2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 12:02

President Trump hasn't committed to a firm number of people who will receive clemency — he's scheduled to have a meeting on pardons Friday afternoon, sources said.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 12:00

Commentary: Sugar is a sharply written tribute to classic movies, featuring lush visuals and a cool soundtrack. Now in its second season, Colin Farrell's stoic performance makes this series another win for Apple TV.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 11:42

⚽ All the latest news and reaction from the World Cup
Player guide | Bracketology | Knockout draw | Email us

Julian Nagelsmann is set to resign as Germany coach, according to reports in the newspaper, Bild.

It was reported ⁠on Friday ​the 38-year-old had agreed to leave following talks with senior German soccer ⁠officials, ⁠a three-hour “secret summit” on Thursday at the German ​Football Association (DFB) headquarters in ‌Frankfurt.

That pundit was Ange Postecoglou, and now, Asia’s No 1 team need him to not just talk the talk but walk the nation to the top level of the global game. The federation in Tokyo should do all they can to get his signature on a lengthy contract as he is going to be in demand this summer.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 11:42

Mayor Zohran Mamdani gave a speech sitting behind the George Washington desk at City Hall on Friday morning to mark America's 250th birthday.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 11:39

A year after President Trump signed the sweeping tax and spending package, its effects on households, businesses and federal programs are increasingly evident.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 11:34

Port expansion and protections for whales part of BC and Alberta plan to expand country’s presence overseas

The governments of Canada and the province of Alberta will move forward on a major new oil pipeline after the pair announced a plan to ease concerns of British Columbia and First Nations on the Pacific coast.

Canada’s prime minister, Mark Carney, shuttled between British Columbia and Alberta on Thursday to announce more than C$150bn in new investments in both provinces, part of a broader project of reducing trade with the United States and expanding his country’s presence in overseas markets.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 11:31

Family of woman who died after being hit by a bullet as she observed rioting in Derry say justice system has failed her

Three men from Derry have been found not guilty of murdering the journalist Lyra McKee in 2019.

Her family said the verdict at Belfast crown court meant the justice system had “completely failed” them and McKee.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 11:11

Prince William will appear on the podcast hosted by Jason and Travis Kelce just hours before Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift's anticipated wedding.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 11:08

Avoiding traditional questions and stilted broadcast clips, PM-in-waiting has evolved his style of media management

He is due to become prime minister in just over a fortnight as parliament begins its six-week summer break. But at a marquee speech this week, he took precisely zero questions. So is Andy Burnham, as opposition leader Kemi Badenoch claims, dodging scrutiny? His allies say no: he is simply going about it in his own way.

The former Greater Manchester mayor is very obviously a different type of communicator from Keir Starmer, and thus always likely to convey his message in methods beyond Starmer’s traditional questions after a speech and the occasional stilted broadcast clip.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 11:00

Exclusive: Shabir Ahmed, jailed in 2012 for rape, abuse and trafficking of girls, was deemed three years ago to present ‘high risk of sexual offending’

The leader of the Rochdale grooming gang was deemed to pose a “very high risk of serious harm” towards children just three years ago, the Guardian can reveal.

Shabir Ahmed, 73, was freed from HMP Leeds on Thursday despite three failed attempts to secure parole, the most recent of which was in October 2024. One document, relating to a previous review in 2023, shows Ahmed was seen to present a “high risk of sexual offending”.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 11:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Researchers have found a never-before-seen piece of macOS malware that combines a series of clever tradecraft to infect Macs with stealthy, custom-developed credential-stealing code. The malware is delivered in two stages. The first is distributed in a disk image that masquerades as Maccy, a clipboard manager for Macs. It's compiled as AppleScript that is notable for the way it delivers the second stage. The malware is named PamStealer because the Rust-written infostealer uses the Pluggable Authentication Modules interface built into macOS to validate the target's login password before sending it to an attacker-controlled server. [...] PamStealer shows a native password prompt designed to resemble a system authorization request. Text that appears with the prompt says: "Maccy wants to make changes. Enter your password to allow this." As noted earlier, once a target complies, the malware validates it locally through the PAM API. "This check is done entirely through PAM: there is no call out to dscl, security, osascript or any spawned process to verify the password, as many commodity macOS stealers do," [said Jamf, a security firm for macOS users]. "The result is a quieter routine that keeps only a verified password, and one fewer process chain for defenders to detect on." If the validation fails, PamStealer displays the prompts again until it receives the correct one. Once the target enters the correct password, PamStealer displays a message stating that the file is damaged and can't be installed. This is designed to be a decoy to prevent the target from suspecting anything is amiss. The malware uses tactics to maximize the information it can steal. One tactic is to request the target grant full disk access to the fake Maccy app. It also contains code designed to access ethereum accounts. The various techniques -- particularly the Script Editor lure, a self-contained JXA dropper, a Rust-based second stage, and local validation of credentials through PAM are all noteworthy.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 10:54

Emails sent between MP Anoulak Chanthivong’s staff take cautious approach to AI giant arriving in Sydney – despite the government’s encouragement

The NSW technology minister’s office removed a reference to being “absolutely thrilled” about OpenAI opening a Sydney office after staffers joked a dystopian Skynet could be headed for the city within five years.

Artificial intelligence giant OpenAI announced its first Australian office in August last year, before opening in December.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 10:52

The government said it had to react to England’s progression in the World Cup, which was only confirmed on Wednesday

Downing Street said it would continue to use X after the culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, announced she would stop using the social media platform.

Nandy said yesterday the culture and media department will also stop using X because the site “now favours abuse and misinformation over meaningful debate”.

It is for individual departments to decide what is right for them in this regard.

Our full focus remains on making sure X is following the law, cleaning up its act and ensuring it is safe for women, girls, children and people right across the country.”

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 10:41

‘Hugely significant’ race for Manchester mayor will give clues on whether PM-in-waiting can turn tide against Reform UK

Andy Burnham was delivered to the steps of Downing Street after one of the most consequential parliamentary byelections in recent British history.

But it is the race to be his successor as Greater Manchester mayor that could reveal far more about the mood of the nation than the historic – and unique – contest in Makerfield.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 10:35

The mayor of Venice says the city is seeking government approval to introduce a form of dynamic pricing to deal with tourism costs.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 10:30

Antitrust regulators suggested that state attorneys general could assist in investigating unlawful conduct by companies.

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A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the Emmy-winning program, hosted by Jane Pauley.

2026-07-03 12:04
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Deal including ‘national priority’ policy brings prospect closer of countrywide agreement between parties

The prospect of a national coalition between Spain’s conservative People’s party (PP) and the far-right Vox party has drawn closer still after the two groupings sealed another deal that will allow the PP to continue ruling the southern region of Andalucía.

The PP, which has governed the former socialist bastion for the past seven years, lost its absolute majority in May’s regional election, forcing it to look to Vox to help it stay in power in Spain’s most populous region.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 10:06

Republican Liz Murrill was indicted for the alleged intimidation of New Orleans elected officials

Louisiana’s highest court has granted a stay of the proceedings in a criminal indictment targeting the state’s attorney general, in the latest twist of a high-stakes political battle between Republican state leaders and Democrats who govern its most famous city, New Orleans.

Liz Murrill, a Republican who is Louisiana’s first female attorney general, was slapped with a 16-count indictment on Thursday by a New Orleans grand jury charging her with intimidation and malfeasance. The charges effectively accused her of trying to intimidate New Orleans officials who fought a law passed by Republican legislators to overhaul the city’s courts.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 10:05

Country’s leadership vows to never surrender as memorial on grand scale aims to relay message of resistance to world

In the small hours of Friday the police roadblocks, stalls, posters and army vans were starting to appear across Tehran, as millions of Iranians prepared to attend the long-delayed six-day funeral ceremony for Ali Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader for 36 turbulent years.

Khamenei was killed aged 86 in the opening salvo of the US-Israeli attack on the country in February, and the final farewell ceremony is intended to be an epic display of personal mourning, national power, resilience and social cohesion. By Thursday, knots of mourners carrying flags and blankets were already gathering along roads festooned with banners showing the red fist, the symbol of the funeral, alongside the slogan: “We must rise.” Many were heading to special hostels being set up across Tehran for the pilgrims. In Revolution Square a giant statue of a clenched fist was being installed.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 10:01

A new batch of A24 films, including Everything Everywhere All At Once and Lady Bird, arrives this July on free streaming services.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 09:57

The New York City mayor delivered a speech on Friday morning from behind George Washington’s desk in New York City Hall to mark the US’s 250th anniversary

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 09:24

Suspect seen in Germany after attack apparently targeting tycoon Vadym Iermolaiev

The main suspect in a Monaco bomb attack this week that seriously injured a Ukraine-born business tycoon and two of his family members is a Ukrainian woman living in Germany who disguised herself as a man, authorities have said.

Interpol, the international police organisation, on Friday issued a red notice for Anastasiia Berezovska, aged 39, describing her as German-speaking with dark hair and a tattoo, possibly of a snake, on her right arm from the shoulder to the elbow.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 09:24

From the lightbulb to the airplane, to medical breakthroughs and the internet age, the past 250 years have been defined by America's intrepid intellect.

2026-07-03 12:04
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Against a backdrop of sweeping rollbacks of civil rights and deteriorating relations with allies, many are feeling cynical

As the United States prepares to mark its 250th anniversary on 4 July, the country faces a turbulent moment under the Donald Trump administration.

The anniversary coincides with sweeping rollbacks of civil rights, deteriorating relations with traditional allies and growing domestic opposition to the administration’s handling of immigration and free speech. Against this backdrop, many Americans say they feel increasingly cynical about the country’s future.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 08:56

For how often people invoke it, the concept of “hell” in Christianity is remarkably vague and nebulous, as both the Old and New Testament barely go into detail about the concept. As such, I’m glad Microsoft has now given us a clear vision of hell and what, exactly, it looks like, ending centuries of denominational disagreements.

Microsoft is currently selling the idea of Windows and Copilot as two separate things: an OS and an assistant riding along on top of it. However, a leaked video shows Project Aion, an internal prototype where Copilot doesn’t just sit inside Windows, it becomes Windows, swallowing the Start menu, the taskbar, and three decades of desktop conventions in the process. The footage is reportedly two years old, so Aion is most likely dead by now. But it’s the clearest look yet at how far Microsoft was willing to take its agentic AI ambitions.

↫ Alfonso Maruccia at Techspot

Everything about this is dreadful. Obviously replacing the entire shell with “AI” nonsense is the main crime against usability here, but on top of that, this new shell is all just websites, all the way down, so everything is slow and stuttery. Since this runs on something called “Win3”, which appears to be a very minimal, stripped-down version of Windows intended to only run the Edge browser engine, you can’t run Win32 applications. If you do try to run a Win32 application, it will load the application in a remote virtual machine running in the cloud, which I;m sure does wonder for performance, responsiveness, and latency.

We can all thank the lord this project is two years old and most likely cancelled by now, but we have no way of knowing if Microsoft is still intending for this to be the future direction of Windows. Since people don’t want to use “AI” of their own volition, it only makes sense in the technology industry’s sick, twisted mind to force people into using “AI” with efforts like this. Consent has never been Silicon Valley’s strength, after all.

At the time of writing, Microsoft is 225 billion dollars in the red on “AI”, so I wouldn’t be surprised if attempts to replace the regular Explorer shell with something “AI”-based is still very much on the table in Redmond.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 08:41

For the surviving Iranian regime, the funeral offers an opportunity to project power after withstanding months of war with Israel and the United States.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 08:36

Katalyst Space's LINK spacecraft is designed to capture and boost NASA's Swift observatory back to a safe altitude.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 08:10

NetBSD is the only BSD without a Vulkan stack (Mesa and Lavapipe), but that’s about to change. The effort to bring Vulkan to NetBSD is now in beta, with prebuilt binaries coming soon.

Mesa configures, compiles, links, installs, and registers the Lavapipe software Vulkan driver on NetBSD 10.1 amd64, against LLVM 19.1.7. The driver (libvulkan_lvp.so, ~17 MB) installs into /usr/pkg/lib, and its ICD manifest (advertising Vulkan API 1.4) installs into /usr/pkg/share/vulkan/icd.d/, so a Vulkan loader on the system can discover it. ldd resolves every dependency cleanly. The entire process — environment setup, dependency builds, the Mesa build, and installation — is automated end to end and reproducible on a fresh install.

↫ vulkan-netbsd GitHub page

It’s important to note that the next step in the process is to port the Vulkan loader, which is required to actually run Vulkan applications. This entire effort is still ongoing and seems to be handled mostly by Dean Howell alone, so expect breakage and incomplete documentation as development progresses. Still, this is a hugely important effort, and seeing it this far along is great news.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 08:07

Exclusive: National Crime Agency and safety watchdog issue guidance amid rise in explicit material online

The UK National Crime Agency has recommended parents should not put photos of their children on public display online as part of landmark guidance to tackle the rise of AI-generated sexual abuse material.

Advice issued by the NCA and the child safety watchdog the Internet Watch Foundation suggests parents and guardians make their social media accounts private or share pictures of their children through a “close friends” group.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 09:17

Singer and fiance Travis Kelce have been coy but festivities appear to be getting under way at Madison Square Garden

In her hit song Welcome to New York, Taylor Swift sings: “Like any great love, it keeps you guessing.”

The megastar has certainly done that this week, as preparations began for what appears to be a giant wedding at Madison Square Garden in New York. Vans unloading flowers, food and what looks like the makings of a massive, white fairytale castle, have been seen outside the arena in recent days.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 10:08

Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce are expected to welcome around 1,000 guests at Madison Square Garden to celebrate their wedding, sources say.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 11:45

The flag-draped casket of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was put on display in Tehran Friday with millions expected to attend his dayslong funeral.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 08:03

EveryMac turned 30.

On July 2, 1996, EveryMac.com launched.

Thirty years is a long time — and a great deal has changed since then — but what has not changed is that EveryMac.com has been there to provide you with detailed info on every Mac from the original 128k to the current line. Thank you very much for your support through the years.

↫ EveryMac news item

I thought OSNews was pretty unique with its founding in 1997, so it’s great to see another enthusiast’s website as old as ours. Amazing company to be in, too – EveryMac is an indispensable, tirelessly maintained, and stupidly accurate resource that I use countless times each year. Here’s to another 30 years.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 08:01

I didn't move all my files, but in just 15 minutes I made a big dent.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 08:01

Some days, Elon Musk is worth $1 trillion. Other days, he's merely an absurdly wealthy billionaire.

2026-07-03 08:04
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Tons of recent releases, from blockbusters to independent films, are all streaming free in July.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 08:00

The 250th anniversary is arriving among Black communities as a whisper instead of a roar

Not soon after Donald Trump’s 2025 inauguration, there emerged a viral illustration of four Black women sitting at the top of a building while watching the world burn at a distance. They are observing with coffee cups in hand. An American flag hangs over the edge. If that exhaustion hadn’t been made clear enough, Black people, particularly across TikTok and Threads, have urged one another to “not give them a reaction”.

The “them” is white people who find Black rage exciting and lucrative for their own personal gain. We’re not allowing our anger to become spectacle. We’re not shouting any more. What is most important is to stay alive, take care of one another, and to allow ourselves to step to the forefront for the rights that they have taken for granted as we’ve risked our lives to protect them. There is an old African American proverb: “If you can’t hear, then you must feel.”

Morgan Jerkins is a senior writer, race and equity, at the Guardian US

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 08:00

Experts say the Food and Drug Administration is not prepared for the health threat of bacterial contamination

Multiple brands of infant formula have been recalled recently due to bacterial contamination, and experts say the Food and Drug Administration is inadequately prepared to deal with the health threat they pose in the wake of Trump administration cuts.

Last March, the FDA announced the launch of Operation Stork Speed, specifically intended to “expand options for safe, reliable, and nutritious infant formula for American families”. Two months later, Martin Makary, who was FDA commissioner at the time, told Congress that the FDA had lost around 3,100 employees due to the Trump administration’s reorganization and cuts. Makary departed the FDA the same month.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 08:00

Investigations into president and corruption charges will get heavy scrutiny if Democrats win majority in midterms

Donald Trump’s presidency is facing investigations and corruption charges from a key House Democrat and ex-prosecutors, involving political and personal abuses of power, which legal experts predict will get heavy scrutiny if Democrats win the House majority in the midterms.

Legal critics call the scandals dogging the president “target rich” for investigations that Democrats will have a “field day” investigating if they win the House majority. Critics cite, for instance, Trump’s damaging the rule of law by weaponizing the Department of Justice (DoJ) to exact revenge on political foes and protect himself from federal investigations, plus Trump moves to profit in radical ways from his presidency with lucrative and new cryptocurrency ventures.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 07:34

‘Late announcement’ means forces will have to adapt plans and move officers ‘away from communities’, say chiefs

Police leaders have criticised Downing Street’s decision to let pubs stay open until 5am on Monday for England’s World Cup match against Mexico, saying it will take officers “away from communities”.

Mark Roberts, the National Police Chiefs’ Council lead for football policing, and Scott Green, the organisation’s lead for alcohol licensing, said the “late announcement” meant forces would have to adapt plans and would leave officers working extended hours.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 07:12

The London-based fintech says restructuring is necessary to reduce ‘duplicate’ roles

Starling Bank has said it will cut more than 100 jobs as it invests more heavily in artificial intelligence to push down costs.

The digital-only bank told staff that 3% of its workforce, or 130 jobs, would be made redundant, as part of a restructuring of its banking and tech operations.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 07:11

A speeding bus plunged from a highway into a rocky ravine in Pakistan, killing 40 people and injuring eight others in one of the deadliest road accidents in recent years, officials said.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 07:09

Move inspired by customer service provided by online retailers such as John Lewis and Amazon

People waiting for hospital treatment will get three weeks’ notice of their next appointment under NHS plans inspired by the customer service provided by online shopping operators.

Hospitals are being ordered to start telling everyone on their treatment waiting list at least three weeks before their operation, diagnostic test or meeting with a consultant.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 07:08

Thousands of volunteers are joined by overseas teams in the hope of finding more survivors in the rubble, reports Tom Phillips in Caraballeda

When twin earthquakes tore through Venezuela’s northern coast last week, Israel Rivas was at home hundreds of miles away in the industrial city of San Félix. As the scale of the catastrophe became clear, the 24-year-old knew he had to react. A mechanic and budding photographer, Rivas gathered the money he had been saving to buy a new camera lens and jumped on a bus to make the 12-hour journey to La Guaira, the coastal state that has suffered the most damage.

“I couldn’t eat well. I couldn’t sleep well, knowing that my brothers and sisters from this country are dying, so I … came here and I’m doing the best I can,” he said on Wednesday, exactly a week after the disaster, as he stood outside Residencia La Gabarra, a 12-storey block of beachside apartments that had collapsed into a jumble of reinforced concrete and bricks with at least three children inside.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 07:01

Subscribers on grandfathered plans are being notified that they'll be automatically pushed to other plans, some of which come with a price hike.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 07:00

Amid Trump’s immigration crackdown, thousands take the oath of allegiance in a US ‘not as welcoming as in the past’

In June, Yesica McKeone officially became a US citizen. At the naturalization ceremony, she raised a hand and took the oath of allegiance to a country on the verge of its 250th anniversary. Thousands of new citizens recited the oath alongside her. Some cried softly.

“I’m finally here,” McKeone, 32, remembered thinking about her citizenship journey. At two years old, she left Michoacán, Mexico, with her family and settled in California, where she became a permanent resident. Now, home is a pastoral patch of land in Solvang, in the heart of California’s central coast.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 07:00

People across the country are pushing for moratoriums, and electeds who approve projects are being punished

Lenoxdatacenter.com went live in May, promoting what it called a “proposed advanced technology and data center campus” in Michigan. The site did not state who wanted to build the center. Lenox Township officials denied anyone had applied to build one.

