can automatically adjust your TV's picture to look better with specific content. Here's why and when you should use it.
Apple said it's normal for your iPhone battery to drain after an update. It's also only temporary.
To focus on sculpting, he worked nights at a Pittsburgh post office. At 92, his art career finally took off.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Meta is planning sweeping layoffs that could affect 20% or more of the company, three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters, as Meta seeks to offset costly artificial intelligence infrastructure bets and prepare for greater efficiency brought about by AI-assisted workers. No date has been set for the cuts and the magnitude has not been finalized, the people said. Top executives have recently signaled the plans to other senior leaders at Meta and told them to begin planning how to pare back, two of the people said. If Meta settles on the 20% figure, the layoffs will be the company's most significant since a restructuring in late 2022 and early 2023 that it dubbed the "year of efficiency." It employed nearly 79,000 people as of December 31, according to its latest filing. The speculation follows a recent report from The New York Times claiming that Meta has delayed the release of its next major AI model after falling behind competing systems from Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Yara’s Svein Tore Holsether says it would be ‘catastrophic’ if the strait of Hormuz was closed for a year
The boss of one of the world’s largest fertiliser companies has said global food supplies could be badly damaged this year if the Iran war becomes an extended conflict.
Svein Tore Holsether, the chief executive of Norway’s Yara International, has called on global leaders to consider the impact that soaring food prices will have in some of the world’s poorest countries “before it is too late”.
Continue reading...First major study on ‘AI psychosis’ suggests chatbots can encourage delusions among vulnerable people
A new scientific review raises concerns about how chatbots powered by artificial intelligence may encourage delusional thinking, especially in vulnerable people.
A summary of existing evidence on artificial intelligence-induced psychosis was published last week in the Lancet Psychiatry, highlighting how chatbots can encourage delusional thinking – though possibly only in people who are already vulnerable to psychotic symptoms. The authors advocate for clinical testing of AI chatbots in conjunction with trained mental health professionals.
Continue reading...Network has faced Trump’s ire and Pleitgen has faced criticism, but it is ‘better to be on the ground’ he says
Frederik Pleitgen, CNN’s senior international correspondent, had a pretty normal Thursday evening – at home in Berlin with his family, he walked his two Rhodesian Ridgeback dogs and spent some time with his two teenagers.
That return to normalcy came after spending a week in war-torn Iran as the only western television correspondent given a visa to report from the country.
Continue reading...Inside the growing scientific quest to understand what creatures with the extraordinary ability to defy the ravages of time can teach us about making human aging better.
Prosecutors intend to seek the death penalty for Tyler Robinson, 22, who is charged with aggravated murder in the Sept. 10 shooting of Charlie Kirk.
Summer holidaymakers opting for ‘more familiar, easy-to-reach locations’ as travel industry counts cost of Middle East conflict
Holidaymakers who had planned to visit the eastern Mediterranean this summer are moving their trips to the west and the Caribbean because of the US-Israel war on Iran, travel companies have said.
Travellers from the UK and mainland Europe are increasingly swapping their holiday destinations away from Cyprus, Turkey and Greece towards Italy, Spain, Malta and Croatia, as the region around the Middle East grapples with flight cancellations and airspace closures.
Continue reading...Kareem’s Daily Quote: Good going, Gandhi…whether you said it or not.
The “Exceptional” Pete Hegseth: He set the standard, then he ignored it.
The “Real” Big One? A global economy built on fragile ground.
Food? Drugs? Both? Neither? The choice no family should have to make.
What I’m Watching: Sidney Poitier is a perfect dinner guest.
Jukebox Playlist: Sam Cooke on repeat.
“A nation’s greatness is measured by how it treats its weakest members.” Attributed to Mahatma Gandhi
Let’s get this out of the way first. Historians and quote researchers haven’t found this exact sentence in Mahatma Gandhi’s writings or speeches. What’s been documented is this: “The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated.” Which I thoroughly agree with, while admitting it isn’t quite the same thing. But he also wrote a lot about uplifting the weakest and most vulnerable among us humans, so it’s at least understandable how those two concepts were shorthanded into one. Beyond that, in 1977 Hubert Humphrey actually said, “The moral test of government is how it treats those in the dawn of life, the twilight of life, and the shadows of life.” A terrific quote, though it didn’t gain as much traction, most likely because Humphrey didn’t cut as romantic a figure as Gandhi did.
The made-up quote and the real one are both reminders that once you peel back all the politics and the noise, it really comes down to how we treat people when no one’s keeping score. It’s not fancy or complicated. It’s the same lesson most of us learned long before we could spell “policy”: you don’t walk past someone who’s struggling and pretend you didn’t see it.
When I was a kid growing up in New York, my parents didn’t have much, but they had this unshakeable belief that you look out for people. My father was a police officer, and he’d come home with stories about folks who were down on their luck—not in a dramatic, movie‑scene way, just regular people trying to get through the day. He never talked about them with judgment. He talked about them with respect. That stuck with me. Later, when I started playing ball and traveling, I saw the same thing in community centers, gyms, and schools, people doing their best in systems that weren’t built with them in mind.
A country can brag about being powerful or wealthy, but if the people at the bottom, the weakest among us, can barely hang on, what does that power really mean?
And “weakest” doesn’t mean lazy or unmotivated. It means the people carrying the heaviest loads: the elderly person choosing between medicine and groceries, the single parent working two jobs and still coming up short, the young person trying to build a future in a system that keeps moving the goalposts. These are the folks who tell you the truth about a country, not the ones on magazine covers.
Yet, it becomes ever easier to look away. We’ve gotten used to seeing struggle as background noise. Sometimes someone can be hurting right in front of us, and we treat it like a passing cloud, something unfortunate, just part of the day. But nothing about it is inevitable. It’s the result of choices. Choices about who gets help, who gets ignored, and who gets blamed for problems they didn’t create.
When I think about greatness, I don’t think about trophies or titles. I think about moments when people stepped up for someone who couldn’t give them anything in return. I think about the older woman I met at a community event who told me she skipped her medication so her grandkids could eat. She didn’t say it with anger, she said it like it was just part of life. And that’s the part that bothered me most. She had accepted a burden that never should’ve been hers to carry alone.
A nation shows its character in those moments. Not in speeches. Not in slogans. In how it responds when someone like her says, “I’m doing everything I can, and it’s still not enough.”
If we really believe greatness is measured by how we treat our weakest members, then the real question becomes simple: Are we building a country where people like her are seen, heard, and supported, or one where they’re left to figure it out on their own?
Erratic rhetoric, shifting goals and mixed signals leave allies, foes and voters unsure what the president wants from war
“Mr President,” said a reporter. “You’ve said the war is ‘very complete’ but your defence secretary says, ‘This is just the beginning’. So which is it?” Donald Trump’s eyes darted left and right then down. “Well, I think you could say both,” he parried.
The confusing answer at a press conference in Doral, Florida this week did not befit a wartime leader armed with stirring rhetoric and a lucid plan. But it was entirely on brand for the 47th US president. The tumultuous style that Trump brings to election campaigns, dealing with Congress and global trade relations has now been imported to the theatre of war.
Continue reading...Dr Brian Elmore witnessed a public health crisis unfold at the border near El Paso. He reflects on why it was like a ‘perverse Groundhog Day’
In late spring 2024, Dr Brian Elmore was working out of a mobile clinic, providing medical treatment to migrants in Ciudad Juárez, just south of the US-Mexico border wall. One of his patients, a Venezuelan man with a fractured arm and a detached left chest from his sternum and clavicle, told Elmore that Mexican immigration officials broke his arm when he first got to town, and that rubber bullets fired by Texas national guardsmen had caused his chest injuries.
The man somehow had managed to fashion a shoddily made splint for his arm, but his chest would require surgery. When an ambulance arrived, the criminal group that controlled the riverine area refused to let him leave. The Texas guardsmen looked on from the US side of the river. “It was heartbreaking,” Elmore said of the spectacle.
Continue reading...With oil markets paralyzed by the U.S.-Iran war, the Trump administration says it could escort ships through the Strait of Hormuz — a massive undertaking that experts say could already be in the preparatory stages.
On the day after Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey commuted his death sentence, halting his execution two days before he was supposed to die, Charles “Sonny” Burton sat in his wheelchair in a visiting room at Holman Correctional Facility in Atmore, Ala., drinking a Coke and eating a Reese’s peanut butter cup.
He could not stop smiling.
“I’m feeling wonderful,” Burton told me.
Burton, 75, wore white sneakers and a brace on his right hand, his tan quilted jacket and slacks fitting loosely over his thin frame. A tan helmet, given to him by the prison to protect from his occasional falls, sat on the table next to an array of photos taken with family earlier that day, along with a bag of quarters for the vending machines.
Burton identified the people in one of the photos for me. Several were still in the visiting room: his sister Eddie Mae Ellison, his son Charles Burton III, and his grandson Charles Burton IV. No sooner had one group of relatives left the visiting room than another showed up — a rolling family reunion.
Burton had been sitting in that same visiting room with his lawyers 24 hours earlier, on Tuesday, March 10, when his longtime paralegal Nancy Palombi got a phone call in Montgomery, 120 miles away. While the rest of the legal team was at the prison without access to their cellphones, Palombi had stayed behind to field any communications from the U.S. Supreme Court, which had just received their final filings aimed at stopping Burton’s execution.
Instead, she got a call from a reporter she knew. The reporter was screaming, “Have you heard?” The governor’s office had just sent out a press release with the subject line, “Update from Governor Kay Ivey: Charles L. Burton.” And that’s how Palombi learned that her client of 20 years would not be executed.
“I was the first member of the team to find out,” Palombi told me that morning, her voice still trembling with a mix of shock, joy, and relief.
Palombi called the prison and spoke to the warden’s secretary, who entered the visitation room with a smile on her face. She told Burton’s lead attorney, Assistant Federal Defender Matt Schulz, that he should call his paralegal right away. “And I’m like, ‘Oh my god, it happened,’” Schulz said. “But I still didn’t want to let myself believe it, because I didn’t know yet.”
Schulz rushed to his car, drove out of range from Holman’s cellphone blockers, and called Palombi. He then sped back.
Describing the scene the next day, Burton turned and pointed toward the hallway that runs along the perimeter of the visiting room. That’s where prison staff celebrated as the news spread on death row. Nurses and officers waved and gave him thumbs ups through the horizontal window slats. “Guards were saying, ‘Sonny got clemency! Sonny got clemency!’” Burton said.
A day later, everyone was still a bit shellshocked. Burton’s son, who had flown in from New York, got the news while loading up his rental car for the drive to Atmore. Burton’s sister was at the doctor’s office in Montgomery, where she saw a local news alert. She ran outside and dropped to her knees. “And then the tears just flowed,” she said.
For decades, the visiting room had been the site of agonizing goodbyes between the condemned and their loved ones in the hours before an execution. Now it was home to warm hugs and tranquil smiles, no one’s bigger than Burton’s. He invoked the famed blues harmonica player Snooky Pryor: “I’m too cool to move.”
Burton’s commutation was historic: the third time in the modern history of Alabama’s death penalty that a person facing execution received clemency by the governor. Ivey, a staunch Republican, has presided over 25 executions since she took office in 2017. Although she commuted the sentence of Burton’s neighbor, Rocky Myers, last year due to serious doubts over his guilt, few were optimistic that she would exercise such mercy again.
Burton would have been the ninth person executed using nitrogen gas in Alabama in just over two years. The method was adopted following complications carrying out lethal injection, a wider trend that has reshaped the landscape of executions across the country. The state’s last execution prompted a forceful dissent from Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who described the psychological torture in visceral detail. “You want to breathe; you have to breathe,” she wrote. “But you are strapped to a gurney with a mask on your face pumping your lungs with nitrogen gas. Your mind knows that the gas will kill you. But your body keeps telling you to breathe.”
Burton’s commutation also came as a searing documentary about the state prison system, “The Alabama Solution,” was in the race to win an Oscar. The film, which was produced using footage from contraband cellphones, forced politicians to acknowledge the deadly conditions and inhumane punishments inflicted on people incarcerated in their state. On the day I visited Burton, lawmakers met in Montgomery to discuss legislation to impose oversight on Alabama’s prisons.
It was this kind of public pressure that undoubtedly saved Burton’s life. “I would have 100 percent died without it,” Burton told me. In Montgomery, activists held vigils every Monday for weeks in front of the governor’s mansion, while downtown businesses posted flyers about Burton’s case in their front windows. On the eve of Ivey’s decision, two of Burton’s daughters led a march to the state Capitol to deliver petitions to her office.
The campaign for clemency was launched by Burton’s legal team, who believed they had nothing to lose. They highlighted Burton’s remorse, his advanced age and poor health, and, above all, his lack of culpability for the murder that sent him to death row. “This is one of those cases that shocks people,” Schulz said in a clemency film produced last year. “And it shocks people in a totally different way than most death penalty cases.”
Burton was 40 years old when he led a group of younger men in an armed robbery at an AutoZone in Talladega, Alabama. A 34-year-old father and military veteran named Doug Battle walked in as the crime was underway — and one of the young men fatally shot him in the back.
At first, Burton denied any role in either the robbery or the shooting. His apparent lack of remorse helped convince jurors at his 1992 trial that he should be punished as severely as the man who actually shot Battle, a 20-year-old named Derrick DeBruce, who had already been sent to death row. After a four-day trial, Burton, too, was found guilty of capital murder and sentenced to die.
But a federal court eventually threw out DeBruce’s death sentence, finding that his lawyer failed to effectively represent him during the punishment phase of his trial. The Alabama attorney general’s office initially appealed the decision, contending that it would be “arguably unjust” to allow Burton to be executed for his co-defendant’s actions. But in 2015, the state agreed to reduce DeBruce’s punishment to life without parole. He died five years later.
“What is the execution of Mr. Burton supposed to accomplish or solve?”
The notion that Burton should now pay with his life for another man’s crime spurred outrage among people in Alabama and beyond. The campaign to save Burton was bolstered by six of the eight living jurors who voted to send him to death row, as well as by Battle’s daughter, Tori Battle, who was outspoken in her opposition to the execution. “What is the execution of Mr. Burton supposed to accomplish or solve?” she asked Ivey in a letter that was submitted as part of Burton’s 88-page clemency petition. “Is it for my father? For me? To deter crime? I honestly do not understand.”
The petition argued, first and foremost, that Burton never killed anyone. “He did not pull the trigger that killed Douglas Battle,” his lawyers wrote. In fact, he didn’t even witness the murder. “Mr. Burton was already outside of the AutoZone building where the shooting took place.” Although Alabama’s felony murder statute allows defendants to be held responsible for the actions of others, Burton was only supposed to be eligible for capital murder if he intended to take somebody’s life — and there was nothing to prove that this was the case.
The state’s star witness against Burton was a teenager named LuJuan McCants who agreed to testify in order to avoid the death penalty. He said that Burton had gathered the group with the intention of committing a robbery — and if something went wrong, “he said let him take care of it.” According to prosecutors, this directive proved that Burton intended to kill anyone who might stand in the way of the robbery. But even this weak evidence was undermined by McCants’s own testimony, as well as by an interrogation video discovered by Burton’s lawyers years after the trial. It showed McCants repeatedly telling investigators that Burton had not wanted anyone to get hurt — and that he’d been upset upon learning that DeBruce shot Battle.
Some of the jurors who spoke out against the execution said they were haunted by their decision. “I have questioned whether death is an appropriate punishment,” one woman wrote in a letter submitted with the clemency petition. “I have often thought about Mr. Burton’s mother, who was no doubt devastated by the sentence.”
But for most, it came down to the obvious unfairness of executing Burton for DeBruce’s crime. “Had I known the shooter would later be taken off death row,” one juror wrote, “I would not have voted for the death sentence.” Another juror wrote that Burton may have been the ringleader, “but if Charles Manson can get a life sentence for leading his group to kill many people, it is fair for Mr. Burton to serve life without parole.”
Like most people living on death row, Burton bears no resemblance to Charles Manson — or to the people Americans picture when they hear the term “worst of the worst.” His early life had many of the familiar hallmarks of those who are put to death in the United States: poverty, racism, childhood abuse, and trauma. By the time Alabama came close to executing him, he’d long since apologized for his actions and was in frequent pain from rheumatoid arthritis, unable to walk on his own.
But he was also lucky, he told me. If there was anything that sustained him during his years at Holman, it was a strong family structure, which many of his neighbors lack. Indeed, Burton’s clemency petition was filled with letters from relatives, pen pals, and advocates who described Burton as a positive and nurturing presence in their lives.
I was supposed to attend Burton’s execution — not as a media witness, but as one of the people placed on his personal list. Burton did not wish for his family to be subjected to his death, and his legal team decided that, should the killing move forward, they wanted the world to know what Alabama had done. They invited me and two other journalists to join them in the witness room.
One of them, Lee Hedgepeth, had already witnessed seven executions in Alabama, including three by nitrogen gas. The last one had been the longest to date, lasting 40 minutes. Schulz had seen two of his clients killed with nitrogen. Their accounts were harrowing: Terror and panic was visible on the faces of the condemned, who gasped and thrashed on the gurney. As Burton’s execution date neared, Schulz wondered how it would compare. Would his elderly client suffer more or less due to his age and poor health? Could his more shallow breathing cause the execution to last longer? Or would the fact that he does not have as much oxygen in his lungs to begin with mean it would be shorter?
What was certain was that executing Burton would have been a horrifying spectacle. Guards would have had to lift him onto the gurney, adjusting the thick black straps to fit more tightly over his withered body, and putting a mask over his face. Witnesses would then have watched as Alabama suffocated an elderly man, who killed no one, in the name of justice.
Instead, Burton is now poised to live out the rest of his days behind bars. On the day after our visit, he was moved out of the prison where he spent more than three decades and driven up to Kilby Correctional Facility outside Montgomery, where newly incarcerated people are housed before being transferred to their designated prisons. The move is sure to be a shock to the system for a man who has hardly begun to process the trauma of his near-execution and who has spent much of the past 10 years between his cell and the prison infirmary. After age 65, Burton told me, he slowed down. “I haven’t been outside in eight years,” he said.
In a less punitive system, it would be obvious that Burton should go home to spend the rest of his life with his family. As he said, “I ain’t got much longer to live.” His relatives harbor some hope that he may some day be eligible for medical release. But for now, according to Schulz, Burton was in good spirits when they spoke on the phone from his new location. “He said he knew many of the nurses there, and that they all were greeting, and treating, him warmly,” he said.
“And he’s alive,” Schulz added. On Thursday at 6 p.m., the hour he had been scheduled to die, Burton planned to eat ice cream at the same time as his attorneys and savor the feeling of gratitude. “God has given me a second chance,” Burton told me. This, he believed, was God’s work. “He put the right people in my path.”
The post In the Room Where Death Row Prisoners Say Final Goodbyes, He Learned He Would Live appeared first on The Intercept.
He is stuck in a quagmire. His goals are elusive. His bombing does not force a surrender. He has no exit strategy. Good morning, Vietnam
Donald Trump is lost in his fog of war. He compounds confusion with improvised fabrications as his naive expectation of a lightning victory has been sunk in the strait of Hormuz. Iran, he felt certain, would easily follow the “perfect scenario” of Venezuela, accede to naming a leader who would instantly do his bidding, and there would be no disruption of the oil markets – “a strong gameplan”, stated Karoline Leavitt, his White House press secretary, who defends each of his changeable excuses with equal ferocity.
There may be few if any facts underlying the delusions upon which Trump constructs his vapid explanations and evanescent strategies. The belief that coherent sense can be made out of Trump’s shuffling words is a weakness of the rational mind that refuses to accept the impulses of the inveterate demagogue for what they are. Searching for reason in the jungle of Trump’s tales may compel hopelessly sensible people to superimpose logic where there is none in order to satisfy the need for some semblance of soundness.
Continue reading...With membership soaring, the Green party is grappling with logistics, culture shifts and a flood of new activists
It is, as one Green activist put it, a never-ending series of “constantly good problems to have”. But how does a party adapt to the sudden trebling of its membership? And when a majority of people in an organisation are new, is it even the same thing anymore?
The basic facts alone are startling. Before Zack Polanski took over as leader last September, the Greens in England and Wales had around 66,000 members. They are now at 215,000, and still rising at speed.
Continue reading...The former No 3 overall NBA draft pick opens up about addiction, homelessness and redemption in a candid memoir revisiting basketball’s cocaine era
When the Golden State Warriors drafted Chris Washburn with the No 3 pick in 1986, it should have been a dream come true. Instead, it might have been the worst thing that could have happened for the 6ft 11in NC State prospect.
“I put on a smile because they were paying me to be out there,” Washburn, a former three-time high school All-American, tells the Guardian. “But I felt alone.”
Continue reading...As top teams land in New York for world sevens this weekend, the Olympic star discusses her uniquely American story and her sport’s search for the spotlight
On Saturday, World Rugby’s HSBC SVNS lands in New York – well, New Jersey – for two days at Sports Illustrated Stadium in Harrison, a short ride from downtown Manhattan. The governing body will be watching keenly, as two days of traditional warm-weather sport are held at the end of a north-eastern winter. In New York/New Jersey on Thursday, it snowed.
The men’s US Eagles are not playing, having lost their place at the top table. But the Eagles women have hopes of a home-soil win after a third-place finish last week in Vancouver, beating France in a thriller after a narrow loss to New Zealand. Coach Emilie Bydwell’s team are third in the season standings, set for Championship tournaments in spring and summer.
Continue reading...The long-running British period gangster series gets its own movie, starring Cillian Murphy and Barry Keoghan.
The Kremlin hopes the Trump administration’s move to contain oil prices sent soaring by the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran will lead to further relief.
Some Iranians living in Dubai say their families celebrated the death of the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, but the war could leave Iran in a worse situation than before.
Lawyers’ pleas for extensions reveal post-DOGE staffing woes at federal agencies’ Freedom of Information Act offices.
Few Chinese laborers have spoken out about the abuses they allegedly suffered while toiling abroad. Until now.
On the afternoon of Sept. 9, 2024, Cherise Doyley was in her 12th hour of contractions at University of Florida Health in downtown Jacksonville when a nurse came in with a bedsheet and told her to cover up. A supervisor brought a tablet to Doyley’s bedside. Gathered on the screen were a judge in a black robe and several lawyers, doctors and hospital staff.
“It’s a real judge in there?” Doyley asked the nurse at the beginning of what would be a three-hour hearing. “Now this is the craziest thing I’ve ever seen.”
Doyley hadn’t asked for the hearing. The hospital had sought it. Doyley had mere minutes to prepare. She had no lawyer and no advocate — no one to explain to her what, exactly, was going on.
Judge Michael Kalil informed her that the state had filed an emergency petition at the hospital’s behest — not out of concern for Doyley, per se, but in the interest of her unborn child. He described the circumstances as “extraordinary.”
The hospital and state attorney’s office wanted to force Doyley to undergo a cesarean section. Doyley, a professional birthing doula, didn’t want that and had been firm about it. She’d had three prior C-sections, one that resulted in a hemorrhage, and hoped to avoid another serious complication and lengthy recovery. She was aware that doctors were concerned about the risk of uterine rupture, a potentially deadly complication for her and her baby. She would say during the hearing that she understood the risk to be less than 2% and didn’t want to agree to a C-section unless there was an emergency.
But the choice would not be hers. The judge would decide how she would give birth.
Mentally competent patients typically have the right to choose their medical care — or refuse it. But there is one notable exception: pregnant patients. That inconsistency is particularly striking in Florida, a state that has pushed to expand medical freedom for those who wish to avoid vaccines or fluoridated water, while constricting the rights of people in various stages of pregnancy.
“There aren’t any other instances where you would invade the body of one person in order to save the life of another,” said Lois Shepherd, a bioethics expert at the University of Virginia School of Law.
In Florida and many other states, court-ordered medical procedures are just one of the ways pregnant patients’ rights are restricted. The effort to chip away at those rights is rooted in the concept of fetal personhood — that a fetus has equal and, in some cases, more rights than the woman sustaining it.
The link between fetal personhood and court-ordered C-sections dates back to the 1980s, when courts started ruling that hospitals can override patients’ decisions in favor of the health of unborn children.
In the years since, proponents of fetal personhood began to push for even broader legal protections. In 1986, Minnesota was the first state to recognize fetuses as victims in homicide cases. Some states have imprisoned pregnant women for exposing their fetuses to drugs. Nearly 30 states have passed laws that allow hospitals to invalidate pregnant patients’ advance directives, which outline the kinds of life-sustaining treatment a person wants after a catastrophic illness or accident. At least one, Alabama, extended the concept of personhood all the way to the earliest stages of fertilization and conception by giving frozen embryos the same legal status as children, though the Legislature later said the law couldn’t be enforced.
And the fetal personhood movement has accelerated in the past several years, supercharged by the U.S. Supreme Court decision to reverse the abortion rights that had been protected by Roe v. Wade.
Florida has long been at the forefront of fetal personhood policies. The state was one of the first in the country to prosecute a woman for “delivering” drugs to her fetus during pregnancy in 1989, although the Florida Supreme Court later overturned her conviction. And after advocates twice failed to get a fetal personhood amendment on the state ballot, the Legislature is now considering a bill that would enshrine the concept in state law by giving embryos and fetuses the same legal status as people in wrongful death suits.
For women in labor, the potential impact of the bill is clear: Experts anticipate their medical needs could be further diminished in favor of the fetuses’.
Several legal experts told ProPublica they are alarmed by Doyley’s case and the legislation’s potential to allow for more court interventions during childbirth. Lawyers who represent women in fetal personhood cases already have identified a higher number of forced C-sections in Florida than other states.
The state attorney’s office for the 4th Judicial Circuit declined to comment on Doyley’s case, saying a response would violate her medical privacy. But in an email, a spokesperson noted why, in general, the office would intervene: “The courts have held that the State has a compelling interest in the preservation of the life of an unborn child and the protection of innocent third parties who may be harmed by the parental refusal to allow or consent to life-saving medical treatment.”
C-sections account for nearly a third of all deliveries in the United States. They can be necessary when babies are breech, or in the wrong position for birth, as well as in cases of maternal or fetal emergency. But in other cases, such as slow laboring or prior C-sections, the need for the surgery is less clear.
Surveys have found that more than 10% of women feel pressured into C-sections and other procedures by doctors worried about injuries to the baby. Patients generally don’t challenge doctors who say they’re necessary, and it is uncommon for someone to hold out and for the hospital to turn to the courts.
It is so rare, in fact, that advocates for the rights of pregnant women were shocked to discover that the same thing that happened to Doyley had happened to another Florida woman just a year and a half earlier.
The similarities in their cases were striking. Both women had three prior C-sections. They had questioned the need for their previous surgeries and arrived prepared to fight for vaginal births. And both women are Black.
They had argued that compelling them to have C-sections violated their rights to make medical decisions. Hospital staff said their medical decisions threatened the health of the fetus. It would be up to the courts to decide which one mattered more.


Asked to consider the constitutionality of court-ordered C-sections, the U.S. Supreme Court declined in 1994, leaving a patchwork of decisions that vary by state.
In the early 1980s, a hospital in Georgia won a court order to force a woman with a dangerous pregnancy complication to have a C-section. Then, in 1987, a judge in Washington, D.C., approved a request to perform surgery on a pregnant woman dying from cancer without her consent. Later, a higher court reversed that ruling and held that hospitals should not override medical decisions. An Illinois appellate court in 1993 refused to order a woman to undergo a C-section.
Not long after, a patient named Laura Pemberton, who did not want a C-section, left a hospital in Tallahassee, Florida, against medical advice. A local judge sent law enforcement to her house to bring her back. Once she returned to the hospital, the judge ordered her to have a C-section, which doctors carried out. She later sued in federal court and lost. The 1999 decision by a federal district judge found that the state had a right to override her wishes.
“Whatever the scope of Ms. Pemberton’s personal Constitutional rights in this situation, they clearly did not outweigh the interests of the State of Florida in preserving the life of the unborn child,” the decision said. The decision marked a legal turning point in prioritizing fetal rights over the religious freedom and bodily autonomy of the mother.
In 2009, Samantha Burton arrived at the same hospital at 25 weeks pregnant, after going into premature labor. Doctors told her she needed to remain on bed rest, but she wanted to leave and go home to her children. The hospital got a court order for her to remain in the hospital and undergo any treatment doctors deemed necessary to save the fetus. She had an emergency C-section, and the baby was stillborn.
She appealed the ruling granting the emergency order, and a Florida appeals court ruled in her favor. They said the circuit judge should have required the hospital to prove the baby was viable before imposing unwanted treatment, but the court stopped short of saying it was unacceptable to override the medical decisions of pregnant women in all situations.
Pregnancy is the only condition where Florida courts have ruled that a patient can be forced to undergo unwanted treatment. Even a state prisoner on a hunger strike has more rights to make medical decisions.
Those rulings give the state vast control over pregnant women.
“All of it essentially is about the state’s ability to decide that a fetus, at any point during a pregnancy, is more important than the person who’s pregnant,” said Rutgers University law professor Kimberly Mutcherson.



In March 2023, more than a year before Doyley’s court-ordered C-section, Brianna Bennett arrived in labor at Tallahassee Memorial Hospital — the same hospital where the women in the 1999 and 2009 lawsuits had given birth.
Over the preceding years, Bennett had come to question the medical reasoning behind her three prior C-sections. Each recovery had been harder than the last, leaving her so incapacitated after the third that for two weeks she couldn’t even go to the bathroom without help.
At the time Bennett went into labor with her fourth, her mother’s hip problems had gotten so bad that she needed a wheelchair and required some help from Bennett to function. Bennett did not think she could care for all her family members while in recovery from abdominal surgery, so she insisted on trying for a vaginal birth.

Tallahassee Memorial Hospital had specialists on staff and a neonatal intensive care unit equipped to serve critically ill babies. Bennett believed it offered the kind of support she needed to be able to follow her birth plan. The hospital has handled a lot of high-risk pregnancies.
As Bennett’s labor stretched past 24 hours, a doctor confronted her about agreeing to a C-section, Bennett said. She continued to refuse, so the hospital reached out to the state attorney. In an email, Jack Campbell, state attorney for the 2nd Judicial Circuit, responded that the court needed to act quickly.
“I plan to file an emergency motion with the Court to allow TMH to take whatever steps medically necessary to protect the life of the child and mother,” he wrote.