Emails obtained by residents through an open records request showed, however, that developers had contacted the township supervisor and deputy supervisor asking for their support to build a datacenter.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 07:00

This weekend marks 250 years since the signing of the declaration of independence, but Donald Trump is making the celebration all about himself. As the anniversary approaches, Jonathan Freedland talks to the Atlantic’s Yoni Appelbaum about why so many Americans are feeling less patriotic these days

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 06:47

Why Should Delaware Care?
As America marks its semiquincentennial on July 4, Delaware can be remembered for its service in the statesmanship and military service in the founding of the nation.

On July 1, 1776, Caesar Rodney was in Dover, questioning British loyalists when he received the fateful word from counterparts in Philadelphia at the Second Continental Congress.

His vote had become crucial, and his presence in Philadelphia was necessary the next day.

That stormy night was the culmination of weeks of change across the American colonies and in Delaware in particular. Less than three weeks prior, there was no Delaware to speak of.

After a decade of increasing British taxes, nationwide boycotts and a crackdown on colonial dissent, war broke out in Boston in 1775. The occupation of one of America’s key cities convinced the colonies of their need to assert their independence. 

Within a year, each colony would craft its own constitution to declare themselves an independent state. In June 1776, Delaware was still considered “the Lower Counties” of the Pennsylvania colony.

But state delegates met in New Castle on June 15, 1776, where they declared Delaware’s independence from both Great Britain and Pennsylvania.

Caesar Rodney was a lawyer, landowner and one of Delaware’s earliest statesman. He cast the deciding vote in the Declaration of Independence. | PHOTO COURTESY OF DELAWARE PUBLIC ARCHIVES

Rodney casts historic vote

After expending significant political capital to secure what Rodney thought would be a successful vote for independence, the third member of Delaware’s congregation, George Read, had decided to vote against separating from the British

With fellow Delaware delegate Thomas McKean voting in favor, Read’s dissent would leave Delaware – and potentially the nation – in a stalemate. The Continental Congress intended to declare national independence unanimously or not at all.

With the nation’s independence sitting on a razor-thin margin, Rodney embarked on his famous midnight ride to break the tie and swing the Delaware delegation’s support for independence. 

For 18 hours overnight, he trekked the 80 miles to Philadelphia on horseback and by carriage through thunder and rain, as detailed in a letter Rodney sent to his brother, Thomas, on July 4, 1776 — the only such letter recovered from a Congressional delegate from that day. 

Aside from the national implications of the watershed moment, Rodney’s ride was an act of personal courage as well. He hailed from southern Delaware originally, where the population held more sympathetic views towards the British — Rodney’s grandfather was even an Anglican minister — though his family believed in the revolution. 

As put by Ciro Poppiti, the New Castle County Register of Wills and reenactor who recently completed a horse ride from Dover to Philadelphia to honor the anniversary of Rodney’s journey, the statesman also knew he was “riding to the gallows.” 

In the midst of a raging war, Rodney was potentially exposing himself to targeting by the British as one of the deciding votes for independence. Additionally, at the time of his ride, Rodney was battling facial cancer that had left his cheek and nose deeply scarred, a significant disfigurement which Rodney concealed with a scarf.

The cancer would claim Rodney’s life nearly eight years to the day of his momentous ride. 

Like most of the American colonies, Delaware had a fervent revolutionary movement, but many residents continued to support the British crown. | PHOTO COURTESY OF DELAWARE PUBLIC ARCHIVES

Delaware had a conflicted populace

Rodney’s ride is perhaps the most notorious single piece of Delaware lore in relation to the American Revolution. But thanks to its location, resources, and an apprehensive and divided population, the state played a significant role in the struggle for America’s freedom from the British kingdom.

During the Revolutionary era, Delaware was viewed as a valuable strategic spot, particularly given its coastline and proximity to Philadelphia, the nation’s capital and largest city at the time. The territory’s largely rural environment further made it an agricultural hub, meaning it was also a popular supplier of food for the American armed forces to the north.

The state – second smallest with just 37,000 residents in 1776 – was a melting pot of cultures, including English, Swedes, Finns, Dutch, and French, along with native tribes, enslaved Africans and free Blacks.

Similar to today’s political partisanship, the state’s geography also played a role in residents’ opinion of the Revolutionary movement. The Wilmington area was primarily a Revolutionary stronghold, along with cities like New Castle, Dover and Lewes. 

Sussex County was more sympathetic to the British, even drawing the presence of American forces at times to quash small-scale rebellions, while Kent County was split. 

As evidenced by the division that necessitated Rodney’s ride, the state’s population had the same misgivings about independence as anywhere else, even as the war intensified after the Declaration. 

British Loyalists in Delaware continued to organize against the revolutionaries during the war and after the Declaration of Independence was signed, and in response, roving “committees of inspection and observation” were established. 

These committees acted as a kind of secret police force dedicated to snuffing out British-sympathetic activities among citizens, according to Ryan Schwartz, of the Lewes Historical Society, largely achieving this through intimidation as opposed to violence. 

Many British Loyalists living in Delaware ended up fleeing to Canada as the war continued and after it ended, finding Delaware to be an increasingly inhospitable place to sow dissent. 

Delaware’s regiment of Revolutionary War soldiers were known as the “Delaware Blues” due to their distinctive uniforms. | PHOTO COURTESY OF NATIONAL ARCHIVES

Patriots fight in the war

Despite its location and festering opposition, Delaware’s native sons also raised up a respected regiment of soldiers known as the “Delaware Blues” for the color of their uniforms – there was no standard uniform in the Revolutionary War as each state outfitted its men how it could.

They would fight at some of the war’s earliest battles, including Long Island and White Plains. They crossed the Delaware River with Gen. George Washington on Christmas night 1776 for an attack at Trenton, New Jersey.

Their founding colonel, John Haslet, would be killed in January 1777 during the Battle of Princeton.

The state of Delaware only saw one major battle during the war, which took place at Cooch’s Bridge near Newark, though there were smaller skirmishes throughout the state. 

But Delaware narrowly avoided potentially becoming another main theater of the war, Schwartz said. The British were focused on toppling Philadelphia, and with previous attempts to do so via land proving futile, their plans in the late summer of 1777 turned to a naval advance on the capital via the Delaware River. 

Stymied by the Delaware River’s shoaly terrain and further deterred by strong American defenses established along the body of water, the British instead decided to land at nearby Elkton, Maryland, just beyond the Delaware border. 

That then led to the Battle at Cooch’s Bridge on Sept. 3, 1777, which saw the undermanned Delaware battalion of 1,200 men, officially formed just a week before the battle, temporarily hold off a group of 16,000 British soldiers before eventually retreating north to join Washington’s forces. Casualties are unclear, but a British officer commented at the time that the fighting at Iron Hill was the worst they faced on their march to Philadelphia. 

While the battle is recorded as a loss for the Americans, Joe Sullivan of the Delaware Public Archive said the battalion’s efforts derailed the British advance to Philadelphia for an additional five days after the fighting had ended. That gave Washington additional time to gather troops and prepare for the oncoming British forces. 

Despite the apparent setback, the Delaware battalion had fulfilled Washington’s Sept. 2 directive: “Give them as much trouble as you possibly can.” 

Days later, the Delaware soldiers would fight at the Battle of the Brandywine, just over the state border in Pennsylvania. It would be a humiliating defeat for the Americans as British Gen. William Howe outflanked Washington’s army.

Following their victory at Brandywine, the British forces would decamp to Wilmington, where they occupied the city and tended to their wounded for about a month before advancing up to Philadelphia.

Along the way, the Delaware Blues would fight at the Battle of Germantown, where they suffered significant losses, including the wounding of their second leader Col. David Hall.

Delaware’s soldiers would head south in 1780 and 1781 to fight in five more battles in the Carolinas before the end of the war.

An American victory at Saratoga generated enough optimism that the French then decided to support the revolutionary effort militarily. This forced the British to expand their fight on several international fronts, diverting resources from their troops on American soil and opening the door for the Americans to emerge victorious from the war. 

Rodney’s ride would not be for naught. 

The post Delaware held vital place in America’s founding 250 years ago appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 06:29

Ceremony for Ali Khamenei intended to be epic display of national power. Plus, the expected wedding of Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce pays dividend to good causes

Good morning. Final preparations are under way for Ali Khamenei’s six-day funeral. The farewell to the former supreme leader is expected to draw millions in Iran. Khamenei was killed in the opening salvo of the US-Israeli attack on the country in February, and the funeral is intended to be an epic display of personal mourning, national power, resilience and social cohesion.

Iran’s first vice-president, Mohammad Reza Aref, who is the lead funeral organiser, described the ceremony, which begins on Saturday in Tehran and will end with Khamenei’s burial on Thursday in Mashhad, as “the most important event of this century” and the most attended event since the 1979 revolution. The scale of the funeral has been conceived to relay political and religious messages of resistance to the rest of the world. At the request of Iraqi politicians, Khamenei’s body will also be carried through the Iraqi Shia cities of Karbala and Najaf.

Will Ali Khamenei’s successor take part? Khamenei’s son and successor, Mojtaba Khamenei, is not expected to make an appearance at his father’s funeral. He was severely injured in the same US-Israeli strike that killed his father and also killed Mojtaba’s wife and his 14-month-old daughter. The extent of Mojtaba’s injuries is unknown and he has so far issued only written statements, including one that distanced himself from the ceasefire negotiations but sanctioned their continuance. Israel’s defence minister, Israel Katz, threatened to kill him this week, saying he was marked for death.

Why is Trump so unhappy with Nato? Aside from the failure of countries such as the UK and France to join in with the US-Israeli war on Iran, Trump has long complained that Europe does not spend enough on defence. Under pressure from the US, Nato leaders agreed at a gathering last year to boost defence-related spending to 5% of GDP by 2035.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 06:07

While it's certainly well designed and delivers respectable 1080p gaming performance, another PC offers better frames per dollar.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 06:03
(Photo by Krisztian Elek/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

What I’m Discussing Today

  • Kareem’s Quote of the Day: What does it say about America that Frederick Douglass’s disappointment still rings true in 2026?

  • Trump wants to SAVE Republican control no matter who it harms: When a party can’t win fairly, it starts calling voter suppression election integrity and hopes no one realizes the difference.

  • Trump’s Birthday Grift for America: Nothing says democracy like cashing in on the nation’s 250th birthday with a glorified campaign rally and VIP donors.

  • Senator Jim Banks of Indiana Calls Clarence Thomas the “Greatest Living American”: I say potato, and you say potatoe—Jim Banks proves himself worthy of comparison to Indiana legend Dan Quayle.

  • Unforgivable Blackness: As told by Ken Burns, the life of Jack Johnson, the first Black heavyweight champion of the world, is a quintessential tale of American greatness and intolerance.

  • “American Tune” Rhiannon Giddens & Paul Simon: Rhymin’ Simon finds a new partner to make one of his greatest songs a more inclusive anthem for a country still trying to tell the truth about itself.


Kareem’s Quote of the Day

“What, to the slave, is the Fourth of July? This Fourth of July is yours, not mine. I say it with a sad sense of the disparity between us. I am not included within the pale of this glorious anniversary! Your high independence only reveals the immeasurable distance between us.”

Frederick Douglass (1818–1895), abolitionist, author, and statesman

(Getty Images)

Every July, all across this nation, fireworks explode over crowds of people who have agreed, at least for one evening, that they share the same inheritance, the same dream, and they call it America. The speeches hit the same notes. It’s a kind of collective fantasy—not exactly a denial of all the times we have failed to live up to our ideals, but a fairy tale we tell ourselves in which the shining princes and princesses of America have stood up to the dark forces aligned against us and emerged victorious. For one day every year, we pretend those ideals are historical facts and not merely aspirations. We allow ourselves to be dazzled by the fireworks and blinded to all the places where we have come up short. But in the last decade, the last eighteen months, the last week and a half, it has become almost impossible to deny the darkness in those corners the fireworks don’t light; to deny that the dark forces we dreamed of defeating now occupy center stage in our national story.

Frederick Douglass was never under any such illusions. An escaped slave from Maryland, he became a national leader of the abolitionist movement in the Northeast. He gave his most famous speech, What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?, on July 5, 1852, at Corinthian Hall in Rochester, New York. It was one of the most precise acts of rhetorical surgery in American history. Standing in front of a predominantly white abolitionist audience, people who considered themselves allies, he described their country to them with words so sharp his voice must have felt like a scalpel.

What strikes me most, though, is not the anger of Douglass’s words, but the sadness. “I say it with a sad sense of the disparity between us.” Anger is easy to dismiss. Sadness does something different: it implicates. The grief in his words carried its own argument. I see this clearly, and what I see makes me grieve for you as much as for me. That is a much harder thing to walk away from than fury. The people in that room could not accuse him of losing control. They could only reckon with what he was describing.

The argument embedded in those words, that the brighter the celebration of freedom, the more visible its denial becomes, has proved to be a running thread through more than two centuries of Black American writing. Langston Hughes made it in 1935 when he wrote “Let America Be America Again.” Zora Neale Hurston, Ralph Ellison, James Baldwin, Alice Walker, August Wilson, Toni Morrison, and Colson Whitehead are some of the authors who have carried it forward through the decades that followed. Can we look at that unbroken line of writers making the same essential argument across two centuries and still conclude the issue has been fundamentally settled? In the summer of 2020, five of Douglass’s descendants read the words from his 1852 speech for an NPR video project, and they landed like they were written that morning. That is either a tribute to how timeless great writing is, or a sobering commentary on how durable this particular problem has proven to be.

The distance Douglass named in 1852 has not been closed. It has been reduced, in fits and starts and with enormous effort; and to deny that progress would dishonor everyone who bled for it. But “reduced” describes something different than “closed,” and the Fourth of July, of all days, is a good time for all of us to sit with that distinction. Selective national memory is a comfortable place to inhabit. Douglass kept insisting we step outside of it. In his vision, the Fourth of July could not be a celebration without a reckoning. That would be a gift to anyone who wished to ignore or minimize the moral failures committed in the guise of freedom. He refused to give his opponents that gift. That refusal strikes me as the most serious form of patriotism available to any of us.

Kareem Takes on the News is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 06:00

Visitors can get free peek at works by one of UK’s most significant 20th-century artists and one of his successors

Swifts screech overhead, hares lope along the grassy paths and butterflies flutter in the woodland fringe. There is an orchard; there are chickens, beehives. It seems simply a lovely, if conventional, slice of English countryside – until you happen upon striking sculptures fashioned out of chunks of reclaimed steel or machinery parts salvaged from factories, shipyards and farms.

The pieces are the stars of a show called Heavy Metal, which brings together work by one of the UK’s most significant 20th-century artists, Anthony Caro, and one of his successors, James Capper.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 06:00

Amid America’s 250th-birthday celebrations, the Eagles are facing tough challenges, looking for momentum and meaning on and off the field

Saturday is America’s 250th birthday and a huge national holiday but the US Eagles will be working. The men are in Denver, kicking off the World Rugby Nations Cup against Portugal, champions of Europe’s second tier. The women are in Johannesburg for the first of two games against South Africa, a double bill with the Springbok men facing England.

“I’m dual nationality,” said the women’s captain, Georgie Perris-Redding, who speaks with a Manchester accent but was born in Detroit and whose development included a stint at the American Pro Rugby Training Center in Little Rock, Arkansas, a groundbreaking operation that nurtured US women’s talent.

USA v South Africa and USA v Portugal are broadcast in the US on Paramount+.

Martin Pengelly writes on rugby in the US on Substack, at The National Maul.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 06:00

America at 250 is not a finished monument, but a structure still under repair

To call this Saturday the nation’s 250th birthday is to indulge a comfortable fiction. 1776 was a declaration, not a birth certificate – and the founders wrote its claims of human equality while this nation enslaved human beings. A truer account of American freedom runs through 1619 and Juneteenth, when Americans forced the country, at last, to begin making its promises answerable to reality.

So I’m not in the mood to celebrate “America 250”, and I’m not alone. The affection is thin this summer: the Pew Research Center found that 69% of Americans were dissatisfied with the country’s direction early this year. That is not ingratitude. Sometimes a sour mood is simply clear vision.

Jamil Smith is a Guardian US columnist

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 06:00

New York mayor’s remarks at city hall to come just hours before Trump is set to deliver address at Mount Rushmore

Zohran Mamdani, the mayor of New York City, is expected to deliver a speech on Friday morning to mark America’s 250th birthday.

The address, scheduled to begin at 10am local time and streamed live, will be delivered from behind George Washington’s desk in New York city hall. Mamdani will be surrounded by recently naturalized citizens.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 06:00

Major retail stores will be open on Friday, although some may have modified hours on Saturday, July 4.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 06:00

A noise demonstration that took place outside of the Prairieland Detention Facility in Texas one year ago has resulted in decades of prison time for the anti-ICE activists involved. Federal judges sentenced eight defendants, who the government cast as antifa operatives, to between 30 and 100 years in prison for terrorism-related charges last week; seven more people were sentenced this week.

“There’s a stunningly wide gap between what the Justice Department has put in its press releases and what top officials have said, versus the evidence that was actually presented at trial,” says Intercept reporter Matt Sledge, who has been covering the Prairieland case and was present at the sentencing. “It’s a real stretch to assert, as the government did, that this was all one coherent group.”

“There’s a concerted effort to characterize opposition to ICE or opposition to the Trump administration as some form of conspiracy, as an effort to provoke terrorism,” says Mark Bray, author of “Antifa: The Anti-Fascist Handbook.” “There are a number of things that can be said about the various sentences, but perhaps the most obviously egregious is that handed out to Daniel Sanchez [Estrada]: 30 years for moving some zines, some literature, which is not illegal to possess.”

This week on The Intercept Briefing, host Jessica Washington speaks with Bray and Sledge about Prairieland as a test case in Trump’s war on dissent, and why the administration is determined to convince the public that antifa is a domestic terrorist organization.

“I don’t think Trump or his allies really care about antifa per se. It’s a useful umbrella term to craft into a boogeyman scare tactic. In a way that ‘Communist’ was used in past generations, antifa is used now,” says Bray. He and Sledge point out that in the wake of Charlie Kirk’s killing, the Trump administration became much more aggressive in its targeting of the left and dissent in general.

Related

Prairieland Defendant Sentenced to 30 Years in Prison for Moving a Box of Antifascist Zines

“You had these Prairieland defendants who had already been arrested and charged, and then the government really ups the ante against them by bringing material support for terrorism charges against them, which really contributes to these long sentences. And I think it’s a preview of what’s going to happen elsewhere,” says Sledge. “It shows that in this post-Kirk era, the government is going to use the most aggressive charges it can find against people it does not like.”

“What that calls upon is creating a different kind of antifascist movement, and to me perhaps the most inspiring kind of model or example is the anti-ICE movement, which does not under many circumstances call itself an antifascist movement,” says Bray. “I think that this moment is bringing out the best in a lot of people, whether or not they have activist experience or not, in organizing with their neighbors. The best moments of antifascism throughout history have been those moments where it ceases to be some sort of specialty politics, but becomes just a common-sense way of protecting our neighbors, those most vulnerable amongst us, and protecting our freedoms.”

For more, listen to the full conversation of The Intercept Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube or wherever you listen.

Transcript

Jessica Washington: Welcome to The Intercept Briefing. I’m Jessica Washington, politics reporter at The Intercept.

Matt Sledge: And I’m Matt Sledge, also a politics reporter at The Intercept.

JW: Matt, it’s really great to have you back on the show. Today, we’re going to talk about some really important reporting you’ve been doing on the Prairieland case.

Last week, judges sentenced eight protesters to between 30 and 100 years in prison on terrorism-related charges for their participation in a July 4 protest last year outside of the Prairieland Detention Facility in Alvarado, Texas. 

Matt, as you wrote in your piece, Judge O’Connor handed down a 30-year sentence to a man, Daniel Sanchez Estrada, who was not present at the protest and whose only alleged crime was moving a box of anarchist zines for his wife.

His wife, Maricela Rueda, who was present at the anti-ICE protest but left early, received one of the harshest sentences — 70 years — because she asked her husband to move her zines. 

You were at the sentencing. What was the room like when people heard that they would be spending, for some of them, the rest of their lives behind bars for attending a protest?

MS: I would say it was very somber, but also strangely reserved. I think many of the defendants and their supporters went into the courtroom expecting very long sentences. At the same time, some of them held out a sliver of hope that the judges who were sentencing people in two courtrooms at the same time might listen to their pleas for downward variations from the sentencing guidelines, might do something to attempt to distinguish between the different roles of the people who were at the protest and the one person who wasn’t there, Daniel Sanchez Estrada. And that essentially didn’t happen.

They all got really harsh sentences, and the judges made it clear that they were trying to send a message.

JW: Matt, we talked about this a little bit offline before the podcast, but it’s hard to imagine that the jurors who handed down these convictions could have imagined that they would be sending people to prison for these enormously long sentences, could have imagined that someone would spend 70 years in prison for a nonviolent act. What do you think is going through these jurors’ heads now?

MS: It’s hard to put yourself in someone else’s heads, but I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re surprised. Because even though some of these charges had various serious-sounding names like “riot” and “material support of terrorism,” jurors almost never know the sentencing ranges that come with charges.

Related

Wearing All Black at Protests Makes You Guilty of Terrorism, Prosecutors Tell Jury

And in this case, probably did not know or expect that federal prosecutors would seek — and the judges would apply — these very harsh terrorism sentencing enhancements that really raised the sentences for all the defendants.

JW: Can you tell us what happened outside of the Prairieland Detention Facility and how this case came to be in the first place?

MS: There were a group of people, generally from the kind of lefty scene in the Dallas–Fort Worth area, that wanted to stage what they termed a “noise demonstration” protest outside this ICE facility, a show of solidarity, they later said, with the people detained inside the facility. This is one of these facilities that saw a huge increase in the number of people detained under Trump. 

There had been a daytime protest outside this facility earlier on the day on July 4, 2025. This group of people, around a dozen people, went that night, much later around 10:30, wearing all black, carrying fireworks, and in some instances carrying guns — which is legal to do in Texas.

Related

Texas “Antifa Cell” Terror Trial Takes On Tough Questions About Guns at Protests Against ICE

They set off some fireworks. One of the people who was there described it as actually a kind of festive environment. Then the police were called, as you might expect, and some of the demonstrators there were already gone by the time the gunfire erupted. A responding local police officer was left with a gunshot wound to his neck. And then the person later convicted of shooting the gun that left the police officer injured, Benjamin Song, escaped that night and was on the run for several days, hiding out in the Dallas–Fort Worth area.

So there was a large police manhunt. This was a big story in the Dallas–Fort Worth area for days.

JW: Obviously, federal prosecutors have a different spin on who these protesters were and what their connection to each other was. Federal prosecutors have labeled this group of protesters as a “North Texas Antifa” terrorist cell.

What are prosecutors trying to do here by labeling protesters as members of antifa, and what evidence did they actually have to make a case that these individuals were “antifa operatives”?

MS: There’s a stunningly wide gap between what the Justice Department has put in its press releases and what top officials have said, versus the evidence that was actually presented at trial.

I’m not aware of anybody associated with this group ever claiming that there was such a thing as the “North Texas Antifa Cell,” which is what the government has branded this as. Several of the cooperating defendants, the people who helped the government out in its prosecution, said they did not think of themselves as antifa.

I think it’s safe to say that everybody involved in this protest was politically on the left, outraged over the Trump administration’s immigration policies and other things. Some of these people may have thought of themselves as anarchists or consumed antifascist zines, but it’s a real stretch to assert, as the government did, that this was all one coherent group.

“It’s a real stretch to assert, as the government did, that this was all one coherent group.”

In fact, at trial, the government story was a little more nuanced than what it put in its press releases and referred to a smaller planning group and then a larger group of people who had essentially just showed up to this demonstration. But there were two really different spins from the protesters and their attorneys and the government as to the intentions going into this night.

The people on trial said basically to a person that they did not go there intending to hurt anybody, they were just trying to show solidarity. Then the government pointed to things like wearing all-black clothing and bringing guns and ballistic vests as evidence that they were essentially going there looking to attack.

JW: Could you just explain to our listeners why it’s a bit of a misnomer to call antifa a group, or particularly in the way that the government is describing here?

MS: The whole idea behind the ideology or movement, whatever you want to call it, is that it’s very decentralized and is all about individuals or small groups taking direct action against people they view as fascists.

Related

He Tweeted That He Was the Leader of Antifa. Then the FBI Asked Him to Be an Informant.

This idea that there might be a whole movement of people committed to antifascism is a little too complicated for antifa’s critics to grasp. [Laughs] They insist that there is this, like, global network.

There are certainly small groups and larger groups of people who identify as antifascists. They certainly talk to each other. But again, this idea that there was something called a “North Texas Antifa Cell” just doesn’t seem to be supported by the facts.

JW: So Daniel Sanchez Estrada was sentenced to 30 years in prison for moving a box of zines, as we’ve already discussed. Elizabeth Soto and her husband, Ines Soto, were sentenced to 50 years for their part in the protest. But part of the evidence used against the Sotos was that they owned a printing press to print zines. Matt, what kind of zines are we talking about here?

MS: Yeah, a lot of the zines and kind of social media feed evidence that the government presented at trial were your standard, off-the-rack anarchist, antifascist zines you might find at any anarchist bookstore or book fair, something like that. Something that would not be surprising at all to someone who has spent time in those spaces.

Related

The Feds Want to Make It Illegal to Even Possess an Anarchist Zine

There’s nothing that came close to being directly relevant to plotting either a protest or an attack outside the Prairieland Detention Center. The government stretched and pointed to zines that were from years before and discussed very general tactics.

So it’s stuff that you may have seen before. It’s not some super secret stuff. It’s very typical anarchist, anti-government zines.

JW: So anything I could probably find in a bookstore in Bushwick, is what you’re telling me.

MS: Exactly.

“There’s nothing that came close to being directly relevant to plotting either a protest or an attack outside the Prairieland Detention Center.”

JW: Speaking of, one of the frequent takeaways I’ve heard from this case is that it proves Signal is not as secure as you think.

You’ve extensively covered the trial. What did you learn about digital privacy in 2026 and how people can continue to resist in an era where our digital communications simply aren’t safe?

Matt Sledge: Yeah, there was something interesting that came out at trial, essentially like a glitch in the way Signal worked and the way it interfaced with iPhones. I’m probably oversimplifying or butchering this, but basically our phones store what pops up in the little notification center when our phones are locked. The feds were able to use that to glean some of these communications. 

But you also have to remember they had several cooperating defendants. There were several Signal group chats going on at the same time. So even if Signal is perfectly buttoned down and the government hasn’t found some new hack or glitch to do — your messages with your fellow organizers, or anybody else you want to communicate with in an encrypted fashion, are only as good as the weakest link in the group.

Related

How Did the Feds Get Into Anti-ICE Activists’ Signal Messages?

If someone decides they’re going to be willing to cooperate with the government and they’re in your Signal chat, the government’s probably going to be able to get access to it, which is why security researchers say it’s really important to have disappearing messages on and keep groups as small as you need them to be, and so on, common-sense approaches.

But I also just think that Signal is not like some silver bullet for privacy protection; it’s a way of reducing risk. People should think about it that way. 

It was also really interesting at trial, and we’ve seen this in a few of these cases, the way the government treats the use of Signal itself as something suspicious.

I’ve seen this also in government bulletins to local police that using Signal or another encrypted messaging app is a threat indicator — when people who use Signal, including Pete Hegseth, would say it’s just a way of keeping their messages private. But Hegseth is a good reminder that you have to look at who you’re including in your Signal group.

JW: I do appreciate a little Hegseth diss as a part of the Signal explanation, as that was, I would say, one of the more high-profile — “leaks” is really not even correct to describe what happened there. 

MS: Yeah, it’s not a leak when you just send a journalist out of the blue your war plans. [Laughs]

JW: Yeah, really can’t call it that. But I did want to talk more broadly about not just the legacy of this case, but what the administration is trying to do more broadly. The Prairieland protest case came on the heels of the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, which the Trump administration almost immediately used to justify cracking down on the broader left.

Matt, can you talk about how the administration is trying to silence critics more broadly by labeling all dissent and protests as acts of terrorism, and can you talk about the other active cases the government has against activists?

MS: Yeah, I think it’s important to remember the timeline. The Prairieland demonstration happened in July of 2025, and then Charlie Kirk was killed in September 2025.

Very soon after that, President Trump issued this executive order purporting to designate “antifa” as a domestic terrorist organization — not something he can actually do, but so it goes.

Then he issues NSPM-7, this presidential memorandum instructing the Justice Department and law enforcement agencies to really crack down on the president’s enemies on the left.

So you had these Prairieland defendants who had already been arrested and charged. And then the government really ups the ante by bringing material support for terrorism charges against them, which really contributes to these long sentences.

I think it’s a preview of what’s going to happen elsewhere. It shows that in this post-Kirk era, the government is going to use the most aggressive charges it can find against people it does not like.

In terms of other cases, you can look to Illinois, where the protesters outside the Broadview facility there, the government attempted to charge them. The grand jury initially rejected it and the government was able to secure charges, and then the case fell apart under government scrutiny.

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Trump’s Spaghetti-Against-the-Wall Indictment Against ICE Protesters — and How to Fight It

More recently, we’ve had [new] charges against some Stop Cop City organizers in Georgia, and charges against protesters in Minneapolis with this aggressive theory about a conspiracy against federal officers, and these folks’ defenders say they were essentially just cop watchers keeping an eye on the federal invasion in Minneapolis.

So the charges may differ from case to case. The exact logic of how these cases work may differ, but the overarching strategy of using the most aggressive charges you can find and painting this all as a big conspiracy is going to continue.

“In this post-Kirk era, the government is going to use the most aggressive charges it can find against people it does not like.”

JW: The cases that you just brought up had given some people hope that while the government may be trying to target protesters and dissenters, they didn’t have the power to jail them to the extent that they obviously wanted to and were intending to.

The Prairieland case and these sentences is a really scary wake-up call that the government is incredibly powerful and that these are not just words or prosecutions. This is an intent to really jail Trump’s dissenters and to jail any kind of opposition to this regime and that they have the power to do that in some of these cases.

We’re going to leave it there. Matt, I just really want to thank you for this update and your reporting. To continue following Matt’s work, sign up for The Intercept’s newsletter at theintercept.com.

MS: Goodbye, Jessie. Thanks for having me.

JW: Next, we zoom out with Mark Bray, author of “Antifa: The Anti-Fascist Handbook.”

Bray is a history professor at Rutgers University and a frequent target of the right. He also consulted as an expert witness with one of the Prairieland defendants but did not testify. With Bray, we’ll take stock of the Trump administration’s crackdowns on dissent and talk to him about his own experiences being targeted by the right.

[Break]

JW: Mark, welcome to The Intercept Briefing.

Mark Bray: Thank you for having me.

JW: Mark, we just spoke to my colleague, Matt Sledge, about the details surrounding the Prairieland case. But to start, can you just give us your reaction to the charges and to the sentencing?

MB: Certainly when we look at the Prairieland case and some other somewhat similar cases during this second Trump administration, we can see that there’s a concerted effort to characterize opposition to ICE or opposition to the Trump administration as some form of conspiracy, as an effort to provoke terrorism. I see it in that context. 

There are a number of things that can be said about the various sentences, but perhaps the most obviously egregious is that handed out to Des — to Daniel Sanchez — 30 years for moving some zines, some literature, which is not illegal to possess.

It’s part of this broader effort to characterize opposition as terrorism conspiracy that we’ve seen in various manifestations. It seems like a particularly egregious version of that, when, to my knowledge, many of the people who were at this protest in Prairieland aren’t even accused of firing the weapon that was supposedly fired.

JW: Yeah, you’re right. The fact that Benjamin Song is the only person who actually fired a weapon and that everyone else participated in what appears to be nonviolent protesting — the charges that were handed out are really hard to even contemplate.

I want to get a little bit more personal as well. So The Guardian reported that you acted as a consultant for one of the defendants but didn’t testify. I know your name also came up multiple times during the trial. Can you talk about that, and what that was like for you?

MB: I was in Spain at the time. I had left the U.S. in response to death threats from the far right and my concerns about the political situation in the U.S. So I was unable, unfortunately, to testify in person. I was consulted by the attorneys for Daniel Sanchez, for Des. I think they asked whether I could testify remotely, and I imagine they were turned down because they didn’t follow up on that.

But part of what I did was, they sent me a Dropbox link or some such equivalent to read all of the radical literature that he transported, all of the scanned zines.

I read through a bunch of them; a few of them I was familiar with already. And a few things stood out. As I said, number one, it’s not illegal to own these things. Just because you own a book or a piece of writing doesn’t mean you necessarily agree with everything in it or anything in it. I own a copy of “Mein Kampf” — that doesn’t make me a Nazi. 

“Just because you own a book or a piece of writing doesn’t mean you necessarily agree with everything in it or anything in it.”

Although these folks were accused of being part of some sort of supposed antifa cell, very few of the zines that he transported had anything to do with antifa politics, and one of them was actually a critique of it.

So it just goes to show you that the political claims are intentionally superficial, vague, and minimalist in order to be able to package as much stuff they don’t like under the same kind of terrorist umbrella as possible.

JW: I want to get into why you had to flee a little bit more deeply. But before that, we spoke to Matt Sledge about this, but I wanted to get your take as well. Why is the administration determined to convince the public that antifa, a decentralized antifascist movement, is a domestic terrorist organization? What are the motivations here, and what does it mean if they can successfully convince us that these are terrorists?

MB: I guess the starting point is to recognize that I don’t think Trump or his allies really care about antifa per se. It’s a useful umbrella term to craft into a boogeyman scare tactic. In a way that “Communist” was used in past generations, antifa is used now.

Certainly, the FBI have been monitoring antifa groups for years now, and I’m sure they have a reasonably accurate sense of what it is. There’s a number of different groups in different cities that organize against the far right in a variety of ways. None of them are particularly large. There aren’t that many of them in the U.S., relatively speaking.

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But by arguing that antifa is — as a number of far-right provocateurs over the years have argued — like the paramilitary wing of the Democratic Party, that phrasing shows us how they’re trying to make the case that whatever kind of far-left radical figure is actually just a version of the center-left, and that everyone who is not with us is against us.

That, I think, is reflected in the term “antifa-aligned,” which the Department of Homeland Security promoted as a framework for thinking about this. That, OK, there are antifa groups, there’s antifa-aligned. It’s like different layers to the onion to be peeled back. 

For me, it’s a useful term because it’s poorly understood. It’s associated in the popular imagination with people who cover their faces, who engage in acts of violence. And in that way, it’s a useful linchpin for framing a conspiracy.

Beyond that, we haven’t actually seen self-described antifa groups in the streets opposing the far right in the U.S. since last decade. It’s not particularly germane to what’s going on in U.S. politics, but of course, the reality of it is not particularly important to Trump and his allies.

JW: That’s really interesting. This isn’t just an attack on the left, and I think people on the left can often see it as, “OK, this is an attack on the left.” This is an attack on any kind of resistance, any kind of dissent, any kind of opposition to Trump. And have we seen this in history? You alluded to attacks on communists, but can you talk a little bit about the history of targeting the left and the broader ripple effects?

MB: There are so many cases. One that comes to mind is something I wrote a book about. I wrote this book called “The Anarchist Inquisition” about Spain and France at the turn of the 20th century. In short, there were anarchist bombings and assassinations — actual anarchists who said, “Yes, I’m an anarchist,” who tried and sometimes succeeded and sometimes failed to kill the king of Spain or to kill the president of France.

They didn’t have a ton of allies, and even in the anarchist movement, most disagreed with that strategy. But the Spanish government, and to a lesser extent the French government, used that as an excuse to arrest all sorts of trade unionists and Freemasons and anti-clerical figures and socialists in this big scandal in the 1890s, El proceso de Montjuïc, where these people were put in a dungeon. And it was this effort to create this conspiracy among the left that all these different people were somehow in cahoots to try and overthrow the monarchy.

“It’s useful for the right to portray all of the left as being the same.”

So there are many cases throughout history around this. You can go forward into the movements of the ’60s. It’s useful for the right to portray all of the left as being the same. Which is actually a useful way I think those of us on the left should remind ourselves — that while there are comparisons between different kinds of right-wing forces, it’s also a mistake to say that all different kinds of fascists and far-right formations are all the same. Because there are differences there too, and understanding them makes sense. Flattening the dynamic can be useful rhetorically on both sides, but it’s usually not accurate.

JW: One thing I have just been thinking about is we’ve seen so many attempted prosecutions of protesters under the Trump administration, and this is their first real victory against, they’re calling it their first real victory against antifa.

Obviously, as we’ve discussed, it’s much more complicated than that. But we’ve seen the administration attempt to prosecute the Broadview Six, who were arrested for protesting outside of an ICE facility in Chicago. Obviously there are sillier instances where federal prosecutors tried to go after someone for throwing a Subway sandwich.

But now that they have their boogeyman scenario for the left, they have sentenced people to prison for the rest of their lives for protesting against injustices perpetrated by their government — does this embolden the administration? Do they learn that they can successfully prosecute people for opposing them?

MB: It certainly emboldens the administration to get this verdict and to get these sentences. Looking back to the fall of last year, when I received threats for my alleged involvement in antifa groups — which is not true, I haven’t participated in any of those groups — the specter of a kind of antifascist Red Scare was looming large.

I think that to a reasonable extent, it kind of faded a bit as the administration focused on a lot of other problems and issues, or created them. It’s come back a bit recently with the Prairieland case, the Prairieland verdicts, also the anti-ICE activists arrested in Minneapolis. There seems to be a bit of a return toward trying to stitch together this alleged antifascist conspiracy.

It’s so Orwellian to think that the antifascists are the bad guys in the midst of an increasingly authoritarian regime, which many scholars of fascism call, to one extent or another, if not fascist, trying to create something akin to fascism. So I do think it emboldens them. I do think it establishes a precedent.

We know that the legal system is all based on different kinds of precedents. And when the administration tried to make the case for antifascism as terrorism back in the fall, they cited a number of different cases which really had nothing to do with it. But what that shows us is that they’re trying to establish a track record, establish the reality of this enemy, this internal enemy they’re trying to combat. This helps them do it because there’s something they can point to. Of course it’s a dishonest intellectual, if you even want to call it intellectual project, to fake evidence and then refer to it as evidence of the thing you’re trying to use as evidence for the evidence. But we know how this administration functions, and it’s not surprising.

“It’s so Orwellian to think that the antifascists are the bad guys in the midst of an increasingly authoritarian regime.”

JW: As someone who has had to deal with the comms side of the White House, I will say it is not very surprising at all. 

You touched on this already a little bit, but because you’re widely viewed as an antifascist expert and you wrote the 2017 book, “Antifa: The Anti-Fascist Handbook,” you’ve long been a target of the right, so much so that you and your family had to leave the country.

Can you talk about that experience and how the threats you were receiving escalated over time to the point that you had to make that decision?

MB: When my book was published in 2017, it was rushed to publication and came out days after Charlottesville. It became a bestseller and was really the book of record for talking about what it was that antifa groups did and what they thought and why.