During the hearing, 15 to 20 people squeezed into Bennett’s hospital room. As would later happen with Doyley, she found herself in front of a tablet with a judge on the screen.
Bennett said she found it offensive that so many people were concerned about the method of her delivery without taking into consideration how difficult it would be to take care of both herself and her baby while recovering from a C-section. “Are any of you gonna help me bathe or shower? Are you gonna help change my pad? Are you gonna help lift the baby out of the bed and put me in the bed because I can’t lift my legs? Is anyone going to help me?”
Campbell told ProPublica that he felt the hearing was necessary to save two lives, Bennett’s and her baby’s. “I’m real comfortable with what we did here,” Campbell said. “I hate the fact that she’s upset about it.”
A spokesperson for Tallahassee Memorial Hospital declined to comment on Bennett’s case, even though she signed a waiver allowing the hospital to do so. “We will not be able to discuss specific patients or cases,” the spokesperson wrote in an email. The hospital did not respond to questions about its history of seeking court intervention in multiple women’s medical decisions while giving birth.
Bennett said she tried to remain calm, but inside she was panicking. During the hearing, her baby’s heart rate spiked. The judge ordered her to have a C-section, and doctors wheeled her into surgery. The operation lasted two and a half hours and the surgical team had to cut around existing scar tissue and avoid her bladder. Her incision looked like an upside-down T and required a wound vac, a portable machine that helps incisions close more quickly.
She said a doctor who visited her room during recovery told her she should never get pregnant again, according to a civil rights complaint filed with federal regulators.The complaint is still under investigation, but lawyers for Bennett said they haven’t heard from investigators in more than a year. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services did not comment on the complaint.
“I cried every single day,” Bennett said. “I felt like I was supposed to be happy. I’m supposed to be thankful that I have a new life and that the Lord has blessed me to see this new baby. And I’m not even happy.”


A year and a half later in Jacksonville, Doyley faced a situation eerily similar to Bennett’s.
She noted as her hearing began that she was the only Black person on the screen. About a dozen faces, most of them white, had gathered to challenge her medical decisions. She said it made her feel as if her race had something to do with the fact that she was thrust into the intrusive hearing.
“I have 20 white people against me, and because I am informed and I am making an informed decision, they are trying to take my rights away from me by force,” Doyley told the people on the screen, requesting a Black nurse or doctor.
“I don’t find that race really has much to do with this, ma’am,” the judge responded.
Dr. Erin Burnett said during the hearing that she did not think Doyley could successfully give birth vaginally because she had a history of stalled labors. A long labor after prior C-sections could increase the risk of uterine rupture, which could kill Doyley and the child, she said.
She said the baby’s heart rate showed some signs of distress and told Doyley it would be better to have a C-section before it became an emergency. If the baby’s heart stopped or if she lost oxygen during delivery, the baby could suffer a brain injury or death.
Dr. John Davis, the chair of the obstetrics and gynecology department, testified that the hospital had been recognized for its low C-section rate and did not perform unnecessary surgeries. Doyley’s condition required intervention, he said.
Burnett and Davis did not respond to requests for comment, and the hospital declined ProPublica’s requests to interview them and others involved in Doyley’s care. Doyley signed a waiver allowing the hospital to discuss her case with ProPublica, but a spokesperson for University of Florida Health in Jacksonville would not comment, citing patient privacy. Nor did the hospital respond to questions about Doyley’s claim that race played a role in the decision to involve the court.
The research on the risks of uterine rupture after prior C-sections is unclear. Studies have found that 0.15% to 2.3% of these labors resulted in a rupture, depending on a number of factors such as body mass, a history of successful vaginal births and whether the labor was spontaneous or had to be induced.
Doyley, who felt comfortable with her odds and wanted to continue laboring, argued during the hearing that C-sections carry their own dangers — including a risk of death.
“A lot of that comes from medical negligence and medical racism, where we have a group of white doctors that think that they know what is best for Black bodies and Black babies,” Doyley said in the hearing.

Both the doctors and Doyley mentioned recommendations from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. However, neither one cited the organization’s stance on court-ordered C-sections, which the group has deemed to be “ethically impermissible.”
After three hours of testimony — all while Doyley lay in her hospital bed — the judge ruled that she could keep laboring unless there was an emergency. If that happened, the hospital could operate, whether she wanted it or not. The judge would reconvene the hearing in the morning.
In response to questions from ProPublica, Kalil wrote in an email that the judicial code of conduct prohibits judges from commenting on cases. “These ethical standards exist to protect the integrity of the judicial process, ensure fairness to all parties, and preserve the Court’s neutrality,” he wrote.
Overnight, doctors said the baby’s heart rate dropped for seven minutes. Doyley woke to her hospital bed being wheeled into surgery. She called out to her sister who was asleep in the hospital room.
“I had to tell her, ‘Hey, wake up,’” Doyley said. “‘Something is going on.’ She’s trying to put on her shoes. I’m like, ‘Girl, leave the shoes. Let’s go.’”
Doyley recalled reciting a short prayer as her sister scrambled into the operating room. The baby was delivered by C-section. Although Doyley’s daughter was initially limp, she perked up and became responsive within a few minutes. Doctors took her to the NICU while Doyley went to recover. And to get ready to face the judge again.
At the 8 a.m. hearing, Doyley looked pained and groggy. She told the judge she still hadn’t been allowed to see her daughter and asked if he could help. A doctor testified that the baby had been brought to the NICU in respiratory distress and placed on a continuous positive airway pressure machine to help with her breathing.
Kalil said he couldn’t order the hospital to do anything. The matter he had been appointed to hear involved only her unborn baby. He had no authority over the child in the nursery.
Kalil wished her well and quickly closed the case.

The post They Didn’t Want to Have C-Sections. A Judge Would Decide How They Gave Birth. appeared first on ProPublica.
Mayor condemns ‘cowardly act’ on south side of city that caused limited damage and no reported injuries
An explosion has damaged a Jewish school in Amsterdam in what the city’s mayor described as “a deliberate attack against the Jewish community”.
The explosion early on Saturday in a residential neighbourhood on the south side of the city caused limited damage, the mayor, Femke Halsema, said in a press release, as police and firefighters arrived at the scene quickly.
Continue reading...Carmaker’s decision to drop NissanConnect EV app on relatively recent cars fuels warnings from experts
Owners of some Nissan Leaf electric vehicles are angry after the carmaker announced it would shut down an app that lets them remotely control battery charging and other functions.
Drivers of Leaf cars made before May 2019 and the e-NV200 van (produced until 2022) have been told that the NissanConnect EV app linked to their vehicles will “cease operation” from 30 March. This means they will lose remote services, including turning on the heating, and some map features.
Continue reading...High-net-worth residents of UAE heading to Ireland and France to wait out missile attacks before tax year ends
Wealthy UK nationals fleeing war in the Gulf are seeking sanctuary in countries such as Ireland and France to avoid hefty tax bills back home.
In the face of possible demands from HM Revenue and Customs, high-net-worth individuals who had been living in the United Arab Emirates and neighbouring countries are hoping to wait out the missile and drone attacks elsewhere rather than return to the UK.
Continue reading...Longtime Slashdot reader tsuliga writes: Two new episodes of Doctor Who that were previously lost have been found. The original Doctor Who episodes were wiped or deleted by the BBC because they were not aware of the future use of re-runs of these shows. Ninety-five of the 253 episodes from the program's first six years are currently missing. How many more episodes are out there waiting to be rediscovered? "The main broadcasters in the UK in the 1960s, 70s, up to the 80s really, junked quite a lot of content," said Justin Smith, a cinema professor at England's De Montfort University and film archivist. "In some ways finding missing 'Doctor Whos' is the holy grail" of classic TV discoveries, Smith said. The two episodes were "The Nightmare Begins" and "Devil's Planet," both of which aired during the show's third series in 1965. It features William Hartnell as the Doctor in a story involving archvillains the Daleks -- pepperpot-shaped metal aggressors whose favorite word is "Exterminate!" Smith said that for fans of the show, "it's got it all, it really has. It is intergalactic, it's got some great performances. It stands up really, really well."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Need something brilliant to read this weekend? Here are six of our favourite pieces from the last seven days
Continue reading...Treasury minister Spencer Livermore trails new strategy as chancellor pins hopes on benefits of AI amid global uncertainty
The NHS and Ministry of Defence will be urged to buy British tech, as the government pins its hopes on the benefits of artificial intelligence to kickstart growth in the face of the Iran crisis, Treasury minister Spencer Livermore has said.
The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, will restate her economic strategy in a high profile lecture on Tuesday, just as rocketing oil prices have raised fears of higher inflation and weaker growth.
Continue reading...Refusal to kowtow to US president has won public backing – and left Badenoch and Farage playing catch-up
It is not often that Keir Starmer’s allies believe he has Nigel Farage and Kemi Badenoch on the run – but on Iran, they think he is on the right side of history and public opinion.
“It could be the making of him,” said Emily Thornberry, the Labour chair of the foreign affairs committee, who was first out of the blocks to say she thought Donald Trump’s strikes on Iran were illegal. “You’ve not had a British prime minister say no to an American president since Vietnam. This is a big deal.”
Continue reading...Datacentre investment boom is one of the biggest infrastructure gambles of this era, and Britain may be uniquely exposed
Stargate was to be the world’s biggest AI investment: a $500bn infrastructure project to “secure American leadership in AI”. Never shy of hyperbole, its key backer, the ChatGPT-maker OpenAI, promised “massive economic benefit for the entire world” with facilities to help people “use AI to elevate humanity”.
Now, OpenAI appears to be dropping out of a part of the deal – the expansion of a flagship datacentre stretching across a swathe of land in Abilene, Texas, which has become one of the most visible manifestations of a frenzy of investment in the chips and power plants required to build and run AI. There has been a breakdown in negotiations over project financing, as well as the timeline of when the expanded capacity might come online.
Continue reading...Iran is trying to create wedges between Gulf states and the US, but Trump is very comfortable on the ‘escalatory ladder’
• Middle East crisis – live updates
In its current phase, the Israeli-US war against Iran and its proxies has become a proving ground for two competing concepts of military escalation, each of which threatens to become a trap.
On one side, Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu have failed thus far in their ill-defined and shifting strategic aims. Despite killing Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, and other key leaders in the opening salvo of the campaign, the clerical regime remains and Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium is unsecured. Airstrikes are intensifying and hitting a greater number of targets.
Continue reading...https://youtu.be/0APDCSXQNjY?si=2T_eqEyztwvdf6ec
As long as it's not a quality issue
Iranian military said in a statement that oil and energy infrastructure belonging to firms that cooperated with the US would ‘immediately be destroyed’
Saudi Arabia’s defence ministry is saying that two drones have been intercepted and destroyed in the eastern region.
More now after reports of explosions in Dubai on Friday morning: thick black smoke rose over the financial hub’s skyline after what authorities described as a fire in an industrial area of the city-state.
Continue reading...Judge keys early surge as US top Canada 5-3
Americans advance to face Dominican Republic
Miller fans side in ninth to seal quarter-final
Aaron Judge doubled and Pete Crow-Armstrong and Brice Turang each had two hits as the United States beat Canada 5-3 on Friday night to reach the World Baseball Classic semifinals.
The US squad rebounded after an 8-6 loss to Italy in pool play left them needing help to advance to this round.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times: A top Senate administrator on Monday gave aides the green light to use three artificial intelligence chatbots for official work, a reflection of how widespread the use of the products has become in workplaces around the globe. The chief information officer for the Senate sergeant-at-arms, who oversees the chamber's computers as well as security, said in a one-page memo reviewed by The New York Times that aides could use Google's Gemini chat, OpenAI's ChatGPT or Microsoft Copilot, which is already integrated into Senate platforms. Copilot "can help with routine Senate work, including drafting and editing documents, summarizing information, preparing talking points and briefing material, and conducting research and analysis," the memo said. The document later added that "data shared with Copilot Chat stays within the secure Microsoft 365 Government environment and is protected by the same controls that safeguard other Senate data." It's unclear how widely AI is used in the Senate or how widespread it might become, as individual offices and committees set their own rules. The chamber has also not publicly released comprehensive guidance on chatbots, the report notes. In contrast, the House has clearer policies allowing the general use of AI for limited internal tasks but restricting it from sensitive data or for being used for deepfakes and certain decision-making activities.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Jan Carey was facing two misdemeanor criminal counts in Washington, D.C., federal court.
Sprawling compound, including mock-up banks and police offices, uncovered by Thai military during border clashes
It is as if you have walked into a branch of one of Vietnam’s banks. A row of customer service desks, divided by plastic screens, with landline phones, promotional leaflets and staff business cards. A seated waiting area and a private meeting room. All of it features the OCB bank’s logo, or its trademark green colour.
This is not a genuine bank branch, however. It’s one of various “mock up” rooms inside a sprawling compound on the Thai-Cambodian border, where criminal groups are accused of using elaborate and industrial-scale fraud schemes to trick victims into handing over money.
Continue reading...Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for March 14.
| my pint broke cause i drove it under a metal door schooched the front pad . getting it fixed tomorrow but after 120 miles i needed more so voila ! much more stable and 18mph is a breeze float on [link] [comments] |
This blog has now closed. Follow our Middle East blog here
Both Pete Hegseth and Dan Caine were asked today about energy secretary Chris Wright’s comments to CNBC on Thursday, where he said that the US Navy cannot escort ships through the strait of Hormuz now but it was “quite likely” that could happen by the end of the month.
Gen Caine appeared to agree with Wright’s assessment, calling the waterway a “tactically complex environment”.
Continue reading... | Really hard to show y'all, but my connection was not working when trying to charge my board, I looked inside & the whole entire connection has just fallen inside the board. What kind of B's is this?!?!!? What should I do? [link] [comments] |
Defense secretary offers alternative TV headlines to reporters to more favourably reflect US military campaign in Iran – key US politics stories from 13 March 2026
Pete Hegseth has used a press conference at the Pentagon to criticize journalists over their coverage of the war in Iran, at one point proposing alternative TV headlines.
The US defense secretary claimed Iran had been left without a functioning air force, navy or missile defense network after 13 days of strikes, and said the combined US-Israeli air campaign had hit more than 15,000 targets since the war began.
Continue reading...Loving the power. When riding on pavement, it feels there is a slight vibration past 10mph. The tire and rim seem true. When I engage it with my hand with the wheel off the ground I get a vibration as well. Again, tire and rim seem to be good. Maybe it’s normal and just the powerful motor? Anyone else experience this?
The suspect, who was killed following the shooting, had previously been imprisoned for several years for trying to support ISIS, the FBI said.
| Found the short one then extended it half thick and velcro taped the extended section. The 2 screws is to apply some pressure against the walls where it slides into the board's bottom. [link] [comments] |
Sources tell Reuters layoffs could affect 20% or more of company as plans reflect broader tensions within big tech
Meta is planning sweeping layoffs that could affect 20% or more of the company, three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters, as Meta seeks to offset costly artificial intelligence infrastructure bets and prepare for greater efficiency brought about by AI-assisted workers.
No date has been set for the cuts and the magnitude has not been finalized, the people said.
Continue reading...The analysis by researchers at Oregon State University provides one of the most comprehensive pictures to date of the structures that have been hit since the start of the U.S. and Israeli war against Iran.
The attacker rammed a vehicle into Temple Israel in West Bloomfield and opened fire, but he was the only one killed, law enforcement officials said.
Clinton, New Jersey, is known primarily for its old grist mill, its quaint downtown, and its historic resident, "Dave the Rave."
Nine defendants were on trial on charges related to the July 4 attack on the Prairieland ICE detention center in North Texas.
XR+ 4213 with 1020 km, stock besides a new tirE. A couple of months ago I pulled it off the charger, brought it outside and it wouldn't move. Turned on fine with no error codes but the motor wouldn't balance, no noise, no effort, nothing. I tried again later that day and it worked fine. A couple weeks later it happened again and this would repeat randomly over the next few months. Now it seems permanent.
I've left it plugged in for 3 days with no success, it stays at 99% with zero range and I'm not sure where to go from here. Am I looking at a new battery now? Any other suggestions or fixes I can try?
Leafs lose American star for rest of NHL season
Toronto star suffered Grade 3 tear of left MCL
Radko Gudas could face suspension after hit
Toronto Maple Leafs captain Auston Matthews has a torn medial collateral ligament in his left knee and will miss the rest of the NHL season.
The team provided an injury update Friday night, a little under 24 hours since Matthews was knocked out of a game against Anaheim on a knee-on-knee hit from Radko Gudas.
Continue reading...Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for March 14, No. 1,729.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for March 14, No. 1007.
The stolen gun used in the Old Dominion University was sold this week to the shooter for $100, according to a federal law enforcement affidavit.
A security detail has been requested from the federal health department's inspector general for top federal housing official Bill Pulte.
Ayman Mohamad Ghazali made two purchases at a Phantom Fireworks store in Livonia, Michigan. He told the store staff the fireworks were for the end of Ramadan.
The Trump administration's Medicare boss reacts to CBS News investigation into California's hospice fraud problems.
SMF is the illumos system for managing traditional Unix services (long-lived background processes, usually). It’s quite rich in order to correctly accommodate a lot of different use cases. But it sometimes exposes that complexity to users even when they’re trying to do something simple.
[…]In this post, I’ll walk through an example using a demo service and the
↫ Dave Pachecosvcprop(1)tool to show the details.
Soalris’ system management facility or SMF is effectively Solaris’ systemd, and this article provides a deeper insight into one of its features: properties. While using SMF and its suite of tools and commands for basic tasks is rather elementary and easy to get into – even I can do it – once you start to dive deeper into what is can do, things get complex and capable very fast.
Google has announced that it will release Chrome for Linux on ARM64 in the second quarter of this year.
Launching Chrome for ARM64 Linux devices allows more users to enjoy the seamless integration of Google’s most helpful services into their browser. This move addresses the growing demand for a browsing experience that combines the benefits of the open-source Chromium project with the Google ecosystem of apps and features.
This release represents a significant undertaking to ensure that ARM64 Linux users receive the same secure, stable, and rich Chrome experience found on other platforms.
↫ The Chromium Blog
While the idea of running Linux on Arm, only to defile it with something as unpleasant as Chrome seem entirely foreign to me, most normal people do actually use Google’s browser. Having it available on Linux for Arm makes perfect sense, and might convince a few people to buy an Arm machine for Linux, assuming the platform can get its act together.
The 1960s episodes featuring the first Doctor William Hartnell will air in the UK in April.
President thanks Grenell for ‘outstanding work’ and says Matt Floca, vice-president of operations, will take over
Donald Trump has announced that Ric Grenell, the longtime Republican foreign policy adviser who oversaw far-reaching changes at the Kennedy Center, which prompted many artists to abandon the performing arts venue, will be replaced by Matt Floca, vice-president of operations at the center.
Trump made the announcement on social media that he has replaced Grenell, thanking him for the “outstanding work he has done”. Floca was photographed in December personally overseeing the addition of Trump’s name to the center’s facade. Grenell’s departure comes as the Kennedy Center prepares to close this summer for a two-year renovation.
Continue reading...Former US senator’s admission comes after Heather Ammel sued her under North Carolina’s ‘homewrecker’ law
Kyrsten Sinema, a former US senator, admitted in court filings to having a “romantic and intimate” relationship with a married man who was a member of her security detail during her final year in office – but argues that his estranged wife should not be able to sue her over it.
The admission to the multi-state affair came in response to a lawsuit filed by Heather Ammel, who accused the former Arizona senator in federal court of breaking up her marriage under North Carolina’s so-called “homewrecker” law.
Continue reading...In a first-ever case, most of the nine defendants were convicted of providing support to terrorists. Only one defendant was convicted of attempted murder of a police officer.
I will not pass up an opportunity to make you talk about Plan 9, so let’s focus on Acme.
Acme is remarkable for what it represents: a class of application that leverages a simple, text-based GUI to create a compelling model of interacting with all of the tools available in the Unix (or Plan 9) environment. Cox calls it an “integrating development environment,” distinguishing it from the more hermetic “integrated development environment” developers will be familiar with. The simplicity of its interface is important. It is what has allowed Acme to age gracefully over the past 30 or so years, without the constant churn of adding support for new languages, compilers, terminals, or color schemes.
↫ Daniel Moch
While the article mentions you can use Acme on UNIX, to really appreciate it you have to use it on Plan 9, which today most likely means 9front. Now, I am not the kind of person who can live and breathe inside 9front – you need to be of a certain mindset to be able to do so – but even then I find that messing around with Plan 9 has given me a different outlook on UNIX. In fact, I think it has helped me understand UNIX and UNIX-like systems better and more thoroughly.
If you’re not sure if Plan 9 is something that suits you, the only real way to find out is to just use it. Fire up a VM, read the excellent documentation at 9front, and just dive into it. Most of you will just end up confused and disoriented, but a small few of you will magically discover you possess the right mindset.
Just do it.
As small-scale attacks target houses of worship, law enforcement and religious leaders are prepared but anxious about what’s next.
Meta plans to remove end-to-end encryption (E2EE) from Instagram direct messages by May 8, 2026. "Very few people were opting in to end-to-end encrypted messaging in DMs, so we're removing this option from Instagram in the coming months," says Meta. "Anyone who wants to keep messaging with end-to-end encryption can easily do that on WhatsApp." The Hacker News reports: The American company first began testing E2EE for Instagram direct messages in 2021 as part of CEO Mark Zuckerberg's "privacy-focused vision for social networking." The feature is currently "only available in some areas" and is not enabled by default. Weeks into the Russo-Ukrainian war in February 2022, the company made encrypted direct messaging available to all adult users in both countries. Last week, TikTok said it would not introduce E2EE, arguing it makes users less safe by preventing police and safety teams from being able to read direct messages if needed.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A suspect in an attack on a synagogue in the Detroit area is dead after ramming a vehicle into the building and being confronted by synagogue security, Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard said.
Arrest of asylum seeker Elvis Joel TE and his two-year-old, without a warrant, had sparked widespread outrage
A federal judge ruled on Friday that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) must release a Minneapolis man and asylum seeker who has been unlawfully detained for 50 days.
The man, identified as Elvis Joel TE in court filings, was arrested on 22 January at the height of ICE’s aggressive raids in Minneapolis. The case sparked widespread outrage as Elvis TE was detained with his two-year-old daughter while they were returning home from the store, and ICE quickly flew both of them to Texas despite a court order barring their transfer out of Minnesota.
Continue reading...Iranian drone strikes shut down a major helium facility in Qatar, removing about 30% of global helium supply and raising concerns for the semiconductor industry, which relies on the gas for chip fabrication. "QatarEnergy declared force majeure on existing contracts on March 4, freeing it from supply obligations to customers," reports Tom's Hardware. The industry outlet Gasworld reports that no imminent restart is planned. From the report: Helium consultant Phil Kornbluth, speaking at a Gasworld webinar on March 4, said that if the outage extends beyond roughly two weeks, industrial gas distributors could be forced to relocate cryogenic equipment and revalidate supplier relationships, a process that could stretch over months regardless of when Qatari output resumes. South Korea is among the most exposed countries, which, according to the Korea International Trade Association, imported 64.7% of its helium from Qatar in 2025. The country relies heavily on helium imports to cool silicon wafers during fabrication and is understood to have no viable substitute. The country's Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources has reportedly launched an investigation into supply and demand for 14 semiconductor materials and equipment types with high dependence on Middle Eastern sources, Nikkei reported on Wednesday. Bromine, which is used in circuit formation, is another big concern, with South Korea sourcing 90% of its imports from Israel, also party to the ongoing conflict in Iran.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
When one child told the toy, "I love you," it responded, "As a friendly reminder, please ensure interactions adhere to the guidelines provided."
I’m feeling kind of nostalgic today so I thought I’d write Hello, world! in Z80 assembly for the ZX Spectrum! The last time I wrote any Z80 assembly was when I was 14 so around 36 years ago! I may be a little rusty!
↫ Old Man By the Sea
It’s easy to tell the world hello in BASIC, but a bit more involved in Z80 assembly.
A model unit of the T1 seen by The Verge shows specs and pricing that don't match what's advertised on the Trump Mobile website.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle No. 537 for Saturday, March 14.
A federal jury handed prosecutors a mixed victory in the trial of nine protesters for their roles during or after a chaotic demonstration outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility last July, convicting eight defendants of terrorism charges but sparing some of them on attempted murder counts.
The widely watched trial could serve as a bellwether as President Donald Trump’s administration seeks to crack down on left-wing groups — and the convictions could encourage prosecutors to bring more such charges. A top FBI official said in December that the agency is now treating “antifa” as a major domestic terror threat.
“This is a sham trial, built on political persecution and ideological attacks coming from the top.”
In a statement posted online, a support group for the defendants said, “Everything about this trial from beginning to end has proven what we have said all along: this is a sham trial, built on political persecution and ideological attacks coming from the top.”
The Trump administration celebrated the verdict.
“Antifa is a domestic terrorist organization that has been allowed to flourish in Democrat-led cities — not under President Trump,” said Attorney General Pamela Bondi. “Today’s verdict on terrorism charges will not be the last as the Trump administration systematically dismantles Antifa and finally halts their violence on America’s streets.”
The court case centered on a nighttime July 4, 2025, protest outside ICE’s Prairieland Detention Facility that started with demonstrators shooting fireworks and spray-painting cars in the parking lot.
Signal messages obtained by the government showed that the demonstrators believed that less confrontational protests against ICE — such as one that had occurred earlier in the day at the same facility — were ineffective. Some of the protesters had brought guns, which is legal in Texas. A police officer responding to the scene was shot in the neck by one of the protesters, Benjamin Song, who had brought an AR-15 with a trigger modified for a higher rate of fire.
The defendants said the protest was a peaceful demonstration meant to show solidarity, pointing to the megaphone that one member of the group brought to shout slogans to detainees. Prosecutors pointed to the guns, ballistic vests, and trauma first-aid kits they brought as evidence of malicious intent.
Song was convicted of one count of attempted murder for shooting the officer, but acquitted on two other counts of attempting to shoot at two correctional officers. Song was also found guilty of discharging a firearm during a violent crime. Four other people accused of attempted murder counts were acquitted on those charges. Song faces up to life in prison.
In a significant victory for the government, jurors convicted eight defendants on material support for terrorism charges for wearing black clothes to the late-night demonstration. That use of “black bloc” clothing was an antifa tactic that assisted in the shooting of the officer, prosecutors said during their closing arguments.
The defendants convicted of providing material support to terrorists were Song, Autumn Hill, Zachary Evetts, Savanna Batten, Megan Morris, Maricela Rueda, Elizabeth Soto, and Ines Soto. They face up to 15 years in prison on that count.
The same defendants were also convicted of riot and two explosives charges related to the fireworks. Hill, Evetts, Morris, and Rueda were acquitted on attempted murder charges that would have carried sentences up to life imprisonment.
Rueda and her husband, Daniel Sanchez Estrada, were convicted of conspiracy to conceal documents. That charge centered on Sanchez’s movement of boxes containing radical pamphlets after her arrest. Sanchez was also convicted of corruptly concealing a document.
The prosecution of the Prairieland defendants represented the federal government’s first use of the material support charge against alleged antifa members accused of domestic terrorism.
The prosecution was the government’s first material support for terror charges against alleged antifa members.
The verdict came after 10 days of testimony inside a Fort Worth courtroom packed with family members of the defendants, law enforcement officials, and journalists.
Prosecutors called the wounded police officer and detention center guards to describe what it was like on the receiving end of a barrage of bullets, as well as four cooperating defendants who pleaded guilty before trial.
Another significant witness was a researcher at a right-wing think tank who said the tactics used by the demonstrators that night, including “black bloc” clothing and the encrypted messaging app Signal — the latter of which the witness said he also used — were typical of antifa.
This is a developing story and will be updated.
The post Anti-ICE Protesters Convicted on Terrorism Charges for Wearing All Black appeared first on The Intercept.
Matt Floca will be the new CEO and executive director of the Kennedy Center, President Trump announced.
Korey LaVergne, 37, of the Lafayette diocese, charged with three counts of felony indecent behavior with a juvenile
A Roman Catholic priest in the south-west Louisiana diocese where the US church’s clergy abuse scandal effectively started decades ago has been formally charged with three counts of felony indecent behavior with a juvenile.
A bill of information from the district attorney for Acadia parish charges 37-year-old Korey LaVergne with three counts of felony indecent behavior with a juvenile who was 15 at the time of the alleged offenses.
Continue reading...In an interview at SXSW, the director of the upcoming sci-fi film Disclosure Day discussed aliens, social media, AI in film and more.
AI services may not stay cheap for long, as companies like OpenAI and Anthropic are currently subsidizing usage to rapidly grow market share. As these companies move toward profitability and potential IPOs, Axios reports that investors will likely push them to increase prices and improve margins. An anonymous reader shares an excerpt from the report: Flashback: Silicon Valley has seen this movie before. The so-called "millennial lifestyle subsidy" meant VC money helped underwrite cheap Uber rides and DoorDash deliveries. Before that, Amazon built its base with low prices, free shipping and, for years, no sales tax in most states. Eventually, all of these companies had to charge enough to cover costs -- and make a profit. Follow the money: The current iteration of AI subsidies won't last forever. Both OpenAI and Anthropic are widely expected to go public. Public investors will demand earnings growth and expanding margins. Even as chips get more efficient, total spending keeps rising. Labs need more capacity, more upgrades and more supply to meet demand. The bottom line: The costs of AI will keep going down. But total spend from customers will need to keep going up if AI companies are going to become profitable and investors are ever going to get returns on their massive investments.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Food and Drug Administration on March 10 changed the approval for a version of the prescription drug leucovorin to include people with a very rare genetic condition. FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary had previously implied that the drug’s new label would cover a much broader group of people with autism, saying that “hundreds of thousands of kids” would benefit.

The condition targeted in the FDA approval is a genetic version of cerebral folate deficiency, caused by mutations in a folate receptor gene. People with CFD — whether from genetic or other causes — have low levels of folate in their cerebrospinal fluid, which leads to reduced folate in the brain. This affects brain development. Patients with genetic CFD can experience developmental delays, movement disorders and seizures. Some behaviors are similar to those with autism.
However, this form of genetic CFD is estimated to occur in 1 in a million people, according to the FDA. That would translate to around 70 kids in the U.S. — far from “hundreds of thousands of kids.” Leucovorin had already been used for decades to treat genetic CFD via off-label prescribing, a common practice when evidence shows a drug approved for one condition improves another.