In that context, I received quite a few death threats. I was visited by the FBI. There was a bomb scare at my work. I was denounced by my employer, the president of Dartmouth College, but not fired because I received support from fellow faculty. But over the coming years, that kind of diminished. Antifa was not particularly pertinent to the news, with maybe the exception of a week in 2020 when Trump tried to blame the Black Lives Matter protests that erupted in response to the police murder of George Floyd on antifa. It pretty much disappeared. 

Then all of a sudden, with Charlie Kirk’s killing, antifa was back on the radar. It was declared a supposed terrorist organization, although it’s neither terrorist nor an organization.

At first, frankly, I didn’t think much of it because I had received threats in the past. Even when Turning Point USA — the local group on my campus, although they were really fed the initiative by the national organization — crafted a petition to have me fired for writing my book, I kind of shrugged. It changed when some of the threats included my home address, and then my home address was published online on X, along with information about my family.

In a country that’s awash in guns, I was very concerned about something like something that happened to Charlie Kirk happening to me, and I was also very alarmed about the political direction of the country. So my goal was not actually to publicize that I was leaving the country, that leaked, but I was planning on leaving. Spain’s sort of my second home, I’ve done research there over the years. 

Now, going back to your earlier point though, the degree of the kind of onslaught of the Red Scare that I was fearful of did not fully materialize over the coming months. It didn’t — I don’t regret going — but it didn’t fully materialize.

I was concerned about all sorts of progressive activists being rounded up, and fortunately that hasn’t happened. It doesn’t mean that we need to stop our vigilance. That’s why we’re talking about issues like this. But it didn’t fully materialize. I do think it’s picking up again a little bit now, so I don’t think we’re out of the woods, so to speak.

But that was my experience, and I returned to the U.S. last week. I’m going to take all sorts of precautions to make sure the same thing doesn’t happen again and to do what I can to keep speaking about these issues.

JW: Why do you think that the energy, the kind of Red Scare energy we had seen pick back up, why do you think it died down, and what do you think brought it back? Do you attribute that to Charlie Kirk’s death specifically? I think a lot of people think that the right used that as an excuse. I’m curious why you think it went up and down in that way.

MB: The killing of Charlie Kirk was obviously an excuse. Even before we knew who had done it Trump was blaming the left.

The effort to frame Tyler Robinson as a leftist is ridiculous if you actually look at all the kinds of convoluted things he believed. Then there was this effort for a few weeks to craft the antifa terrorist threat. Now, why it stopped, I’m not entirely sure. I do think that we live in this social media era where you can make something a big deal very quickly, but just as quickly people move on to the next thing.

“In that context, the antifa terrorist threat was almost completely abandoned because Pretti and Good were simply called terrorists.”

I wonder if there was an element of that, particularly in the context where the administration was trying to pursue a number of different objectives at once. I felt, I don’t know what your opinion was, but towards the end of 2025, the kind of authoritarian momentum of the regime started to wane a little. And then all of a sudden January hit, Maduro gets kidnapped from Venezuela, the ICE occupation of Minneapolis grows even more intense. It seemed like particularly with the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, that there was an effort to get the momentum back going again. In that context, the antifa terrorist threat was almost completely abandoned because Pretti and Good were simply called terrorists. 

So the middleman term between leftist and terrorist was antifa. They took out the middleman term: Leftists are terrorists. They’re coming back to it now. I’m not entirely sure how far they’ll get with it. One of the questions you always have with the growth of authoritarianism or fascism or whatever you want to call it in democratic states is, to what extent can the institutions that are designed to thwart those advances hold up?

I think overall it’s been a mixed bag in the U.S., but certainly you’d have to think that Trump and his allies do not believe that they can simply arrest just anyone and claim they’re part of a terrorist conspiracy at this point or they would have done it. A lot of the arrests that ICE made have not held up, and so I guess they don’t feel fully emboldened.

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But as you suggested earlier, every step they take, every supposed precedent they establish could make them feel more emboldened to take steps moving into the future. The one last thing I’ll say, though, is that I think the real linchpin for these efforts is something more approximating a genuine crisis or emergency, where they can more believably say, “If we don’t deal with these terrorists, our efforts to save the country will be for naught.”

Right now I don’t think that most Americans believe that there is this internal terrorist conspiracy, that’s something they have to be concerned about, especially when the price of groceries is going through the roof, or of gas. But if they get some situation where that’s more plausible, then I’d be more scared.

JW: As you noted, you wrote your handbook just at the start of Trump’s first term. The forward is written by the late Joshua Clover, who recounts pivotal moments in those years in which antifascists were pushing back against the rise of white nationalism. Nearly a decade later, how do you think about this moment that we’re in, and how we’ve gone from the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, where a group of neo-Nazis chanted, “Jews will not replace us,” holding tiki torches, to all of the in between and where we are now?

MB: When I published “Antifa” in 2017, I described the situation we were in as a moment of preventative antifascism that was akin to one extent or another to the post-war European context of trying to organize such that Nazis or fascists couldn’t bring back another horrific regime. We’re not in that situation anymore in the U.S., and I think to some extent we’re in a bit of an unprecedented situation, which I know that’s a term that’s thrown around a lot, but I mean it when I say it.

Whereas you look at the growth of Hitler’s regime in Germany or Mussolini’s in Italy, from the point at which they had the opportunity to take authoritarian power to the kind of consolidation of the regime, there was a much quicker, more straightforward ascension. Hitler outlawed various different political parties and threw their leaders in jail pretty quickly over the months after the Reichstag fire, which provided the context for the Enabling Act [of 1933], which allowed him to centralize his power.

In the U.S., we are not in the status quo, but we’ve not yet fully reached a kind of fascist or authoritarian regime, that we do still have other political parties. You can at least, under most circumstances, protest. So thinking about that in between I think is very interesting, particularly since the kinds of antifascist politics that I wrote about in the book were designed by different kinds of leftists after World War II to stop small and medium-sized fascist groups before they reached the halls of power.

But now, figures like Stephen Miller and Pete Hegseth and so forth they have their hands on the wheel. So what that calls upon is creating a different kind of antifascist movement, and to me perhaps the most inspiring kind of model or example is the anti-ICE movement, which does not under many circumstances call itself an antifascist movement.

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I would call it an antifascist movement, which ironically is exactly what Trump is trying to get us to call it from a different angle. I think there’s a kind of contestation over language, contestation over images of suffering. I found it shocking when they published the alternate video of the killing of Renee Good in order to essentially — I and many others interpreted it — for us to think that she deserved it because of the context of her partner shouting at the ICE agent.

So contestations over images of violence over words, and I think that this moment is bringing out the best in a lot of people, whether or not they have activist experience or not, in organizing with their neighbors. The best moments of antifascism throughout history have been those moments where it ceases to be some sort of specialty politics, but becomes just a common-sense way of protecting our neighbors, those most vulnerable amongst us, and protecting our freedoms.

That’s what I think is happening now, and that’s what I hope we’ll continue to see, and that could produce really inspiring social movements over the years to come.

“The best moments of anti-fascism throughout history have been those moments where it ceases to be some sort of specialty politics, but becomes just a common sense way of protecting our neighbors, those most vulnerable amongst us, and protecting our freedoms.”

JW: To your point, what we’ve been witnessing with these anti-ICE protests is not just organized groups in Signal chats working together, although that is obviously happening as well. We’re seeing everyday people watch their neighbors get dragged out of their homes and standing up and saying, “I won’t stand for this.”

You have to think that the movement of antifascism — separate from how, the Trump administration is trying to describe antifa — but this larger movement of antifascism does have legs if people are willing to stand up for each other, to see their neighbors as members of their family, as members of their community.

We’re going to have to leave it there, but Mark, thank you so much for joining me on The Intercept Briefing.

MB: Thank you so much.

JW: We want to know what issues you are following, send us an email at podcasts@theintercept.com or leave us a voice mail at 530-POD-CAST that’s 530-763-2278

That does it for this episode. 

This episode was produced by Laura Flynn. Ben Muessig is our editor-in-chief. Maia Hibbett is our managing editor. Fei Liu is our product and design manager. Nara Shin is our copy editor. William Stanton mixed our show. Legal review by David Bralow.

Slip Stream provided our theme music.

This show and our reporting at The Intercept doesn’t exist without you. Your donation, no matter the amount, makes a real difference. Keep our investigations free and fearless at theintercept.com/join

And if you haven’t already, please subscribe to The Intercept Briefing wherever you listen to podcasts. Do leave us a rating or a review, it helps other listeners to find us.

Until next time, I’m Jessica Washington.

The post Trump’s Communist Boogeyman Playbook: Charging Protesters as Terrorists appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care? A recent shooting of a 19-year-old has quickly become one of Wilmington’s highest-profile police use-of-force cases in recent years. With differing accounts from police and community members, a Delaware Department of Justice investigation is expected to be closely watched as residents look for answers.

On Thursday morning, the family of a teen shot and killed by police in northeast Wilmington publicly demanded that city officials release body camera footage from the shooting. 

Later in the day, the family was shown the video by Wilmington police. Also watching was a family attorney, Harry Daniels, who told Spotlight Delaware the video depicted events on June 24 that differed from the city’s account. 

He said 19-year-old Kadir Skinner could be seen running from a neighborhood dog as police began chasing him. Skinner never turned toward the officer before police shot him three or four times, according to Daniels.

“He never threatened the officers. He was running with nobody around him,” said Daniels, a Georgia-based civil rights lawyer. 

Skinner was then handcuffed. He later told officers several times he couldn’t breathe, Daniels said. 

“That’s when they decided to rapidly pick him up and take him to the hospital, where he ultimately died,” he said. 

Kadir Skinner’s parents Durrell Dollard and Rashai Skinner stand side by side at a press conference Thursday about their son’s killing. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY BRIANNA HILL

Daniels also sought to refute the city’s assertion that Skinner had pointed a gun toward a crowd of people prior to the foot chase. He said the body-camera video showed no crowd of people in the area until after the shooting when neighbors began to gather around the scene. 

Asked about Daniels’ account, Daniel Walker, deputy chief of staff to Mayor John Carney, said the footage does not contradict any of the city’s statements 

“This footage does not reflect the totality of the investigation, which is still ongoing,” Walker wrote in a statement to Spotlight Delaware.  

Walker did not respond to the question of why the officer in question made the decision to shoot Skinner. 

Police account under scrutiny

Police have said officers were monitoring a large gathering near Jessup and East 24th streets when they saw Skinner leave a home and point a gun toward the crowd.

When officers approached him, Skinner fled on foot, according to police.

On Wednesday, city officials released additional details, saying Skinner was shot once in the buttocks during the chase, and that officers then transported him to the hospital themselves.

Police also said they recovered a firearm but did not say whether Skinner was holding it when he was shot.

The officer who fired the shot, who has yet to be identified, remains on administrative leave, according to police.

The police’s account of the events was challenged even before Skinner’s family watched the body camera footage.

Latiya Greene, who said she witnessed the shooting while visiting a relative in the area, previously told Spotlight Delaware she saw Skinner running with his hands raised as officers chased him.

She said she heard him say something to the effect of, “I don’t have nothing,” before he was shot. Greene said she did not see anything in his hands.

Greene also said she saw an officer collect shell casings shortly after the shooting.

“He came and swooped up all the shell casings from off the ground, put them in his pocket,” she said.

Asked about Greene’s account, city spokeswoman Caroline Klinger referred Spotlight Delaware to an earlier statement from the mayor’s office saying details would be released after state and city investigations conclude.

Klinger has also noted that city officials sent the body camera footage to the Delaware Department of Justice for its investigation.

The DOJ intends to release the body camera footage publicly, department spokesman Mat Marshall said, but it first must blur faces of bystanders and collect supplemental footage. 

Marshall also stated that Attorney General Kathy Jennings has spoken with Skinner’s family and has expedited her department’s investigation.

DOJ officials are asking anyone with video that shows the incident to contact publictrust@delaware.gov

A community backlash

City officials showed Skinner’s family the body camera footage after days of rallies, community meetings and growing criticism of the shooting — and the city’s response to it. 

At a protest on Tuesday, local activist Mahkieb Booker led a crowd of about 50 people on a march from Rodney Square to the nearby Delaware state building. 

Demonstrators march along Wilmington’s Market Street toward the Carvel State Building on Tuesday. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY MATT BUTLER

Organizers decided to gather at the state’s Carvel Office Building to highlight what Booker said was a lackluster response to the police shooting by the state DOJ. 

Two days later, on Thursday, Skinner’s family held their press conference. While there, his sister Aniyah Clark pleaded for Wilmington officials to provide a more detailed account of what happened.  

“My goodness, it shouldn’t take this much for us to get the closure we need,” Clark said, with her voice breaking. “We already have to bury him and never see him again.”

Also speaking at the press conference was prominent national civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who has been hired by Skinner’s family.

According to Crump, Skinner’s father had approached officers directly after the shooting to tell them the victim was his son. Officers then maced Skinner’s father, Durrell Dollard, in his face. 

The city did not immediately respond to questions about the incident.

Crump also noted that police took Skinner to ChristianaCare in Wilmington that night. Working at the hospital at the time was the teen’s mother, Rashai Skinner.

Rashai Skinner spoke briefly at the family’s press conference Thursday. With her voice quivering, she noted that Kadir Skinner’s middle name is Assad, which means lion. Then speaking to police, she said “you guys have woken up the lioness.” 

“And I’m not going to stop fighting for my son,” she said.  

Asked if the family plans to sue the city or police department, Crump – who in the past had represented the family of George Floyd, among others – said they “plan on exploring every possible legal parameter to get full justice.”

The post Attorney says body-cam footage challenges Wilmington police account in shooting of teen appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 06:00

The US age-adjusted death rate fell to a record low in 2025, likely pushing life expectancy to a record high as overdose deaths declined and mortality improved across all age groups. CNN reports: There were about 689 deaths for every 100,000 people in the US in 2025, according to a new report from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention -- the lowest rate recorded in more than a century of tracking. The age-adjusted rate has fallen 22% since 2021, landing about 4% lower than it was just before the pandemic in 2019. [...] The top causes of death in the US in 2025 followed longstanding patterns: Heart disease led with nearly 695,000 deaths, followed by cancer with nearly 623,000 deaths. Unintentional injuries, which includes drug overdoses, were the third leading cause of death. Overdose deaths are still high -- about 70,000 people died from an overdose in 2025, preliminary CDC data shows -- but experts say that sharp declines probably played a large role in bringing the age-adjusted death rate down in the US.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care? 
As we celebrate the 250th anniversary of the nation’s founding, the legacy of contentious Revolutionary War era Delaware figure and slaveholder Caesar Rodney once again comes into view. Six years after a Rodney statue was taken down in Wilmington during a national era of racial reckoning, Delawareans still have a range of beliefs about how Rodney’s legacy should be interpreted, and what should be done with his statue.   

A statue of one of Delaware’s most controversial Revolutionary figures is on display in Washington for America’s 250th birthday, after spending the past six years in storage.

As time ticks until Caesar Rodney’s return to Delaware following the Fourth of July celebration in D.C., state leaders still are not sure what should be done with the statue of his likeness, and, more broadly, how to reckon with Rodney’s complicated legacy as Founding Father and a slaveowner.  

Rodney is most famous for trekking 80 miles from his Dover home up to Independence Hall in Philadelphia to cast the tie-breaking vote to approve the Declaration of Independence on July 2, 1776. 

But he also enslaved at least two dozen people throughout his lifetime on his family’s Kent County farm, known as Byfield

A number of prominent Delaware establishments are named for Rodney, including Wilmington’s main public square, a Kent County school district and a conservative public policy think tank

Defenders of Rodney say he deserves to be recognized for his contributions to the nation and the state — in addition to being a delegate to the Continental Congress, Rodney also served as governor and a state Supreme Court justice. They say the past cannot be erased by hiding the statesman from public view.  

“Any person of influence had slaves,” said Delaware Republican Party Treasurer Brandon Brice, who has been an advocate for reinstalling the statue. “There’s a good, a bad, and an ugly to history, and I think if we’re going to tell history, we have to tell all of history.”

But, in a state where about one in four residents are Black, others are skeptical as to whether substantive conversations about Rodney’s slave-owning past ever took place, and some question whether he really is a Delaware figure who should be highlighted. 

“I don’t think the people’s voice has changed because conditions haven’t changed, history hasn’t changed,” said Hanifa Shabazz, who was the Wilmington City Council president when the statue was taken down in 2020.  

The statue of the man was taken down from Wilmington’s Rodney Square in 2020, during national protests over the police killing of George Floyd. When then-Mayor Mike Purzycki made the decision to remove the statue, he promised that an “overdue discussion about the public display of historical figures and events” would take place. 

Community leaders say they have had plenty of informal conversations since 2020 about Rodney’s legacy and representation in Delaware. 

But when asked by Spotlight Delaware, Wilmington city and state officials could not provide specific examples of any formal discussions about Rodney that have taken place.

Gov. Matt Meyer’s office did not respond to multiple requests for comment about his thoughts on the statue. 

There has also been a push in recent months by a group of Wilmington residents to reinstall a statue of Christopher Columbus, which was simultaneously taken down in 2020.

Rodney’s complicated history

Some facts about Rodney’s biography – including his personal beliefs about slavery, and his famous ride to Philadelphia – are debated by scholars. 

Rodney lived his whole life at Byfield, an 800-acre Kent County farm owned by his family, and held a number of political positions both in Delaware and in the Continental Congress. 

A portrait of Caesar Rodney that is currently owned by the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery. | PHOTO COURTESY OF THE NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY

The commonly told story is that Rodney heroically rode the 80 miles from Delaware to Pennsylvania on horseback, through a thunderstorm, to arrive in Philadelphia in time to cast the tie-breaking vote in favor of the Declaration of Independence. 

However, historians now say it is more likely that Rodney did most of the ride up to Independence Hall in a covered carriage, because he was battling facial cancer. 

And undoubtedly more controversial than how Rodney got to Philadelphia is a dispute over how  many people Rodney enslaved, and his views on the institution of slavery. 

It has been widely reported, including in the Delaware Public Archives, that Rodney owned more than 200 slaves. 

A recently completed research report on Rodney’s slave-owning past commissioned by former Mayor Purzycki and obtained by Spotlight Delaware, however, estimates that Rodney enslaved at least 26 people during his lifetime. 

Some Delawareans also have argued that Rodney was an early abolitionist. One such individual is Charlie Copeland, former chair of the state Republican Party and director of the namesake think tank, the Caesar Rodney Institute.

Copeland cited a proposal Rodney made to the Delaware legislature in 1767 that they forbid the importation of more slaves into the province as evidence of his beliefs.

Both the report initiated by Carney’s office and Delaware historian Dick Carter, however, say they would not go so far as to call Rodney an abolitionist. 

Carter told Spotlight Delaware Rodney’s view of slavery was “sufficiently complex,” but he does not believe Rodney was “a strong supporter of the institution of slavery.” 

Ciro Poppiti, a Delaware lawyer and the New Castle County Register of Wills, donned a Caesar Rodney costume and undertook a recreation of Rodney’s ride from Dover to Philadelphia last month. | PHOTO COURTESY OF CIRO POPPITI

A semiquincentennial reenactment

Adding to the conversation surrounding one of Delaware’s Founding Fathers, and what to do with the statue of his likeness, was a recreation of Rodney’s ride from Dover to Philadelphia last month. 

Ciro Poppiti, a Delaware lawyer and the New Castle County Register of Wills, donned a Rodney costume and undertook the two-day journey by carriage, traversing back roads to make it to Independence Hall on June 13.  

Poppiti said the ride was substantially more complicated to pull off in 2026 than in 1776, because Delaware roads are far busier now, and many are not safe to travel by carriage. 

To Poppiti, though, it wasn’t just a whimsical opportunity to wear 18th century garb – the ride was also a chance to espouse some unity among Delawareans for the country’s 250th anniversary and reflect on Rodney as a part of Delaware history, he said. 

Poppiti’s ride included stops at some spots in Rodney’s life, such as Christ Episcopal Church in Dover, where Rodney attended services. A participating group conducted a penance service recognizing that Rodney owned slaves. 

Riding alongside Poppiti in the carriage were some of who he called the “unheard voices” of Rodney’s story – actors portraying people he enslaved and prominent Delaware women of the time. 

“How do you think Caesar Rodney had time to be a hero? It was because of those patriots enslaved and working at his farm at Byfield,” Poppiti told Spotlight Delaware. 

He said he hopes this nuanced representation in the Rodney reenactment will help inspire discussions about how to fairly display the statue in Delaware again. 

Complicated statue conversations

The bronze statue of Rodney, depicted heroically on horseback, was erected in Rodney Square in Wilmington in 1923.

As protests over the death of George Floyd took place in Wilmington in the spring and summer of 2020, then-Mayor Purzycki and the Wilmington City Council decided to put the controversial statue in storage, vowing to initiate conversations about its future. 

The Caesar Rodney statue was placed in the so-called Freedom Plaza, along with statues of other Revolutionary War-era figures, in late April. Rodney’s statue is slated to remain in D.C. for the next six months. | PHOTO COURTESY OF EMMA PAGNI

According to a number of people with knowledge of the situation, however, those discussions never fully took place. 

Shabazz, the city council president at the time, said Wilmingtonians saw the statue being removed as a victory, but there were so many other issues to be addressed that there wasn’t ever time to revisit the statue’s future. 

Yasser Payne, a University of Delaware sociology professor, said he was a part of community meetings about the statue, but he does not recall conversations with city or state officials. He described elected officials’ support for actual introspection about Rodney as “tacit.”

Ivan Henderson, executive director of the Delaware Historical Society, said his organization tried to work with the city and other groups to have public dialogue about the statue in 2024 and 2025, but nothing came to fruition. 

A spokesperson for Wilmington Mayor John Carney’s office said the city has been engaging in “extensive conversations with historians, community leaders and cultural institutions” since 2020 about Rodney’s life and legacy. 

The spokesperson did not respond to Spotlight Delaware’s follow-up questions about what those conversations have entailed. 

In 2024, as Carney campaigned for mayor, he told Spotlight Delaware that he was in favor of renaming the city’s main square after its most famous modern leader, former President Joe Biden.

State Sen. Eric Buckson (R-South Dover) has been pushing publicly for Rodney to be put back on display for several years.

Spotlight Delaware first reported in November 2025 that Buckson had secured a deal with the federal Department of the Interior to transport the statue to D.C. and display it as part of the country’s 250th anniversary celebration in the nation’s capitol. 

The Rodney statue was placed in the so-called Freedom Plaza, along with statues of other Revolutionary War-era figures, in late April. Rodney’s statue is slated to remain in D.C. for the next six months, Buckson said. 

What’s next for Rodney?

While the Rodney statue is scheduled to stay on display in D.C. until the fall, state leaders do not appear to have a plan as to where it will go when returned to Delaware. 

Buckson wrote a resolution in June calling for the city of Wilmington, the state and Kent County leaders to work together on finding a suitable location for the statue in Kent County – Rodney’s home – by November of this year. It was never considered by legislature before it concluded this week.

Wilmington is not being considered as a place for Rodney to be displayed once again, he said. 

“It’s a victory for Delaware and the country to tell the historical significance of his ride,” Buckson said. “When that guy comes back to Delaware, Delawareans can decide where best to display the statue and how best to display it.” 

Buckson said he is proposing the state stand up a committee made up of a diverse group of Delawareans to decide how to best display the statue “in its full context.” 

He also said his current ideas for where to best place the statue include Legislative Mall and the John Dickinson Plantation, both in Dover. 

A spokesperson for Carney said he is in support of Buckson’s proposal, but the plans “are still taking shape.” Dover Mayor Robin Christiansen said he is strongly in favor of returning the statue to Dover. 

Other Delawareans on both sides of the debate, however, still have concerns about the status of the statue. 

Copeland, the Caesar Rodney Institute director, said he is disappointed that “our current political environment” means the statue likely won’t return to be displayed in Wilmington, where it would get the most foot traffic from out-of-town visitors.  

Payne, the UD professor, said he views the push to reinstall the statue now as a reflection of a step backward from the progress made during the George Floyd years and a reflection of the country’s current “conservative spirit.”

But to Poppiti, the historical reenactor, months of studying Rodney’s life and trying to embody his character left him with a different conclusion. 

He said he believes Delawareans are putting too much emphasis on the statue and what will be done with it, when Rodney himself would not have cared about the statue. Rather, Rodney would have urged us to carry on the legacy of the Revolution, and of national unity. 

“What he’d say is, ‘Let’s not lose the incredible gift that we were given 250 years ago,’ which is the opportunity for self-determination,” Poppiti said.  

Transparency Notice:
Brandon Brice serves on Spotlight Delaware’s Advisory Council. Advisors have no role in the editorial decision-making of Spotlight Delaware. For more information, see our Ethics Policies page.


Maggie Reynolds is a Report for America corps member and Spotlight Delaware reporter who covers rural communities in Delaware. Your donation to match our Report for America grant helps keep her writing stories like this one; please consider making a tax-deductible gift of any amount today by visiting https://spotlightdelaware.org/support/.

The post 250 years since his ride, how does Delaware reckon with Caesar Rodney’s legacy? appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
A recent shooting of a 19-year-old has quickly become one of Wilmington’s highest-profile police use-of-force cases in recent years. With differing accounts from police and community members, a Delaware Department of Justice investigation is expected to be closely watched as residents look for answers.

On Thursday morning, the family of a teen shot and killed by police in northeast Wilmington publicly demanded that city officials release body camera footage from the shooting. 

Later in the day, the family was shown the video by Wilmington police. Also watching was a family attorney, Harry Daniels, who told Spotlight Delaware the video depicted events on June 24 that continued to raise more questions than answers.

He said the body camera footage, taken from the officer who fired the fatal shot, begins with 19-year-old Kadir Skinner running from a neighborhood dog as police began chasing him. Skinner never turned toward the officer before police shot at him three or four times, according to Daniels.

The Wilmington Police Department has verified that Skinner was struck once by the firing officer.

“He never threatened the officers. He was running with nobody around him,” said Daniels, a Georgia-based civil rights lawyer. 

Skinner was then handcuffed. He later told officers numerous times that he couldn’t breathe, Daniels said. 

“That’s when they decided to rapidly pick him up and take him to the hospital, where he ultimately died,” he said. 

Kadir Skinner’s parents Durrell Dollard and Rashai Skinner stand side by side at a press conference Thursday about their son’s killing. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY BRIANNA HILL

Daniels also sought to refute the city police department’s assertion that Skinner had pointed a gun toward a crowd of people prior to the foot chase. He said the body-camera video showed no crowd of people in the area until after the shooting when neighbors began to gather around the scene. 

Asked about Daniels’ account, Daniel Walker, deputy chief of staff to Mayor John Carney, said the footage, which doesn’t show the lead up to the shooting, does not contradict any of the city’s statements to date.

“This footage does not reflect the totality of the investigation, which is still ongoing,” Walker added in a statement to Spotlight Delaware.  

Walker did not respond to the question of why the officer in question made the decision to shoot Skinner. 

Police account under scrutiny

In their first statement, Wilmington PD reported officers were monitoring a large gathering near Jessup and East 24th streets when they saw Skinner leave a home and point a gun toward the crowd.

When officers approached him, Skinner fled on foot, according to police.

On Wednesday, city officials released additional details, saying Skinner was shot once in the buttocks during the chase, and that officers then transported him to the hospital themselves.

Police also said they recovered a .45-caliber handgun but did not say whether Skinner was holding it when he was shot.

The officer who fired the shot, who has yet to be identified, remains on administrative leave, according to police.

The police’s account of the events was challenged even before Skinner’s family watched the body camera footage.

Latiya Greene, who said she witnessed the shooting while visiting a relative in the area, previously told Spotlight Delaware she saw Skinner running with his hands raised as officers chased him.

She said she heard him say something to the effect of, “I don’t have nothing,” before he was shot. Greene said she did not see anything in his hands.

Greene also said she saw an officer collect shell casings shortly after the shooting.

“He came and swooped up all the shell casings from off the ground, put them in his pocket,” she said.

Asked about Greene’s account, city spokeswoman Caroline Klinger referred Spotlight Delaware to an earlier statement from the mayor’s office saying details would be released after state and city investigations conclude.

Klinger has also noted that city officials sent the body camera footage to the Delaware Department of Justice for its investigation.

The DOJ intends to release the body camera footage publicly, department spokesman Mat Marshall said, but it first must blur faces of bystanders and collect supplemental footage. 

Marshall also stated that Attorney General Kathy Jennings has spoken with Skinner’s family and has expedited her department’s investigation.

DOJ officials are asking anyone with video that shows the incident to contact publictrust@delaware.gov

A community backlash

City officials showed Skinner’s family the body camera footage after days of rallies, community meetings and growing criticism of the shooting — and the city’s response to it. 

At a protest on Tuesday, local activist Mahkieb Booker led a crowd of about 50 people on a march from Rodney Square to the nearby Delaware state building. 

Demonstrators march along Wilmington’s Market Street toward the Carvel State Building on Tuesday. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY MATT BUTLER

Organizers decided to gather at the state’s Carvel Office Building to highlight what Booker said was a lackluster response to the police shooting by the state DOJ. 

Two days later, on Thursday, Skinner’s family held their press conference. While there, his sister Aniyah Clark pleaded for Wilmington officials to provide a more detailed account of what happened.  

“My goodness, it shouldn’t take this much for us to get the closure we need,” Clark said, with her voice breaking. “We already have to bury him and never see him again.”

Also speaking at the press conference was prominent national civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who has been hired by Skinner’s family.

According to Crump, Skinner’s father had approached officers directly after the shooting to tell them the victim was his son. Officers then maced Skinner’s father, Durrell Dollard, in his face. 

The city did not immediately respond to questions about the incident.

Crump also noted that police took Skinner to ChristianaCare in Wilmington that night. Working at the hospital at the time was the teen’s mother, Rashai Skinner.

Rashai Skinner spoke briefly at the family’s press conference Thursday. With her voice quivering, she noted that Kadir Skinner’s middle name is Assad, which means lion. Then speaking to police, she said “you guys have woken up the lioness.” 

“And I’m not going to stop fighting for my son,” she said.  

Asked if the family plans to sue the city or police department, Crump – who in the past had represented the family of George Floyd, among others – said they “plan on exploring every possible legal parameter to get full justice.”

The post Attorney says police body-cam shows Wilmington teen being shot while running appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 05:47

A volunteer at the National Archives in London found the document among other papers seized from an American ship in 1776.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 05:20

UK provisional peak of 37.7C shatters previous record by huge margin, while Germany hits all-time high of 41.7C

Last week’s heatwave across western Europe shattered national June records and set new all-time highs.

The UK recorded a provisional high of 37.7C at Lingwood in Norfolk on Friday 27 June, smashing the previous June record of 35.6C, set in 1976. Such a margin is exceptionally rare: temperature records are typically broken by 0.1C or 0.2C, not a remarkable 2.1C.

Continue reading...

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 05:00

Ditched single-use plastic bottles but can’t find a good reusable one? I spent months putting dozens through their paces – these are the ones worth buying

The best travel mugs and reusable coffee cups, tested

If you think a water bottle is just a water bottle, it’s time to wake up. These days, there’s a lot riding on your choice of drinking vessel. The heady combination of worrying about the planet and, on a more day-to-day level, staying hydrated has made reusable water bottles a must-have.

Once the preserve of hikers and gym-goers, water bottles have become a small but significant act of environmental virtue signalling. Not all bottles are created equal, though. Some are insulated, some leak, some weigh as much as a toddler, and some even infuse your water with hydrogen (more on that later). The choice is dizzying.

Best water bottle overall:
Owala FreeSip

Best budget water bottle:
Ion8 stainless-steel water bottle

Continue reading...

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 05:00

America has long stood for freedom and prosperity, but under Trump insults, threats and unpredictability have become the new norm. As the US marks its 250th anniversary, Guardian correspondents around the world report on how it is perceived elsewhere

Amy Hawkins in Beijing

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 05:00

An investigative collage featuring a bright red sweatshirt, a set of handcuffs and medical examiner tags for Geraldo Lunas Campos. Red paper scraps with the seal of El Paso County, Texas, border a black-and-white photo of double doors secured behind layers of razor wire.
Geraldo Lunas Campos died at East Camp Montana on Jan. 3, 2026. Cengiz Yar/ProPublica. Source images: Documents and images reviewed by ProPublica and The Texas Tribune.

Guards at an immigration detention center in El Paso, Texas, could see a detainee in his cell with one end of a bedsheet wrapped around his neck and the other tied to the door handle. If they opened the door, the sheet would tighten and strangle him. 

The detainee, Geraldo Lunas Campos, had been in detention at Camp East Montana for a month by then. The facility itself was still relatively new and had been opened as part of the Trump administration’s plans to house and quickly deport thousands of immigrants at a time.

Almost immediately after being admitted, the 55-year-old Cuban immigrant began expressing frustration about his care, according to a nearly 300-page unpublished medical examiner’s investigative report. 

The report, reviewed by ProPublica and The Texas Tribune, includes dozens of notes that detail medical staff interactions with Lunas Campos, who had a history of mental illness and had been previously institutionalized in New York. 

The report and the records it contains offer a rare and disturbing look at how immigrant detention facilities — erected rapidly and with little oversight — manage detainees with serious mental health needs. The records paint a portrait of a man in a crisis and a facility whose staff, on several occasions, discussed transferring him to a facility where he could get a higher level of care. 

According to the records, he complained at least eight times to staff about skipped or late doses of antipsychotic drugs to treat his depression, anxiety and hallucinations. He “expressed frustration regarding his medication dosage,” says a Sept. 9 entry from medical staff. 

A cropped excerpt from a typed clinical document. A section titled "Plan" contains a highlighted sentence stating: "he expressed frustration regarding his medication dosage."
Medical staff notes  from Sept. 9 indicate Lunas Campos complaining to staff of Camp East Montana in El Paso, Texas, about his medication dosage. Reviewed and highlighted by ProPublica and The Texas Tribune

They point to moments of exasperation that led to self-harm. He banged his head against the wall after he couldn’t afford to pay the charges to talk with his children in New York. That left him with a black eye. In response, staff simply noted that they spoke with him about “not hitting his head against the wall bc he must take care of his brain and his eyes.” 

The incident with the noose and the doorknob came in early October. A mental health provider eventually coaxed him to untie it. Notes detailing the incident stated that Lunas Campos affirmed he wasn’t suicidal. The notes dismissed what occurred as a “suicidal gesture made to force security staff to release him” from the isolation room where he had been segregated from the rest of the detainees. Hospitalization, the notes stated, was “not clinically indicated at this time based on assessed risk and protective factors.”

A cropped document detailing a "Treatment Plan" to manage suicidal thoughts features an "Addended" note with yellow highlighting that reads: "Pt seen for follow up, reaffirms not suicidal, suicidal gesture made to force security staff to release him from SHU, pt met with psychiatrist."
Medical staff notes from October cite suicidal ideation and behavior by Lunas Campos, which they attribute to attempts at being released. Reviewed and highlighted by ProPublica and The Texas Tribune

Lunas Campos died in detention nearly three months later, after an altercation with guards over his medication. The Trump administration initially claimed that he had experienced medical distress, but a coroner later ruled his death a homicide. 

The conflicting accounts over the cause of his death have drawn significant media attention and served to rally advocacy groups who have alleged that it is one of the more shocking pieces of evidence of the dangerous conditions endured by immigrants in federal detention facilities. 

But little had been reported about Lunas Campos’ condition and treatment before that day. On Monday, Lunas Campos’ three children sued the companies running the facility at the time of his death. The lawsuit alleged that guards killed him and argued negligence, including missed medication doses and the improper use of force and restraint. The Washington Post on Thursday reported that Lunas Campos had repeatedly sought treatment for his mental illness, pointing to the medical examiner’s investigative report. The companies have not responded to the allegations in court filings and did not return emails and phone calls seeking comment.

ProPublica and the Tribune reviewed the contents of the report several weeks ago. Two doctors, who are experts on mental health and deaths in detention, also reviewed the report at the news organizations’ request. The takeaway was clear: The detainee asked for help, the facility staff failed to adequately respond.

The news organizations separately reviewed more than 160 emergency calls, as well as records and interviews with staff and government officials familiar with the detention center. They show medical and mental health emergencies beyond those experienced by Lunas Campos, as well as staff indicating they felt ill-equipped to respond. Detainees had little access to recreational activities and time outside, which mental health experts say exacerbates their despair. Staff also ignored warning signs, such as detainees’ previous efforts to harm themselves.

“It’s civil detention,” said Will Horowitz, an attorney representing Lunas Campos’ adult children in the lawsuit. “They’re not in detention because they’ve committed a crime.”  

The White House declined to comment. Immigration and Customs Enforcement didn’t respond to multiple requests for an interview and did not answer a list of written questions. The administration has previously dismissed detainee accounts of inadequate medical care and poor conditions at Camp East Montana and other detention centers as “false” and called them “fearmongering clickbait.” Federal officials have repeatedly said that for many immigrants, the medical care they receive in detention is the best in their lives.

In Lunas Campos’ case, officials from the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE, initially minimized the incident that led to his death, pointing to his criminal history. Later, in response to news reports that the medical examiner planned to rule the death a homicide, a DHS spokesperson said guards had used force to keep him from killing himself

Lunas Campos was sentenced to a year in jail after a 2003 conviction for sexual contact with a child under the age of 11, according to The Associated Press. The news organization also reported that he was convicted of attempting to sell a controlled substance and sentenced to five years in prison and three years of supervision in 2009.

Horowitz said Lunas Campos’ criminal history is irrelevant to his detention. Lunas Campos’ children declined to comment on the failures highlighted in the medical examiner’s report or on his criminal history, but, Horowitz said, “They want people to know that he was a person like anyone else and that he didn’t need to die.” 

In a report issued after Lunas Campos’ death, DHS officials said he received regular medical and psychiatric evaluations, with staff adjusting his medication as needed. They also contended that he was monitored for suicidal ideation. Investigative records from the El Paso medical examiner show a period during which facility staff checked on him every 15 minutes following his suicide attempt, as required by the federal government. 

But the medical examiner’s report also brings into focus a series of breakdowns in care, according to Dr. Sanjay Basu, an epidemiologist at the University of California, San Francisco. He said Lunas Campos’ case is a model of how such moments compound, creating crisis after crisis with dire outcomes.

“The clinical trajectory documented in his chart — escalating agitation, self-harm, pressured speech, repeated confrontations with staff over medication — is the predictable result of erratic psychotropic medication administration in a patient with serious mental illness,” Basu said.

He pointed to records that show staff didn’t transfer Lunas Campos to a facility that could better treat his mental health, even after noting that they were working to move him as early as Oct. 8. Lunas Campos was also repeatedly placed in segregation cells, separate from the rest of the camp population, which had little more than a bed in them. The government’s own detention standards say staff should generally make every effort to avoid placing detainees with a serious mental illness in segregation. 

Most critically, instead of taking his previous suicide attempt seriously, staff interpreted it as an effort to manipulate them, Basu said.

The records, Basu said, clearly show “systemic neglect.” 