Despite this limited approval, Makary had initially implied a more substantial change. “Today the FDA is filing a Federal Register notice to change the label on an exciting treatment called prescription leucovorin so that it can be available to children with autism,” Makary said in a Sept. 22 press conference. “We are going to change the label to make it available,” he went on to say. “Hundreds of thousands of kids, in my opinion, will benefit.”
This was the same press conference in which President Donald Trump and others touted an unproven link between autism and the use of Tylenol, or acetaminophen, during pregnancy.
Makary later referred to a subset of people with autism with antibodies that block their own folate receptors, called autoantibodies. Some researchers have hypothesized that a subset of people with autism have CFD caused by these autoantibodies, but this is not well-established, as we will explain.
The FDA “is approving prescription leucovorin for treatment of autistic children,” Dr. Mehmet Oz, administrator for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, said at the same event. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said the treatment “may benefit large numbers of children who suffer from autism.” He had previously vowed by September to identify “what has caused the autism epidemic.”
The Federal Register notice Makary referred to described data on the rare genetic form of CFD, however. The notice also stated that data on leucovorin for people who have symptoms with “autistic features” along with antibodies targeting the receptor “is limited” and that “additional studies are needed.”
The then-head of the FDA’s drugs division, Dr. George Tidmarsh, also subsequently clarified that the new indication was the rare genetic one. “We’re not proposing to approve leucovorin for [people with] the diagnosis of autism,” he told the autism publication the Transmitter in an interview for a story published Oct. 2.
When asked this week about the discrepancy between Makary’s earlier comments about broad benefits for kids with autism and the ultimate FDA approval for a rare genetic condition, a spokesperson from the Department of Health and Human Services told us that Makary previously had been talking about an antibody-related form of CFD, and not the rare genetic disorder.
“Dr. Makary was referring to cerebral folate deficiency — which can be caused by antibodies blocking folate receptors — rather than cerebral folate transport deficiency, which is caused by a specific genetic mutation,” the HHS spokesperson wrote in an email.
However, as we’ve said, the idea that a large subset of people with autism have CFD and can benefit from leucovorin has not been well-established.
“There is no substantive evidence that cerebral folate deficiency (CFD) plays a role in the pathogenesis of autism,” two researchers with expertise in folate and cancer treatment wrote in a January perspective in the New England Journal of Medicine. They also said that despite claims that antibodies against folate receptors play a role in autism, most experts consider this conclusion to be “inconclusive.” They added that the presence of the antibodies doesn’t necessarily mean that folate is low in the cerebrospinal fluid, which is the defining feature of CFD.
The new approval was for GSK’s Wellcovorin, a brand-name version of leucovorin that has long been off patent and that is no longer made by the company. Leucovorin remains available in generic versions. It is mainly used for cancer patients alongside certain chemotherapy regimens to reduce toxicity or to improve effectiveness.
While clarifying that Makary’s remarks about broad benefits applied to a different form of CFD, the HHS spokesperson also said that the rare genetic form of CFD “was the focus of the September announcement about this drug.”
But during the Sept. 22 press conference and subsequent media appearances, Makary repeatedly emphasized potentially sweeping benefits of the new leucovorin label.
“For many kids with autism, it will provide some improvement in their symptoms, and for some subset, marked improvement,” Makary said in a Sept. 22 NewsNation interview, urging people to talk to their doctors. “There are 2.5 million kids suffering, and I hope hundreds of thousands of them will see some improvement with this new treatment that we’re going to approve in about two to three weeks,” he went on to say.
“I think the biggest story today was that the FDA is taking action to make leucovorin available to kids with cerebral folate deficiency,” he told ABC News that same day. “That may be 20% to 50% of kids with severe autism, and they have a clinical improvement in studies.” In a Sept. 25 interview on C-Span, he gave an even larger estimate, saying “we are going to approve a drug called leucovorin for the treatment of autism” and that it “may help 50% or 60% of kids with autism.”
There is very limited evidence to support the assertion that wide groups of kids with autism could benefit, as we wrote in September. David S. Mandell, a psychiatry professor at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine and director of the Penn Center for Mental Health, told us then that the evidence on leucovorin “as a treatment for autism is very weak.”
Other researchers told the Transmitter in September that the literature on autism and leucovorin was “meager” and that it would be “extremely premature” for the administration to recommend the treatment for autism.
“These leucovorin studies are small, lack validated biomarkers or outcome measures, and certainly are not generalizable to all children with autism,” Dr. Shafali Jeste, a neurologist at UCLA, told the Transmitter. “The over-simplified conclusions and media hype from these studies take advantage of vulnerable families who are searching for answers and hope.”
At the time, this evidence included a small collection of studies that looked at the impact of leucovorin on communication and other characteristics in children with autism. One of these studies — among the largest, with 80 participants recruited — has since been retracted due to concerns about its data and statistical analysis, according to a notice on the journal website. Another of the studies had been terminated for “investigator non-compliance,” although the authors still published results.
“Larger, well-designed, multisite trials using objective outcome measures are necessary to determine whether leucovorin is safe and effective in autism and in which subgroups it may be most beneficial for,” says an FAQ page from the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Despite these uncertainties and the lack of a broad approval, people appear to have heeded Makary’s advice to talk to their doctors about leucovorin. New outpatient prescriptions of the drug increased by 71% in children ages 5 and older in the first couple of months following the September announcement, according to a study published March 5 in the Lancet.
Editor’s note: FactCheck.org does not accept advertising. We rely on grants and individual donations from people like you. Please consider a donation. Credit card donations may be made through our “Donate” page. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck.org, Annenberg Public Policy Center, P.O. Box 58100, Philadelphia, PA 19102.
The post No Broad Autism Approval for Leucovorin, Despite FDA Commissioner’s Prior Suggestions appeared first on FactCheck.org.
Trump DoJ’s investigation was purportedly about the management of the central bank’s renovation
A federal judge on Friday blocked the justice department from serving subpoenas to Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell in an inquiry purported to be about the management of the central bank’s renovation.
Powell disclosed the surprise investigation on 11 January, and described the move as a threat to Fed independence and part of the Trump administration’s attempts to pressure the Fed to cut rates.
Continue reading...Here's how to tell the old and new AirTags apart, and how the second generation improves on the original.
The site, which features 40 dedicated channels, attracted 10,000 users on its first day.
TSA employees have been working in US airports without pay since the partial shutdown began in February
A rising number of US airports are asking for donations to support employees affected by the partial government shutdown with airport security officials missing their first full paychecks Friday.
Transportation Security Administration (TSA) employees have been working in airports around the US without pay since a shutdown began in February after Republicans and Democrats failed to reach a funding agreement. Democrats have since refused to support a bill to fund the Department of Homeland Security, the TSA’s parent agency, without first receiving guaranteed immigration enforcement reforms.
Continue reading...The 2024 lawsuit alleged that Adobe's confusing and costly cancellation process violated consumer protections.
Some airports have been warning fliers to arrive four hours early because of long security lines.
The latest release of oil follows historic withdrawals from the Biden administration to combat gas prices from the Ukraine war.
U.S. gas prices are surging as the Iran war drives up the global cost of oil. But what exactly accounts for what you pay at the pump?
Kenya Chapman was arrested for allegedly selling firearm to Mohamed Bailor Jalloh, who killed one person on Thursday
The US Department of Justice on Friday charged a man who authorities say sold a gun to the Old Dominion University (ODU) shooter despite the gunman’s previous conviction in a terrorism case.
Kenya Chapman is facing federal charges in connection to the sale of the weapon to Mohamed Bailor Jalloh, a former army national guard member who yelled “Allahu Akbar” before he opened fire in a classroom at the Virginia school on Thursday, according to authorities.
Continue reading...Tehran residents report relentless bombing with US and Israeli planes launching wave of attacks
Donald Trump has said Iran will be hit “very hard” in the coming days, describing leaders of the regime as “deranged scumbags” who it was a “great honor” to kill, as Tehran residents reported relentless bombing and violence continued to spiral across the Middle East.
The US president’s comments, which signaled an intensification of the US-Israeli campaign, came as Israeli and US warplanes launched successive waves of attacks on the Iranian capital and elsewhere on Friday. One strike reportedly hit close to a square near Tehran University where crowds were gathered in support of Iran’s regime. The area is home to many government buildings.
Continue reading...The Kennedy Center is set to close for two years on July 4.
Richard Kahn, who worked closely with Epstein for more than a decade, testified before the Oversight Committee on Wednesday.

On March 12, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gave his first press conference since the U.S. and Israel first attacked Iran. Some social media users doubted the authenticity of the video address, and led them to question whether Netanyahu was still alive.
"Rumors swirling that the Prime Minister of Israel - Netanyahu - is dead after this video has been released of him LIVE on TV," one March 13 X post read. "Look at the 6 fingers."
"Breaking: Latest video released by the israeli government shows that it was ai generated because netanyahu has 6 fingers," read another March 13 X post. "Is Netanyahu dead?"
In the image, Netanyahu is pointing with both hands, and social media users said his right hand appears to have six fingers.
But upon closer look at the video, Netanyahu’s hands looked normal. A trick of light likely made part of his palm appear to be an extra finger.
(Screenshots from the Israeli Government Press Office YouTube video)
The full press briefing can be found here. There are no other indications that it was altered or generated with artificial intelligence. Netanyahu interacted with reporters over video conference. He gestured with his hands a lot and no irregularities appeared.
Several news outlets reported on Netanyahu’s press briefing.
A video of Netanyahu’s press conference doesn’t prove he is dead. We rate this claim Pants on Fire!
sdinfoserv writes: After running a Reddit clone for a couple of months, the Digg beta shut down again. The website is a splash memo from CEO Justin Mezzell, blaming the latest "Hard Reset" on bots. "Building on the internet in 2026 is different," writes Mezzell. "We learned that the hard way. Today we're sharing difficult news: we've made the decision to significantly downsize the Digg team..." The decision was made after struggling to gain traction and an overwhelming influx of AI-driven bots and spam. "When the Digg beta launched, we immediately noticed posts from SEO spammers noting that Digg still carried meaningful Google link authority," says Mezzell. "Within hours, we got a taste of what we'd only heard rumors about. The internet is now populated, in meaningful part, by sophisticated AI agents and automated accounts. We knew bots were part of the landscape, but we didn't appreciate the scale, sophistication, or speed at which they'd find us." "We banned tens of thousands of accounts. We deployed internal tooling and industry-standard external vendors. None of it was enough. When you can't trust that the votes, the comments, and the engagement you're seeing are real, you've lost the foundation a community platform is built on." Despite the setback, Digg plans to rebuild with a smaller team, with founder Kevin Rose returning to work full-time on a new direction for the platform. "Starting the first week of April, Kevin will be putting his focus back on the company he built twenty+ years ago," writes Mezzell. "He'll continue as an advisor to True Ventures, but Digg will be his primary focus." Slashback: The Rise of Digg.com
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A federal judge has quashed a pair of grand jury subpoenas sent to the Federal Reserve Board as part of a criminal probe by U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro's office.
Key Democrats in Congress are, once again, vaguely opposing a war instead of forcefully opposing it on moral or ideological grounds. Just as Democratic leadership slow-rolled a war powers vote for two weeks after President Donald Trump began amassing his armada to attack Iran, and four days after the bombing was underway, Democrats are refusing to speak out clearly against the war, instead resigning themselves to process-based criticism and demands for “more information” and “plans.”
With strong indications that Trump may soon send ground troops, we are long past the time for begging to see the “plans.” Democrats need to forcefully call for an end to this war now.
Still, this “We need to see Trump’s plans for Iran” talking point has taken hold, either through top-down messaging discipline or a very unfortunate series of coincidences. Democrats in the House and Senate have been echoing some version of this line for the past week:
This messaging often comes after closed-door briefings with Congress, followed by a consternating Democrat in front of a camera lamenting a lack of a “plan” or “exit strategy.” Let us examine this clip, for example, of Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., as he “demands answers” and does a lot of posturing and Plan-Mongering but, strangely, never actually says the war is wrong and should end immediately.
On Thursday, Democratic Reps. Yassamin Ansari, Sara Jacobs, and Jason Crow released a 1,100-word letter to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth demanding accountability for war crimes committed in Iran that makes no demand to end the war causing the war crimes.
Similar to the Biden White House’s strategy of demanding Israel “allow in more aid” in Gaza while continuing to arm and fund the destruction of Gaza, there’s a surplus of performative outrage and handwringing over the logical outcome of the war without opposing the war causing the war crimes in question. Countless other Democrats are repeating this script with varying degrees of normative content, but typically without much at all, instead keeping the conversation purely in the realm of process and strategy.
“[President Trump has] not shown us any plans for what he wants to do for the day after,” Sen. Jacky Rosen, D-N.V., told reporters earlier in the week. “We have to have a plan,” Sen. Gary Peters, D-Mich., said to NOTUS on Tuesday. “I’m still not convinced that the administration has a plan to execute the rest of the war and have an exit strategy.”
Some of those pushing this line may argue that we can make process criticisms and demand an end to the war. While there’s nothing inherently wrong with this approach –– and some have done it –– for the vast majority, this is simply not the case. The only message that’s pushed out to the public is the how and when of the war, not the fact of it.
An extension of this messaging is a call for “hearings” or “investigations” on the war. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., is aggressively pushing this line, telling reporters earlier this week that “the story from the administration changes by the hour.”
“When it comes to sending our service members into harm’s way, the American people need to understand why,” he said. “But right now, they don’t even have a ‘why.’ … That needs to change. We need testimony. We need accountability.”
This war is not an abstract policy proposal up for debate at the Oxford Union Society that requires further deliberation.
It’s unclear why anyone needs “testimony.” The war is illegal, immoral, killing countless Iranians, and needs to end immediately. The implication in this constant Plan-Mongering is that some brilliant Aaron Sorkin speech from Hegseth or Marco Rubio in front of Congress would somehow change these underlying basic facts. This is a criminal war being carried about by openly violent racists and needs to stop at once. It is not an abstract policy proposal up for debate at the Oxford Union Society that requires further deliberation.
“Senate Democrats vow to force Iran war votes if Republicans don’t hold hearings,” an exclusive from Semafor informed us on Tuesday. “Senate Democrats are threatening to force repeated votes on President Donald Trump’s war with Iran unless Republicans agree to hold committee hearings about the ongoing war,” the report continued.
Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., did make a clear statement in the Semafor article against the war, saying, “Now is the time for Democrats to use all the leverage we have to try to stop this unnecessary war.” But this is an outlier in these Plan-Mongering PR roll outs. Indeed, the entire premise that Democrats would force more war powers votes unless “Republicans hold hearings” is nonsensical. If the war powers votes are meaningful leverage, why not use them to make a clear, consistent moral case to the public, rather than indulge the idea this is an unsettled debate to be hashed out in drawn-out hearings? What more is there to learn? The war is illegal, unjust, and immoral. What functional purpose would hearings serve, other than to mine for viral content of Dems Owning Trump Administration Officials?
It’s true that every Democrat in the Senate — save for Pennsylvania Sen. John Fetterman — supported a war powers resolution on March 4. And while this would have triggered congressional authority to vote for or against war with Iran, it is not, itself, a vote against war — it is an assertion of Congress’s authority to decide the matter. This conditional element, combined with the fact that its failure in both the Senate and House was likely a fait accompli, permitted Democrats to be on the record as appearing to oppose the war without running afoul of the pro-war, pro-Israel lobby.
The Plan-Mongering strategy is being promoted by centrist, corporate, and billionaire-funded groups like Third Way.
It’s telling that the Plan-Mongering strategy is being promoted by centrist, corporate, and billionaire-funded groups like Third Way, who released talking points detailing how Democrats should talk about the war on the first day of the bombing, the substance of which is an almost carbon copy of how top Democrats have subsequently spoken about it.
“President Trump is refusing to answer a number of grave and urgent questions,” leads off the memo, which proceeds to lay out the familiar talking points: Is Iran truly an imminent threat? (The answer, one assumes, is TBD.) Why did Trump tell us in an address to the nation in June that Iran’s nuclear assets had been “completely and totally obliterated”? Is this a “Wag the Dog” war? Is this a war for regime change? (Again, the normative substance remains elusive.) Why has Congress been bypassed? The memo ends with this muddled statement of support but skepticism about process: “We strongly support our troops and hope this mission succeeds. But these unanswered questions mean we don’t know what success looks like, and that should deeply worry every American.”
What’s missing is a clearly articulated message against the war, or any demand to end it now. Instead, a “hope the mission succeeds,” and a lot of hand-wringing, deflections, and concerns that Congress is being left out of the war. The influential liberal group National Security Action released similar, if marginally better, process-focused talking points last week in their “messaging guide.” While the guide conditionally opposes new funding, it still makes no demand to end the war immediately, instead suggesting Democrats should refuse to fund it until “Donald Trump makes clear how and when we are getting out of this reckless war.”
What’s missing is a clearly articulated message against the war, or any demand to end it now.
Rather than a clear objection to funding this illegal and immoral war in any form, these talking points continue to leave open the possibility Democrats could support it, if only there was an acceptable “plan.” Central to this incoherent messaging is the implication that there exists a “plan” Trump could proffer that would satisfy Democrats. And if that’s the case, after the 900th demand by Democrats that he produce one, one is left wondering: Why don’t the Democrats provide one, or at least a rough outline? What would a good “plan” for a surprise and unprovoked attack on Iran look like, exactly? What’s to stop Schumer’s office from offering one? What’s left unsaid is that there’s no plan in the universe that would justify this war of aggression that’s already killed over 1,300 civilians, including 200 children.
Those pushing this argument would likely make a pragmatism defense: These types of process critiques play better with the public, they might insist. But it’s unclear on what basis this could be said, as the war is already historically unpopular. Polls show the public overwhelmingly wants the war to end; they are not asking for more refined “plans” or “explanations” or “hearings.”
The real reason why this line is popular is almost certainly because it creates the appearance of unified party opposition while permitting those who soft-support the war to find something to criticize, namely the lack of a sufficiently good “plan.”
This focus on process criticism — which defined Democratic leaders Sen. Chuck Schumer and Rep. Hakeem Jeffries’s superficial response to the war in the immediate lead-up and first days of the war — does not build any moral narratives, or undermine the logic of regime change, which remains the bipartisan consensus, or run afoul of AIPAC and other major pro-Israel Democratic donors. But it may help placate Democratic voters who are overwhelmingly opposed to the war to the tune of 89 percent. When Democratic message-shapers are tasked with opposing a war without opposing the moral logic of the war, confusing and often contradictory process criticism is all they have left.
Democrats, as a minority party, could not unilaterally end the war if they wanted to, but this appeal to their powerlessness doesn’t tell the whole story. When the House voted on a separate war powers resolution the day after the Senate’s failed, four Democrats — Reps. Henry Cuellar, Jared Golden, Greg Landsman, and Juan Vargas — broke ranks and opposed it. Had they voted the party line, it would have passed due to two Republicans joining the effort, and the war would have likely ended — at least until a subsequent authorization vote took place.
When is Jeffries, the supposedly anti-war House minority leader, going to discipline these four pro-war Democrats who ruined the party’s nominal opposition to this war? So far, there have been no reports of any such measures, so we’re left to understand that opposing the war is important, but it’s not important-important. A potential upcoming vote on supplemental war funding should be more clarifying, with the potential to differentiate between real opposition and senators Who Just Want to Look Outraged. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., indicated he will oppose any more funding, while others, such as Sens. Tim Kaine, D-Va., and Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., have not ruled out more funding, ostensibly to “support the troops.” Jeffries, true to form as a party leader, refuses to say what he’ll support.
What generic Plan-Monger language does is permit seemingly genuine antiwar voices like Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., and Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., to run the same basic script of AIPAC stalwarts like Booker and Schumer. The “No Plan” sandbox provides cover for Democrats with a record of supporting Israel and being “tough on Iran” to appear anti-war without all the mess of saying anything substantive against the war.
A party that built its message around a strong, firm, and unequivocal case to end this war now would very suddenly draw attention to the undoubtedly dozens of congressional Democrats who would not echo this line. So what we get instead is limp process critiques, demanding pointless hearings, and bizarre attacks that Trump is not doing regime change fast enough. Polls repeatedly show the most common criticism of Democrats is not that they are too far left or too anti-war, but that they are too weak, that they don’t stand for anything.
Centering criticism of a deeply unpopular war on those carrying it out for not filling out the right paperwork or producing a satisfactory slideshow — rather than making clear, normative objections to a war of aggression — feeds directly into this perception. But perhaps it’s a perception Democratic leaders, and the pro-war, pro-Israel donors who fund their political careers, would prefer over the alternative.
Update: March 16, 2026
This article has been updated to clarify Rep. Jim McGovern’s stance on the Iran War.
The post Why Dems Keep Saying Trump Has “No Plan” Instead of Calling to End the War With Iran appeared first on The Intercept.
Guide to where you can watch CBS News in your area.
President Donald Trump claimed that Iran essentially shutting down the Strait of Hormuz “doesn’t really affect” the United States the way it does “other countries.” It’s true that a small share of U.S. oil imports comes from the Persian Gulf. But the U.S. has been affected by the global increase in the price of oil.
Since the waterway has been effectively closed – significantly reducing crude oil exports from the Persian Gulf region – oil prices have increased by double-digit percentages, which has contributed to a 50-cent-plus spike in the average price of a gallon of gasoline in the U.S.
“The US is definitely affected,” Mark Finley, the nonresident fellow in energy and global oil at Rice University’s Baker Institute, told us in an email. Because it’s a global oil market, “if something goes wrong anywhere, the price goes up everywhere,” he said.
Iran has blocked the flow of oil and other goods through the strait in retaliation for joint U.S. and Israeli airstrikes that began on Feb. 28. Iran has threatened to shoot or bomb vessels that attempt to pass through the narrow body of water that separates Iran from Oman and connects the Persian Gulf with the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea.

About 20 million barrels per day of crude and other oil products were transported through the strait in 2025. That has slowed “to a trickle” since the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran began, according to the International Energy Agency.
In a March 9 press conference, Trump talked about offering “risk insurance” to oil tankers operating in the region, possibly by having U.S. Navy ships escort the tankers, “because you have to keep the straits flowing.”
But then he said, “With all of that, it affects other countries much more than it does the United States. It doesn’t really affect us. We have so much oil. We have tremendous oil and gas, much more than we need.” And he added, “I mean, we’re doing this for the other parts of the world, including countries like China. They get a lot of their oil through the straits. So, we’re doing this.”
Compared with some other nations, the U.S. does get just a fraction of its crude oil from Middle Eastern countries for whom the strait is the primary route of exporting oil products.
Last year, the U.S. imported approximately 490,000 barrels of crude oil per day from countries in the Persian Gulf, which include Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. That was about 8% of the almost 6.2 million barrels per day the U.S. imported in total, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. (Canada and Mexico were the source of roughly 70% of U.S. crude imports last year, with Canada alone accounting for a little more than 63%.)
Meanwhile, “About 80% of oil and oil products transiting the Strait in 2025 was destined for Asia,” the IEA has reported – with China, India and Japan being the main importers in the region. China, which Trump mentioned by name, receives between 45% and 50% of its imports through the strait, according to the Center on Global Energy Policy.
But it’s not accurate to claim that Iran’s blockade on the strait “doesn’t really affect” Americans, as Trump claimed. The fact that the U.S. is the world’s leading producer of crude oil, and relatively little of its imports come from the Persian Gulf, doesn’t mean that Americans won’t feel any pain.
“It insulates us in the sense that we’re not going to have a hard time finding supply, but the prices are global, so prices go up anyway,” Abhi Rajendran, director of Oil Markets Research at Energy Intelligence, told us in an interview.
As we’ve reported, the U.S. still relies on some imports because much of the crude oil produced domestically is lighter, or less dense, while many refineries in the U.S. were long ago configured to use the heavier crude oils produced in other parts of the world, such as Canada. That’s also why the U.S. exports a lot of the oil produced in the States.
Trump wrote on social media that higher oil prices are actually a positive thing. “The United States is the largest Oil Producer in the World, by far, so when oil prices go up, we make a lot of money,” the president said.
In his email, Finley told us that “US oil companies, their employees, and the states where they operate benefit from higher prices.” As for consumers, including households and businesses, he said they “bear the burden of higher prices at the pump” as well as on “everything that uses oil.”
He noted that the price of gasoline, diesel fuel and other petroleum products in the U.S. “have gone up sharply” since the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran.
In a February update, the IEA said, “With around 25% of the world’s seaborne oil trade transiting the Strait, and options to bypass it being limited, any disruption to flows through the Strait would have huge consequences for world oil markets.” It warned that a prolonged disruption of shipments would lead to oil supply shortages and make price increases inevitable.
As we’ve written, most of the cost of gasoline is determined by the price of crude oil, which refiners use to make gasoline and other petroleum products. The price of crude oil is set internationally and is largely based on supply and demand factors around the world.
Since the airstrikes on Iran began, the price of West Texas Intermediate crude, the U.S. benchmark, has increased about 41% to almost $95 a barrel, and the price of Brent crude, the international standard, rose about 32% to just over $94 a barrel, according to the Energy Information Administration. As a result, as of the week ending March 9, the average U.S. price for regular grade gasoline had increased to $3.50 per gallon – up by about 56 cents, or roughly 19%, since the week ending Feb. 23, which was five days before the fighting with Iran began, EIA data show.
On March 11, “to address disruptions in oil markets stemming from the war in the Middle East,” the 32 nations that are members of the International Energy Agency — which include the U.S. — announced that they collectively would make 400 million barrels from their oil reserves available for purchase “over a timeframe that is appropriate” for each country.
For the U.S., the Department of Energy said that Trump had authorized the release of 172 million barrels from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve over several weeks.
Experts have said that whether the releases help stabilize oil markets and lower prices depends on how fast the crude can be shipped and how much longer the fighting lasts.
“I think it will help,” Rajendran told us about the planned releases. But he added this caveat: “as long as the conflict doesn’t drag on past early to mid-April.”
Beyond that point, he said, countries would likely have to keep drawing more from their oil reserves or start making other adjustments to address demand.
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The post How Iran Blocking the Strait of Hormuz Affects the U.S. appeared first on FactCheck.org.
Planning a trip? Travel experts recommend booking your flight soon as the Iran war drives up airline and ticket costs.
The Hall County district attorney has dismissed all charges for the five teens arrested in the death of their teacher during a prank gone wrong.
He shoots 66 to make cut at Players Championship
Rory McIlroy squeaks into third round with strong finish
Keegan Bradley has admitted to still being “heartbroken” by his American Ryder Cup team’s loss at Bethpage last year. Bradley is also keen to retain the US captaincy at Adare Manor next September, should Tiger Woods knock back the opportunity.
Luke Donald and Europe were set for a Bethpage rout before a rousing US recovery on day three. The visitors still won the trophy for a second time in succession. Bradley, who has returned to playing duties on the PGA Tour, remains wounded by the event and, as is the case with all Ryder Cups, the losing captain has been subject to heavy criticism.
Continue reading...Alicia Keys was on hand to help celebrate.
Concerns with Ozaki Scheme emulation have led AMD chip designers to conclude there’s currently no substitution for raw FP64 performance. To ensure the accuracy of traditional modeling and simulation workloads, AMD Fellow Nick Malaya tells HPCwire the company intends to keep pushing the envelope on native FP64 performance with its upcoming HPC-focused GPU, the Instinct MI430X, which will power the Discovery supercomputer going into Oak Ridge National Lab in 2028.
The Ozaki Scheme is a promising new emulation technique that is intended to enable scientists to perform high-precision matrix multiplication math using lower-precision hardware, traditionally on INT8 cores, but also on FP8 compute, as Katsuhisa Ozaki and two other Japanese researchers showed this week in a new paper. The scheme has been presented as a method to run traditional modeling and simulation workloads that would ordinarily require lots of FP64 performance instead to utilize the lower-precision performance that’s abundant as result of the AI boom.
While Ozaki theoretically sounds good, the current implementations of Ozaki-I and Ozaki-II have limitations that preclude its use in the real world, said Malaya, who is AMD’s technical lead for exascale application performance.
The Ozaki scheme has two main problems, Malaya said. First, the software is not IEEE compliant, and it does not provide the same answer as running the codes on actual FP64 hardware.
“In some cases, that’s okay,” he said. “But in a lot of matrices that are common that we’ve observed, the accuracy implications are pretty profound. In fact, you can give it matrices that differ by a few orders of magnitude in terms of the elements in the matrix…Ozaki has accuracy problems.”

Ozaki emulates higher-precision math using lower-precision cores (Shutterstock)
The second big problem with Ozaki revolves around its expectation for square matrices. If the HPC workload does not have square matrices, then the performance drops below native FP64 hardware, Malaya said.
HPC applications traditionally use vector computations as opposed to the tensor and matrix math that dominates AI. But fewer than 10% of HPC applications in the real world have made the changes to the double-precision general matrix–matrix multiplication (DGEMM) instructions that would let them benefit from Ozaki.
“You can’t, to my knowledge with Ozaki-I or Ozaki-II or any of the methods out there, apply that to the vector instructions,” Malaya said. “That’s a key nuance I think the community is missing, which is they say, ‘Oh, well, there’s a lot of compute in the DGEMM instructions. You can use Ozaki for it.’ Sure. That’s great. We have software that does that as well. There’s limitations to Ozaki, but it doesn’t address 90% of the HPC apps. That’s the big gap.”
AMD is going to support Ozaki emulation on its chips, Malaya said. “There’s no reason not to. It’s software. We can release it and support it. And you can have libraries that allow you to dynamically switch between the native and the Ozaki method and probably estimate it,” he said. “But we’re not finding it compelling as, ‘You can replace all the hardware pipes.’ You need those FP64 pipes to fall back onto.”
At the end of the day, Ozaki does not present a workable alternative to native FP64 performance, Malaya said. “I have serious concerns it is ready for a production-level HPC code,” he said. “I’m not the only one in the community saying that.”
Ozaki concerns have led AMD to the conclusion that there’s no substitute for native FP64 performance, at least for the foreseeable future. The company is currently developing the MI430X, which is a specialized version of its next-generation GPU, the MI450, that will feature a significant amount of native FP64 capacity, Malaya said.