A row of orange traffic cones lines a dry, scrubby dirt field in the foreground. In the background, long, white tent-like buildings and a prominent orange-and-white striped water tower stand under a clear blue sky.
Camp East Montana sits inside Fort Bliss in the desert of far east El Paso. Paul Ratje for ProPublica and The Texas Tribune

A System Unraveling

Camp East Montana was supposed to be the model for how detention centers across the country would operate under President Donald Trump’s administration. It was near the U.S.-Mexico border and had easy access to a highway and an airfield to quickly transport and deport unauthorized immigrants. Its location on barren, massive Fort Bliss land also allowed for a space that could hold up to 10,000 unauthorized immigrants at a time, more than any other facility in the country.

Instead, the detention center became an example of what could go wrong. 

Within months of the camp’s opening, the American Civil Liberties Union, which is now suing the federal government, published accounts from immigrants who said they were beaten by guards, denied lifesaving medication and kept in squalid conditions with sewage at times spilling into their eating areas. Detainees commonly caught measles or tuberculosis. The government hasn’t responded formally to the lawsuit, but in statements to the media a DHS spokesperson said claims of inhumane conditions and detainees being abused are “categorically false.” 

The problems treating people with mental health challenges were not as visible but stacked up in ways that experts said added mental distress and could contribute to more suicide attempts. In the worst cases, they said, detainees unnecessarily died.

The facility was never set up to house detainees struggling with serious mental health conditions, a DHS official and a medical provider who worked there told ProPublica and the Tribune. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because the government did not authorize them to discuss conditions at the camp. 

Several staffers told the news organizations that they had a lot of relevant information they could share, but they had signed nondisclosure agreements.   

The DHS official said immigrants didn’t have adequate space to read, pray, write or get legal services. They were kept inside windowless cells with nothing to do. Detainees were also granted little time outside, partly because the facility’s outdoor space was not big enough for all of them, a government report later found. The federal government requires detention centers to provide detainees at least one hour of outdoor time per day, but many got only a couple of hours a week, detainees told ProPublica and the Tribune. 

“Recreation and amenities, games, books, TVs, are all lifelines for people in detention,” the DHS official, who did not participate in the report, said. 

Prolonged confinement made detainees more anxious and desperate, at times leading to hunger strikes and fights. Immigrants were only supposed to remain at Camp East Montana for a maximum of two weeks, according to contract documents and statements from federal officials. When Lunas Campos died, the typical detainee had spent 38 days in the facility, according to a ProPublica analysis of government data provided to the Deportation Data Project, which collects and posts immigration enforcement information. He had been there far longer, more than 100 days.

Dr. Katherine Peeler, a medical adviser for the advocacy group Physicians for Human Rights who has studied healthcare in immigration detention centers, said that the conditions reported at Camp East Montana signal that it is not a safe place for any detained individual. 

“You’ve been detained. You don’t know what the process is going to be. You don’t know when you’re going to be released,” Peeler said. “It’s really hard to trust people who are in charge to give you accurate information and so, as a result, you’re going to have a lot more despair and a lot more kind of anguish.” 

The situation is worse for people with a history of mental illness, Peeler said. Solitary confinement can cause post-traumatic stress disorder, self-harm and suicide risks, according to a 2024 report that Peeler co-authored with partners, including students and staff at Harvard University. 

“We are creating a mental health crisis that does not need to be there,” Peeler said.

Some detainees at Camp East Montana who showed signs of potential self-harm were placed in isolation rooms that were not suicide-proof. They had doorknobs and mesh ceilings to which detainees who wanted to harm themselves could tie a bedsheet, the DHS official said. 

National detention standards don’t specify the number of suicide-proof rooms needed in each facility but make clear that detainees who are suicidal should be placed in rooms “free of objects and structural elements that could facilitate a suicide attempt.” 

“It’s insane,” said the medical provider who spoke to ProPublica and the Tribune. “If somebody wants to kill themselves, there’s nowhere to put them that’s actually safe.” 

“They Just Didn’t Do It”

Lunas Campos was in such a room when he first tried to commit suicide. By then, staff had reported at least three other suicide attempts to 911.

There were the two calls in September, one about a detainee who lay on the floor holding his stomach in agony and unable to speak after swallowing an unknown object. The other about a man biting his arms and trying to cut his wrists with a piece of cardboard and a comb. 

Another call came in October, the day before Lunas Campos was spotted with a sheet tied around his neck. A man being kept in a medical isolation room to rule out tuberculosis tried to hang himself, the caller told the 911 operator. 

Suicide attempts are warning signs of a larger problem at a detention center, which could include inadequate strategies for observing or flagging self-harm or more general medical issues, said Claire Trickler-McNulty, a former senior official at ICE who served in the Obama, first Trump and Biden administrations. 

Out of 53 deaths in ICE custody since Trump returned to the White House, at least 10 have been reported as presumed suicides. The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights has called for independent investigations into the ICE deaths and expressed alarm over the reported use of solitary confinement.

“You would hope that if you have a number of negative outcomes of problematic incidents like that, that they would do critical incident reviews, figure out what was going on and try to take corrective action,” Trickler-McNulty said.

Last week, DHS’s inspector general launched probes into detainee deaths and whether the department was following its own standards on the use of force, citing a rise in ICE custody fatalities since 2022. 

Other problems were already identified in a report released last month by the Government Accountability Office. The GAO found millions of dollars had been wasted, pointed to gaps in medical care and noted unsanitary conditions at the El Paso facility. The report mentions that in October, ICE officials raised concerns with the contractors running the facility about the lack of windows on some doors in medical holding rooms, which prevented staff from easily seeing what was happening inside. 

The DHS official flagged several other problems that the government could have worked to improve. It could have assigned more ICE agents to help with chronic staffing shortages, created more opportunities for recreational activities and built special tents with suicide-prevention rooms, the DHS official said. 

“There was no lack of money or space and there was an obvious incentive to do it,” the official said, referring to the suicide attempts at the facility. “They just didn’t do it.”

There seemed to be a push-pull between career ICE staff and political appointees, the DHS official told the news organizations. 

“The political side didn’t want to give the appearance that it was so chaotic, they wanted to pretend it wasn’t happening,” the official said. 

Even without the proposed changes, staff at the detention center should have done more to treat Lunas Campos’ mental illness, said Joanne Ahola, a psychiatrist who has spent 17 years evaluating immigrants inside detention centers for Physicians for Human Rights’ volunteer Asylum Network. She also reviewed his records at the request of ProPublica and the Tribune.  

Lunas Campos’ early pleas for help continued throughout his detention. Nearly two weeks after his suicide attempt, he again flagged that he wasn’t getting his medications.

“Pt reported being very frustrated and anxious because he had not received his medication for a couple of days,” a medical note from Oct. 19 read. It noted that Lunas Campos was visibly “irritated and yelling.”

Another note on Nov. 10, said Lunas Campos “had not gotten his medications since Nov. 6.” 

And, on Nov. 11, more than a month after staff told Lunas Campos that they were working to move him to a facility with a higher level of care, shorthanded as HLOC, he was still waiting. Continues to request transfer to HLOC stating conditions at current facility are adversely affecting his mental health,” according to a note from that date.

A compilation of three patient history excerpts shows various entries regarding Geraldo Lunas Campos. The text contains three highlighted sections:

First section: "Pt was visible irritated and yelling."

Second section: "the patient had not gotten his medications since November 6th."

Third section: "SHU lieutenant also spoke with detainee and were able to deescalate, detainee removed sheet from his neck and discussed transfer to higher level of care."
Notes from East Camp Montana staff from October and November show Lunas Campos’ repeated requests for medication, attempts at suicide and requests to be transferred to facility with a higher level of care. Reviewed and highlighted by ProPublica and The Texas Tribune

Lunas Campos was temporarily moved to another facility, but it was another detention center that experts say did not provide the higher level of care he needed.

On Jan. 2, a day before his death, he returned to Camp East Montana. A note from medical staff at 9:42 p.m. said they “provided emotional support,” “reviewed grounding and breathing techniques to manage anxiety,” encouraged him “to seek ongoing mental health support as needed,” and added his name to the medical sick call for a psychiatric evaluation. 

“This is a man who needed regular medications, a full evaluation, mental health clinicians and, no doubt, re-hospitalization,” Ahola said.  

“Instead, it almost seems like it was brushed off or brushed under the rug,” she added. 

Less than two weeks after Lunas Campos’ death, the health administrator at Camp East Montana called 911 again.

Victor Manuel Díaz, a 36-year-old Nicaraguan native, was found in a cell with his pants tied around his neck. He was in a room with no windows.The staff found him as they were doing routine checks.

An ambulance was needed, the health administrator told the operator, explaining where emergency responders should go upon arrival at the facility. Without hesitation, he added, “They’ve been out here many times.” 

Díaz, who cooked chicken and washed dishes at a Minneapolis Korean restaurant, had been picked up and flown to Camp East Montana a week earlier. The GAO noted that ICE itself later acknowledged in a report that staff had not properly followed procedures after he “exhibited risk factors for suicide.” Staff placed him in a medical holding room — not a suicide-resitant cell — and left him unattended for periods longer than 15 minutes, the GAO stated. 

His autopsy, which was conducted by the military, has not been made public. 

The post “He Didn’t Need to Die.” How an Immigration Detention Center Repeatedly Failed to Address a Mental Health Crisis. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 05:00

After four years of war, life in Lukianivka, the most frequently hit part of the Ukrainian capital, is a mix of adaptability and endurance, defiance and denial, resignation and resilience.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 04:46

President Trump says it would be "ridiculous" for the United States to continue its "one sided" relationship with NATO. His remarks came less than a week before a NATO summit in Turkey.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 04:45

Will the UK’s next prime minister finally have a ‘national conversation’ on defence? Expert comment thilton.drupal

The Defence Investment Plan recommits the UK to a national conversation on defence and security. The failure to deliver one so far undermines public trust and leaves the UK vulnerable to hybrid threats.

Keir Starmer and Andy Burnham

Keir Starmer has released the long-awaited Defence Investment Plan (DIP), which sets out the UK’s military spending plans, ahead of the NATO summit next week. The DIP also contains a commitment to a ‘national conversation campaign on defence and security’. 

However, this plan for a ‘national conversation’ was already adopted by Starmer’s government in the Strategic Defence Review (SDR) of 2025. The conversation was to focus on the rationale for investing more in defence, the role of the public in support of national security and resilience, and countering misinformation. 

The review recommended it take the form of a ‘two-year series of public outreach events across the UK, explaining current threats and future trends’. This has not yet happened. 

Meanwhile, intelligence services have warned that Russian sabotage, hostile reconnaissance, cyber-attacks and disinformation campaigns are increasingly directed at the UK, a country viewed as ‘enemy number one’ and a ‘soft target’. The first step in countering these ‘hybrid’ attacks targeting the UK’s political stability is for a new prime minister to inform the public and build a societal response. 

Building trust and consent

The commitment from the Starmer government in 2025 reflects UK and NATO doctrine, which emphasize the ‘central proactive element’ of strategic communications in countering hybrid threats. Increased public awareness can spur civil society action to recognise hybrid threats and address vulnerabilities, acting as a deterrence by denying or reducing the impact of such threats. 

However, the UK government faces a strategic challenge: low public trust. According to 2024 polling, the UK government is one of the least trusted by the public among OECD countries. A ‘national conversation’ could be an important way to improve the public’s trust in the government. 

Allowing the public to feel they are part of a dialogue with authorities and including them in decision-making can build long-term public trust. Communications can foster cohesion through values-led narratives which promote civic unity. 

Withholding information on threats can negatively impact public confidence.

Sharing more about security also requires government to trust the public. The UK government has been accused of a ‘Stalinist’ culture of excessive official secrecy, with information either not shared due to fear of public and media panic, or a desire to control the narrative of the threat. 

Withholding information on threats can however negatively impact public confidence, especially if the British public perceives allied governments or independent media as offering greater candour than official UK sources.  

In turn, a national conversation that builds trust and explains the level of threat facing the UK will help the government to secure public approval for increased defence spending as outlined in the DIP. This is vital considering that higher defence spending generally requires a combination of cuts elsewhere, tax rises, or borrowing – all options that could prove unpopular with the public if the government doesn’t better explain and justify its decisions. 

What role should the public play?

A key element of the conversation is to engage the public in supporting national security and resilience. To send a clear demand signal to society through outreach activities, the government must first organize and articulate policy on the public’s role.

According to Dr Fiona Hill, a co-author of the SDR, civil aid organizations currently feel ‘there is no green light from above’ and ‘a sense of inaction’ in planning to support emergency responses. While the government is researching policy options on aspects of societal resilience, there appears to be limited political direction or ownership with no single minister responsible. 

The SDR also recommended the conversation should support ‘efforts to counter threats to information integrity as a critical component of national cohesion’. This reflects an online information ecosystem which is becoming easier to manipulate, with impacts offline. Violent disorder has occurred every summer since 2024, fuelled in part by misinformation on platforms including Elon Musk’s X and Meta’s Facebook.

Possible calls to action might include asking the broader public to engage in media literacy initiatives, such as those available in libraries and online, for example via civic organizations in Finland and Sweden. 

Given the potential of misinformation to cause polarization and destabilization, the UK government has taken some limited steps to improve resilience, but actions on media literacy are focussed on parents and limited to a government campaign rather than a broader civic coalition. 

Strategic questions

Attempts to destabilize UK society currently exist in a ‘space between peace and war’, with attacks seeking to exploit vulnerabilities across the full spectrum of societal functions. 

Europe’s Centre of Excellence in Countering Hybrid Threats therefore recommends a ‘whole-of-government’ approach, using societal resilience as an organizing framework to cohere other disparate policy areas. In Nordic states, this has extended to social, cultural, and constitutional policy, while the German zeitenwende (turning point) shift since 2022 has linked investment in the military with infrastructure resilience and economic development. 

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 04:30

With players leaving EA’s series once life there felt like a grind beset by ethical concerns, this quirky new sim promises a better life elsewhere

For 26 years, the life-sims genre has been dominated by one series: The Sims. Originally designed by Will Wright, creator of Sim City, EA’s virtual dollhouse series has grown into a $5bn [£3.8bn] empire with the constant release of new games, expansion packs, and collaborations cementing its place among the bestselling video game franchises of all time. But things are beginning to change. New contenders are emerging and turning the heads of even loyal players in The Sims community.

The most recent, and promising, of these is Paralives, once the solo project of indie designer Alex Massé, who is now employing a small team of developers. Released on the PC games platform Steam in May 2026 as an early access title (meaning it’s technically unfinished and looking for user feedback), it sold 250,000 copies in just eight hours. On that first day, the concurrent player count hit 78,603 – not far off The Sims 4’s all-time peak of 96,328 in 2022. While Paralives is a small project, this success is understandable. Following the news of EA’s controversial acquisition by a Saudi-backed business consortium, some simmers are looking for what they see as a more ethical alternative. But this is only part of the game’s appeal. The real draw is the game’s focus on creativity over realism: the quirky details that made many fans fall in love with The Sims in the first place.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 03:01

Weekend’s high temperatures and humidity ‘virtually impossible’ without climate crisis, researchers say

The scorching heat blanketing much of the US this week would have been “virtually impossible” if not for the climate crisis, researchers have found, warning that the high temperatures could threaten Independence Day celebrations and World Cup matches this weekend.

“The climate the country has today is fundamentally different to the one it had when the founding fathers signed the Declaration of Independence,” said Theodore Keeping, extreme weather and wildfire researcher at Imperial College London, in a press release.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 02:00

Amazon says its Leo satellite network now has enough spacecraft in orbit to begin limited commercial internet service, with 396 satellites providing "continuous service across initial latitudes." Early performance will likely be uneven, however, and well behind Starlink. "It'll be years before Amazon can boast similar performance numbers as it continues to launch a planned 3,232 Leo satellites," reports The Verge. From the report: SpaceX went live with its "Better than nothing beta" back in 2020 when it had almost 900 satellites operating in low-Earth orbit. It initially served a narrow band of users in the upper US and Canada, who complained about frequent service interruptions and high sensitivity to obstructions, with speeds between 50Mbps and 150Mbps, and latency from 20ms to 40ms. By 2022, the service and coverage areas had already dramatically improved. [...] SpaceX currently has over 10,000 Starlink satellites in operation, providing robust internet connectivity on land, sea, and air in over 160 countries. Performance varies by the dish, service level paid for, time of day, and location of the user, but we're now talking 200Mbps median download speeds, 10Mbps to 40Mbps uploads, and latency hovering around 25ms.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 01:47

In today’s newsletter: As official celebrations spotlight a narrow cast of ​white heroes, communities across the US are reclaiming the histories that Freedom 250 leaves out

Good morning, and a very happy 250th birthday to the United States of America. If you prefer to celebrate with cage fighting on the White House lawn, an IndyCar rally through the streets of Washington DC, or simply by watching the president do his lonely bop to YMCA at a sparsely attended state fair, so much the better.

It takes a special kind of someone to make the semiquincentennial birthday of a nation of 349 million people, from a whole variety of backgrounds, all about himself. But he wouldn’t be the only one centred on a very particular (white, male, Christian-centric) view of how the nation came to be.

UK news | Women from Black and Asian backgrounds are less likely than their white counterparts to receive an epidural while giving birth, research has revealed.

Ukraine | Ukraine and Russia have promised fresh assaults after Moscow launched a huge barrage on Kyiv, killing at least 27 people, tearing open apartment buildings and sending tens of thousands of people to shelters.

UK news | Criminal investigators in the UK say they have uncovered a “truly international network” of organised drug-facilitated sexual assault in which victims are sedated before being raped and sexually assaulted.

UK politics | Keir Starmer has formally apologised for the British state’s role in past forced adoptions after decades of campaigning by mothers and children affected.

World news | A rescue team pulled a 43-year-old security guard alive from a collapsed basement, ending an operation that became a symbol of hope after the devastation of twin earthquakes that struck Venezuela.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 01:19

President says Washington’s relationship with Nato is ‘not reciprocal’ and ‘they were not there for us’ in Iran war

Donald Trump has said it is “ridiculous” for the US to continue its “one sided” relationship with Nato, less than a week before a summit of the military alliance in Ankara.

Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform that “They were not there for us!!!” and Washington’s relationship with Nato “is not reciprocal”.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 01:00

Researchers say Stelios Kouloglou’s device was compromised after he joined European parliamentary committee

NSO Group’s hacking software was repeatedly used against a member of the European parliament while he was conducting an investigation of spyware abuses in Europe, according to a new report.

Researchers at the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto said they could not attribute the attacks against Stelios Kouloglou to any particular government operator of Pegasus spyware. But their investigation found the attack against the Greek now-former MEP bore the hallmarks of a previous hacking campaign against exiled Russian and Belarusian journalists in Europe.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 00:45

I see a lot of people posting OW tricks but it looks so lame. I mean skate boarders or snowboarders doing tricks look awesome, but the OWs? Its just cringe. Just ride! OW Tricks are lame.

submitted by /u/FireSkyLikeFly
[link] [comments]

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 00:43

SwitchBot's latest 3K camera includes some familiar AI features and a couple of standout customizations I've never seen before.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-03 00:00

What Thucydides really thought about power.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-03 00:00

What America’s armed forces can—and cannot—do for democracy.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 23:57

Migratory giant petrel discovered near Hawks Nest north of Newcastle infected with H5. Testing under way to determine if it’s highly pathogenic H5N1 strain

New South Wales has its first suspected case of the deadly H5 bird flu in a giant petrel that was found near Hawks Nest, north of Newcastle, on the state’s coast.

If CSIRO testing confirms it is the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain, it would mark the first detection of the deadly disease on the Australian east coast.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-02 23:39

I know for sure I wanna vesc it and put a new battery in it, but I don’t know for sure what specific kit or battery combo would work the best/be the most reliable, and if it would be worth it to buy a new motor too.