AMD expects to ship the MI430X with the launch of Discovery in 2028 at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (Source: AMD)
Exactly how much FP64 capacity isn’t something that AMD is ready to share yet. However, Malaya said that it will feature substantially more FP64 capacity than its current data-center GPU, the MI355, which delivers 77 teraflops. That is actually down from its previous GPU, the MI325, which delivers 81.7 teraflops of FP64 capacity.
All of these chips–from the MI325 to the MI430–will have more FP64 capacity than Nvidia Blackwell, which offers 40 teraflops, or the upcoming Rubin GPU, which will offer 33 teraflops of FP64. Nvidia is leaning on Ozaki emulation to boost the FP64 capability of Blackwell to 150 teraflops and Rubin to 200 teraflops.
Nvidia justifies its reliance on Ozaki emulation by saying that adding more native FP64 capacity won’t actually speed up scientific applications, since they are bottlenecked by registers, caches, and HBM rather than raw compute.
“A balanced GPU design therefore provisions sufficient FP64 resources to saturate available memory bandwidth, avoiding over-allocation of compute capacity that cannot be effectively utilized,” the company wrote in a January blog post.
Rubin will deliver up to 22 TB per second of high-bandwidth memory (HBM) bandwidth, which is a 2.8x increase from Blackwell, which offers 8 TBps. AMD’s current MI355 GPU offers 8 TBps of HBM bandwidth, while the MI430X will have 19.6 TBps, Malaya said.
While Nvidia is offering much more HBM bandwidth rather than higher FP64 performance, AMD is taking a different approach. According to Malaya, it’s best to increase HBM and flops in lockstep.

ORNL’s Frontier uses AMD EPYC CPUs and MI250X GPUs.
“It’s really the byte-to-flop ratio that matters. From our perspective, we think you need to maintain a much closer ratio to what you’ve seen on current products,” he said. “You’d need to be a lot closer to that ratio in terms of increasing FP64 to keep the roofline profile, as they call it, the arithmetic intensity, the same.”
Since AMD will deliver a 2.5x increase in HBM bandwidth from the MI355 to the MI430X, a similar 2.5x increase in FP64 flops would also be warranted. Some simple arithmetic shows that, based on that 2.5x growth factor, the MI430X could sport anywhere between 192 teraflops and 204 teraflops of FP64 performance, depending on whether the newer MI355 or the faster MI325 is the baseline. This is just speculation, of course, as the company has not yet said how much FP64 capacity it will deliver in the new chiplet-based design.
FP64 is “very important” to the Genesis Mission, Department of Energy’s Under Secretary for Science Darío Gil said in an interview with HPCwire last month.
“In discussions I’ve had with both [AMD CEO] Lisa Su and with [Nvidia CEO] Jensen [Huang], they have expressed a strong commitment for FP64, that it will continue,” Gil said. “For us, it’s very important, because we don’t view this [as a] substitution.
FP64 is critical to supporting modeling and simulation workloads, not just to further traditional scientific exploration but also to provide the data feedstock for training emerging AI models, Gil said.
“You have the high-fidelity simulation codes that run with high precision. You use those, once validated, as the basis to generate training examples with which you train a surrogate model that you end up running on an AI supercomputer,” Gil said. “You end up with benefits in terms of productivity, in terms of time to solution, often 10x, 20x, 100x.”

AMD Fellow Nick Malaya is the exascale lead for application performance
The new generation of Department of Energy supercomputers, like Discovery, will feature a mix of FP64 and lower-precision capacity, Malaya said. Discovery is the new leadership-class supercomputer that the DOE announced in October. It will be a warm water-cooled HPE Cray GX5000 system that includes MI430X and “Venice” EPYC CPU, use an HPE Slingshot interconnect, and connect to the Cray K3000 storage system, which will use DAOS and Lustre parallel file systems.
“There’s always a balance how much FP64 do you need versus FP16,” Malaya said. “The contention from AMD is we need to support a range of data types based on their needs. It’s not going to just be everyone needs FP64 and that’s enough for everybody. It won’t work.”
While AI generally is happy with lower precision capacity, there are exceptions. Malaya points to AI-based protein folding simulations, like AlphaFold and Openfold, which use FP32. Meanwhile, some traditional HPC workloads, like molecular dynamics, don’t need the double precision of FP64.
But at the end of the day, there is still plenty of unmet demand for FP64, he said.
“For HPC, we think that they’re going to still need a lot of FP64,” he said. “There’ll be some codes that are just totally memory bandwidth [constrained] and they don’t need that much. But there’s ones like computational chemistry codes and some of these others that actually have a lot of arithmetic intensity and they’ll use it.
“It’s definitely something that’s going to depend on the basket of apps you care about,” Malaya continued. “And the thing that we find though is that you can get it wrong. If you under provision compute, you’ll be compute-bound when you’d otherwise not be. And that can really limit your performance.”
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The post AMD Hints at Big FP64 Increases in MI430X GPU as Ozaki Underwhelms appeared first on HPCwire.
The announcement appeared to tacitly acknowledge a growing body of evidence that U.S. forces, not Iran, were responsible for the deadly attack.
Crisis in the Middle East, Ramadan in Gaza, the Milano Cortina Winter Paralympics and Paris fashion week – the past seven days as captured by the world’s leading photojournalists
Continue reading...
GINA GRUWELL
Staff Reporter
Iconic artists like Taylor Swift and Shania Twain go from country to pop and make history. In more recent years, there has been a shift in the media, where pop artists are adding a little twang to their traditional tunes.
Freshman cognitive science major Evangelia Papadopoulos feels that artists having a background in country and folk helps strengthen their music because of the powerful lyrics.
“Normal country songs are like folk songs — telling stories. I feel like now [Swift] is bringing that into her pop music,” Papadopoulos said.
One artist’s recent change from pop music to country has taken the world by storm. Beyoncé’s “Cowboy Carter” album created controversy after winning the most coveted award of the Grammys, Album of the Year.
Mia Hanson, a freshman communication major, adored the album.
“I think that her take on country [music] was different from what people would have expected, but I loved it and I think it can apply to a lot of different people,” Hanson said.
She also mentioned that Beyoncé has been doing country for a while. The singer has a history with the Country Music Awards (CMAs), as she was blacklisted from the show after performing with The Chicks, formerly known as The Dixie Chicks, in 2016.
She most recently won Album of the Year at the CMAs with “Cowboy Carter.”
“She had country [music] on ‘Lemonade’,” Hanson said. “‘Daddy Lessons’ is country tones like New Orleans music. She is from Houston, Texas. That is her roots. Winning it at the CMAs was a big deal.”
On the other hand, freshman sports health major Alanorah Kels had a different opinion, believing that Beyoncé’s win was “biased” because of her popularity.
“She just won because she’s Beyoncé,” Kels said.
Not only has Beyoncé made a change in her music, but several up-and-coming artists such as Sabrina Carpenter and Chappell Roan have made country tunes as well. With hits such as “Please, Please, Please” by Carpenter featuring Dolly Parton and “The Giver” by Roan, the pop radios have dialed into guitars and yeehaws.
Papadopoulos believes that pop artists should be branching out, while remaining true to themselves.
”When someone is an artist, they have their own sound, their own vibe,” Papadopoulos said. “And if they completely change that it’s unethical.”
Several pop artists have also gone out of their way to collaborate with country artists to expand their sounds and their fan bases. Country artist Morgan Wallen recently worked with Tate McRae on a single titled “What I Want.”
According to Billboard, the hit was one of Wallen’s 41 chart-placing titles. The single also reached the No. 1 slot the week of its debut.
Hanson stated that she has listened to the duet from McRae and Wallen exclusively on the radio.
“I think they were fine because I like Tate McRae, so I’ll listen to the song,” Hanson said. “But I don’t think I would listen if they weren’t collabing with those people.”
The debate of whether pop is turning into country or vice versa is one for the ages. The question of where music is going in the future is up in the air.
“I like going back in time,” Papadopolus said. “Do whatever you want to, but the future of music is that it is all out there. People [are taking] influence from the ‘70s and the ‘80s. They’re bringing back the funk.”
BrianFagioli shares a report from NERDS.xyz: Cloud storage company Backblaze has partnered with StorageReview to make a massive dataset containing 314 trillion digits of Pi publicly accessible. The digits were calculated by StorageReview in December 2025 after months of heavy computation designed to stress modern hardware. The dataset now hosted in the cloud weighs in at over 130TB, while the full working dataset used during the calculation reached about 2.1PB when intermediate checkpoints were included. The report notes that the Pi digits have been broken into roughly 200GB chunks to make it more practical for researchers or enthusiasts to download. Here's what StorageReview founder Brian Beeler said about the project: "Pushing [Pi] to 314 trillion digits was far more than a headline number. It was a sustained, months-long computational challenge that stressed every layer of modern infrastructure, from high core-count CPUs to massive high-speed storage, and it gave us valuable insight into how extreme, real-world workloads behave at scale. Making this dataset available in the Backblaze cloud takes the project a step further by opening access to one of the largest raw outputs ever generated in a single-system calculation. Hosting multi-petabyte files for the broader community is no small feat, and we appreciate Backblaze stepping up to ensure researchers, developers, and enthusiasts can explore and build on this record-setting achievement."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The U.S. military participated in a multi-national exercise in Alaska and Greenland in the austere conditions that officials say military forces need to train in more regularly for the future.
Trade body attends meeting with Rachel Reeves, hours after saying it was pulling out over suggestions of price gouging
• Watchdog puts UK fuel retailers ‘on notice’ over profiteering from Iran war
The trade body for the UK’s petrol station industry has got into a row with the government after claiming the “inflammatory language” used by ministers to describe rising pump prices may have incited abuse against forecourt staff.
The Petrol Retailers Association (PRA) said ministers had for several days suggested that forecourts might be “price gouging” and “ripping off” motorists as global oil markets have surged in response to the war in Iran.
Continue reading...Bolivian interior ministry says Sebastián Marset is being extradited to US, where he’s wanted for money laundering
Sebastián Marset, an alleged Uruguayan drug trafficker and one of South America’s most wanted criminals, has been arrested in Bolivia.
Marset, 34, is accused of trafficking tonnes of cocaine from South America to Europe, and also of having ordered the murder of a Paraguayan prosecutor who was shot dead as he honeymooned on a Colombian beach in 2022.
Continue reading...German chancellor says decision is wrong and that pressure on Putin over Ukraine war should be increased
European countries have pushed back against Donald Trump’s decision to ease some US sanctions on Russian oil amid Iran’s blockade of the strait of Hormuz, insisting the international community should maintain pressure on Moscow over its war against Ukraine.
The UK has joined Germany, France and Norway in rejecting the move, with the foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, decrying what she said was Russia and Iran’s attempt to “hijack the global economy”.
Continue reading...Exclusive: Chancellor plans help for vulnerable and low-income customers due to conflict in Middle East
Rachel Reeves will set out extra support next week for households across the UK facing a surge in the cost of heating oil due to the conflict in the Middle East.
The chancellor is expected to set out plans to assist those on low incomes or with other vulnerabilities, particularly in rural areas. The help will be delivered in England via councils using the new crisis and resilience fund.
Continue reading...Oscar, Ana and their children fled violence for safety in the US. Now Oscar, afraid and alone, is back in Honduras – ‘at the mercy of God and his will’
As soon as Oscar’s deportation flight landed at the La Lima airport in Honduras, he put on his baseball cap. On the airport shuttle toward the terminal, he pulled his cap even lower – trying to obscure his face at various police checkpoints.
His parents picked him up in a car, and drove him to a lodging they had arranged for him – miles away from his family home. He has hardly stepped outside since. “Because I can’t trust anyone – not the authorities, not the government, not a police officer,” he said. He has visited his mother a handful of times since the US deported him three weeks ago, and only under the cover of night. “They will kill anyone here. There is death everywhere.”
Continue reading...
Why Should Delaware Care?
Spotlight Delaware’s Breaking Bread Tour, launched this year, gives residents a chance to speak directly about issues affecting their communities. By bringing neighbors together around the same table, the discussion allows residents to highlight concerns that might not always appear in local government meetings or policy debates.
On Monday evening, more than 75 New Castle County residents gathered in the basement of a Wilmington church to eat a meal and discuss what they thought were the most pressing challenges for their community.
Their answers spanned a range of recent headline-grabbing issues, including affordable housing and homelessness; education funding; civic engagement and transparency in government; new federal policies under the Trump administration; and tax increases following Delaware’s recent property reassessment.
The event, hosted by Spotlight Delaware as part of its “Breaking Bread” tour, occurred at the Jefferson Street Center, located within Hanover Church building in Wilmington’s Baynard Village neighborhood.
The attendees shared a meal of spaghetti and meatballs while chatting in small groups. Each group was then asked to identify the issues that generated the most discussion at their tables.
For a group that included Wilmington resident Thea Lopez, the salient issues up for discussion stemmed from national actions by the Trump administration. She later told Spotlight Delaware that people in the state should break out of their different groups to address those themes.
“We all understand that there are all these different issues going around, but yet we still work in silos,” Lopez said.

During the dinner, the structure around Delaware’s schooling system was also discussed. One high school senior said frequent teacher turnover, a lack of challenging Advanced Placement courses and limited opportunities for student input negatively affects their learning environments.
Homelessness and the need for better coordination of services was another major topic. Some participants said that while churches and nonprofits regularly provide meals and shelter for the unhoused, there is no centralized system coordinating those efforts in Wilmington.
In the past, Wilmington officials have asserted that creating homeless shelters is a job for the state government, stating that the city’s main interventions are “law enforcement-based.”
Participants also raised concerns about transportation reliability, particularly changing bus routes that make it harder for residents to get to work, as well as challenges facing small businesses in areas such as Wilmington’s Hilltop where parking can limit access for customers.
The Breaking Bread tour aims to encourage community dialogue and identify the issues that matter most to residents. Spotlight Delaware will host additional Breaking Bread events in Kent and Sussex counties later this year.
The post At Wilmington dinner, residents share concerns about housing, schools and government transparency appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Double standards in Europe and elsewhere are laid bare by the muted response to US and Israeli aggression and the killing of civilians
When Russia launched its full scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the international condemnation from Europe and elsewhere was loud and clear. Leaders did not expect legal threats to shift Vladimir Putin or end war crimes by his troops. But they understood the importance of naming what had happened as an illegal act of aggression, and of seeking to hold those responsible accountable.
The same countries have been strikingly muted since the US and Israel launched their war on Iran. This too was an act of aggression. Spain’s Pedro Sánchez has been lonely in his forthright condemnation, though Norway and others also pointed to the breach of international law. Meanwhile, Australia’s prime minister, Anthony Albanese, offered unreserved support and Germany’s chancellor, Friedrich Merz, declared that it was “not the moment to lecture our partners and allies”.
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...Notorious Latin American narco trafficker Sebastian Marset, who eluded police for years, was handed over to U.S. authorities after his arrest Friday in Bolivia.
Meta has delayed the release of its next major AI model after internal tests showed it lagging behind competing systems from Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic. The New York Times reports: The model, code-named Avocado, outperformed Meta's previous A.I. model and did better than Google's Gemini 2.5 model from March, two of the people said. But it has not performed as strongly as Gemini 3.0 from November, they said. As a result, Meta has delayed Avocado's release to at least May from this month, the people said. They added that the leaders of Meta's A.I. division had instead discussed temporarily licensing Gemini to power the company's A.I. products, though no decisions have been reached. [...] It takes time to improve A.I. models, and Meta can still catch up to rivals, A.I. experts said. But a longer timeline has set in at the company, with Mr. Zuckerberg tempering expectations for Avocado in the past few months. "I expect our first models will be good, but more importantly will show the rapid trajectory we're on," he said on a call with investors in January. A Meta spokesperson said in a statement: "As we've said publicly, our next model will be good but, more importantly, show the rapid trajectory we're on, and then we'll steadily push the frontier over the course of the year as we continue to release new models. We're excited for people to see what we've been cooking very soon."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
These debt relief companies could help you slash your debt, but there are some things to know before signing up.
White House contends with reality of shoddy preparations for war and unclear conditions for victory
As US and Israeli jets descended to deliver the opening salvos of the war in Iran, Donald Trump’s back-of-the-envelope plan for regime change in Tehran was about to run into the reality of the largest US intervention in the Middle East since the start of the Iraq war in 2003.
That reality came quickly.
Continue reading...Trump has warned that Cuba is next in line after Venezuela and Iran, saying that the Havana regime is in its “last moments of life.”
The wrong gold IRA company can cost you more than you bargained for, so make sure you know what to look for.
Saturday quiz | Avoiding AI | Size matters
It was lovely to read Sabrina Olson’s letter (6 March) on the quiz as it has been a family ritual for us for years. It kept us all connected through our children’s time at university, then moving into their own homes, and in some cases working abroad. It kept us going through the enforced separation of Covid and became a rite of passage for any new partners who joined our family group, especially as our winner is expected to do a “creative” dance of victory. Two lovely daughters-in-law are now regular quizzers.
Angela Barker
Rottingdean, East Sussex
• I have found that chatbots are easily circumvented when, asking to state the problem, I write or spout gibberish (The AI assistant was offering me any help I needed. All I wanted was a living, breathing human, 11 March). It seems to be the fastest way to be put in contact with a human being.
Dr Peter Glanvill
Chard, Somerset
Two weeks in, it’s increasingly clear that the US-led war has taken every problem it aimed to solve – and made it worse
It’s not easy, but let’s try to look at this war in the best, most charitable light. Let’s try to see the US-Israel conflict with Iran as its prosecutors and advocates would want us to see it.
They would say that it has two aims, both legitimate. The first is to weaken if not remove a regime that has done terrible evil to its own people. Who could mourn the supreme leader of a government that, according to one report, gunned down 30,000 of its citizens on the streets in just two days on 8 and 9 January? Listen to those Iranians who long ago reached the glum conclusion that the only way they could be rid of their tormentors was through external military action. As one exiled Iranian put it to me this week: “The Iranian people have been begging the world for help for so many years. They tried voting for change in 2009; they were killed. They tried protesting in 2019, 2022 and this year; they were massacred in the tens of thousands … They were out of all other options.”
Jonathan Freedland is a Guardian columnist
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...The Israeli government is blocking medical workers from entering or leaving Gaza, twice canceling the departure of seven U.S.-based physicians on a medical mission there, according to a group of doctors in Gaza who spoke to The Intercept.
The temporary suspension of travel is the latest in a crushing set of restrictions that Israel has used to sever Gaza’s contact with the outside world, compounding food, fuel, and medical care shortages for a population subjected to more than two years of genocide. Large backlogs of patients in Gaza need specialized treatments and surgeries, so volunteer medical specialists come with much-needed supplies to relieve some of the demand.
“When you do something like this, it throws all of that to the wayside and we struggle with our ability to treat those patients,” said Dr. Thaer Ahmad, a Chicago-based physician who has previously volunteered in Gaza. “This continues to have really profound implications on Gaza’s most vulnerable people.”
Ahmad, who volunteered in early 2024 at Nasser and Al-Aqsa hospitals, has witnessed similar restrictions at other moments of high tension — past Israeli offensives against Iran, the collapse of past ceasefire deals, or the Israeli military’s siege of Gaza City last September. He has been denied entry into Gaza by the Israeli government four times since his medical mission, including in May 2024, when he and other doctors were turned away in Egypt as the Israeli military took over the Rafah border.
The restrictions in Gaza are set to be lifted next Tuesday, according to messages United Nations aid coordinators sent Wednesday announcing the blockades to dozens of NGOs, two of which confirmed to The Intercept the border closures were affecting their medical teams. Physicians who remain trapped inside the territory have cast doubt on whether the dates will be honored given the multiple postponements.
“There’s uncertainty around when we’re going to leave, are we going to leave? Are they going to try to push the dates even further?” said Dr. Salman Khan, an infectious diseases physician at Columbia University, who is among the trapped doctors.
Khan and six other American doctors were scheduled to return to the U.S. on March 10 following a two-week medical mission at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis. The group has been blocked twice from leaving the territory, with Israel’s border security officials citing a “security assessment” without further explanation. The physicians also expressed frustration with the World Health Organization, noting that the international body was partly responsible for coordinating the doctors’ safe passage.
Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories, or COGAT, the Israeli military unit that controls the borders between Palestine and Israel, confirmed it had closed crossings into Gaza “due to the ongoing missile threat” and said the restrictions are temporary and meant to protect people’s safety. It refuted claims that it was blocking doctors from leaving Gaza to harm its civilian population.
The World Health Organization did not immediately respond to The Intercept’s request for comment.
Since the start of Israel’s genocidal campaign in Gaza, the military has weaponized blockades, preventing aid from entering the Strip, including food and medical supplies. In addition to systematically killing and imprisoning aid and medical workers throughout the war, the Israeli government has also blocked the movement of international medical missions, further straining an already decimated economy and health care system. Palestinians in the West Bank have also seen similar wartime blockades, including the lockdown of entire cities.
Despite the October deal between Israel and Hamas, the Israeli government has continued to impose limits on food and medical supplies from entering the Strip. In February, the government reopened its Rafah border crossing into Egypt, allowing some Palestinians to seek medical care outside of Gaza.
Once the U.S. and Israel began their war on Iran, the Israeli government once again shut all aid crossings into Gaza. Food has been allowed through a single border entry point — the Kerem Shalom crossing — but the amount of aid allowed in is well below what is needed, according to the United Nations. The Israeli government had already barred some NGOs earlier this year, such as Doctors Without Borders, from accessing Gaza after the organization refused the government’s new requirements of handing over lists of Palestinian employees due to concerns the government would target the workers.
Dr. Mimi Syed, an emergency room physician based in Olympia, Washington, also knows these restrictions firsthand. In August 2025, she was prevented from entering Gaza while waiting for approval in Jordan for her third medical aid trip. During her previous medical trips to the Strip, she witnessed entire convoys of international doctors who were barred from leaving Gaza.
The unpredictable and indefinite nature of the Israeli government’s restrictions hamper future medical missions, Syed said.
“Healthcare workers like myself have jobs in the US that are full-time and we have to get back to our jobs/families,” Syed told The Intercept. “It creates another form of logistical difficulties and prevents and discourages many of us from returning or even attempting to go in.”
The Palestinian American Medical Association, which is facilitating Khan’s trip to Gaza, and Humanity Auxilium, a Texas-based NGO that also organizes medical missions, told The Intercept the recent border closures have hurt their ability to move medical supplies and teams in and out of the territory.
“It really puts us in a limbo in figuring out when to deploy surgeons who cannot take off for weeks,” said Faiza Hussain, executive director of Humanity Auxilium.
Khan, who remains inside Gaza, said he’s had to cancel his patients’ appointments at Columbia’s Irving Medical Center in New York due to the delays.
“I was supposed to be back at work at my hospital today,” Khan said. “This is impacting people on the other side of the world.”
Khan added that some of his colleagues were anxious to return to their children. One of them was running low on their personal medications, having only packed enough for two weeks. The group of doctors includes anesthesiologists Ashraf Abou El-Ezz of Indiana and Anas Rahim of Texas, neonatologist Ahmed Faisal Saleem of Arizona, emergency medicine physician Aizad Dasti of Maryland, and vascular surgeon Asad Choudhry of New Jersey. One other physician did not wish to disclose their identity. They are continuing their volunteer work at Nasser Hospital as they wait out the blockade.
Although Israel’s attacks on Gaza have slowed since the start of the war on Iran, the Israeli military continues to launch strikes in the territory, in violation of the so-called ceasefire deal. In the first week of Khan’s medical mission, he recalled receiving trauma patients from an Israeli bombing on an encampment one mile from Nasser Hospital. A four-year-old girl died at the hospital from her wounds, he said.
After urging from Khan and advocates, the U.S. State Department had arranged flights for the doctors from Tel Aviv’s airport on Friday, Khan said, but has yet to clear a way for them to leave Gaza to make the flight.
The State Department did not respond to requests for comment.
Update: March 13, 2026, 3:15 p.m. ET
This story has been updated to include the names of more doctors stranded in Gaza.
The post Israel’s Deadly Blockade Traps 7 U.S. Doctors in Gaza appeared first on The Intercept.
Trio captured relaxing around a wooden table in photo believed to have been taken on Martha’s Vineyard
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and Peter Mandelson have been pictured in bathrobes alongside Jeffrey Epstein, in the first known photograph of them together.
The trio were captured relaxing outside at a wooden table with mugs decorated with the American flag in the newly unearthed photograph believed to have been taken on Martha’s Vineyard, an island off Cape Cod in Massachusetts that is favoured by the wealthy.
Continue reading...Here's what to know if you pay to remove ads on Prime Video.
Avocado, code name of Meta's next-generation foundational AI model, might not be released until May.
On stage at SXSW, Spotify Co-CEO Gustav Söderström announced a new feature that lets you shape your own Taste Profile.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Pitchfork: Earlier this week, the U.S. Department of Justice and Live Nation reached a settlement in the DOJ's antitrust lawsuit against the concert giant. During the trial, which lasted only a week, representatives for Live Nation had moved to exclude a collection of Slack direct messages from 2022 between two of the company's regional directors from the evidence presented to the jury. Bloomberg and a number of other publications have, as of today (March 12), successfully petitioned New York federal judge Arun Subramanian to release the chats. The conversations are between Ben Baker, now head of ticketing for Venue Nation, and Jeff Weinhold, currently a senior director in the ticketing department. Baker and Weinhold joke about overcharging and price-gouging fans -- "Robbing them blind, baby," Baker brags in one exchange pertaining to a Kid Rock show in Tampa Bay -- as well as being able to raise prices on ancillary services such as parking seemingly at will. "These people are so stupid," Baker writes. "I almost feel bad taking advantage of them BAHAHAHAHAHA." Live Nation described the messages as "off-the-cuff banter, not policy, decision-making, or facts of consequence." In a statement the company has since added: "The Slack exchange from one junior staffer to a friend absolutely doesn't reflect our values or how we operate."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Temple Israel Rabbi Josh Bennett and staff member Cassi Cohen say their security training prepared them to respond quickly when a man rammed a vehicle into their synagogue.
Mayor says he will encourage Met to scale down his official vehicle alongside plans for new charges for big cars
The London mayor, Sadiq Khan, has said he would be encouraging the Met to abandon his armoured car in favour of a smaller vehicle as he signalled a clampdown on driving SUVs in London.
Khan and Transport for London are considering options including additional charges on outsize vehicles to tackle the increasing numbers of SUVs on London’s roads, primarily to address road safety but also to address concerns about parking and congestion.
Continue reading...The prime minister issues the statement after a fuel trade body earlier withdrew from a meeting with the chancellor today
Even before Donald Trump’s Operation Epic Fury on Iran unleashed higher oil prices, threatening the outlook for growth and inflation, the UK economy was flatlining.
That’s the bleak message in the latest data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS), which showed zero GDP growth in January.
Continue reading...The move, which lowers fees to 25%, is a breakthrough for Chinese developers Tencent and ByteDance
Apple announced late on Thursday it would lower the commission fees collected in its App Store in mainland China. The move follows pressure from regulators in the tech company’s second-largest market, as well as global scrutiny of its payment requirements.
Fees for in-app purchases and paid transactions will be lowered to 25% from 30% starting on Sunday, Apple said in a statement on its blog for developers.
Continue reading...US defense head is eager to frame operation as a success – and slam journalists for not portraying it in a positive light
Pete Hegseth on Friday again claimed the US military campaign against Iran has been an unprecedented success, using a Pentagon press conference to accuse journalists of downplaying Washington’s supposed gains on the battlefield.
Speaking alongside the chair of the joint chiefs of staff, the US defense secretary claimed Iran had been left without a functioning air force, navy or missile defense network after 13 days of strikes, and said the combined US-Israeli air campaign had hit more than 15,000 targets since the war began.
Continue reading...Alireza Askari, 42, sentenced for killing Paria Veisi after she left him, and aunt Maryam Delavary jailed for helping bury her
A man has been jailed for at least 26 years for the “cold-blooded murder” of his ex-wife and the burying of her body in his garden.
Alireza Askari, 42, admitted killing Paria Veisi, 37, at the property they previously shared in Penylan, Cardiff, in April last year.
Continue reading...Every voter would be affected by the Save America act, as people would face more barriers to voting: ‘It’s a recipe for disaster’
Donald Trump has vowed that he will not sign any other legislation until Republicans’ massive voting bill, the Save America act, is passed. The bill would upend voting for all Americans in the middle of a federal midterm election year and create costly, chaotic changes for elections workers.
The Senate is set to consider the legislation next week, though Senate leaders say they don’t have the votes to get over the filibuster hurdle, essentially dooming the bill for failure.
Continue reading...Negotiations aimed to ‘find solutions to the bilateral differences’ between the countries, Miguel Díaz-Canel said
Cuban officials have held talks with the US government, the country’s president, Miguel Díaz-Canel, confirmed on Friday, amid growing pain inflicted by a punishing US fuel blockade and frequent power failures.
“These talks have been aimed at finding solutions through dialogue to the bilateral differences we have between the two nations,” Díaz-Canel said in a prerecorded statement to senior Communist officials.
Continue reading...Apple will cut its App Store commission in China from 30% to 25% starting March 15, with small-business and mini-app rates dropping from 15% to 12%. AppleInsider reports: Chinese regulators have been back and forth with Apple in recent years over the 30% App Store commission. The latest publicly known pressure occurred after President Trump slammed the country with seemingly random and outrageous tariffs in 2025. While nothing much else has happened in the public eye in the year since, Apple has announced a new commission rate via its developer blog. The new rates go into effect on March 15. The current standard 30% rate is dropping to 25% for in-app purchases and paid app transactions. The Small Business Program and Mini Apps Partner Program will see rates drop from 15% to 12%. That lower rate applies to auto-renewals of in-app purchase subscriptions after the first year. Mini Apps are for transactions found in super apps like those popularized in China. [...] Developers will need to sign the updated terms, but the new rates are applied automatically. It is unclear if these new changes will prevent regulatory action from China.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Candidates in both parties – but mostly Republicans – are seeing cash infusions after merely indicating support
With the first primaries of the US midterm elections now under way, the cryptocurrency industry is injecting millions of dollars into congressional races across the country, with particular emphasis on Illinois, which has attracted the bulk of the campaign financing. Arkansas, Alabama and Texas have also drawn the industry’s donations.
Crypto Pacs, firms and investors have already spent $32m supporting industry-friendly candidates and opposing its detractors, according to Federal Election Commission data, building on the industry’s expansive spending in the 2024 presidential election.
Continue reading...It's a month for every type of gamer, with titles including Dredge Plus, Unpacking Plus and My Very Hungry Caterpillar Plus becoming available.
Campaigners welcome Keir Starmer’s backing of ‘Philomena’s law’ to protect payments for those who accept compensation
Survivors of Ireland’s mother and baby homes can continue to receive benefits in the UK after Downing Street agreed to protect payments.
Keir Starmer bowed to pressure from campaigners to back a bill known as Philomena’s law, which would ringfence survivors’ benefits if they accepted compensation from Dublin.
Continue reading...Number of American troops killed in war on Iran after incident in western desert now stands at 13
All six crew members onboard a US military aircraft that crashed in western Iraq were killed, the US military has said.
The KC-135 military refuelling plane crashed in western Iraq on Thursday, in an incident the military said involved another aircraft but was not the result of hostile or friendly fire.
Continue reading...
It was a Saturday in February, and I was checking my email inbox on my phone for no particular reason, during a conference. A Mother Jones reporter had written a note, so I opened it.
It’s not so unusual for me to receive press inquiries — I am a feminist writer who touches on hot-button issues — but this particular email I never could have predicted. It was about an infamous federal case against people arrested in connection to a protest against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Last July 4, a group of people had gathered for a demonstration against ICE’s Prairieland Detention Facility in Alvarado, Texas. It was a noise demo during which a police officer was shot. Some 18 people were arrested and charged for the protest.
Prosecutors had introduced my analysis of feminism’s relationship to horror cinema as “evidence of ideologically driven intent.”
The government’s indictment against the Prairieland protesters stood as a chilling development in President Donald Trump’s war on dissent: It was the first time that terrorism-related charges had been brought against people for allegedly being part of an “antifa cell.”
Did I have any thoughts, the Mother Jones reporter wanted to know, on the prosecution using an essay by me in a terrorism trial?
Excuse me?
The essay in question: a film review I wrote in 2019 about the horror movies “Hereditary” and “Midsommar.”
I blinked twice, rubbed my eyes, and then began digging around on the internet to understand.
To my astonishment, prosecutors had introduced my seven-year-old analysis of feminism’s relationship to horror cinema as “evidence of ideologically driven intent” the previous day.
Although I published the piece in “Commune” magazine, the review had been printed in zine format — and that was what authorities seized from the Dallas home of one of the defendants, Daniel Sanchez Estrada, last summer.
The appearance of my review in the trial is a brazen attempt at conjuring “guilt by literature” — just one of the tactics prosecutors have used to criminalize speech and use First Amendment-protected speech as a legal weapon against the Trump administration’s political enemies.
Nobody, by the way, is suggesting that Estrada shot or conspired to shoot the officer. He stands accused of two crimes: attempting to conceal documents “by transporting a box containing numerous Antifa materials” and conspiracy to conceal those zines. He faces up to 20 years in prison.
Estrada isn’t himself facing terror charges, but he being tarred with the label by his association with this so-called “antifa cell.” What Estrada’s case most acutely represents is the way the President Donald Trump conflates antifa and terrorism to do things like criminalize the transportation of zines — in other words, simple First Amendment protected activity.
Trump pulled this off by deeming antifa a “major terrorist organization” — a legal designation that doesn’t even exist for domestic groups — ignoring the fact that antifa is an orientation, not a group.
The feds, as Natasha Lennard notes, tend to try to evidence such charges by collecting circumstantial evidence of individual crimes alleged to have taken place “in the context of” legal protest activity — even when there is no direct link between those charged and the alleged crimes.
The charge may or may not stick — often they don’t — but the lawfare from above serves a terrorizing end in itself, she explains, since “the lengthy prosecutions hamper protest movements and chill dissent.”
I need to ask: Why my review? And the truth is I don’t really have a great answer.
There is a rich irony here: My little horror movie review was introduced to prove a conception of antifa that — like many of the monsters we scream at in horror flicks — isn’t quite real.
The title of my essay — which is to say, of the zine seized from the accused’s house in Dallas — is “The Satanic Death-Cult Is Real.” It refers to the fictional demon-worshipping ceremony in the final scene of “Hereditary” as well as, at the same time, to the all-too-real, madness-inducing logic of the private nuclear household.
From my ego’s standpoint, it’s painful to assume that anyone is refusing to read beyond my titles before reacting. (It’s a tragically common occurrence: I’m the author, after all, of books about the communization of care with titles like “Full Surrogacy Now” and “Abolish the Family.”)
It seems that the FBI didn’t read beyond the cover of what it calls my “booklet.”
It seems, though, that the FBI didn’t read beyond the cover of what it calls my “booklet.” That was the description of my review-in-zine-form when it appeared in an itemized receipt for seized property, alongside cellphones, computers, weapons, and other bits of technology — for the sole reason that it is willing to throw anything, no matter how absurd, at anti-ICE activists to paint them as vile terrorists.
When the Mother Jones reporter messaged, I replied immediately, from my phone, in a state of agitation. It ought to be surprising, I pointed out, that possession of a printout of some film criticism could be brandished as evidence of a treasonous conspiracy against the United States government, yet — in 2026 — it is not.
“Perhaps,” indeed, I wrote, “there is an element of truth in the state’s preposterous linking of the mere implication of having read antifascist culture writing about the private nuclear family in [director] Ari Aster’s oeuvre with the alleged crime of belonging to a cell of an organization — antifa — that, as we all know, doesn’t even exist.”
Thankfully, however, organized antifascism does exist. I proudly accept the notion that any of my writings have helped in any small way to stoke the desire to practice antifascism, courageously and practically, as those blocking and protesting the brutality of American stormtroopers are doing all over the world.
If nothing else, I’m grateful that the FBI seized my book review and that prosecutors hauled it out in this ridiculous trial, because it gave me the opportunity to express my full solidarity with the Prairieland defendants.
The post I Wrote a Movie Review. Cops Took It From a Protester’s Home to Make the Case That He’s a Terrorist. appeared first on The Intercept.
Joey Pete of Sunchild First Nation said king seemed ‘committed to learning’ after meeting Indigenous leaders
King Charles has expressed concern over a simmering separatist movement in western Canada, according to Indigenous leaders who met the head of state at Buckingham Palace.
Members of the Confederacy of Treaty Six First Nations travelled to London from their territories in the provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan to raise the alarm over the secessionist movement, arguing that it ignores key agreements signed between First Nations and the crown nearly 150 years ago.
Continue reading...Researchers use TACC’s Stampede3 supercomputer to design proteins that self-assemble under extreme conditions
March 13, 2026 — Proteins are the building blocks of life. These biomolecules comprise chains of amino acids that fold into precise shapes to perform specific jobs in nature. But these elegant structures form only under narrow pH and temperature conditions, a property dictated by billions of years of evolution that has limited efforts to develop synthetic, protein-based advanced materials.

Tianren Zhang, Yao Tang and Darrin Pochan of the University of Delaware developed protein-based building blocks, called bundlemers, for advanced materials. The computer screen shows a visualization of two bundlemers stacked end-to-end. Molecular simulations on TACC’s Stampede3 helped provide an atomically resolved understanding of bundlemer structures, fluctuations, and intermolecular interactions. Credit: Kathy F. Atkinson/University of Delaware.
Now, researchers led by the University of Delaware’s Darrin Pochan have designed small protein fragments, or peptides, that can assemble themselves into well-organized structures across an unusually wide range of conditions and scales. The key lies in how positive and negative charges are carefully arranged on the peptides, giving them instructions for how to stick together in extreme conditions. The findings are published in Science.
Protein-based building blocks offer a promising, sustainable platform for materials development. They can potentially be produced biologically, degrade into environmentally compatible components and are well-suited for biomedical applications.
“This work is fundamental research that opens the door to potentially beautiful technology,” said Pochan, a Distinguished Professor of Materials Science at UD’s College of Engineering. “Sustained federal, industrial and university investment in this kind of basic science is essential for real innovation in the long run.”
Pochan’s laboratory focuses on designing molecular building blocks that assemble into novel materials. His advances were recently recognized with his designation as a 2026 Materials Research Society (MRS) Fellow.
Extreme Stability Unlocks New Possibilities
A team led by Pochan, Ph.D. candidate Yao Tang and postdoctoral researcher Tianren Zhang developed computationally designed peptides that come together to form particles they call “bundlemers.”
Consisting of four peptides, each bundlemer is shaped like a tiny barrel, with a carefully arranged pattern of positive and negative charges on its surface. That precise pattern makes the bundlemers extremely stable over the entire pH range, from the strongest acids to the strongest bases. At very low or very high pH, the particles form liquid crystals, while at neutral pH, they assemble into lattice-like clusters.
“Being so stable across the entire pH range is really unique and powerful,” Pochan said. This stability, combined with the ability to switch between different ordered states, paves the way toward new kinds of advanced materials, he explained.
For example, Kevlar, the material used in bulletproof vests, is made by processing liquid crystal polymers into an extremely strong solid. By harnessing the strength and adaptability of bundlemers, researchers may be able to create similar materials with precisely designed properties.
Supercomputing Powers Discovery
Molecular simulations of bundlemers and assemblies of bundlemers in solvated environments are essential for providing an atomically resolved understanding of their structures, fluctuations, and intermolecular interactions.
“TACC’s Stampede3 supercomputer resources are essential for these simulations,” said study co-author Jeffery Saven of the University of Pennsylvania. “The methods involved with this project make use of Stampede3’s versatile capabilities,” Saven added. “In addition to molecular simulations, the resource enables the computational modeling of lattices. High memory nodes facilitate the computational design of bundlemer sequences.”
The researchers were awarded supercomputer allocations on Stampede3 by the U.S. National Science Foundation-funded Advanced Cyberinfrastructure Coordination Ecosystem: Services & Support (ACCESS) program, which provides support for thousands of U.S. scientists.
“By streamlining access to leading-edge computational resources, the NSF ACCESS program empowers researchers to focus on the fundamental scientific questions that computational science can help answer,” Saven said.
Programming Assembly Through Surface Design
“The surface patterning of chemistry is what’s so important about these building blocks,” Pochan noted. “This is something we’re going to explore for the next decade: how we can use that patterning to give these particles very specific behavior.”
In this case, the researchers designed surface charge patterns that allow the peptide particles to assemble into ordered structures across the entire pH range. Even small changes to this surface chemistry can lead to large changes in behavior, shifting how the bundlemers interact with each other and what kinds of structures they form.
This level of molecular precision is common in biology but rare in materials science. Changing a single amino acid on the surface of a protein can completely alter its structure and function. In contrast, conventional soft materials, such as plastics, are inherently disordered, making it difficult to leverage surface chemistry to control their properties.
“Combining tools from biology with materials science allows us to achieve an extraordinary degree of precision,” Pochan said. “Because we have exact control over the surface display of our bundlemers, we can explore in-depth how to direct their assembly into ordered materials.”
From Fundamental Discovery to Real-World Impact
For the current study, Pochan’s team built the bundlemers in the lab using standard chemical synthesis techniques. But because they are protein-based materials, they potentially could be produced inexpensively and at large scale using biological methods.
To explore paths toward scalable production, Pochan is collaborating with Pierre Rouviere, former Dupont scientist and entrepreneur with experience in engineering bacteria to produce protein and peptides for large-scale industrial applications. The collaboration is supported by a Delaware Bioscience Center for Advanced Technology grant for Entrepreneurial Proof of Concept.
Pochan also plans to launch his own startup on UD’s STAR Campus, further embedding this work within Delaware’s growing innovation ecosystem and extending insights that emerged from fundamental research into new directions.
Other UD co-authors of the paper include graduate student Jacob Schwartz and professor Christopher J. Kloxin. Postdoctoral researcher Dai-Bei Yang and professor Jeffery G. Saven, both of the University of Pennsylvania, are also co-authors. Major sources of support include the National Institute of Standards and Technology, part of the U.S. Department of Commerce, and the National Science Foundation through UD’s Materials Research Science and Engineering Center. UD central facilities and their scientific staff were also critical in performing the research. These include the Keck Center for Advanced Microscopy and Microanalysis, the Advanced Materials Characterization Lab, the Peptide and Protein Materials Center and the Delaware Biotechnology Institute.
The science story featured here was enabled by the U.S. National Science Foundation’s ACCESS program, which is supported by National Science Foundation grants #2138259, #2138286, #2138307, #2137603, and #2138296.
Adapted from a press release by Hillary Hoffman, University of Delaware.
Source: Jorge Salazar, TACC
The post TACC: Designing Protein Building Blocks for Advanced Materials appeared first on HPCwire.
SANTA CLARA, Calif., March 13, 2026 — Marvell Technology, Inc., a leader in data infrastructure semiconductor solutions, has announced a major expansion of its 1.6T optical DSP platform portfolio, advancing the industry’s transition from 800G into 1.6T next-generation AI data center connectivity.
Marvell has a multi-generational history of industry firsts. The company was the first to introduce 200G/lane 1.6T DSPs in 5nm with Marvell Nova in 2023, followed by the 3nm 1.6T Ara platform in 2024, which increased performance and reduced the power envelope as the demand for 1.6T modules expanded in 2025. Now shipping in mass volume to global customers, Ara is enabling the world’s hyperscalers and cloud providers to deploy 1.6T pluggable connectivity for AI data centers.
Today, Marvell is introducing the next wave of its 3nm 1.6T optical DSP platform portfolio, increasing performance per watt by optimizing separately for each high-volume use case and introducing new capabilities, including:
As AI infrastructure scales exponentially, connectivity has become the primary bottleneck of the modern data center, and the solution requires more than a “one-size-fits-all” approach. New, dedicated semiconductor interconnect solutions are required to address the increasing performance, power, design, security and application-specific challenges. With these new 1.6T offerings and an unmatched breadth and depth of expertise—and offering a full connectivity stack including industry-first DSPs, advanced SerDes, switching, interconnects, drivers and TIAs, and the Marvell RELIANT interconnect telemetry platform—Marvell is uniquely positioned to address this demand.
“Marvell pioneered PAM DSP technology, and we continue to lead with advanced SerDes and production-proven 800G platforms. We are now extending that multi-generational product leadership into the 1.6T era,” said Xi Wang, senior vice president and general manager, Connectivity Business Unit at Marvell. “With these new products, Marvell will deliver the performance, power efficiency and manufacturing capacity required to keep up with the explosive growth of next-generation AI data centers.”
“The performance of today’s data centers—powered by hundreds of thousands of GPUs, XPUs and other advanced compute engines—depends on the interconnect technologies that link them together,” said Vladimir Kozlov, founder and CEO at LightCounting. “Marvell DSP products are essential to many high-speed links in modern data center infrastructure, enabling compute resources to operate at peak performance and efficiency. The company’s expanded 1.6T DSP portfolio ensures that data centers can fully maximize their compute investments well into the future.”
Broadest End-to-End Connectivity Portfolio
Marvell delivers the industry’s most comprehensive portfolio of connectivity platform solutions for scale-up, scale-out and scale-across AI infrastructure, with a vast global installed base across hyperscale and cloud deployments and millions of high-speed lanes deployed worldwide.
The Marvell portfolio spans the full data center connectivity stack, including DSPs, SerDes, switching, interconnects, drivers and TIAs to support all systems, devices, links and nodes across the network. The new offerings announced today extend the company’s existing 1.6T portfolio, which includes Marvell Ara, Alaska and Nova DSPs, its Ethernet PHY platform, the Silicon Photonics Light Engine and the LPO TIA and laser driver chipset.
Marvell also provides supporting system-level technologies such as the Marvell RELIANT interconnect telemetry platform, which helps customers reduce operational complexity and improve network reliability and performance.
Last week, Marvell announced the expansion of its multi-generational 1.6T ZR/ZR+ and coherent DSP technology portfolio, underscoring the company’s commitment to continually deliver the latest scale-up, scale-out and scale-across technologies to drive AI innovation.
Availability
Marvell Ara X, Ara T, Petra and Aquila M DSPs are sampling to customers beginning in Q1 2026.
Marvell will showcase its end-to-end connectivity portfolio at OFC 2026, March 15–19, at the Los Angeles Convention Center in Los Angeles, California. Visit the Marvell booth #1600 to learn how the company is driving the next generation of data center and AI infrastructure.
About Marvell
To deliver the data infrastructure technology that connects the world, we’re building solutions on the most powerful foundation: our partnerships with our customers. Trusted by the world’s leading technology companies for over 30 years, we move, store, process and secure the world’s data with semiconductor solutions designed for our customers’ current needs and future ambitions. Through a process of deep collaboration and transparency, we’re ultimately changing the way tomorrow’s enterprise, cloud and carrier architectures transform—for the better.
Source: Marvell
The post Marvell Ushers in the 1.6T Era with Expanded Optical DSP Platform Portfolio appeared first on HPCwire.
LEMONT, Ill., March 13, 2026 — A research team led by the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory developed an innovative AI “adviser” that monitors and optimizes the performance of machine learning algorithms as autonomous experiments progress, enabling faster discovery of advanced electronic materials.
The researchers applied the adviser to Polybot, Argonne’s AI-guided robotic laboratory, to accelerate the investigation of electronic materials called mixed ion-electron conducting polymers (MIECPs), materials promising for wearable electronics and energy storage. Polybot is in the Center for Nanoscale Materials, a DOE Office of Science user facility at Argonne.
Autonomous platforms typically require large datasets to adapt effectively. The adviser mitigates data scarcity by evaluating algorithm performance in real time, extracting actionable patterns, and communicating those insights to human scientists who refine experimental plans. Integrated with Polybot’s autonomous synthesize-characterize-optimize workflow, the adviser guided adaptive choices that reduced the study to just 64 experiments out of more than 4,300 possible processing-condition combinations.
During the campaign, the adviser observed diminishing performance improvements from one AI optimizer and suggested switching to another AI algorithm for subsequent experiments. The scientists implemented the recommendation, and device performance improved significantly.
The adviser also flagged deposition speed as a key driver of performance, prompting a broader investigation of that parameter that led to further gains.
Researchers performed in-depth characterization of the 10 most representative material samples—including measurements conducted at the Advanced Light Source, another DOE Office of Science user facility at LBNL—to link device behavior to material structure. Two structural features played a crucial role in better performance: wider spaces between layers and thinner fibers. The team also discovered that the material crystallizes into two distinct structures. These significant findings can be leveraged to design higher-performing MIECPs.
“AI algorithms used in autonomous laboratories lack the ability to make adaptive changes to experiments based on small datasets,” said Jie Xu, one of the study’s lead authors. Xu is an Argonne scientist and assistant professor of molecular engineering at the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering. “The AI adviser transformed our robotic laboratory from a relatively static workflow into a highly adaptable one. The results were compelling.”
Xu added, “I expect researchers to apply our adviser concept and methods to various materials. This will help accelerate new discoveries.”
The study was published in Nature Chemical Engineering. In addition to Argonne, the research team included the University of Chicago, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), University of Southern Mississippi and the University of Central Florida.
Source: Argonne National Laboratory
The post Argonne-led AI ‘Adviser’ Accelerates Robotic Design of Advanced Electronic Materials appeared first on HPCwire.
Experts warn of ‘attack on Americans’ lungs’ from cuts to health programs, environmental rollbacks and other plans
Donald Trump’s policies are likely to drive soaring rates of lung disease and premature death, according to a wide-ranging new study by pulmonary specialists and public health experts.
The analysis, published in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, examines policies adopted during Trump’s second term across 10 areas, including healthcare access, environmental regulation, workplace protections and vaccine uptake.
Continue reading...Kazakhstan referendum: The new constitution demonstrates a diminishing interest in Western values Expert comment LToremark
The changes will cement Tokayev’s grip on power and could cause tensions with the West as Kazakhstan seeks to emulate the state-led economies of China and the Gulf.
On 15 March, voters in Kazakhstan approved the most comprehensive overhaul of its constitution since its adoption in 1995 under former president Nursultan Nazarbayev. This radical revamp of 80 per cent of the constitution will lay out the future trajectory for Kazakhstan – and provide a legacy for President Kassym Zhomart Tokayev. Now in the seventh year of his presidency, he has successfully navigated a series of crises, including the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2022 protests and coup attempt, and the ongoing war in Ukraine. However, Tokayev has struggled to define his presidency and move away from the personalist rule of his predecessor and the political system that he established.
Alongside structural change to the political system, Tokayev wishes to imprint some key themes from his presidency on the political culture of Kazakhstan. These include a strong, legalistic state focused on social stability, secularism, environmental protection and digital progress. The government claims that the new constitution will modernize and streamline the political system. But this brand of modernization, which is already in process, entails a move away from Western-led liberal economic models which emphasize privatization, deregulation and foreign investment. Instead, it will move Kazakhstan towards a more institutional, less personalist authoritarian system – similar to the political economy of its neighbour, China. Tokayev appears to admire the technocratic authoritarianism of China, where he served as counsellor to the Soviet ambassador in the late 1980s. Instead of looking west, the Tokayev administration, supported by large parts of the professional class, now looks to emulate the state-led economies of China and the Gulf.
The constitutional changes include a transition to a unicameral parliament, the Kurultai, and the creation of the Halyk Kenesi, a new representative body of citizens. There will also be a redistribution of powers between the president and parliament with the president retaining significant powers while creating a more balanced system of checks and balances on paper. The president’s new powers mean he will be able to appoint all candidates for the Supreme Court, as well as members of the Constitutional Court, the Supreme Audit Chamber and the Central Election Commission, subject to Kurultai approval. These officials will also play a pivotal role in assuring Tokayev remains in power. Furthermore, constitutional amendments will now only be approved through a referendum, rather than by parliament, which the president says will prevent ‘certain political groups’ from amending the constitution.
The constitutional changes strengthen the power of the presidency and present several possible scenarios for succession. President Tokayev could use the results of the constitutional referendum as justification for a new seven-year term. Tokayev’s current – and final – mandate ends in 2029, by which time he will be 76 years old. Or he could step down early and assume the position of vice president, with his successor installed as president. The latter would enable him to manage Kazakhstan’s complex foreign affairs, without the pressure of day-to-day domestic duties.
Tokayev is likely to win extensive internal and external support for an extension of his tenure as president. Both Russia and China would favour continuity in their relations with Kazakhstan, viewing Tokayev as a productive partner. Russia, in particular, views Tokayev as a guarantor against a wave of anti-Russian popular sentiment. A veteran diplomat, Tokayev has also managed to work well with Western governments, most notably the administration of US President Donald Trump.
China is likely to welcome the transition to a more stable and institutionalized system more akin to its own. But Russia will be wary that the new constitution cements Kazakhstan’s sovereignty and territorial integrity in the face of increasing Russian attempts to assert its influence. The new constitution also proposes making Kazakh the country’s main language, while retaining Russian as another, albeit downgraded, official language.
Human rights groups, meanwhile, have raised concerns over the changes. Although the text emphasizes the importance of human rights and clarifies constitutional mechanisms, they claim that it also gives the government more leverage to crack down on freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and association. The changes include a ban on foreign financing of political parties and trade unions. In the run-up to the hastily scheduled vote, there have been instances of police intimidation and journalists criticizing the proposed changes have been arrested, hardly signs of a more open society.
The new constitution also removes a reference to international law taking precedence over domestic law. At present it is unclear whether this is directed at investors or whether it is intended to limit the application of international human rights law in Kazakhstan. But the changes could have a major impact on investors, particularly those in the extractives sectors – the largest investors in the country. The current wording could allow domestic law to supersede Kazakhstan’s treaty obligations, such as bilateral investment treaties and the Energy Charter Treaty. This will complicate the enforcement of international arbitral awards. Kazakh lawmakers would also not have to consider the nation’s treaty obligations when developing new legislation, given that domestic law would have de facto supremacy.
The rule made famous by Trinity Rodman’s offseason transfer saga had actually been in the works for years.
Sometimes, a rule’s official name is superseded by the player who seemingly inspired it. But sometimes, the origin story is a bit more nuanced.
Contrary to its initial prevailing narrative, the NWSL says it didn’t rush to create the High Impact Player rule (HIP) in reaction to the Washington Spirit’s efforts to sign Trinity Rodman. Stephanie Lee, the league’s vice-president of player affairs, said the NWSL began looking at how it could keep pace with the growing women’s soccer market in the summer of 2023.
Continue reading...Exclusive survey finds negative economic impacts felt across party lines as White House doubles down on tariffs
Seven in 10 Americans say Donald Trump’s tariffs have led to them paying higher prices, according to an exclusive new poll for the Guardian.
The Harris Poll survey presents Republicans with a major problem in the battle for the upcoming midterm elections. The majority of all voters (72%) believe Trump’s tariffs have had a negative rather than a positive impact and 67% said tariffs aren’t the right solution for improving the economy.
64% of Republicans agreed that Trump’s tariffs had led to higher prices compared with 77% of Democrats and 67% of independents who believed the same.
60% of Republicans also said that tariffs had had more of a negative impact on consumers than a positive one, compared with 81% of Democrats and 75% of independents.
Continue reading...
Why Should Delaware Care?
Community activists often cite traffic congestion concerns as the primary reason to stop controversial projects. Gov. Matt Meyer’s executive order will speed up the construction of in-demand affordable housing by barring state transportation officials from considering those concerns.
Gov. Matt Meyer removed a traffic regulation last month that he said acted as an obstacle to the development of new apartments, townhomes and other affordable housing in the state.
The new policy, created through an executive order, lifts a state requirement that developers of large affordable housing projects pay to study the impacts of those developments on local traffic.
Builders of other developments, including commercial buildings or market-rate housing, must still conduct those impact studies. And in Sussex County — where growth and traffic have been at odds for years — local officials say they can still require traffic studies through the county’s land use approval process.
The state rule change is part of a broader set of reforms outlined in the executive order that Meyer says will speed up “priority projects,” including affordable housing and energy infrastructure developments.
He said that development plans have too often been stuck in a regulatory limbo while waiting for the results of traffic impact studies and other state requirements.
The policy comes after decades of growth in Sussex County, where large tracts of farmland have been regularly transformed into subdivisions and strip malls. In recent years, critics of the transformation say that growth has brought too many cars onto roads that were built for a more rural landscape.
Asked about Meyer’s reforms, some of the loudest critics responded with ambivalence. While they noted that the county still has the authority to require developers to make road improvements, they also argued that the state for years has treated road upgrades as an afterthought.