Any advice helps!

submitted by /u/GlitchKid2007
[link] [comments]

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 23:15

Official statement offers the most detailed official account yet of the highly unusual and fatal incident in Beijing

Chinese authorities said the man who flew a small plane into Beijing’s tallest skyscraper last week was a 66-year-old who had mental health problems.

The statement published on Thursday offered the most detailed official account yet of the highly unusual incident that occurred in Beijing’s central business district on the evening of 26 June.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 22:53

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for July 3.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 22:34

Powered by chipmakers Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, South Korea is seeing a surge in wealth, but there are questions over who gets to share in the profits

When South Korea’s most high-profile divorce case returned to court last month, the lawyers were arguing not just about the breakdown of a relationship, but also the exact date at which to value shares in one specific company.

The judges’ decision in Seoul could change the value of business tycoon Chey Tae-won’s assets by billions of dollars. The shares were in the holding company behind SK Hynix, the manufacturer of chips powering AI systems around the world.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 22:03

The Aspen Acres Fire continues to burn out of control in Pueblo and Custer counties.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 22:00

This live blog is now closed.

OpenAI is reportedly in early stage talks to give a 5% stake in the ChatGPT developer to the US government as artificial intelligence companies attempt to smooth relations with Donald Trump’s administration.

The OpenAI chief executive, Sam Altman, has argued that giving the US public a financial stake in the company is the best way to share the benefits of AI, according to the Financial Times, which cited two unnamed people familiar with the discussions.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 22:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: Researchers who tracked more than 90,000 people over a decade found that sitting or lying down while awake for more than 30 minutes in one period each day was associated with an increased risk of cancer death. The risk increases for every additional hour of continuous inactivity, the findings suggest. However, the researchers also found breaking up periods of sedentary behavior longer than 30 minutes with bursts of physical activity could help reduce the risk. Getting up every half-hour, even for a short walk around the office, could do wonders for your health, they said. [...] The findings, published in Plos Medicine, focused on the health effects of prolonged sedentary behavior on a daily basis. [...] The team analyzed data from wearable devices worn by more than 91,000 UK Biobank participants, who were followed for an average of 12 years. The findings suggest prolonged inactivity lasting more than 30 minutes was associated with cancer risks. Each additional hour of prolonged inactivity every day was associated with a 10% increase in risk of cancer death. However, replacing long spells of inactivity with movement appeared to reduce that risk. Substituting one hour of sedentary behavior each day with light physical activity, such as ironing or washing up, was associated with a 12% lower risk of cancer death. Replacing 30 minutes of inactivity each day with 30 minutes of moderate physical activity, such as walking at an average pace, was associated with an 8% lower risk. The risk was 22% lower when five minutes of inactivity was replaced with five minutes of vigorous physical activity each day, the study suggested. There were limitations to the research, including the fact that the researchers performed a statistical analysis of an observational study, so could not prove causation.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 21:56

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent touched on the recent disclosure of President Trump's crypto earnings, the latest developments with the tax-deferred Trump Accounts, and the struggles facing the U.S. economy.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-02 21:52

Do a lack of lights indicate the front sensor is activated on startup? Or the beeps?

Here is a video of my board having an active front sensor when powered on which of course means ghosting:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H__2xnMFWlU

I'm wondering if there are postings of the onboard safety warnings somewhere so I know what to look for before I actually try to ride this thing.

submitted by /u/Eegore1
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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 21:51

Gonçalo Ramos scored to set up a last-16 clash with Spain as Croatia’s hearts were broken when VAR ruled their late equaliser offside

1 min: Croatia in blue, Portugal in white.

Weather and ref

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 21:42

Princess Cruises vessel is docked in San Francisco for disinfecting in third outbreak for company this year

More than 100 passengers and about 23 crew members on a Princess Cruises ship fell sick from suspected norovirus, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), marking the third outbreak to hit one of the company’s watercrafts this year.

The Ruby Princess vessel set sail on 12 June from San Francisco, bound for Alaska and Canada, with a scheduled return on 2 July. More than two weeks into the journey, CDC officials received a report of an outbreak, which is defined by a threshold of 3% or more of passengers. Aboard the ship were 3,032 passengers and 1,144 crew members, per the CDC.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 20:22

Commentary: With July 4 upon us and generative AI infiltrating the world of creatives, what are we to make of the increasingly bonkers On This Day...1776?

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-03 05:01

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for July 3, No. 648.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 20:00

Narendra Modi received the Guardian of the Blue Horizon award, with trophy and certificate, from the Seychelles president, Patrick Herminie, at the weekend.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 19:53

The US Department of Energy wants changes to energy-efficiency standards enacted under the Biden administration.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-02 19:38
Day 2 of owning the X7LR

Second day owning the funwheel X7 Lr just got done with my second ride, absolutely loving the board! Vesc is amazing there are so many customizable settings it's a lil overwhelming but slowly learning what all the settings do. So glad I joined the dark side!

submitted by /u/counterdefensive1911
[link] [comments]

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 19:34
  • Red Sox’s Contreras also given seven-game ban

  • Pitcher apologized for remark, racial overtones

  • Bench-clearing fracas resulted in four ejections

Major League Baseball suspended Washington Nationals starting pitcher Cade Cavalli and Boston Red Sox first baseman Willson Contreras seven games each on Thursday for their ⁠roles in a benches-clearing incident on Tuesday in Boston.

MLB also suspended Nationals right-hander Miles Mikolas for five games and Red Sox outfielder Nate Eaton for three for ⁠their actions during the ⁠incident at Fenway Park. The ​four players each were fined an undisclosed amount as part of the discipline.

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2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 19:33

Amazon's head of devices and services discussed the company's focus on artificial intelligence, Alexa Plus and new types of technology to support it.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 19:21

Memo calls for ‘surge’ of analysts after agents in January seized hundreds of boxes containing Fulton county ballots

The FBI has asked its field offices across the country to dedicate more than 200 staffers to its investigation of the 2020 election in Georgia’s Fulton county.

A memo obtained Thursday by the Associated Press calls for the FBI to “surge” 260 investigative analysts and staff operations specialists to the effort, which it described as a “priority investigation.”

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2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 19:20

In latest legal twist, appeals panel rules US does not have to reinstate signage on climate, immigration and slavery

The Trump administration does not have to reinstate materials related to climate change, immigration and slavery that it has removed from national parks, a US appeals court ruled on Thursday.

It’s the latest twist in a legal battle over how history is remembered at American public monuments.

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2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 19:20

The clock is ticking for Android as a (somewhat) open platform.

If you are running Android 8 or higher, a virus has been installed on your device and is silently awaiting remote activation. Over the past few months, devices around the world have been infected with this novel strain, with as many as 4 billion Android handsets and tablets estimated to have already been contaminated, meaning that around half of all humanity may be at risk from this threat.

Disguising itself as the innocuously-titled “Android Developer Verifier” (ADV) process, this trojan horse runs surreptitiously in the background as a system service with full root privileges, quietly awaiting an activation signal. The service cannot be blocked, disabled, or removed. Unlike a commonplace bit of malware, this extraordinary strain won’t be detected and neutralized by Play Protect (the malware scanning and remediation service that is installed on all Android Certified devices). In fact, Play Protect is itself the vector through which this virus is transmitted and installed.

That is because it is Google themselves who is propagating ADV. And once activated, this malevolent process has exactly one goal: to block you from running software by developers who haven’t been approved centrally by Google.

↫ The F-Droid news website

If nobody steps up, if no regulator takes on Google in this matter, we could very well be looking at the end of F-Droid and similar open source application repositories on Android. I use F-Droid, and in fact, one of the most important and most-used application on my Pixel 10 Pro comes from F-Droid: Fennec. This Firefox fork is not available through any Google-sanctioned means, and I could just wake up one day and have the browser on what is supposed to be my phone stop working.

Age verification, tying crucial services to iOS and Google Android, killing the ability to install your own software on your phone, purposefully making people hopelessly addicted to and dependent on “AI”, and so much more – we’re facing a multi-pronged attack designed to beat us into submission and give up on the idea of Free computing. I have to admit I’ve lost all hope we’ll be able to win this battle, as the combined interests of technology megacorporations and our own governments are just too powerful to fight.

I feel like we’re living in the computing end times.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 19:20

Dr. Debra Houry, who resigned in protest from the health agency, said the spread of misinformation impacted lives.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 19:05

Abdul El-Sayed, backed by Bernie Sanders, leads polls ahead of Haley Stevens and Mallory McMorrow in primary

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has thrown her support behind Abdul El-Sayed, the doctor and progressive Democrat seeking the party’s nomination in Michigan’s closely watched US Senate race.

In an interview with the New York Times, Ocasio-Cortez – an influential congresswoman on the left of the Democratic party – endorsed El-Sayed, a former public health director. “Despite our ideological differences and whatever disagreements there are in the party, every single one of us sees this moment as existential,” she said.

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2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 19:03

President, in latest AI-generated social media post, targets prominent celebrities who have spoken out against him

Donald Trump on Thursday posted an AI-generated social media video portraying himself as a doctor who claims to have cured some of his most prominent celebrity critics – including Rosie O’Donnell – of the fictional condition “Trump derangement syndrome”.

Outside the AI fantasy, O’Donnell said her assessment of the president remained unchanged. In a statement, she offered her own diagnosis: “He’s quite ill-and getting worse daily. The 25th amendment exists for exactly this reason. Remove. Impeach. Convict.”

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2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 19:01

One of 11 surviving copies of ‘Exeter printing’ and only one known outside US was taken from American privateer ship

For Michael Scurr, a volunteer at the National Archives in Kew, west London, it was “just a boring old Thursday morning” when he sat down in late May to catalogue a collection of documents from the British national collection that had never previously been recorded in detail.

As he opened a volume of 18th-century Royal Navy correspondence, however, Scurr unfolded a document whose opening words he recognised. “In Congress, July 4, 1776. A declaration by the representatives of the United States of America …”

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2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 18:57

What if you need to do very low-level testing involving the very guts of Windows NT, but don’t need most of the userland that sits on top? In fact, what if that userland only slows you down and complicates the work you’re trying to do?

The solution is Windows PE (Windows Preinstallation Environment). It is an official, stripped-down environment distributed with every Windows ISO image. It runs entirely in RAM, requires as little as 512 MB of memory, and lacks support for DirectX, the PowerShell subsystem, or the standard graphical shell (Explorer). Booting by default with NT AUTHORITY\\SYSTEM privileges makes it an ideal test harness for both of these tasks.

The following analysis focuses on the low-level mechanisms of WinPE, as well as BCD and QEMU modifications that allow transforming this system into an ultra-fast, idempotent testing environment.

↫ Piotr Bednarski

Now, the kind of work Bednarski does isn’t the most common of tasks, but I’ve often wondered just how far you can get by bolting on whatever WinPE will allow you to. There were various unofficial third-party tools that built Windows live CDs based on WinPE, but I think most of those have died out by now. If you look hard enough, you can also find some other utilities people made for WinPE, including even some rudimentary web browsers. Regarding web browsers, modern efforts seem to run into issues.

WinPE is not really meant for any advanced functionality, but I really do wonder how capable you can make it without turning it into regular Windows.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 18:49

San Francisco jury fails to reach verdict on more serious felony conspiracy charge over April 2024 demonstration

Seven protesters who blocked traffic on the Golden Gate Bridge during a 2024 anti-war demonstration have been found guilty of misdemeanor charges in a case that became yet another flashpoint over how governments and major institutions respond to pro-Palestinian protests in the Trump era.

The jury, which deliberated for a total of seven days, was deadlocked on the most serious charge: felony conspiracy. If convicted of that charge, the defendants would have faced a potential sentence of 15 years in prison.

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2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 18:33

M/PC is a concatenative operating system for Varvara, inspired by Openfirmware, designed to manage files on system without a file browser. It uses the postfix notation, meaning that the function success their operands.

↫ M/PC website

I’m not going to pretend to really understand what any of this means.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 18:23

Though publicly denied by Elon Musk, a new AI device from SpaceX wouldn't be very surprising.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 18:18

AI is becoming an increasingly important tool for drug discovery. However, for many pharmaceutical and biotech companies, the challenge isn’t finding more powerful models. It’s getting existing models to work together with proprietary research data and computing infrastructure in a way that’s actually useful for scientists.

That is exactly the problem Databricks and Nvidia are trying to address with the new Genesis Workbench – an open-source blueprint for building AI applications in the life sciences. 

Rather than introducing a new model, the project combines enterprise data, Nvidia’s BioNeMo models and GPU infrastructure into a single environment designed to help researchers move from setting up AI workflows to using them.

In a Databricks blog post, the company described Genesis Workbench as “an open blueprint for a life-sciences application on Databricks – a modular workbench that brings the major stages of computational drug discovery under one roof, one UI, and one governance model.”

Drug discovery projects often combine multiple AI models with different components that all play a role in data-driven scientific research. These components may include internal research data, lab results and GPU resources. The problem is that these components frequently live in separate environments. This makes collaboration and reproducibility more difficult than they need to be.

The number of AI models available to researchers is only growing. That makes it even more important to have a way to manage them alongside proprietary data and existing research workflows.

(Credits:Databricks)

Genesis Workbench is Databricks’ attempt to change that. Instead of focusing on one part of the drug discovery process, it pulls together tools for genomics, single-cell analysis, protein engineering and small molecule design into a single environment where researchers can move between tasks more easily.

According to Databricks, “By centralizing both public and proprietary datasets with Databricks AI Search, we’ve entirely eliminated external API dependencies. Ultimately, this seamless setup connects every step of the process—allowing genomics findings to flow effortlessly into single-cell validation, target structure prediction, candidate docking, ADMET, and ranking.”

Databricks says the platform relies on open-source models managed through Unity Catalog, with MLflow tracking experiments and GPU-backed Model Serving handling inference. 

Nvidia contributes its BioNeMo Agent Toolkit along with technologies such as Parabricks and a growing portfolio of biology and chemistry models that can be incorporated into scientific workflows.

One of the platform’s distinguishing features is that it runs entirely inside a customer’s Databricks environment. That is important, because it allows organizations to keep sensitive research data within existing governance controls instead of sending it to third-party AI services.

There is also flexibility to scale as biological AI continues to evolve. New AI models will continue to emerge. Organizations can add or replace individual modules without rebuilding the broader research environment. 

Genesis Workbench also reflects a broader shift in how enterprise AI platforms are evolving. Much of the industry’s early focus centered on building larger and more capable foundation models. However, that is changing. At BigDatawire, we see vendors are increasingly focusing (and competing) on how well those models can be integrated with enterprise data and domain-specific workflows.

(DCStudio/Shutterstock)

Life sciences, including drug discovery research, present a particularly demanding environment as research spans multiple disciplines. This includes everything from genomics and structural biology to chemistry and clinical data, while also having to handle highly regulated and proprietary data. 

Building AI applications in this setting requires more than raw computing power. It also demands secure access to data and the flexibility to incorporate new models as the technology evolves.

For Databricks, Genesis Workbench is another example of the company pushing beyond analytics and further into AI applications built on the lakehouse. Nvidia, meanwhile, is using the project to put BioNeMo and its accelerated computing software at the center of enterprise drug discovery workflows instead of treating them as standalone research tools.

If researchers spend less time moving data, connecting models and configuring infrastructure, they have more time to focus on the science. That is what Nvidia and Databricks are trying to achieve with the Genesis Workbench.

The post Genesis Workbench Launched by Databricks and Nvidia appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 18:11
  • Fox averages 24.429 million; 9.1 million on Telemundo

  • Outpaces averages of NBA Finals, Sunday Night Football

  • Monday’s last-16 matchup sure to challenge record again

The US men’s national team’s dramatic win over Bosnia and Herzegovina in the World Cup on Wednesday drew a record television audience, according to preliminary reports released by Fox Sports and Telemundo.

The game had an average of 24.429 million viewers on Fox, making it the most-watched English-language soccer broadcast in US history, the broadcaster said. The Fox telecast peaked at 31.883 million. Telemundo, which holds the Spanish language rights to World Cup broadcasts in the US, reported 9.1 million viewers over the total game window.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-02 18:11
Help Identifying Clicking Noise please!?

I have had nothing but problems with my GT-S!! Battery went bad after 500 miles, well that’s what futuremotion told me. I got it back after $1k+ for a new battery and my first ride it just shut off and wouldn’t turn on, just like the issue I sent it in for. Sent it back out and got it back a month later and my first ride the tire went flat and board shut off at 30%!!? They won’t tell me why I paid for a new battery and it did the same thing upon receipt. Now this less than 600 miles.
I have 3 other boards XR, pint and gt, with over 7500
Miles and no issues and this stinker of a board with nothing but problems. Really trying not to let it ruin my hobby but I’m getting tired lol.

What am I dealing with now!?

Thank you to whoever recognizes this sound and I’m sorry for your loss as well!

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2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 18:05

The current president chatted with a life-sized AI version of the 26th US president at the new Theodore Roosevelt presidential library.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 18:01

Former Fox News host further said he doesn’t ‘want to be a candidate’ for president and aired frustration with Trump

Tucker Carlson, the rightwing broadcaster, wants to help build a new political party in the United States, he said in an interview – though he gave scant detail about the party, and did not indicate whether he was referring to a concrete project or merely musing.

In the same interview, Carlson dismissed the idea of running for office as part of that new party. “I don’t want to be a candidate,” he said.

Continue reading...

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 18:00

ChatGPT-maker OpenAI is reportedly in discussions with the White House over a government financing deal. It may not happen.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 18:00

A spokesperson said the Kentucky Republican "continues to improve."

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 17:57

Liz Murrill accused of trying to intimidate officials who opposed GOP-enacted law to overhaul local courts

Louisiana’s Republican attorney general was indicted on Thursday on criminal charges by a grand jury in New Orleans, accused of trying to intimidate local officials who fought a law enacted by GOP legislators to overhaul the local courts.

Liz Murrill, the attorney general, told eight New Orleans officials, including Helena Moreno, the mayor, and Jason Williams, the district attorney, that they could face removal from their jobs because of their opposition to the law.

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2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 17:50

This week's guests include NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman and former CDC Chief Medical Officer Dr. Debra Houry.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 17:34

Derrick Callella admitted he called and sent texts to Guthrie’s family, demanding a bitcoin transaction

A California man is facing up to two years in prison or a $250,000 fine after pleading guilty to sending Nancy Guthrie’s family a phoney ransom note, federal authorities announced on Thursday.

Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of the Today Show host Savannah Guthrie, was last seen on 31 January at her residence outside Tucson, Arizona. Inside the home, authorities observed her cellphone, medication and other basic essentials. Law enforcement officers also found drops of her blood near the porch.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 17:25

USA at 250: Soft power, hard power and the future of the American dream Audio sseth.drupal@c…

In this episode of Independent Thinking, Bronwen Maddox is joined by Laurel Rapp and Ambassador Tim Davis to discuss America’s international role and its domestic divisions as it approaches the 250th anniversary of its founding.

The United States marks its 250th birthday at a moment of intense division and international uncertainty. At home, President Donald Trump is aggressively remodelling America’s governance around expanded White House power and burning through firewalls intended to prevent presidential overreach and self-enrichment. Internationally, his capricious mix of transactional diplomacy, coercive tariffs and naked hard power has left American allies shell-shocked – and opened the door for China to spread its influence.

Former US ambassador to Qatar Tim Davis joins host Bronwen Maddox and Laurel Rapp, director of our US and North America programme, to discuss the future of the United States in the world – and whether, for ordinary citizens, the American dream still exists.