“Transportation infrastructure cannot simply be treated as irrelevant when evaluating new development,” Sussex resident Gary Vorsheim said.
Vorsheim is a member of the advocacy group, Route 24 Alliance, which last year protested plans to build commercial and housing developments on fields that sit inland of Rehoboth Beach.
In January, the group asked a Delaware judge to force the Sussex County Council to deny a proposal to build shops and apartments — some of which will be affordable — at the site of former horse farm. They argued that local officials misunderstood the timing of traffic improvements, among other issues, when approving the development, which is called Belle Mead.
In response to traffic-centered pushback against housing developments, Mike Riemann, former president of the Delaware Homebuilders Association, said the priority of the state should be building affordable housing.
“Do we not support [an individual’s] ability to find a home because someone has to sit at an intersection for an extra five seconds?” Riemann said.
Delaware is short almost 20,000 rental units for households that earn less than half the region’s median income, according to a 2023 study prepared for the Delaware State Housing Authority. Many people struggle to find homes that fit their budgets, especially near the Delaware beaches where home values have skyrocketed.
Under Meyer’s new rules, a housing project can avoid paying for a traffic study if at least 15% of its units are affordable to people making either 80% or 120% of an area’s median income, depending on if they are rentals or properties for purchase.
The housing project also has to be in an area that is either already served by public water and sewer infrastructure or that local officials designated for future growth.
The removal of the traffic study requirements is part of Meyer’s broader edict to state agencies to create a “permitting accelerator” for his priority projects.
Through the accelerator, he wants the timeline for state approvals for priority developments to go from the current average of 18 to 24 months to under six months. Review delays, he argued, drives up housing and energy costs.
“Affordability is the defining challenge of this moment in our state, and what we’re doing today is addressing one of the most practical drivers of affordability,” Meyer said at the press conference announcing the order.
The post To push affordable housing, Gov. Meyer eases road upgrade rules appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
A series of Tiny Desk Concert-inspired musical acts in a small Mexican grocery store in New Castle is platforming up-and-coming artists while opening Delaware’s music scene to regional Mexican music.
The bananas set the tone.
The bristling piñatas then join the chorus overhead. Next, the humming of the produce fridges follows.
Then, Carlos Mayo-Jimenez breaks through with his guitar. And Jesus Manuel Beltran Mendez finally joins the symphony with his voice.
The Wilmington-based band Ilusión is playing a gig — inside a Mexican market nestled off of U.S. Route 13 in New Castle.
Rows of tomatoes, tortillas and papayas serve as their backdrop. Customers stocking up on their weekly groceries serve as their audience.
In the vein of NPR’s Tiny Desk Concerts, José Luis Aguilar Garcia created his own monthly series of “Mercadito Concerts” inside his family’s grocery store, Fiesta Fresh Market & Carniceria.
Aguilar Garcia, the 28-year-old owner of the Wilmington-based independent music label VPS Music, said he hoped the project would spotlight up-and-coming, independent artists while also bringing more business to the market.
And by bringing more Mexican culture to Delaware, Aguilar Garcia said he hopes people will feel a little bit more at home when they come to the market.
Aguilar Garcia first got the idea in 2023 when he attended a Tiny Desk Concert in Washington, D.C., for DannyLux, one of the artists his label represented. Then in 2024, Dariell Cano — a Mexican-American artist whom VPS also represented — was briefly staying in Delaware, and Aguilar Garcia asked him to stop by the shop.
With an extra employee vest lying around, Aguilar Garcia asked Cano to put it on and pretend he worked at the market for a social media post.
“That’s when it sort of clicked,” Aguilar Garcia said. “What if we start doing live concerts?”
The series took off from there.
Delaware’s central position along the Northeast Corridor could work as an incentive for bands traveling between shows in Philadelphia and New York City during their tours, Aguilar Garcia said.
In May 2025, Julio César, a regional Mexican musician, was traveling as a supporting act with singer-songwriter Ivan Cornejo in a nationwide arena tour. The tour was set to have a concert in New York City before traveling to Florida for their next stop.
Aguilar Garcia reached out to César’s management and asked if they could stop by the market on their way down to Florida. César agreed.
Nearly 60 people streamed into the quaint market to watch César’s free concert, Aguilar Garcia said.
“It’s really cool just to open up the scene over here in the East Coast,” Carlos Mayo-Jimenez, a member of Ilusión, said about the Mercadito Concert series. “It’s a really great starting point, in general, for the moment that we’re trying to start here.”
Back inside the market, Ilusión is playing their newest song, “Colores,” as they continue their set. The song premiered Thursday night.
Wires snake from Ilusión’s microphones to the control center that Aguilar Garcia set up near the entrance of the store, near the Coca-Cola cans. Aguilar Garcia periodically checks the focus of the video behind the camera.
Aguilar Garcia — a native of Puebla, Mexico — co-owns the market with his sister and dad. Aguilar Garcia’s father worked at the New Castle Farmers Market down the road for roughly 20 years before establishing his first grocery shop in Carneys Point Township, N.J., in 2019.
The Fiesta Fresh Market & Carniceria in New Castle then opened in May 2024.
Aguilar Garcia hopes brands may soon sponsor the series of Mercadito Concerts to help keep them going. For now, Ilusión’s strums and singing taper off, and the atmosphere returns to everyday-market sounds — refrigerators humming, shopping cart wheels turning and bags crinkling.
Then the next song begins.
The post NPR-style concerts bring fresh Mexican music flair to New Castle market appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Back in 2019, it looked like Oregon lawmakers might finally commit to ending the state’s outlier status on campaign finance.
I had just authored an investigative series for The Oregonian/OregonLive, my previous newsroom, revealing how Oregon’s lack of limits on campaign donations had allowed corporate America to give more to lawmakers, per capita, than anywhere else in the country and led to some of the weakest environmental protections on the West Coast. The state Supreme Court had allowed it to happen by saying campaign donations were protected free speech under the Oregon Constitution.
Lawmakers in Oregon, one of five states without any limits at all, seemed willing to do something about what we’d revealed. They asked Oregonians to change the constitution and explicitly allow contribution limits, something legislators had repeatedly tried and failed to do before. At the ballot in 2020, 78% of voters said yes, one of the widest margins for any ballot measure in decades. All lawmakers needed to do was to write legislation limiting donations.
But for the next four years, no limits were adopted. When lawmakers eventually set caps in 2024, individual donations were restricted to $3,300 per election, well short of caps in the $1,000 to $2,000 range that good-government groups had sought previously. Lawmakers left other avenues for donors to give their time and money. They allowed corporate donations, which many states ban, to continue. They made it so the limits wouldn’t take effect until 2027, after the current race for governor is over.
And now, lawmakers have voted to ratchet the spigot open further — and perhaps, campaign reform advocates say, all the way.
On March 5, Oregon’s Democratic-controlled Legislature approved a bill that supporters described as containing little more than technical fixes to what they’d written two years ago.
Groups that seek to limit the influence of money in politics said the changes are far more serious than housekeeping. They said the new bill inserted loopholes that, among other things, will allow companies to bypass the limits by giving through corporate affiliates.
Dan Meek, an attorney who for years has been at the center of efforts to curtail money in Oregon politics, labeled it “the bill to destroy campaign finance reform in Oregon.”
Oregon elections haven’t had contribution limits since briefly in the 1990s. Phil Keisling, a former secretary of state who advocated for those caps only to see them overturned in court, described the Legislature’s track record on campaign finance as “one of the most profound public policy failures” in Oregon’s recent history.
“Limits should have been in place decades ago,” he said. “The base problem is that there are powerful forces within both political parties who prefer the system as it is.”
Legislative leaders defended their work.
In a floor speech, House Majority Leader Ben Bowman described the contribution limits the Legislature adopted as delivering on “elections where the voices of everyday people are not drowned out by wealthy and powerful interests making unlimited political contributions.” He described this year’s changes as necessary for the new system to work.
The investigation I worked on seven years ago found that campaign donations in Oregon did more than just help politicians get elected.
They sometimes spent campaign money in ways that benefited themselves, including on luxury hotel rooms, dry cleaning, car washes — even picking up the tabs during dozens of visits to sports bars. One lawmaker used campaign money to buy a new computer three weeks before she left office; another spent it on an Amazon Prime membership, 11 days before resigning.
The money shaped public policy. As a reporter covering Oregon’s environment, I watched the Legislature weaken or stall efforts on climate change, logging practices, industrial air pollution, herbicide spraying, oil spill preparedness and other issues over a decade. One retired regulator told me all it took was a single phone call from a well-connected lobbyist to kill one clean air initiative.
What’s happened since my investigation was published reveals how hard it can be to eliminate this kind of influence when the people expected to rein in donations are the ones whose campaigns have long benefited from them.
After Oregonians overwhelmingly voted to hand lawmakers the power to regulate election money in 2020, lawmakers failed to put restrictions in place in 2020, 2021, 2022 and 2023.
Tired of waiting, advocates for tight constraints on campaign money gathered tens of thousands of signatures to put a measure limiting donations on the ballot in 2024. Labor unions, a major source of giving to Democrats, responded by threatening to put up their own competing initiative. A backer of the union measure said recently that it would have encouraged grassroots participation through small donor committees and included public financing for candidates.
Meek, the campaign reform advocate, described the union measure as an effort to create far looser limits, with less disclosure and major loopholes.
Lawmakers stepped in, brokering a deal that was hailed as a historic breakthrough. Unions, the campaign reform advocates and big business produced a bill that Meek described as at least a starting point for controlling Oregon’s political money — albeit with fewer constraints and bigger dollar limits than he and others wanted.
Kate Titus, Oregon director of Common Cause, an advocacy group that was involved in the negotiations alongside Meek, said everyone agreed that some technical fixes to the bill’s language would be needed before the system took effect in 2027. But she said the group, which included House Speaker Julie Fahey, agreed that no substantive changes would be made without everyone’s agreement.
Then came this year’s short, monthlong legislative session — and a surprise.
Titus described seeing Fahey in a state Capitol hallway in early February and asking whether any bills were coming on campaign finance. Fahey’s expression changed to what Titus described as “pure panic.”
“I can’t talk,” Titus said the speaker told her, before hurrying away.
(Fahey’s spokesperson, Jill Bakken, said the speaker was on her way from a floor session to a meeting and didn’t have time for an impromptu hallway conversation, telling Titus she could schedule time through her staff.)
Hours later, Titus said, an 85-page bill was introduced with Fahey’s name on it and a public hearing scheduled early the next morning.
It would push back the deadline that the 2024 legislation set for launching a new website for tracking campaign money, from 2028 to 2032.
The bill would make the $5,000 limit on donations to one type of political committee apply per year, not per two-year election cycle — effectively doubling the amount allowed. A spokesperson for Fahey called the 2024 provision a “typo” that needed correcting because it was inconsistent with limits on other donation types.
The 2024 law prohibited multiple businesses controlled by the same person from each giving as much as the law allows. The 2026 bill would allow it as long as the businesses weren’t created solely to evade limits, a change Fahey’s spokesperson said was needed to avoid a “chilling effect on community-based organizations’ participation in elections.” The Campaign Legal Center, a nonpartisan Washington, D.C.-based watchdog group, called it a loophole that renders Oregon’s contribution limits “illusory.”
On top of all that, the bill would remove a long-standing provision in state law that says that money someone spends in coordination with a candidate is a campaign contribution. A spokesperson for Secretary of State Tobias Read said the provision was “redundant” because the law also says “any other thing of value,” beyond money, is a campaign contribution. But the Campaign Legal Center said the change could leave Oregon functionally with “no contribution limits.”
A representative of the League of Women Voters of Oregon, which was involved in the 2024 negotiations, called the bill “a complete betrayal.”
Bakken, Fahey’s spokesperson, told ProPublica that groups including the league “have been part of this conversation for many years” and that they will have opportunities for input as lawmakers consider future changes.
As for why the Legislature hasn’t done more to stem the flow of money into the system, Bakken said that constraining donors too greatly could push them to divert cash from campaign donations into commercials and mailers in support of candidates, something candidates legally can’t control. These “independent expenditures” have no dollar limit under federal law.
Unhappy as Meek and others were with the proposal, they couldn’t do much. They threatened to go back to the ballot, but without the signatures they’d gathered to do so in 2024, they’d lost their leverage. The bill sailed through the Oregon House by a 39-19 vote and the Senate 20-9.
Sen. Jeff Golden, a Southern Oregon Democrat who opposed the bill, called its passage the biggest surprise of his eight-year tenure. Given the potentially huge loopholes, he said in an interview: “I thought my colleagues wouldn’t pass it. And I was wrong.”
The measure sits on the desk of Gov. Tina Kotek, a Portland Democrat. She has until April 17 to decide on it.
The post Oregon Voters Overwhelmingly Said Yes to Limiting Money in Politics. Then Politicians Had Their Say. appeared first on ProPublica.
Conflict in the Strait of Hormuz is spilling into the Indian Ocean Expert comment thilton.drupal
The effective blockade of the strait during the US-Israeli war with Iran has increased the chance of accidents and forced ships into alternative routes with their own risks.
The US-Israeli war with Iran has turned the Indian Ocean into a theatre for major maritime confrontations.
On 2 March, in response to US-Israeli strikes, Iran announced it was closing the Strait of Hormuz, the vital maritime chokepoint that connects Gulf waters and the wider Indian Ocean beyond. On 4 March, a US submarine sunk the Iranian frigate IRIS Dena off the coast of Sri Lanka. Since the outbreak of the conflict, at least 18 vessels have been attacked in Gulf waters.
The US now claims Iran’s navy is destroyed. Despite this, the Strait of Hormuz remains functionally closed.
While some analysts argue that Iran lacks the power to fully control the strait, Iran’s strategy does not depend on naval control. If Iran can launch missile or drone attacks from its coast, it can impose enough risk to disrupt shipping. The recent experience in the Red Sea illustrates this dynamic: a relatively small number of Houthi missile and drone attacks caused container traffic in the region to fall by roughly 90 per cent in 2024.
Iran’s ability to essentially close the strait will have a knock-on effect on wider maritime traffic, creating new security risks as ships seek alternative routes. While Iran has vowed to disrupt international trade to inflict pressure on US President Donald Trump, the US may seek to intercept ships bound for Iran, creating dangerous conditions for escalation in the increasingly crowded Indian Ocean and beyond.
The current conflict has created a de facto blockade in which the US seeks to deny maritime transit or access to Iran, while Tehran simultaneously seeks to stop all movement through the Strait.
These competing strategies have created a highly uncertain operating environment for commercial vessels in the Gulf. According to a briefing from Lloyd’s List Intelligence, more than 40 ships disabled their Automatic Identification System (AIS) signals at the start of the conflict – a practice known as ‘going dark.’ Ships typically disable AIS to conceal illicit activity. Many of these vessels are part of Iran’s sanctioned shadow fleet. The number of dark vessels is likely to increase.
At the same time, several Gulf countries have begun employing GPS jamming to interfere with guided missiles. While intended as a defensive measure, this jamming also disrupts navigation systems used by civilian ships. AIS signals can become scrambled or unreliable, making it more difficult for vessels to communicate with each other and avoid collisions. With maritime search and rescue capabilities already constrained by the conflict, such interference significantly increases the risk of accidents.
Amid this chaos, Iran announced that it would permit Chinese ships to transit through the Strait. In response, some ships are attempting to use their transponders to identify as Chinese. For example, a Liberian-flagged bulk carrier ship called SinoOcean broadcast its destination signal as ‘CHINA OWNER_ALL CREW’ to transit the Strait of Hormuz.
While these operations are not necessarily aimed at illicit activity, they do represent a newer category of false flag operations in shipping, which involve the deliberate misrepresentation of a vessel’s flag state to evade oversight. This tactic is most often used by shadow fleet vessels moving sanctioned commodities. Under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, both false flags and changing a ship’s flag during a voyage are considered illegal.
Taken together, GPS jamming, dark vessels, and false flag signals create significant uncertainty about the identity and activities of ships in the region. This ambiguity complicates attribution for maritime incidents and increases the likelihood that naval forces will misinterpret commercial behaviour.
In response, it is possible that the US will pursue more ships seizures across the Indian Ocean, especially under the pretext of the ongoing conflict. On 24 February, before the attack on Iran, the US seized an oil tanker allegedly linked to Venezuela’s illicit oil trade off the coast of Sri Lanka. Back in November, the US also seized a cargo ship going from China to Iran across the Indian Ocean.
The blocking of the Strait of Hormuz will redirect shipping into other routes that pose their own risks. Since 2 March, the volume of traffic around Hormuz has dropped precipitously. Many ships have also decided to avoid the Suez Canal as a precautionary measure.
This will increase traffic through the Mozambique Channel and Cape of Good Hope as ships attempt to take the long way around Africa. Due to the slowdown, rising costs, and uncertainty about the duration of conflict, many ships may also remain at ports along the Indian Ocean.
These shifts in maritime traffic will create new security risks. Congested or poorly patrolled routes often attract piracy and other illicit activities. For example, pirates operating from Somalia have historically attacked ships off the coast of Africa in the western Indian Ocean, and piracy is on the rise again.
China’s Five Year Plan commits to economic resilience – as the Iran war exposes the fragility of global supply Expert comment jon.wallace
Beijing is striving for tech self-reliance, aiming to embed intelligent technologies in its economy. But there is a tension in the strategy that could define China’s next decade.
As China concluded its annual National People’s Congress (NPC) this week, the world beyond Beijing’s Great Hall of the People looks unusually unsettled. War and instability in the Middle East are rattling global energy markets and supply chains. And geopolitical rivalries between China and the United States are sharpening competition over technology, minerals and trade.
Judging from Chinese Premier Li Qiang’s Government Work Report delivered on 5 March, and the latest executive summary of its Five Year Plan, China’s top leadership is sending a clear signal: economic resilience and technological self-reliance are not temporary responses to pressure but long-term strategic choices.
For Beijing, the logic behind this approach is straightforward. Over the past decade, Chinese policymakers have become increasingly convinced that globalization – once the engine of the country’s meteoric growth – is becoming a source of vulnerability.
Conflicts, geopolitical rivalry and the COVID-19 pandemic have exposed the fragility of global supply networks. And intensifying technology restrictions by advanced economies have underscored how dependence on foreign inputs can constrain national development.
The turmoil in the Gulf will only reinforce Beijing’s conviction. Instability in several of the world’s most important energy suppliers illustrates how quickly geopolitical crises can ripple through global markets. For a country like China, which remains the world’s largest energy importer and a central hub in global manufacturing networks, the war is a stark reminder of the risks inherent in overreliance on external conditions beyond its control.
In that sense, the leadership believes its pivot toward resilience was both prescient and necessary. Policies aimed at strengthening domestic supply chains, boosting advanced manufacturing, and investing heavily in strategic technologies – from semiconductors and 6G connectivity to artificial intelligence – are framed not merely as economic initiatives but as pillars of national security.
Some published details of the 15th Five Year Plan – China’s economic blueprint – further underscore this strategic shift. The Plan seemed to offer few surprises and did not catch any global media attention this week. Yet, it showed that Beijing has elevated high-end manufacturing and digital innovation to the centre of its economic agenda.
The work report states that the Chinese government will increase its overall national research and development spending by around 7 per cent in the next five years compared to the period between 2021 and 2025. And it also proposes to make digital economy industries account for 12.5 per cent of the overall GDP in the following five years.
China’s government is placing stronger emphasis on fundamental breakthroughs in future industries such as brain-computer interfaces, quantum technology and semiconductor supply chains. Meanwhile policymakers are promoting the ‘AI Plus’ initiative – an effort to integrate artificial intelligence across manufacturing, logistics, healthcare, and urbanization.
The ambition is to move China up the value chain, embed intelligent technologies throughout the real economy and create a more productive and technologically autonomous growth model.
Yet resilience has come with heavy trade-offs. China’s economy is no longer expanding at the rapid pace that defined the previous decades. Indeed China has set its growth target at between 4.5 and 5 per cent. That number will make many advanced economies envious. But it is the lowest target since records were published from the 1990s.
Structural adjustments – particularly in the property sector and local government finance – have weighed on growth. Policymakers insist that slower but higher-quality growth is preferable to the debt-driven expansion of the past. But for many Chinese households and businesses, the transition has been uneven. Despite all the state and enterprise investments in high-end manufacturing, some business sectors and consumers still feel the chill of economic slowdown.
Perhaps the most persistent challenge lies in China’s labour market. Youth unemployment, which surged as a result of the pandemic and shrinking service sectors, remains troubling. Can the economy generate opportunities for a highly educated generation entering the workforce?
Even as official statistics fluctuate and measurement methods evolve, the underlying issue is clear. Millions of young graduates are struggling to find jobs that match their skills and expectations.
This dilemma highlights the tension within China’s development strategy. On the one hand, the push toward high-tech industries and strategic manufacturing promises long-term competitiveness. On the other, these sectors are capital-intensive and cannot absorb the vast number of graduates produced each year. The country’s traditional engines of employment – real estate, construction, and low-cost manufacturing – are no longer expanding at the same pace.
Additionally, the latest push to tech self-reliance requires new skillsets in the secondary and tertiary education syllabus.
Addressing this imbalance will require more than technological breakthroughs. It will demand policies that foster a more dynamic private sector, expand service industries, and encourage entrepreneurship among younger workers. Without such adjustments, the promise of resilience could come at the cost of creating a frustrated generation.
Within the Plan’s executive summary, there are strong words to support employment generation, including helping skilled labours to acquire basic AI skills. But it is short on detail.

Deputy Editor Karl Baker joins “Beyond the Headlines” to mark the beginning of 2026 election season with a discussion about money – specifically how Delaware’s political parties finance their operations.
Two of Karl’s recent articles have taken on the topic through a bipartisan lens: “Longtime court critic quietly funds PAC controlled by House Speaker,” and “Delaware’s GOP projects strength after months of turmoil.” In the podcast, Karl discusses what these two developments say about the state of money in Delaware politics and shares how he tracks these trends.
The podcast was hosted by Director of Community Engagement David Stradley.
This transcript has been edited for length and clarity.
I’m going to start off with two things that you are famous for at Spotlight Delaware. The first is in our editorial meetings – you like to grill our reporters about their nut grafs. Can you share with our listeners what a “nut graf” is, and then give us the nut grafs for these two articles that you wrote?
Sure. A nut graf is the paragraph within a story, usually up high – sometimes it’s the first line in the story, sometimes not – that encompasses all of the important themes for the story itself.
So the nut graf for the story about the House Speaker’s PAC is, effectively, that this company and the company’s CEO, who has waged this campaign in Delaware for a decade now – really assailing the state’s court system and judiciary, specifically – gave some money to a new PAC controlled by the House Speaker. It kind of marks how the CEO, his name is Phil Shawe, has shifted his approach from sponsoring these protests and bringing in celebrities to criticize the courts to one where he is getting more directly political and supporting candidates.
And the GOP story?
It’s a story about how there had been financial turmoil, confusion and disarray with the state GOP’s finances, particularly after the party’s longtime contracted accountant resigned in January. Now the party says they’ve been able to right the ship and are employing a new fundraising strategy. And they say they’re ready for the launch of the 2026 campaign.
The other thing you are famous for at Spotlight Delaware is that you are considered our in-house expert in campaign finance, and particularly the institutional knowledge of campaign finance in Delaware.
How did you become interested in campaign finance, and why do you think it’s so important to watch carefully in Delaware?
How did I become interested? I think just over the years you see how interests align behind candidates, and they align behind candidates through donations to their campaigns.
That can tell you where those companies or other interests think those candidates stand on issues, and that will then tell you potentially where those candidates may sit on certain issues.
With both of these articles you wrote, why report on them now?
Well, it’s the beginning of campaign season. It’s a little early, but we’re going to have a stretch where we see lots of fundraising initially, and then lots of spending of that money over the summer.
So it’s good to remind people that this is coming. Also, for the first story about the Speaker’s PAC, we had the year-end state campaign finance reports that came in in January. And then for that particular story, it was an amended report that came in in February that tipped us off. That’s the “why now” of that story.
For the story about the state GOP, we had done one in December. I’ve been following the subsequent developments in their fundraising since then. I determined that the things that had happened particularly since the new year, it was now time for the new story because it was significant enough that the public should know.
When those campaign finance reports come out, what is your process like? What are you looking for?
So, there are the reports that are filed with the state, and then there are reports that are filed with the federal government through the Federal Elections Commission.
For the state, at the start of the year in January, there’s going to be a lot of year-end reports filed. And so I just kind of look through every day to see which reports are filed on that day. I like to see how much money they raised for the period, how much money they spent, how much money they’re left with.
The money they’re left with is a good indicator of their war chest, as they call it, for the coming campaign. And then maybe most importantly, who made the donations.
Let’s go into this article about the Democratic finances. For anybody who has not read your article, or who has not been following Delaware politics for the last decade, can you tell us a little bit about Phil Shawe, the first funder of Delaware House Speaker Melissa Minor-Brown’s Back on Track PAC?
He has a company called TransPerfect that, according to all the reports, makes a lot of money. Forbes did a feature story of Shawe last year, they called him a billionaire. I think they reported that TransPerfect revenues in recent years were nearing a billion dollars. It’s a company that makes money, and therefore Shawe, as the primary owner, makes a lot of money, too.
In 2015, his company was in a high-profile Delaware court case. He and his ex-fiancee were the co-founders of the company and they weren’t getting along. The reports are that boardroom fights at the company were acrimonious, apparently forging on violent, according to reports.
The judge ultimately said, “You guys can’t get along. There’s nothing I could do other than just sell the company off for the good of the employees and the good of your customers.”
Shawe launched this campaign to criticize not only the judge’s order, but also the subsequent custodianship of the company. Shawe saw that as an affront. He saw that as stripping his company away from him, and it effectively was.
Shawe’s ex-fiancee agreed to sell him her half of the company, so he got his company back. Still, he continued his campaign. He brought in celebrities. Al Sharpton came frequently to Delaware to speak out against the state’s courts, particularly its lack of diversity.
It was this all-encompassing campaign to tell everybody how bad that Shawe thought the Delaware courts were.
Now, this was all done as an outsider campaign until 2024, or really 2023, before the [Delaware] gubernatorial campaign when things shifted. The TransPerfect public relations organization approached, as far as I understand, the leading candidates for governor and said, “Hey, we want to help you guys. Would you help us?’
At the time, I think they were arguing for what they call wheel spin, an arbitrary appointment of judges in cases. That’s what they wanted. And ultimately they threw their support both directly and indirectly behind Matt Meyer – indirectly in the sense that they spent a lot of money attacking his chief opponent, Lieutenant Governor Bethany Hall-Long.
Ultimately, their spending of over a million dollars in that campaign helped propel Matt Meyer to be the governor, which he is now. So that happened.
And then last year, they announced, “We’re going to do something similar, maybe not as much money, but in the legislative races.” And now we know at least some of what they’re doing.
You quote Shawe’s spokesperson in your article as saying, “We look forward to working with members of the state legislature to build a more equitable and transparent justice system for both individual Delawareans and companies domiciled there.”
I read that and think, “A more equitable and transparent justice system?” That sounds like a noble aim. For folks who are suspicious of campaign donations, what’s behind that quote? Is there more there?
It sounds nice. Transparency is good.
Frankly, I don’t know. And that’s kind of the story. We know that they wanted wheel spin, right? The random selection of judges on cases. But beyond that, I’m not exactly sure what that means policy wise.
Now, I would say to readers of any publication, when a story says a statement, especially an emailed statement, especially from a spokesman, you should just generally have a higher degree of skepticism of that statement.
The reporter is not able to have a back and forth when it’s an emailed statement. You’re not able to prod the person making the statement and say, “Hey, what about this? What about that?” There’s these logical holes in your statement.
That should just be understood with any emailed statement from a spokesperson.
Is it true? Maybe. What does transparency mean for them? I’m not really sure. Cameras in courtrooms, maybe? I don’t know.
You also quote Speaker of the House Melissa Minor-Brown as saying Shawe’s support “doesn’t mean that I’m for sale, or bought and sold.”
Of course that’s the suspicion for any Delawarean about large campaign contributions: how is this going to impact the representative?
Are those suspicions justified? Has there ever been a documented instance in Delaware of “Donor X makes this large donation. Politician Y then takes this step to implement policy preferred by donor X.” Or is this just our conspiracy minds at work?
A couple things. I would start by saying, I think that suspicion is reasonable to have.
To the question of does this mean that, you know, is she bought and sold? I guess that’s her language. I don’t know. Who knows? Probably not, but that’s not really the question.
I think the question is, the importance of the news, is that this organization that has narrow interests – or any company or organization that has special interests – is aligning behind this candidate whose interests are broad to her district and, as Speaker, to the entire state. So that’s interesting that the special interest group is supporting this particular candidate.
Now to your question, is there an example? There’s lots of examples of big contributors giving to a candidate who wins and then forms policy that is in the interest of that donor. The question is, was that candidate, was that politician, did they already believe those things and were they supported by that special interest because the donor knew that they believe those things? Or, I think what your question might be, did they switch their opinions?
I don’t immediately have any examples in the past in Delaware of a politician changing on something immediately after getting a donation.
If I’m a typical small individual who makes a donation to a political campaign, I’m doing that because I believe in that politician. I think that they’re going to implement policies that I agree with. Ideally you would think a special interest would be functioning in the same way,
Mostly I think that is how it works. They see somebody that they like and they give money to them.
Now, their interests might be different from yours. You’re an individual, right? They’re “special interests,” whether it’s a company, a union, or any other interest group. But if they donate to a candidate, it’s because they think that candidate is good for them.
If you donate to a candidate, I imagine you think that candidate is good for you and maybe good for the state. So in a sense, it’s not different. The difference is where their interests lie.
One thing you pointed out was this press release that Shawe’s advocacy group put out celebrating a new Delaware court policy that he was in favor of, and Minor-Brown provided a quote for that press release.
Is that standard practice, a politician providing a quote for an advocacy group’s press release?
No, it was fairly unusual and particularly unusual with TransPerfect.
And more than that, I think it was four months before that, TransPerfect had announced after their successful support of Matt Meyer, that they were going to support legislative races. At the time, in that previous announcement, we didn’t know which candidates they were going to support. We could guess, but we didn’t know specifically.
But then four months later, they put out this press release about this change in the court rules and the speaker is quoted there. That told me, “Oh, okay, that’s a strong indication of somebody that they will likely support in the next election or that person’s allies.”
So did seeing that quote in that press release, when you were looking at these campaign finance reports, were you then looking for anything connecting Shawe and Minor-Brown?
I mean, I was looking at them all. But yes, I mean, when I saw that, I guess I looked for it.
When you’re looking at campaign finance reports, you’re going to look at the most powerful elected officials first. So, if it’s a governor’s race, you’re going to look at those running for governor. You’re also going to look at, with particular interest, those who are donating to the speaker of the house.
So let’s switch to the GOP. Your article on the current state of Delaware Republican Party finances follows up on reporting you did in December highlighting several financial and personnel challenges in the party. Party chair Gene Truono did not comment for your December article, but gave you two lengthy interviews for this article.
Did you have a sense that he was going to be more willing to talk to you as things were looking better for the state GOP? Why do you think he gave you more information for this article?
I think that’s probably part of it. It’s easier to talk publicly to a reporter when things look a little bit better.
At the time, I’m not sure if they exactly knew what was going on. He has told me since, he told me during those lengthy interviews, that they weren’t really able to be in a lot of communication with their accountant at the time. So they may not really have had good answers.
I think part of it also is, and this is just me putting myself in his head and speculating, but he might’ve seen that it’s actually better for us when we talk to a reporter.
Broadly, beyond just this story, I think it is better for folks to talk to reporters, even on a story that’s gonna be scrutinizing. Unless they think they’re going to get sued over something. If their comments might be used in a lawsuit, then maybe don’t talk to a reporter. But short of that, I think it’s generally better.
Your reporting states that the Delaware GOP federal bank account as of February was $19,000 and that they had a similar amount for their state account.
Help the listeners out. Does that amount of money signal that the GOP is ready to field competitive candidates to take on Senator Coons and Representative McBride in national races, and then also try to chip away at Democratic majorities in the state. Is that a healthy amount of money to help them accomplish their aims?
On its own? If they didn’t raise any more money, then no. But, it shows that they’ve started raising a little bit of money. And then also what they’re telling me is this is the start of their new fundraising initiative, that they say will go well beyond their current cash on hand.
You are always looking for signs of what’s going to happen in the future, indicators about what’s going to happen in the future. And I think it is an indicator that things might be turning. The ship is slowly steering the other direction,
Will you be looking at the next campaign finance reports to see if that ship is heading in the right direction still?
Yes. And, I think with the next campaign finance reports, I’m going to look closely at the donors themselves. Are there any big individual donors or groups, not just people but other groups or companies or anything like that.
In that article about the GOP, you detail some turmoil in the business relationships with their former accountant and also in Truono “unappointing” GOP Executive Director Nick Miles.
How do you write about these issues – and I guess this goes for the Minor-Brown article as well – how do you write those in a way that doesn’t just seem like total political insider intrigue, but makes clear to everyday Delawareans how this impacts them?
When you report, you get a whole lot of stuff. You just get a lot of notes, a lot of stuff together, and then you have to synthesize that all and try to just figure out how am I going to write this in a way that takes a hundred pages of notes and puts it into a two-page story.
But to answer your question directly, the most important nuggets from your notes, the most important to the public, to the reader, goes at the top of the story. And that is an editorial decision you have to make. And then you try to make it flow and try to make it interesting, so they’ll read to the bottom.
I made the decision, for example, to put the information about Nick Miles no longer being with the party, or at least no longer being the executive director, at the very bottom of the story. I think it’s interesting, I think it follows up on what we reported in December, but it wasn’t central to this new story.
I thought it should go on the record and have the public know about it, but I made a decision – let’s put it at the bottom. I imagine a whole lot of people who read the story didn’t actually get that far down to even read it. So maybe they’re listening now and they learned.
And that political insider stuff still relates to – I mean, you talk about that over 200,000 Delawareans are registered with the GOP – that insider political stuff still impacts how those folks see their party.
Yes, it impacts how their party operates, especially in the current moment. There is within the GOP, I think, still this tension, maybe it’s resolving, maybe not, between the traditional GOP folks – the Chamber of Commerce type of folks – and the new MAGA coalition.
And so to see who is in leadership in their party can give the members of the party, and just the public generally, an idea of which of those camps the party is more following or is it a mixture.
And then the second part of it too is, you also have a whole lot of people who donate to the party and a lot of them aren’t super wealthy. A lot of them are just kind of regular people. So there is a level of accountability journalism that’s involved there just to tell people this is how they’re spending your money.
The original plan was to publish both of these articles the same day. That didn’t quite happen. But when you and Jake, our editor in chief, were planning the reporting cadence in our newsletter, why did you want these reports to land close to the same time?
They were coming around the same time anyway. We were thinking, oh, might as well run them on the same day.
In part because I think it demonstrates to the readers that we go after power bases wherever they lie. The plan was to show that, and frankly a little bit of a public relations for Spotlight Delaware showing people that we’re scrutinizing the Republicans and we’re also scrutinizing maybe the second most powerful Democrat.
Big picture final question here. You’ve said that both of these articles really kind of marked the launch of campaign season. What are the big themes that you are looking for now that this campaign season is starting off, with finance and otherwise?
So starting with the Democrats in Dover, you have I think three camps that have emerged, if not more.
You have the establishment Democrats. They may bristle at that description, but I’m just going to call them that for lack of a better term. You have the more leftist Democrats, the progressive Democrats. And then you have the governor’s office. You have Governor Matt Meyer.
Who aligns with who and who supports who is still a little squishy. But I think as this campaign moves forward, when we look at additional campaign finance reports, when we look at what people are saying, it’ll give us more clarity about what that means for who’s going to support who.
As the election moves forward, the campaigns move forward, I’m going to keep an eye to see whether the governor involves himself in any of these local legislative elections.He probably won’t, but I’d be curious to see if he does.
And then for the Republican side, it seems like we always state that this is a super important election for everybody, but this one will be for them. They can either win a few seats which could then maybe eliminate the Democrats super majority, at least in one of the House. There’s different kinds of super majorities in Delaware. Or they can lose a couple seats and the Democrats super majority could increase to allow them to pass constitutional amendments without any Republican votes.
So they could either move into a little bit more relevance, because they’re on the fringes now. Or they can move farther into the periphery and become somewhat of an afterthought in Delaware politics.
So that’s what these elections might tell us – first primary then in general.
Thank you for keeping us up to date on campaign finance. As you’ve noted, there’s going to be plenty more to talk about as we head towards November.
Thanks, David. Appreciate it.
The post ‘Beyond the Headlines’ podcast: Campaign finance ahead of 2026 Delaware midterm elections appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Two deportees sent to Eswatini were from Somalia, one was from Sudan and another was from Tanzania
The government of Eswatini announced on Thursday it received four more “third country” deportees from the United States, as part of the Trump administration’s multimillion-dollar deal with the small African nation.
Now a total of 19 deportees from the US have been sent to Eswatini even as they hail from other countries, amid the Trump administration’s continued anti-immigrant crackdown and changes to immigration policy.
Continue reading...Federal agents raiding the home of two alleged antifa “operatives” seized a telling piece of evidence, a defense attorney said during closing arguments in a landmark trial Wednesday.
A printing press.
That printing press was never presented to jurors. Still, the government has kept it locked away because it hated the pamphlets and zines it published, lawyer Blake Burns said.
Burns represents Elizabeth Soto, one of nine defendants whose fates were in the hands of jurors as deliberations began Thursday. All are accused of roles during or after a late-night noise demonstration outside Prairieland Detention Center, a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility near Dallas that ended with a local police officer wounded by gunfire.
The case has become a bellwether for the Trump administration’s crackdown on dissent from the left. The government charged people involved with the anti-ICE protest with a slew of charges, including attempted murder and terrorism counts that defense attorneys said are being used to criminalize protest.
“They’re here asking you guys to put protesters in prison as terrorists.”
“They’re here asking you guys to put protesters in prison as terrorists,” Burns, the defense lawyer, told jurors. “That’s not happened before. And you are literally the only people in the world who can stop it.”
During 10 days of testimony in a packed Fort Worth, Texas, courtroom, prosecutors bombarded jurors with images of radical zines printed on the press, anti-government internet memes, drawings of burning cop cars, and a video of an unidentified street brawl between far-left and far-right protesters.
Prosecutors acknowledged those materials were protected by the First Amendment but said they showed the roughly dozen people who assembled outside the ICE facility were steeped in antifa tactics.
Eight of nine defendants on trial this month face material support for terrorism charges for wearing “black bloc” clothes at the protest. Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel have hailed the first-ever use of terrorism charges against alleged antifa members.
Defense attorneys argued Wednesday that prosecutors had wildly overcharged a case that should have centered on the alleged shooter, Benjamin Song, instead of the larger group.
Prosecutors presented much of the evidence that might be expected at an attempted murder trial: ballistics and fingerprint experts, eyewitness police officers, and cooperating witnesses.
They also presented lengthy testimony about radical pamphlets and artwork collected from the defendants arrested that night or in raids during the following days.
Despite labeling the defendants “a North Texas antifa cell” in their indictment, prosecutors have acknowledged that they were at most a loose-knit collection of people from the Dallas–Fort Worth’s small leftist scene of anarchists and socialists.
Two of the scene’s fixtures were Elizabeth and Ines Soto, a married couple who operated the printing press and helped run a local reading group called the Emma Goldman Book Club, named for the early 20th-century anarchist revolutionary.
At one point during testimony Tuesday, a prosecutor spent more than half an hour scrolling through a Twitter account allegedly operated by the Sotos. The Twitter feed included a retweet of a December 2016 post with the words “How to handle fash in your hood” that included a shaky video of a street fight between protesters accompanied by the Flatbush Zombies song “Death 2.”
“I crack your fucking skull and use that as a bowl for cereal. I’m so serial. Ted Bundy, give me money, Son of Sam, gun in hand. Jeffrey Dahmer, with two llamas,” the jury heard in the song’s lyrics.
Defense attorneys objected to the introduction of the video as evidence.
“Yes, it is prejudicial,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Shawn Smith told the judge in defense of using the video. “The whole reason we’re putting it into evidence is because it’s prejudicial.”
Though U.S. District Judge Mark Pittman, a Donald Trump appointee, allowed the Twitter feed to be presented in court, prosecutors could not definitively establish whether the Sotos had posted the video or what incident it depicted.
The Sotos, however, have not disputed that they were key members of the reading group. In his closing argument, Smith said the group was a front to recruit new antifa members.
“Emma Goldman Book Club,” Smith said. “It sounds very innocuous. It’s camouflage for what it is.”
To help jurors interpret the book club’s readings and other materials, prosecutors presented a researcher at a far-right think tank as an expert.
Kyle Shideler of the Center for Security Policy once focused his research on the Muslim Brotherhood. After the 2020 George Floyd protests raged, he wrote a book about “black identity extremists.” In recent years he has focused on another right-wing boogeyman: antifa.
Shideler said Monday that he helped write the definition of “antifa” included in the government’s indictment. He walked that testimony back Tuesday, saying that he only conferred on a draft.
Prosecutors also had Shideler read Trump’s September 22 executive order purporting to designate antifa as a domestic terrorist organization, in an apparent attempt to suggest that the language was borrowed from the order.
Shideler described what he said were common tactics of antifa, including using the messaging app Signal — which Shideler said he also used — and wearing “black bloc” clothes to obscure identities. The phrase refers to instances where groups of left-wing demonstrators dress in all black to make them less individually identifiable.
The point of that testimony came into focus during the prosecution’s closing arguments. Using Signal and wearing black-bloc clothing were “tactics that assisted in the ambush of a cop,” said Smith.
“Material support. It sounds — I don’t know — nefarious. Complicated. It’s actually very simple,” Smith said.
He said that wearing black clothes at the noise demonstration would be enough to convict the eight defendants accused of material support.
“Providing your body as camouflage for others to do the enumerated acts is providing support,” he said. “It’s impossible to tell who is doing what. That’s the point.”
The government used Shideler and the antifa talk to try to distract jurors from the defendants’ actual actions on the night of July 4, said MarQuetta Clayton, an attorney for defendant Maricela Rueda. She also warned that the trial served as a larger proving ground for the government’s attempts to criminalize antifa.
“The government’s expert on antifa said his career may be boosted by the outcome of this case,” she said. “This is an experiment for them. But this courtroom is not a laboratory, and Maricela is not a lab rat.”
Rueda’s husband, Daniel Sanchez Estrada, is the only defendant on trial who is not accused of participating in the July 4 protest. Instead, prosecutors have charged him and his wife with conspiring to obstruct justice by moving a box of zines out of Rueda’s house after her arrest.
Free speech advocates say that Estrada’s arrest sets a dangerous precedent that criminalizes the mere possession of anti-government material.
“He is on trial for two things: Carrying a box, and conspiracy to carry a box.”
“He is on trial for two things,” said Sanchez’s public defender, Christopher Weinbel. “Carrying a box, and conspiracy to carry a box, of which they try to call evidence.”
Weinbel said the box contained Sanchez’s own possessions, the timeline of his movements disproved the theory that he was acting at the direction of his wife, and that a government agent had also testified that none of the materials were used in the investigation.
Smith, the prosecutor, argued that moving the boxes was part of a larger cover-up in the hours and days after the demonstration.
“What is important to the group is hiding their material,” he said. “This anarchist, insurrectionist, hating-the-government material.”
Defense attorneys chose their words carefully when it came to Song, the person accused of shooting an AR-15 rifle at two detention center guards and the Alvarado, Texas, police officer who was hit.
None of the defense lawyers overtly blamed Song for the bloodshed, but several suggested that the government should have distinguished between Song and the rest of the protesters.
“This should have been a three-day attempted murder trial of one person,” Weinbel said.
Prosecutors painted Song as the ringleader that night. Still, they argued that four defendants who are also on trial for attempted murder — Song, Rueda, Autumn Hill, and Megan Morris — could have reasonably foreseen that Song would use violence based on conversations before the demonstration.
The eight defendants who face material support charges gave aid to the attack by wearing black clothes, prosecutors allege. They include the defendants accused of attempted murder along with the Sotos, Savanna Batten, and Zachary Evetts.
Song’s attorney, Phillip Hayes, said during his closing argument that Song was only trying to shoot “suppressive” fire at the ground after police arrived on the scene. Hayes suggested that a ricocheting bullet wounded the officer.
The post Wearing All Black at Protests Makes You Guilty of Terrorism, Prosecutors Tell Jury appeared first on The Intercept.
Is the U.S. at “war” with Iran? Americans are getting conflicting messages from the Trump administration and congressional leaders.
“We are not at war. We have no intention of being at war,” House Speaker Mike Johnson said at a press conference on March 5, hours after Republicans in the House blocked a war powers resolution that would have required congressional approval for any further military action against Iran. Instead, Johnson called the military action a “limited operation.”
But in remarks to reporters on March 7 — and on other occasions — “war” is exactly how President Donald Trump has described it.
“We’re winning the war by a lot,” Trump told reporters on March 7. “The war itself is going unbelievably. It’s as good as it can be.”
While there are varying definitions of war even among academics who study such things, the war-or-not political debate is mostly about the legal definition of war according to the Constitution, and the implications that come with such a designation.
While Article II of the U.S. Constitution designates the president as “Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy,” Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution gives Congress — and only Congress — the power “To declare War.” In other words, the president is obligated to seek authorization from Congress before he initiates a war.
But Congress hasn’t formally declared a war since World War II. And it didn’t happen with the military attack initiated by Trump in Iran. Rather, in accordance with the 1973 War Powers Resolution, Trump provided a report to Congress on March 2 about the administration’s justification for the U.S.-Israeli joint strikes against Iran initiated on Feb. 28.
“So currently, if political leaders were to say that this is a war, they would also be acknowledging that the administration’s actions were unconstitutional,” Stephanie Savell, director of Brown University’s Costs of War project, told us.
In a March 1 post for his Substack, Foreign Exchanges, journalist Derek Davison wrote that Trump had “made a little verbal slip” when referring to the military operation as a war.
“You’re not supposed to refer to these sorts of things as ‘wars’ when you’re the president of the United States, at least not at their outset, because by law wars have to be declared by Congress,” Davison wrote. “Presidents have leeway to engage in military action prior to a congressional vote but only in self-defense, which was plainly not the case here even if one were to stretch that term beyond all comprehension.”
But Trump numerous times has referred to the situation with Iran as a war.
“We have unlimited middle and upper ammunition, which is really what we’re using in this war,” Trump said in remarks on March 3.
“We’re doing very well on the war front, to put it mildly, I would say,” Trump said on March 4.
In his remarks on March 7, when talking about American casualties, Trump commented, “It’s part of war. It’s a sad part of war. It’s the bad part of war.”
Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth has also repeatedly referred to the armed conflict as war.
“We didn’t start this war, but under President Trump, we are finishing it,” Hegseth said in a press conference on March 2. “We set the terms of this war from start to finish.”
Those characterizations are in stark contrast to the way many Republican members of Congress have described the military conflagration.
“Nobody should classify this as war. It is combat operations,” Republican Rep. Brian Mast said on CNN the day the U.S. and Israel initiated airstrikes on Iran.
In a press conference on March 3, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries pointed to Trump’s own words to argue that the president “has unconstitutionally and illegally chosen to launch a war.”
“He’s describing it as a war,” Jeffries said. Hegseth “is describing it as a war. Other members of the administration are describing it as a war. And it’s a requirement under the Constitution that it’s members of Congress who make the decision as to whether to get us entangled in this kind of armed conflict.”
As we’ve written before, legal experts have told us that under an originalist interpretation of the Constitution, congressional approval for the use of military force against another country is required. But in practice, several presidents have launched military actions in other countries without congressional authorization.
Robert Johnson, director of Oxford University’s Changing Character of War Center, told us via email, “There is a political reason not to call the campaign against Iran a war. The President must consult Congress and gain approval after 60 days. Until that time, he is permitted to take actions which are in self-defense of the United States, a power the POTUS was granted because [of] the Cold War and the speed at which a nuclear armed attack could be launched.”
“Most scholars and lawyers do not use the term war, even when they should,” Johnson said. “The term in use is armed conflict. This is further defined as an armed attack. A pattern has been set in the last three decades of not declaring war and taking military action, that is, using lethal force to obtain political ends and to neutralise an emergent threat, such as a terrorist attack. Legally, the criteria are that it should be a threat which cannot be dealt with reasonably by any other means and it should be ‘imminent’ as a threat.”
The media and academics, of course, use other definitions of war that have nothing to do with the legal or constitutional considerations.
The Associated Press, for example, decided on March 1 to start using the word “war” to refer to the Israeli-U.S. strikes on Iran and Iran’s retaliation.
“This reflects the scope and intensity of the fighting,” the AP wrote.
The AP noted that the Merriam-Webster dictionary defines war broadly as, “A state of usually open and declared armed hostile conflict between states or nations,” or “a state of hostility, conflict, or antagonism.”
“Even though none of the countries have officially declared war, the attacks by the United States and Israel, combined with Iran’s retaliation, meet those criteria,” the AP noted. “The decision by the Trump administration and Israeli leaders to attack and the subsequent destruction and casualties are enough to call the actions, and Iran’s response, a war. Trump himself has used the word war to describe the conflict.”
Johnson, of the Changing Character of War Center, said, “As a phenomenon, war is a contest of organised polities using lethal armed force at scale. Under this definition, the U.S. is ‘at war.'”
Savell, at the Costs of War project, cited the words of Douglas Fry, an anthropologist of war, in his 2007 book “Beyond War: The Human Potential for Peace.” Fry defined war as: “A group activity, carried on by members of one community against members of another community, in which it is the primary purpose to inflict serious injury or death on multiple nonspecified members of that other community, or in which the primary purpose makes it highly likely that serious injury or death will be inflicted on multiple nonspecified members of that community in the accomplishment of that primary purpose.”
“This fits what the US is doing in Iran,” Savell said.
But there are other definitions used in academia as well.
Scott Wolford, a professor of government at the University of Texas at Austin, and Jeff Carter, a professor in the Department of Government and Justice Studies at Appalachian State University, are co-directors of the Correlates of War Project, which provides a “systematic accumulation of scientific knowledge about war” dating back to 1816.
COW defines war as “‘sustained combat’ between belligerents, or what we might call competitive violence used by groups organized for violence against other groups organized for violence,” Wolford and Carter told us via email.
The conflict between the U.S. and Iran meets their definition of “sustained combat,” they said.
“Operationally, though, to enter the COW data as a war (as opposed to lower-level violence) there’s a battle death cutoff of 1000, above which a conflict enters the data as a war,” they said.

Seven American troops have been killed in the military conflict so far, and retaliatory Iranian strikes have also killed nearly two dozen others in the Middle East region, according to a March 8 New York Times report. Iran’s U.N. ambassador said on March 6 that more than 1,300 Iranian civilians have been killed in the conflict.
Those figures from Iran have not been verified, however, and Carter noted that COW’s 1,000 threshold “applies to members of the combatants’ armed forces,” not civilians.
If the military conflict leads to 1,000 battle deaths, it would be categorized as a war in the COW database, regardless of what either Iranian or U.S. leaders call it. (Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, did call the conflict a “war,” telling PBS News on March 9, “This is a war imposed on us.”)
“The virtue of those definitions is that they’re independent of what governments *say* about whether or not they’re at war,” Wolford and Carter wrote.
“But that’s distinct from the political-legal question of whether this is a war,” they said. “Declarations of war are pretty rare, though Congressional authorizations for the use of force aren’t, and the fact that this conflict began and continues with neither is probably what’s at issue in the public argument over the definition.”
But experts told us the political classification of the conflict could change over time, if the number of American casualties rose, if ground troops were deployed, or if the military action continues for a protracted amount of time.
“If there was a specific and limited set of armed attacks, of short duration, the Administration could sustain the argument that they are not yet at war,” Johnson said. “However, the scale, extent, and possibly duration of [counter] attacks would take us beyond purely legal definitions.”
In remarks on March 11, Trump referred to the military action in Iran as “a little excursion.”
A reporter asked, “You just said, ‘It is a little excursion,’ and you said, ‘It is a war.’ So which one is it?”
“Well, it’s both,” Trump said. “It’s both.”
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The post Is the U.S. at ‘War’? Politicians Disagree appeared first on FactCheck.org.
Climate change is a greater threat to Greenland than Trump’s mineral ambitions The World Today mhiggins.drupal
Islanders want to be in control of exploiting their zinc, copper and other resources in ways that benefit the community and protect its fragile environment, writes Patrick Schröder.
In January scenes of protesters gathered outside the Inatsisartut, Greenland’s parliament, in the capital Nuuk, made news around the world. Despite the bitter Arctic cold, protesters stood for hours, holding hand-painted placards declaring ‘Greenland is not for sale’ and wearing red baseball hats printed with the words ‘Make America Go Away’.
They were objecting to US President Donald Trump’s latest claims that the United States needs to ‘own’ Greenland for national security reasons. Acquiring the island, which is strategically positioned between the US and Russia, has long been an ambition of Trump, who claims it will help protect the US from Russian and Chinese missile attacks. Days into his second term last year, Trump even threatened military action to seize Greenland to gain access to its largely untapped critical minerals, including graphite, zinc and copper.
Although its rugged topography and limited infrastructure make mining complicated and expensive, Greenland’s resources have attracted growing international attention in recent years. ‘Everyone talks about the minerals,’ said Trump in January. ‘There’s so many.’
In Washington, Greenland is increasingly seen as a potential ‘near-domestic’ solution to reduce its dependence on Chinese critical mineral supply chains, which dominate the market. Europe is also looking to the island, which is a semi-autonomous territory of Denmark, as a source of critical raw materials needed for the green energy transition.
To Greenlanders, Trump’s statements and the surge of global interest in its mineral resources sound like echoes from its colonial past: blunt, extractive and dismissive of local agency. The dilemma facing the island today, however, is more complicated than a simple rejection of foreign interest.
From Nuuk to the smallest coastal municipalities, Greenland’s leaders and communities are weighing up tough questions of who decides if these resources are extracted, how they might benefit the people of Greenland and how its fragile environment would survive the process.
Malene Vahl Rasmussen, the Mayor of Kommune Kujalleq on Greenland’s southern peninsula, has been negotiating with international mining companies over exploration rights in recent months, as she explained at a panel on Arctic mineral governance organized by Chatham House in Nuuk last November. The area is thought to be home to the island’s richest mineral resources, and her sense of duty was clear: investment could bring much-needed jobs, better infrastructure, hospitals and education facilities, she said.
Shortly after the event, an exploration licence was granted to the US mining company Critical Metals Corp. At the beginning of 2026, the company began construction of a pilot plant to support extraction of rare earth oxides, a critical ingredient for magnets used in electric vehicle motors and wind turbine generators.
Local authorities have cautiously welcomed such developments, granting new mining licences to international companies in recent months, including the British firm GreenRoc Mining in December 2025 for graphite mining. But the licensing stage is merely the first step; moving to commercial operations will need new investments.
Peter Dige Thagesen, head of geopolitics at the Confederation of Danish Industry, said: ‘Several of the projects will require significant financing. This applies, for example, to mining projects such as the Greenlandic Amitsoq graphite mine near Nanortalik, and the molybdenum mine known as the Malmbjerg project. If Greenlanders wish to fully realize these projects, it is essential that financing comes not only from Greenland, but from both Denmark and the European Union.’
Since Trump’s recent overtures altered the political mood, the prospect of European investments has taken on greater significance. In January, after a meeting with Mark Rutte, the NATO secretary-general, at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Trump announced ‘a framework for a future deal’ in Greenland that would include mineral rights and give the US ‘total access’ with ‘no end, no time limit’. Neither Greenlandic nor Danish officials were reportedly involved in discussions, however.
For Mayor Rasmussen, this marked a significant escalation. In an open letter to Trump later that month, she warned: ‘If [US] mining activities are not carried out in full compliance with Greenlandic law and with genuine respect for the population, there will be no mining. It is that simple.’ Greenlanders, she insisted, were not swayed by bluster or geopolitical pressure, including from Washington. ‘Our land and our communities are not pieces on a great-power chessboard,’ she wrote.
Jens-Frederik Nielsen, Greenland’s prime minister, also responded strongly, telling reporters after Trump’s announcement: ‘We have red lines … nobody other than Greenland and the Kingdom of Denmark have the mandate to make deals or agreements about [us].’ He added that if Greenlanders had to choose ‘we choose the Kingdom of Denmark, we choose the EU, we choose NATO.’
Since January, European countries have aimed to strengthen their presence on the Arctic island. For example, France opened a consulate in Nuuk in February and signed a technical cooperation agreement aimed at improving geological knowledge of Greenland’s mineral resources.
Polling consistently shows overwhelming opposition to any form of US control over the island. In February, a new survey found that 76 per cent of Greenlanders do not want their island to become a part of the United States.
One of the reasons Trump’s proposals have caused so much alarm in Greenland is that they challenge long-held convictions about the meaning of land, identity and stewardship. In Greenland, private land ownership is prohibited, with the land managed collectively as a public trust rooted in Inuit traditions, emphasizing communal, long-term care of the land rather than its commodification.
Revenue from mining is important, but so is avoiding irreversible environmental damage in ecosystems that communities rely on for fishing, hunting and identity. Fisheries, for example, account for almost a quarter of Greenland’s GDP and 90 per cent of total exports.
At Chatham House’s Environment and Society Centre, work is being done to support Greenland as it tackles these important questions, and to facilitate more exchanges with European partners. The event in Nuuk last year was just one part of ongoing discussions over Arctic mineral development, and how this can be better aligned with high environmental standards and boosting local jobs and revenues.
Long before Trump expressed any interest in buying Greenland, the island realized it faced a much greater security challenge: the climate. In Nuuk, icebergs drift past the shorefront far later into the winter than they once did. The Arctic is warming around four times faster than the global average, and Greenland’s ice sheet, the largest in the Northern Hemisphere, is losing mass at an accelerating speed.
The thaw is revealing new opportunities and risks, said Thomas Varming, of the Denmark and Greenland Geological Survey: ‘The warming climate is reshaping the landscape. Glacier retreats, thawing permafrost and longer ice-free seasons are exposing geology that was previously unreachable. That creates opportunities for mineral exploration that didn’t exist a decade ago,’ he said. ‘These processes could also undermine infrastructure, disrupt ecosystems and exacerbate risks for the communities who depend on this land.’
Many projects under consideration face long lead times, high capital costs and significant uncertainty, especially in a rapidly changing Arctic where melting permafrost alters ground stability and logistics. During my visit to Nuuk in November, Greenlanders told me they were worried that if the US gained greater control over the island, mining would accelerate under looser environmental and social safeguards. There is fear that decisions would be made far from Nuuk, that local consent would be sidelined and that Greenland would cease to be a self-determined society, instead becoming a resource frontier.
As Jason Beaman recounts his long slog searching for mental health therapy last year, he sounds defeated.
The first therapist assigned to him by the Department of Veterans Affairs told him at their initial meeting that she was leaving the agency. A few months later, his second therapist told him she was also leaving. An appointment with a third counselor was canceled with no explanation.
These were huge setbacks for the 54-year-old veteran of the Navy and Army Reserve. Nearly a decade ago, a spiral of depression and anxiety left him homeless and living on the streets of Spokane, Washington. A VA social worker threw him a lifeline, helping him apply for benefits, find housing and get into therapy.
He still needs mental health care, he and his physician say. But bouncing from therapist to therapist has left him exhausted.
“I just quit. I don’t want to mess with the therapist anymore,” Beaman said. He spends much of his time now alone playing video games or walking with his dogs.

After President Donald Trump returned to office last year, his administration announced plans to overhaul the VA, one of the largest health care systems in the country, to deliver “the highest quality care.”
“This administration is finally going to give the veterans what they want,” VA Secretary Doug Collins said last March, as the department announced tens of thousands of job cuts.
But in interview after interview, veterans across the country told ProPublica that one year into the second Trump administration it’s become more difficult to get treatment, as hundreds of therapists and social workers have left the VA. Many of them have not been replaced.
While front-line mental health care workers were largely exempted from the job cuts, hundreds chose to leave anyway. Some cited disagreements with new administration policies, including several targeting the LGBTQ+ community, while others, facing diminished ranks, said they simply could no longer provide proper care.
In January, the department had around 500 fewer psychologists and psychiatrists than it had at the same time last year, ProPublica found.
Although the losses represent a relatively small number — about 4% of psychologists and 6% of psychiatrists — they are notable for an agency that has long struggled with inadequate mental health staffing. For years, administrators have listed psychologists in particular among their most “severe staffing shortages.”
Mental health is not the only area where the VA has lost medical staff. The agency has eliminated more than 14,000 vacant health care positions across the system, according to data first reported by The New York Times.
Data published by the VA going back to May 2023 shows that the agency was adding psychologists every quarter until Trump’s return to the White House. Then, the trend flipped, with departures outpacing hires in all four quarters of last year.
Compounding the losses, the agency’s cohort of social workers, some of whom are licensed therapists who provide mental health counseling, declined by nearly 700 staffers over the year.
To better understand the departures and their impact on veterans’ care, ProPublica interviewed dozens of former and current VA staffers as well as patients.
ProPublica also examined a previously unreported internal employee exit survey, which included hundreds of responses from mental health care workers.
“Mental Health is understaffed, burned out, and there is not enough mental health care for the Veterans who need the services,” wrote one New York-based former employee, according to the records.
“Support is no longer there to provide ethical and good care for these Veterans,” wrote a second, based in Indiana. “Scheduling issues are incredibly high due to poor staff hiring and retainment.”
Yet another wrote that the number of new patients seeking help at their Kansas facility was far too high, making it “unethical to accept more veterans in our clinics.”
Many of those vacated positions have gone unfilled due to a yearlong hiring freeze, which was only lifted in January.
The losses under the new administration amount to 4% of the agency’s psychologists, 6% of psychiatrists and 3% of social workers.

Echoing the exit survey, many who remain on staff describe crushing workloads as they struggle to fill the gaps. Those reached by ProPublica, who agreed to speak only under the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation, said that as staffing losses mount, they’ve seen their patient loads increase, while administrators shorten their appointments and pack more and more clients into group therapy sessions.
“It was always bad,” said one VA psychologist, referring to staffing at a facility in Arizona. “And now it’s at a breaking point.”
The therapist described being stretched so thin that schedulers replaced some one-on-one sessions with online group sessions that included as many as 35 veterans. The therapist said despite that they were still overloaded with individual sessions and had to limit each one to as little as 16 minutes.
The VA declined ProPublica’s request to interview an official familiar with its mental health programs. In an email, VA spokesperson Peter Kasperowicz accused ProPublica of attempting to mislead the public by “cherry picking issues that are limited to a handful of sites and in many cases were worse under the Biden Administration.”
He argued that the agency’s performance around mental health has improved since Trump took office, citing more than 15.5 million direct mental health care appointments in the most recent fiscal year (Oct. 1, 2024, to Sept. 30, 2025), a 4% increase from the previous fiscal year. He did not say whether those additional appointments were for individual therapy. Kasperowicz also noted that the administration has opened 25 new health care clinics.
After ProPublica shared its findings and the names of veterans who would appear in this story, the agency reached out to several to inquire about their care and offer help. The veterans told ProPublica they remained skeptical that the VA would consistently respond to their mental health needs.
As the ranks of mental health care providers at the VA have shrunk, the department has proposed shifting billions of dollars into community care, a program in which veterans obtain health care via private physicians and other providers. But the program has been stretched thin amid the loss of administrative staff and ongoing issues finding private therapists, ProPublica found, with veterans encountering longer delays as they seek help.
In December, patients waited an average of around 25 days just to receive a confirmed appointment date, nearly four times the VA’s stated goal for scheduling community care.
Collins has disputed assertions that there’s a systemwide problem with access to mental health care. “And if you need emergency care, or are in a crisis situation, you have immediate care,” he told a Senate committee in January.
He said the VA’s average wait time for new patients seeking mental health care appointments was less than 20 days, the number it has set as its goal. But other VA officials have acknowledged problems with access.
“There are wait times at some facilities that are beyond what our expectations and standards would be,” Dr. Ilse Wiechers, assistant undersecretary for health for patient care services, told senators at a separate hearing.
ProPublica’s analysis found that wait times fluctuate dramatically, and fast access to care can depend on location. For example, the small clinic near Beaman’s home in rural Nebraska, with its comparatively small staff, saw appointment wait times for new mental health clients climb as high as 60 days in December and drop to 20 days in February, according to the VA figures.
But a closer look at the entire VA system reveals that a large number of facilities are struggling. In early February, more than half of its hospitals and clinics reported one-on-one mental health appointment wait times for new patients that were longer, and in some cases far longer, than the VA’s 20-day goal, according to a ProPublica analysis of data published on the agency’s website.
In late December, Beaman said he received an email from the VA saying he’d been approved for additional therapy. He was able to meet with a therapist in January — after about six months of waiting and going more than a year without a session. In the interim, he said, he relied on prescription medications, video games and his therapy dogs to keep him steady. Still, his anxiety worsened, he said, and now he often feels so uncomfortable around others that he rarely leaves his home except to walk his dogs while wearing headphones so no one speaks to him.
Kasperowicz, the VA spokesperson, wrote in his email to ProPublica that Beaman had “more than a dozen mental health visits at VA between late 2024 to mid-2025 through the Cheyenne VA clinic” in Wyoming, which is about an hour-and-a-half trip for Beaman. Kasperowicz declined, however, to say whether those appointments involved the one-on-one mental health counseling Beaman had requested. Beaman said he only had two sessions for one-on-one therapy in 2025 — meetings that were truncated because of the therapists’ impending departures.
Kasperowicz also said that one of Beaman’s appointments didn’t occur because he had “moved.” Beaman, however, said he has lived at only one address in Nebraska.
Experts warn that the exodus of mental health care providers from the VA has hurt the agency’s ability to meet veterans’ unique needs.
“VA psychologists are best in class,” said Russell Lemle, former chief psychologist for the San Francisco VA Health Care System and a senior policy analyst at the Veterans Healthcare Policy Institute. “They have research and training and decades-long experience” working with veterans.
“When you lose them, the veterans are the ones who pay the price,” he said.

Michelle Phillips, 56, a Navy veteran from Ohio, saw her therapist in remote sessions once a week for two years for her PTSD. Then, in December, Phillips’ therapist told her that she was quitting the VA because of Trump’s policies.
The change, Phillips said, “could mean life or death.”
Years of depression have led Phillips to isolate. Inside her small home about an hour outside of Columbus, the city where she enlisted in 1988, the walls are filled with reminders of brighter times — photos of family members and military paraphernalia from her time in the service. Her only real company is an aging dog, and she almost never leaves.
Her virtual therapy sessions were “the only contact that I had coming in my home to talk to me every week,” she said. “And I would sit and just wait for that appointment.”
Phillips said the counselor requested that the VA continue her one-on-one remote counseling with a new therapist — which totaled about four hours per month. The agency initially offered her virtual group therapy, an option that her previous therapist dismissed as inappropriate. In the third week of January, the VA told Phillips she could have an appointment for one-on-one sessions in March. She later declined the appointment because she didn’t want to face starting over with a new therapist.
Phillips, who is disabled and doesn’t work, said she will try to pay for one-on-one therapy out of pocket with the same therapist who left the VA but will likely only be able to afford one, possibly two, sessions a month.


James Jones said his close connection to his VA therapist, who was trained in combat trauma, helped him control his PTSD-fueled episodes of anger and alcohol abuse. Now the 54-year-old Gulf War veteran, who lives in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina, has seen his care cut in half after his therapist told him colleagues had quit and he had to pick up the load.
His sessions went from an hour every week to half an hour every two weeks. “I can tell it’s rushed,” said Jones, a maintenance mechanic with the National Park Service. “I’m not able to work through something.”
Others have found it difficult to establish care in the first place.
Last summer, George Retes, 26, who left the Army in 2022 after serving for four years, was driving to work in Camarillo, California, when he was suddenly caught between immigration agents and protesters. Retes said the agents broke his car window, pepper-sprayed him and detained him for days. The incident, which ProPublica detailed last fall, left him shaken and exacerbated the PTSD that was first sparked after he faced missile attacks in Iraq, Retes said. (The Department of Homeland Security has not responded to ProPublica’s questions about Retes.)
Following his release, Retes found himself withdrawing from the world. “I wasn’t texting anyone or talking to anyone,” he said. “Not even my kids.”
A few weeks after being arrested, Retes sought help from the VA clinic in Ventura, California, where staffers told him they’d be in touch for an appointment. But Retes said he never heard back, even after he called to follow up. His incident with Immigration and Customs Enforcement was in July. Retes is still waiting.
According to data on the VA’s website, new patients seeking individual therapy at the Ventura clinic had to wait an average of two and a half months in early February.
The VA said it could not discuss Jones’ or Retes’ accounts because the veterans declined to waive their privacy rights.
The VA overhaul has also taken a toll on mental health providers, many of whom quit after spending years at the agency.
Natalie McCarthy worked as a social worker and mental health therapist for a decade before quitting the VA in May. Like many others working in mental health, she did all of her work remotely; from her Ohio home she saw vets mostly from the Washington, D.C., area.
But McCarthy and her colleagues faced pressure to return to agency offices after the VA issued new restrictions on telehealth workers. She was uneasy about the prospect of having to conduct sessions in makeshift spaces like conference rooms filled with other counselors — a situation that raised widespread ethical concerns over the legally mandated privacy for medical conversations.
Complicating matters, McCarthy said, were Trump’s orders eliminating diversity and equity initiatives within the federal government. She said she began to worry that therapists would no longer be able to discuss the subject of race with their patients or document patients’ thoughts on the topic in their session notes. So she quit.
“I was angry that veterans were in that position,” said McCarthy, who started her own practice. “I was angry that I was in that position. It just felt like an unnecessary thing to have to navigate.”

Psychologist Mary Brinkmeyer found herself in a similar situation. She started at a VA facility in metropolitan Norfolk, Virginia, in 2022 after seeing a posting for an LGBTQ+ care coordinator, which oversees support programs for LGBTQ+ veterans and helps navigate their care. She quit last February after her superiors began enforcing Trump’s anti-diversity orders.
Brinkmeyer said she was told to stop conducting training for physicians and other staff on best practices for caring for LGBTQ+ patients. Then, she said, staff members were ordered to remove all LGBTQ+ paraphernalia from the facility such as rainbow flags, identity-affirming literature and program brochures. Also, an edict was issued directing people to use the bathroom of their gender assigned at birth, Brinkmeyer said.
That’s when the VA stopped feeling like a welcoming place. “There was a failure of empathy,” she said.
The VA did not respond directly to either Brinkmeyer’s or McCarthy’s accounts of how the administration’s policies had impacted the quality of mental health care.
Much like those seeking mental health care directly from the VA, veterans referred to community care are also struggling to secure appointments.
Gwyn Bourlakov, 58, enlisted in the Army National Guard in 1998 and over the following 21 years she was awarded a Bronze Star for her service in the invasion of Iraq, climbed the ranks to become a major and won a Fulbright scholarship to study Russian history.
Today, after a series of professional setbacks, Bourlakov works as a museum security guard. Lingering PTSD from her time in the service, coupled with deep bouts of depression over her current circumstances, have kept her seeking the VA’s help despite long-standing frustrations with its services.
After she began looking for a new therapist last year following a move to Colorado, officials at her local VA clinic in Golden said at her intake appointment that its in-house providers were swamped and could not see new patients for at least six months.
She asked if she could get help through community care, but staffers told her that the system was so overwhelmed that it would be a “nightmare,” she recalled. Veterans living in eastern Colorado waited 57 days on average to get a community care appointment scheduled in December, VA figures show.
Bourlakov said she tried to get help through a separate VA clinic, but when her phone calls went unanswered, she finally gave up.
“I don’t have time for all of that,” she explained. “It’s just like shouting into the wind.”

Following inquiries from ProPublica, VA officials reached out to Bourlakov and other veterans interviewed for this story to offer additional assistance with their mental health care. The calls left several frustrated, saying it shouldn’t take questions from the media for them to get help from the VA.
Though skeptical, Bourlakov decided to move forward. She was contacted by three separate VA representatives in February asking about her health and if she needed help scheduling a therapy appointment.
The earliest telehealth appointment they offered was not until June, she said. The next available in-person slot was not until July. Bourlakov opted for June.
The post Veterans Who Depend on Mental Health Care Keep Losing Their Therapists Under Trump appeared first on ProPublica.
Decades after patients first warned Columbia University that one of its doctors sexually abused them, some university administrators have finally faced consequences.
On Tuesday, Columbia released a long-awaited report that details a culture of silence that allowed OB-GYN Robert Hadden to abuse more than 1,000 patients during his nearly 25-year career at Columbia.
In unveiling the report, the university also announced that two long-time administrators are leaving their positions.
Dr. Mary D’Alton, chair of the OB-GYN department and Hadden’s former boss, has stepped down. D’Alton will maintain her clinical practice.
Dr. Lee Goldman, the former dean of the medical school, will retire. The two were administrators above Hadden. They were also among those cc’d on a 2012 letter that let Hadden continue seeing patients even after he was arrested when one woman reported he’d assaulted her.
Yesterday’s report was prompted by a ProPublica investigation that revealed how Columbia had dismissed women and ultimately protected a predator. Amid outrage in the wake of the 2023 story, Columbia announced it would set up a $100 million fund for survivors and initiate an independent review.
More than two years after the review was announced, the 156-page report was published days after the New York attorney general said it was investigating Columbia’s response to the Hadden case.
The report outlines how more than a dozen patients’ complaints had gone nowhere, in part because of the lack of clear reporting procedures. The report also found a “hierarchal institutional culture” in which physicians occupied an “exalted” or “god-like” status that made it difficult for staff to report concerns.
One patient, Eva Santos Veloz, was 18 years old when she saw Hadden for an emergency delivery in 2008. At the time, she and her mother reported that Hadden had touched her in ways that made her uncomfortable, sometimes without gloves. Nothing happened after she filed the complaint. At the time, she said, she came to believe she was making the whole thing up because no one seemed to believe her.
Santos said that while the report confirms that she was right all along, it doesn’t tell her anything new. “The only peace it gives me is that they are publicly saying, ‘We knew about this and we did nothing,’” she said.
The report also lists five different complaints that were reported to leadership but resulted in no action against Hadden. Investigators note that the university’s record-keeping practices were insufficient and that higher-ups failed to conduct a full investigation into his misconduct.


In an internal email sent Tuesday to the OB-GYN department and obtained by ProPublica, D’Alton announced that she will remain on the faculty “to continue our department’s work of advancing women’s health.”
“I cannot adequately express the sorrow that I feel for the suffering Robert Hadden inflicted on his patients,” D’Alton wrote in the email. “That these acts were committed by a doctor in our department, including while I was chair, pains me deeply and always will.”
A similar statement posted to the Columbia website does not note her continued employment.
D’Alton did not respond to a request for comment.
In a statement, Goldman said his “heart breaks for the victims of Robert Hadden.”
He continued: “Throughout my tenure we focused on prioritizing a culture of ethics and patient safety at the medical school, and to reassess and enhance its policies and procedures on an ongoing basis.”
The report also confirms that executives at the top of the organizations — including former Columbia President Lee Bollinger, as well as one of the trustees at both Columbia and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, the Columbia-affiliated system where Hadden was an attending physician — had been alerted to Hadden’s arrest the evening it occurred.
Bollinger, who retired from his post in the summer of 2023, did not respond to a request for comment.
A letter accompanying the report’s release said, “The University remains steadfast in our commitment to our ongoing responsibilities. We must continue to operate with transparency and confront systemic failures when they occur.” Columbia did not provide an additional comment.
In a statement, a group of survivors, including Marissa Hoechstetter and Evelyn Yang, criticized the report for failing to examine what happened in the years after Hadden left Columbia — including the university’s documented efforts to destroy evidence, fight former patients in court and discredit those survivors.
The statement also points out that Claire Shipman, the current acting president of the university and who signed Tuesday’s announcement, has been on the board of trustees since 2013, amid the fallout from the Hadden case. She did not respond to a request for comment.
“What Columbia has released today offers the bare minimum accountability for failures that
should have been addressed years ago,” the survivors’ statement said. “It confirms the systemic breakdown that allowed Hadden to operate. But it stops short of examining the cover-up culture that survivors experienced firsthand once the abuse came to light.”
The deadline to submit a claim for compensation to Columbia’s survivor fund, which was established for former patients who do not want to file a lawsuit, was extended to June 15.
The post Report Confirms Columbia Ignored Decades of Doctor’s Sexual Abuse appeared first on ProPublica.
Nigeria and Ghana foreign ministers discuss security, AES countries, Boko Haram and US operations News release jon.wallace
During an event at Chatham House, HE Yusuf Tuggar and HE Samuel Ablakwa also discussed ECOWAS, West Africa-France relations, and allegations of attacks on Christian communities in the region.
Ghanaian Minister for Foreign Affairs Samuel Ablakwa and Nigerian Minister of Foreign Affairs Yusuf Tuggar discussed West African security and peacebuilding in a packed event held at Chatham House on 9 March.
The foreign ministers took questions from the audience on West African security issues, from the withdrawal of AES countries from the ECOWAS security bloc and US airstrikes in Nigeria on Christmas day, to West African relations with France and how to combat groups like Boko Haram.
During the event, Minister Tuggar emphasized the importance of local security solutions in West Africa, saying:
‘I think what has worked in our region successfully, what we’ve been able to achieve in Sierra Leone, what we’ve been able to achieve in Liberia… bringing about peace and peacebuilding successfully… I think we have done so when we have come up with our own solutions. This is why ECOMOG was so successful. It was led by forces from the region, with the support of the United Nations, with the support of other major powers… That should be the formula.’
Addressing the role of the United States in Nigerian and regional security, he said the US should play ‘an indirect role. A supportive role as opposed to…taking a more direct approach that would see perhaps boots on the ground.’
Asked by an audience member about the nature of violence in Nigeria and the region, and the role of religion, Minister Tuggar said:
‘I’m not saying that the violence is not religious altogether. Some of it is motivated by religion. But it does not necessarily mean that there is a Christian genocide going on in Nigeria. That is false. It is incorrect…And it is not confined to Nigeria. It’s a regional problem. So that is why with framing we have to be careful.’
Minister Ablakwa, describing Ghanaians killed by terrorists in Burkina Faso, said:
‘These terrorists they didn’t ask them which religion they subscribed to. So, the point we are making is that we should be more nuanced…It is not just a simple, you know, religious matter.’ He also pointed out other drivers of violence including youth unemployment, climate change and state collapse.
Asked if the regional security bloc ECOWAS had been weakened by the withdrawal of three Sahelian ‘AES’ states (Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger) Minister Ablakwa said:
‘ECOWAS is still strong’ and spoke of Ghana’s plans to increase defence spending, build the country’s first electronic warfare centre, and improve its ISR capability.
Addressing AES countries’ poor relations with France, and Ghana’s viewpoint, Minister Ablakwa said:
‘We have to admit that there is a genuine concern in francophone Africa that their relations with France will have to be reset and that there is a need for a new approach.’
He also pointed to the responsibility of the international community in delivering security:
‘Terrorism taking root is a threat to the entire global community…the challenges we face today are direct consequences of certain actions by the international community, from Afghanistan to Syria to Libya…. not having a post Gaddafi plan, how we deal with the regime change agenda in Libya. We’ve had to bear the brunt.
‘What is going on now in the Middle East is going to further aggravate the situation. As you chase out the terrorists and dismantle those cells which you don’t want close to you, they will have to relocate… Should we allow Africa to be their safe haven?’
The panel event formed part of the Chatham House Africa Programme’s ongoing work on African peace and security. The Programme will shortly launch a new project focused on regional conflict systems in the Horn of Africa, the Sahel and Central Africa.

Why Should Delaware Care?
The growth of data centers has become a hotly contested topic in Delaware and nationally, because the facilities, which power the technology of the future, require huge amounts of electricity. New regulations on the industry approved by New Castle County are the first of their kind in the state.
After months of acrimonious debate, the New Castle County Council agreed to compromise Tuesday and passed an ordinance that imposes new regulations onto the rapidly growing data center industry.
The sweeping legislation includes new rules that require data centers to maintain buffer zones around them, and to use energy-efficient backup generators, among other regulations.
But the new regulations will not apply to the most controversial data center proposal in the state – the Project Washington development proposed near Delaware City. It is not immediately clear whether they would apply to development projects already in the county’s approval pipeline that may add plans to build a data center at a future date.
“It’s a good start,” said Councilman Dave Carter, who wrote the bill. “It was difficult to make some compromises, but I think we’ve got tremendous improvements in.”
After council members critiqued the original legislation last fall, Carter worked with county staff to change the bill to address those concerns, such as concessions on noise regulations. The final proposal ultimately passed with 12 councilmembers voting yes, and 1 absent.
Tensions ran high among audience members in the packed council chambers Tuesday evening, with jeers, laughs and applause throughout discussions by the council and during a public comment period.

But while past county council debates over the data center regulations got heated — one even featured a councilman flipping off another — this one stayed mostly cordial.
After some debate and conferring with the council’s lawyer, councilmembers Janet Kilpatrick and John Cartier both agreed to withdraw their last-minute amendments, allowing the compromise to pass.
Kilpatrick’s amendment would have exempted all existing buildings from following the regulations, while Cartier’s amendment would have made the regulations apply to data center proposals in the pipeline.
Carter first proposed the regulations last summer amid a backlash to a developer’s plan to build a massive, power-hungry data center on about 580 acres north of the Delaware City Refinery, called Project Washington.
Many residents and elected officials feared the facility would harm the local environment and exacerbate an energy crunch that was already impacting the region.
Project Washington would not have to follow these regulations, though. Part of the council’s compromise was to make the ordinance only apply to new projects, not ones already in the development pipeline.

Even so, members of Delaware’s building trades unions on Tuesday expressed fear that the regulations will cause the state to lose future data center projects, along with the tax revenue and jobs they would bring.
For months, those union members have accounted for the most vocal contingent in support of data center proposals locally.
The ordinance will now go to County Executive Marcus Henry, who will either veto it or sign it into law. David Culver, New Castle County’s General Manager of Land Use, said during the hearing that Henry supports the regulations.
Carter’s amended ordinance included a few concessions on noise regulations, but also clearly outlined how data centers are allowed to use water to cool their supercomputers.
Carter removed specific requirements developers would have to meet in order to dampen persistent noise from data centers. Instead, it says developers would have to defer to existing code that says they “shall not generate noise levels that exceed the pre-development noise level.”
He did the same for the lighting regulations, deferring back to existing standards for industrial projects.
Additionally, the ordinance says data centers must use closed-loop cooling systems, which are designed to reuse as much water as possible. By mandating these systems, Carter said, data centers could reduce their water and energy use.
The regulations say data center projects must be at least 1,000 feet from the nearest residential dwelling, unless the developers submit a noise study to the county. They could then build them within 500 feet of a home.
Data center developers also must set aside funds to decommission the data center if they decide to no longer operate it. That means tearing down the buildings and restoring the land to its original condition.
The regulations approved Tuesday will not impact the handful of data center projects that were already in New Castle County’s development pipeline, including most notably Project Washington near Delaware City.
The first half of that massive project has been hamstrung by a ruling under the Coastal Zone Act though, which would prohibit the data center’s use of diesel generators for back-up power. The developer, Starwood Digital Ventures, has appealed that ruling, but it could take months or years to be fully adjudicated.
The second half of Project Washington would require the same approval under the Coastal Zone Act by the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control as well as a rezoning by the county — a more onerous process than the first phase that requires the county council to approve it.
The same Coastal Zone Act ruling could be a hurdle for a project proposed near the St. Georges Bridge. But it is unclear whether the new regulations would apply to it because the plan was originally for a warehouse.
Finally, a third site near Newark has perhaps the easiest path now that the regulations, and their effective start date, have been determined. That project would see the redevelopment of the White Clay Corporate Center into a three-building data center. It is already properly zoned, does not lie within the Coastal Zone and would not be affected by the new regulations.
The post After months of debate, New Castle County Council agrees to regulate data center industry appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
China’s economic statecraft has been exposed by US attacks on Iran and Venezuela Expert comment jon.wallace
The US strikes raise questions over China’s policy to forge energy and trade ties with US rivals. But in the long term, Beijing sees itself gaining diplomatic capital through a contrasting role as a stable and peaceful superpower.
The US attack this month on Iran, coupled with that on Venezuela in January, register as a blow to China’s diplomatic and economic statecraft. Beijing has forged a comprehensive relationship with both countries that spanned diplomacy, energy, trade, infrastructure and even military cooperation.
China has a ‘Comprehensive Strategic Partnership’ with Iran, denoting one of the highest tiers in China’s hierarchy of diplomatic ties. Significant investments are involved. As part of the partnership, in 2021 Beijing and Tehran signed a 25-year, $400 billion deal to invest in Iran’s energy, infrastructure and banking sectors, partly in exchange for discounted oil exports to China. Tehran exported more than an estimated 80 per cent of its oil to China in 2025, representing a lifeline for the regime.
Other aspects of China’s involvement in Iran include the construction of new railway lines from Tehran to Hamadan and Sanandaj, as well as from Kermanshah to Khosravi. Ports, airport and navigation systems are also under development, according to local media reports, and a $2.1 billion project to upgrade the Abadan refinery is underway.
China enjoys an ‘All-Weather Strategic Partnership’ with Venezuela, a term that also indicates a significant level of diplomatic affinity. China received three quarters of Venezuelan oil exports in 2025, according to Reuters, using oil to repay significant loans.
But now, as the US strikes these Chinese partners and goes after Chinese strategic assets (such as two ports in the Panama Canal controlled by a Hong Kong Chinese company), Beijing is finding that its strategy of courting US adversaries threatens to jeopardize some of its interests.
Broadening out this theme are the cases of Ukraine and, potentially, Cuba. In Ukraine, China – as a staunch partner to Russia – finds itself on the opposing side to the US-led West. In Cuba, where President Donald Trump has said he wants to effect a ‘friendly takeover’, China has significant commercial ties and some aspects of military cooperation.
All this raises a question: is US action in Iran, Venezuela and Cuba intended to impede China’s statecraft? Clear answers remain elusive.
President Donald Trump has justified the Iran intervention for reasons including supporting Iranian protestors, combating Iran’s regional network of proxy groups, and eliminating its ballistic missile programme.
The Venezuelan attack had a similar range of justifications, from acting as a judicial extraction mission against an alleged ‘narco-terrorist’ (former Venezuelan president, Nicolás Maduro), and compensation for supposedly stolen US energy assets. In each case, the prime motivation appears to have been specific to each country as opposed to part of a broader strategy to counter Beijing’s influence.
Regardless of US motivations, its attacks on Iran and Venezuela have demonstrated the limits of China’s support for countries with which it professed to share ‘strategic partnerships’ – and the strain of pragmatism in Beijing’s foreign policy.
China has resisted taking concrete action against the US in response to the strikes on its partners. Not only that, but it appears likely to go ahead with plans to host Trump for a summit at the end of the month. Asked this week if China would still host the US president, Wang Yi, China’s foreign minister, did not answer directly but hinted the summit was still on, saying ‘the agenda of high-level exchanges is already on the table’.
To be sure, Beijing has been forthright in its verbal criticism of US operations this year. After the abduction of Maduro, Wang Yi said: ‘We have never believed that any country can act as the world’s police, nor do we accept that any nation can declare itself the world’s judge’.
Addressing Iran, he said it was ‘unacceptable for the US and Israel to launch attacks against Iran… still less to blatantly assassinate a leader of a sovereign country and instigate regime change’.
‘This was a war that should never have happened, and a war that benefited no one,’ he said on Sunday, portraying China as ‘the world’s most important force of peace, stability and justice’. Wang reiterated Beijing’s call for an immediate ceasefire to ‘prevent the situation from escalating and avoid the spillover and spread of the flames of war’.
But the reality is that in spite of its pledges of partnership, and its public condemnations, Beijing has clearly demonstrated that ties with Iran and Venezuela do not rank anywhere close to the utility it sees in trying to improve relations with the Trump White House, and prevent it from again turning vengeful on China.
Washington retains a panoply of economic sanctions against China, including hundreds of Chinese companies identified on the so-called ‘entity list’, a separate regime of restrictions on semiconductor exports, and a range of other bans related to military, human rights, narcotics, cybersecurity, surveillance and other issues.
It also maintains some tariffs on Chinese exports to the US. The Chinese economy has not been excessively hindered by these measures – exports, for instance, have surged this year. But Beijing still prioritizes preventing a new round of trade war with Washington.
Beijing’s inaction in support of its partners may cause some short-term damage to China’s prestige – and the perceived value of its ‘strategic partnerships’. But China will also see merit in its approach over the long-term.
Will Britain face up to its huge new defence bill? The World Today iallan.drupal
To pay for what the Strategic Defence Review recommends, the UK has four options and none is easy, writes Andrew Dorman.
In his speech to this year’s Munich Security Conference Prime Minister Keir Starmer emphasized the security challenges facing Britain and its European partners, including the need to rearm: Britain and Europe ‘must spend more, deliver more and coordinate more,’ he said.
Yet only when the British government publishes its long-promised Defence Investment Plan will we discover what this means: more indecision or effective action on how Britain will pay for its rapidly changing defence needs.
The government has taken nearly two years to get to this point. Starmer announced a new Strategic Defence Review (SDR) shortly after assuming office in July 2024. Published after some delay the following June before a NATO summit in the Netherlands, the SDR accepted all 62 recommendations of its three external advisers and, by the end of the Hague summit, Starmer committed the UK to the new NATO target of defence spending of 3.5 per cent of GDP plus an additional 1.5 per cent spent on wider defence infrastructure by 2035.
Like its immediate predecessors, the 2021 Integrated Review and the 2023 Integrated Review Refresh, the 2025 SDR continued to identify Russia as a short-term threat to the UK and its NATO partners along with China, North Korea and Iran in the longer term. This was uncontroversial with the only debate being about when NATO forces needed to be in a position to deter and, if necessary, defeat any Russian foray into the territory of a NATO member.
Here the SDR abandoned the policy of its predecessors which had promised to deliver armed forces in a decade. Instead, reflecting the assumptions of NATO planners, it emphasized the immediacy of the threat posed by Russia and the need for the armed forces of the UK and its allies to be ready. Few commentators disagreed.
The other big difference between the situation at the start and end of the SDR process revolved around the commitment of the United States to NATO. Donald Trump’s re-election as US president, the apparent closeness of members of his administration to Russia and uncertainty about Trump’s commitment have raised significant questions about the US adherence to Article 5 and about Europe’s dependency on the US.
On this, officials remain divided. The optimists argue that the Trump presidency is a blip and that the US commitment to European security would be restored with the next president in January 2029. All that Europe and Britain need do is ride out the next three years. In contrast, the pessimists declared that the US commitment to NATO has effectively ended. This leaves Britain particularly vulnerable because of the past 80 years of UK–US defence integration.
While most commentators generally agree with the SDR’s ‘NATO First’ focus and with its 62 recommendations, questions remain: How are these recommendations going to be funded? And how does the continued language of Britain being Europe’s leading military power stand up when Germany is committed to much higher levels of defence spending?
In part, the SDR team sought to reconcile the ambitions of their review with likely funding through two measures. First, they largely adopted the optimists’ perspective and, while they spoke of a greater contribution from Europe – including Britain – they did not, at least in public, question the US commitment to Europe. Second, they adopted a standard defence-review tactic of assuming efficiency savings, this time through the use of artificial intelligence allowing civil servant numbers to be further reduced. On the question of Britain’s position as Europe’s leading military power the SDR and government merely reiterated the narrative of British pre-eminence.
So much for Britain’s ambitions for its defence capabilities. What followed, however, was prevarication.
The government promised to release a Defence Investment Plan in autumn 2025 that would demonstrate the affordability of the strategy. Throughout autumn and into the new year rumours circulated about a sizeable gap between the estimated cost of delivering the defence programme and the funding promised in the government’s broader Spending Review, published in spring 2025.
This was hardly a surprise. Even before the SDR the National Audit Office’s audit of the most recent annual Ministry of Defence Equipment plan identified a deficit of nearly £17 billion. Implementing all 62 recommendations of the SDR simply exacerbated the problem even if the estimated £6 billion of efficiency savings could be achieved. The timeline for the publication of the Defence Investment Plan was subsequently changed to pre-Christmas and then the new year.
As yet, there is no sign of it, but indications are the government hopes to publish the plan before Easter. In the meantime, rumours about potential measures, including a reduction from two to one army divisions, the cancellation of the £6.2 billion Ajax armoured vehicle and a reduction in the Navy’s Type 26 frigate programme as ships currently under construction are allocated to Norway instead.
Nevertheless, at Munich in February, Starmer reiterated Britain’s commitment to be at forefront of European security. So, what is the way forward? The government has four options.
The first is to follow the German example and significantly raise defence spending to nearer NATO’s new target of 3.5 per cent in this parliamentary cycle through a combination of increased taxation and/or borrowing. This is the preferred option of many defence commentators but would represent a risky change of tack. It comes at a time of high government debt and competing demands for public investment in areas ranging from health and education to infrastructure and wider resilience.
The second option is to abandon Britain’s commitment to a nuclear capability and instead spend all the earmarked defence budget on conventional forces. For some in defence this has appeal, but the political consequences would be seismic. NATO’s nuclear guarantee would come into question given that only Britain and the US provide the requisite nuclear forces.
The third option is to cede the mantle of being Europe’s leading military power, run down Britain’s conventional forces and free-ride off European states that are geographically closer to Russia. In such a scenario, Britain would become the equivalent of a nuclear-armed Belgium. This would represent a turning point for Britain and a difficult one for a government to sell to the electorate and its allies.
Could Vietnam’s new South China Sea bases open a ‘Pandora’s box’ of competitive island building? The World Today iallan.drupal
The scale of Hanoi’s land reclamation operations is fast surpassing Beijing’s in the contested Spratly Islands, write John Pollock and Damien Symon.
Vietnam is rapidly expanding its military bases on reefs and shoals in the South China Sea, including the building of harbours and airstrips, new satellite imagery shows.
The land reclamation work expanded to all 21 reefs, shoals and sandbanks controlled by Hanoi in the contested Spratly Islands. The archipelago falls within the Exclusive Economic Zones of six countries – Vietnam, China, the Philippines, Taiwan, Malaysia and Brunei – all of whom have competing claims over the Spratlys as well as military outposts.
China asserts sovereignty over roughly 90 per cent of the South China Sea, bounded by the disputed ‘Ten-Dash-Line’. The location of the Spratly islands is strategically significant, with an estimated one third of all global shipping passing through these waters. Their proximity to lucrative fishing grounds and untapped oil and nature gas reserves has also heightened tensions between claimant states – sometimes resulting in violent maritime clashes.
Vietnam’s land reclamation programme, first identified in 2022, follows China’s own efforts launched a decade ago to transform its reefs in the Spratlys into military bases. According to the Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative (AMTI) the scale of Hanoi’s recent operations suggests it is quickly catching up.
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