About Independent Thinking

Independent Thinking is a weekly international affairs podcast hosted by our director Bronwen Maddox, in conversation with leading policymakers, journalists and Chatham House experts providing insight on the latest international issues.

More ways to listen: Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

Explore our other Chatham House podcasts.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-02 17:24
It’s toast

Rode this tire for 1341 miles. Ordered a new one. Even made it home before it went flat

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2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 17:22

The company apparently expects to sell a lot of folding iPhones.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 17:21

July 2, 2026 — The Building HPC Infrastructure and HPC Capacity for ASEAN Data Utilization Project, implemented under the Korea-ASEAN Digital Innovation Flagship (KADIF) program, reached a key milestone with the Opening Ceremony of the ASEAN-Korea High Performance Computing (HPC) Facility in Indonesia on June 18, 2026.

Credit: AKCF

Held in Jakarta, the opening ceremony brought together representatives from ASEAN, the Republic of Korea, Indonesia’s National Research and Innovation Agency (BRIN), Korea Institute of Science and Technology Information (KISTI), and key stakeholders from across the region, marking an important step in advancing regional digital infrastructure and cooperation.

Supported by the Government of the Republic of Korea through the ASEAN-Korea Cooperation Fund (AKCF), the project is a multi-year initiative running from 2024 to 2028 with a total budget of USD 10 million. It is implemented by KISTI in collaboration with BRIN.

“More than just a supercomputer, this facility is a strategic asset for ASEAN. Access to advanced computing capabilities will be essential in supporting innovation, digital transformation, and the region’s future economic competitiveness,” said H.E. Satvinder Singh, Deputy Secretary-General of ASEAN for the ASEAN Economic Community.

Strengthening Regional Research and Innovation

The newly inaugurated HPC facility provides advanced computing capacity to support data-intensive research and artificial intelligence (AI) applications. With a theoretical peak performance of approximately 4.28 petaflops, the system can process massive datasets and enabling complex computations required for climate modeling, disaster risk reduction, healthcare innovation, industrial research, and next-generation AI development. It has also been nominated as a candidate for inclusion in the TOP500 list of the world’s most powerful supercomputers.

Delivered to BRIN’s Soekarno Science and Technology Area (KST) Cibinong on 21 April 2026, the facility will be accessible to researchers and institutions across ASEAN, helping to address regional gaps in high-performance computing infrastructure and strengthening the foundations for a more integrated data ecosystem.

Building Human Capital for the Digital Economy

In addition to infrastructure development, the project places strong emphasis on capacity building and knowledge transfer. Through 2028, the project will deliver specialized training programs in HPC operations, data utilization, and AI applications. Around 160 local operations personnel are expected to benefit from these technical trainings, ensuring the sustainable management and long-term usability of the facility.

“We hope this facility will be widely utilized to support various initiatives and collaborations among ASEAN member states. The facility is open to researchers, scientists, industry players, policy analysts, and development planners across the region to innovate together,” stated Arif Satria, Chairman of BRIN.

This project reflects the shared commitment of Korea and ASEAN to advancing inclusive digital transformation. By combining world-class computing infrastructure, creation of ASEAN data utilization platform, and human resource development in data and AI, the initiative supports ASEAN’s efforts to build a more resilient, innovative, and competitive digital economy.


Source: AKCF

The post New ASEAN HPC Center Aims to Expand AI and Data Research Across Southeast Asia appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 17:14

July 2, 2026 — AWS has announced the general availability of Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) C9g and C9gd instances, powered by AWS Graviton5 processors. C9g instances are compute-optimized and deliver up to 25% higher performance per vCPU compared to previous-generation C8g instances. They feature the fastest memory of any processor instance in the cloud, with DDR5 8800MT/s DIMMs, 5x more L3 cache, and up to 3x higher packet-processing performance compared to Graviton4-based instances. The faster memory and larger caches mean your workloads spend less time waiting on data, translating into higher throughput for in-memory analytics, faster agentic loops, and more responsive real-time applications.

Credit: Shutterstock

C9g instances are ideal for batch jobs, video encoding pipelines, or distributed analytics that can utilize Amazon Elastic Block Store (Amazon EBS) for storage. It is also a natural fit for agentic AI workloads, where concurrent environments and CPU-bound reasoning steps benefit from Graviton5’s higher core count and larger caches. As AI shifts from answering questions to taking actions, running code, and orchestrating multi-step tasks, the demand for CPU compute is growing, and C9g instances are built for this shift.

Some workloads also need fast local storage alongside that compute power. Choose C9gd when your application benefits from high-speed, low-latency local NVMe SSD storage, for example scratch space during HPC simulations, temporary caches for ML inference, or local buffers for ad-serving engines.

Graviton5-based instances with NVMe instance store volumes also support detailed performance statistics, providing high-resolution I/O metrics, including latency histograms broken down by I/O size, up to 1-second granularity and accessible via Amazon CloudWatch or nvme-cli at no additional cost.

C9g and C9gd Instances at a Glance

C9g and C9gd instances are available in 11 sizes ranging from medium to 48xlarge, plus a bare metal option. They offer up to 15% higher network bandwidth and 20% higher EBS bandwidth on average across sizes compared to the previous generation, with the largest 48xlarge size delivering up to 100 Gbps of network bandwidth and up to 72 Gbps of EBS bandwidth, a 2x increase.

C9gd instances add local NVMe SSD storage with up to 30% higher storage performance compared to previous-generation local storage instances.

Both families are well-suited for high-performance computing (HPC), batch processing, gaming, video encoding, scientific modeling, distributed analytics, CPU-based machine learning inference, and ad serving.

Here are some additional capabilities:

  • Instance Bandwidth Configuration (IBC) lets you adjust the allocation of bandwidth between Amazon EBS and Amazon VPC networking by up to 25%, helping you optimize performance for workloads with specific bandwidth requirements such as databases and caching.
  • ENA Express support for enhanced networking.
  • Up to 128 EBS volumes can be attached to virtual instances.
  • Support for Savings Plans, On-Demand, Spot Instances, Dedicated Instances, and Dedicated Hosts.

Nitro Isolation Engine

Security and isolation are foundational requirements for running workloads in the cloud. Within the Nitro System, the AWS Nitro Hypervisor is designed to isolate instances from each other as well as AWS operators. With C9g and C9gd instances the bar is being raised even further with the Nitro Isolation Engine, an enhancement to the Nitro System, which enforces isolation of instances and harnesses formal verification to provide assurances of isolation with mathematical precision.

C9g and C9gd instances are the first set of compute-optimized instance types to feature Nitro Isolation Engine, a purpose built component that is responsible for enforcing isolation between virtual machines, including mediation of all access to virtual machine memory, CPU register state, and I/O devices through a minimal set of APIs.

To learn more about the Nitro Isolation Engine, visit the blog post. For details on the formal verification results, including scope and assumptions, see this technical white paper.

Now Available

Amazon EC2 C9g and C9gd instances are now available in US East (Ohio, N. Virginia), US West (Oregon), and Europe (Frankfurt). Additional regions will follow.


Source: Sébastien Stormacq, AWS

The post Amazon EC2 C9g and C9gd Instances Powered by AWS Graviton5 Processors Now Available appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 17:05

The US unemployment rate fell to 4.2% in June largely because 720,000 people left the labor force, pushing participation to 61.5%. Excluding the Covid-era jobs market, that's the lowest participation rate since June 1976. CNBC reports: The decline in the labor force marks a "massive exodus" driven by multiple factors, said Mike Reid, head of U.S. economics at RBC. "The unemployment rate fell to 4.2% as both the number of unemployed workers and the size of the labor force pulled back," Reid wrote in a post-report commentary. "This may well be a story of retirements but could also be a story of prior job seekers dropping out of the labor force." [...] [T]he rolls of those counted as not in the labor force, a group that includes the unemployed and those not looking for work, jumped by 832,000. And while the establishment survey, which counts jobs filled, showed growth for the month of 57,000, the survey of households, which counts the actual level of those working, tumbled by 507,000. On a year-over-year basis, the labor force is down by just over 1 million, while the level of the employed also has fallen by 1.06 million and the ranks of the unemployed have risen by 40,000. The employment-to-population ratio slipped to 59% in June, the lowest since October 2021. All that has happened while the unemployment rate has risen by just one-tenth of a percentage point to 4.2%. The drop in participation is sometimes attributed to a shrinking immigrant population and retiring baby boomers and Gen Xers. However, in June the biggest plunge came from what is defined as "prime age" workers, or those between the ages of 25 and 54. That rate fell 0.6 percentage point to 83.3%, its lowest since December 2023. "Looking at the statistics now, that argument doesn't hold up so well," North said of the retirement and immigration rationale. "I hate to use the word 'alarming,'" he added, but said the numbers are cause for concern.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 16:50

A woman in a blue suit gestures with her hand while talking.
Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey at a press conference at the State House in March Jessica Rinaldi/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

Massachusetts’ deadline to prosecute rape cases will no longer be one of the strictest in the nation under a bill Gov. Maura Healey pledged to sign into law.

State law currently bars nearly all rape prosecutions involving cases with adult victims after 15 years, making it difficult to charge someone after that deadline even in cases where new evidence is likely to lead to a conviction. The new law would ensure that if DNA is matched to a suspect after that 15-year window, prosecutors could file charges indefinitely. 

Healey pushed to revise the prosecution deadline for rape as part of her annual budget proposal in January. The move came after WBUR and ProPublica found that as many as 47 other states allow more time to charge rapes or similar sexual assaults than Massachusetts. 

Many of those states extended their deadlines in recent decades as DNA technology helped solve old cases and as evidence mounted that police across the nation had failed to fully investigate rape cases.

Healey’s proposal survived the legislature’s monthslong budget process. She announced Wednesday that she’d sign the $63.4 billion budget and has until July 11 to approve it. It would go into effect as soon as it’s signed.

“Today, DNA evidence can provide new answers years later, and our laws should reflect that reality,” Healey said in a statement. “This change gives survivors another path to justice while helping law enforcement hold violent offenders accountable.”

Prosecutors must still file charges within the existing 15-year deadline if a match is made within that timeframe, as they were required to under the old law. The new law could open the door to prosecution for cases for which the statute of limitations has not yet passed. 

In Massachusetts, legislators have tried unsuccessfully to change the rape statute of limitations every session since 2011, WBUR found. Defense attorneys opposed those bills, saying a longer deadline risked violating the rights of the accused.

Rape survivors have worked with state Rep. Adam Scanlon, a Democrat, for the last five years to create a DNA exception, he said. They joined the effort because they were frustrated that they could no longer pursue justice after the deadline, even when new evidence emerged.  

 ”It gives them hope in the future to ensure that no one has to suffer the same indignities,” Scanlon said, adding, “This was a long process driven by survivors.” 

Some survivors whose cases were too old to be prosecuted pushed for the change. One of them was Louise, who was the focus of WBUR and ProPublica’s investigation. WBUR doesn’t identify victims of sexual assault without their permission and agreed to identify Louise only by her middle name.

In October 2005, she was raped and repeatedly stabbed by a man who gave her a ride in Boston, according to police and court records. Seventeen years later, a DNA match identified an area man as a suspect. 

DNA evidence also linked that suspect to another rape. Suffolk County prosecutors charged the man in both cases in 2022, but had to drop the cases because the statute of limitations had expired. He maintained his innocence. Had this law been enacted a few years ago, Louise could have seen the suspect in her case face trial.

“It really was devastating,” Louise said. “ I never fathomed that time lapsing would be an issue.” 

Louise testified before state legislators in support of the DNA exception after her interview with WBUR. She said she’s relieved it will become law.   

“It’s nice to have the government move in the right direction, which builds a sense of trust, a sense of safety — and justice,” Louise said.

The post Massachusetts Set to Extend Statute of Limitations for Rape Cases With DNA Evidence appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 16:38

Two of the biggest US carriers are battling for your business. We run down all the specs and features of their plans.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 16:36

Grigor Dimitrov claimed an emotional win against the 15th seed; Alexander Zverev, Iga Swiatek and Elena Rybakina advanced; while three of the four remaining Brits departed

At 4-3 in the second, Shnaider makes 0-40, Sansonova saving the first break point with a forehand ushered to the corner and the second with a serve out wide and clean-up. But when a return, thudded flat and close to the baseline, arrives, the response falls long, and the French Open semi-finalist will now serve for a decider at 4-6 5-3.

We get going on No1 at 1pm BST, 1.30pm on Centre, but before that, we’ve close matches on 12 and 18. Samsonova is still holding her own against Shanider, who beat Sabalenka – admittedly with help from Sabalenka herself – on her way to the semis at Roland Garros, leading 6-4 3-3 and refusing to wilt though her opponent has improved. And Fery – who our commentators reckon has the ability to break the top 20 – trails Virtanen 5-7 4-4. Back with our hidings, though, De Minaur has just served out a 6-2 set to lead Mannarino 2-0.

Continue reading...

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 16:24

Dozens were injured overnight in Kyiv during an attack that caused fires and explosions throughout the city.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-03 05:00

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for July 3, No. 1,840.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-03 05:01

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for July 3 No. 852.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-03 05:01

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for July 3 No. 1,118.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 19:29

David Hearn is accused of ripping out a piece of sealant on the bottom of the Reflecting Pool on June 19, U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro said.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 21:11

Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce donated to 20 local and national charities ahead of their wedding Friday.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 16:04

Canoeist David Hearn was arrested in June after touching a peeling piece of liner in the pool from renovation project

David Hearn, a three-time US Olympian and canoeist, has been indicted by a grand jury in Washington DC after Donald Trump blamed vandals for damaging Washington’s reflecting pool following a $14.7m renovation project.

The ‌indictment accuses Hearn, 67, ‌of “maliciously” breaking or destroying lining material on the bottom of the reflecting pool on 19 June. Lawyers for Hearn denied ‌the allegations following his arrest, accusing the ​Trump administration of treating ordinary conduct as criminal.

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2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 16:00

Sysdig says it has documented the first ransomware attack carried out end to end by an AI agent, which autonomously exploited exposed systems, stole credentials, established persistence, compromised a production database, and destroyed data. The research team named the attacker "JadePuffer" and said it gained initial access to an internet-facing Langflow instance by exploiting CVE-2025-3248. "The most striking characteristic, however, was the LLM's behavior," Sysdig director of threat research Michael Clark said in a blog post. An anonymous reader quotes an excerpt from The Register: JadePuffer's "self-narrating" payloads "contained natural language reasoning, target prioritization, and the kind of detailed annotations that human operators don't often write but LLM-generated code produces reflexively," Clark added. "The operation also adapted in real time, retrying failed steps within refined parameters. In one sequence, it went from a failed login to a working fix in 31 seconds." After exploiting CVE-2025-3248, a missing authentication vulnerability in Langflow that allows remote, unauthenticated attackers to execute arbitrary Python on the host, the AI agent began scanning for and collecting secrets, including LLM provider API keys, cloud credentials "with explicit coverage of Chinese providers" including Alibaba, Aliyun, Tencent, and Huawei, while also scanning for AWS, Azure and Google Cloud Platform, cryptocurrency wallets, and database credentials. The AI also installed a crontab entry on the Langflow server to maintain persistence and call back to the attacker's infrastructure every 30 minutes. JadePuffer's intended target was a separate internet-exposed production server running a MySQL database and an Alibaba Nacos configuration service, we're told. Nacos is an open-source service-discovery and dynamic configuration platform developed by Alibaba and used in the cloud provider's microservices applications. The agent connected to the server's exposed MySQL port using root credentials, although Sysdig doesn't know how the attacker obtained them. These credentials weren't stolen from the victim's environment. JadePuffer then attacked Nacos via multiple vectors including an authorization bypass flaw (CVE-2021-29441) and forging a valid JSON web token (JWT) using Nacos's default signing key. Additionally, using its root database access, the LLM injected a backdoor administrator into the Nacos backing database. It ultimately encrypted all 1,342 Nacos service configuration items using MySQL's built-in AES encryption function, and created an extortion demand, ransom note, Bitcoin payment address, and a Proton Mail contact [...]. However, according to the threat hunters, the victim can't recover the encrypted data, even if they paid the ransom demand, because the agent escalated "from row-level deletion to dropping entire database schemas, narrating its own targeting rationale," without backing up any of the encrypted data.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 15:46

Spotify said the streams tied to Malcolm Todd's "Earrings" were not from genuine listeners after suspicious betting activity emerged on Kalshi.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 15:38

Makerfield MP said he would consider reducing business rates as part of a package that could also include freeze on private rents

Andy Burnham promised to ease the cost of living if he becomes prime minister in his first interview since returning to parliament.

The Makerfield MP told LBC that if he became prime minister later this month, as expected, he would look at reducing business rates for some high street businesses, bringing down water and energy costs by de-privatising companies and making bus travel free for 16- to 18-year-olds.

Continue reading...

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 15:33

The Washington, D.C., fireworks show, which is sponsored by the Trump-backed organization Freedom 250, is not slated to begin until 10:30 p.m. or 11 p.m.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 15:06

Michigan U.S. Senate candidate Abdul El-Sayed has centered healthcare in his campaign, championing Medicare for All and critiquing his opponents, both Democratic and Republican, on the issue. 

El-Sayed, a Democrat and former public health official, has accused former U.S. Rep. Mike Rogers, the sole Republican candidate in the Aug. 4 primary election, of being influenced by the pharmaceutical industry. 

In multiple interviews and recent social media posts, El-Sayed said Rogers "took a $14 million payout as a pharma lobbyist." 

Federal and Michigan records do not show Rogers ever working as a registered lobbyist for any company, including pharmaceuticals. We found no record that he worked in the pharmaceutical industry after leaving Congress.

Rogers did paid consulting work for technology companies after leaving Congress. His net worth may have increased by more than $14 million since then, but no single reported payment or group of payments match that amount.

Rogers’ campaign sent El-Sayed a June 22 cease and desist letter, demanding that El-Sayed stop referring to Rogers as a "pharma lobbyist" and stop claiming he received a $14 million payout from the pharmaceutical industry. The letter said El-Sayed’s statements "constitute defamation under Michigan law." 

"Team Rogers put Abdul on notice for lying to Michigan voters about Mike’s background," Rogers campaign spokesperson Alyssa Brouillet said in a statement to PolitiFact.

In response to the letter, El-Sayed partially walked back the statement, saying Rogers is not a pharmaceutical lobbyist in a tongue-in-cheek social media video

"My mistake, he just spent so much time in Congress helping the pharmaceutical industry that I thought he was a pharma lobbyist … When I say Mike Rogers, do not think of a pharma lobbyist. When I say pharma lobbyist, do not think of a Mike Rogers," El-Sayed said in the video. 

When we asked El-Sayed’s campaign if he still stands by his statements that Rogers was a pharmaceutical lobbyist, the campaign pointed us to its June 22 statement responding to Rogers’ cease and desist, saying Rogers put "Big Pharma over the people he served." The statement did not say that Rogers is a pharmaceutical lobbyist.

Rogers’ career after Congress

Rogers represented Michigan in the U.S. House of Representatives from 2001 to 2015. After leaving office, Rogers worked as a consultant and served on boards for telecommunications and cybersecurity companies including AT&T, Nokia and Telefónica. He also served on nonprofit boards related to national security and was a CNN host and commentator.

Rogers’ financial disclosures from his 2024 Senate campaign and the current campaign don’t include any work for pharmaceutical companies. Consulting is distinct from lobbying, said Michael Beckel, the director of money in politics reform at Issue One, which seeks to reduce the role of money in politics.

Consultants advise clients on navigating issues, Beckel said, while lobbyists advocate for specific legislation and regulations.

"Both consulting and lobbying are part of Washington's influence industry, but consultants and strategic advisors are generally not required to register as lobbyists unless they meet the formal definition of being a lobbyist," he said. 

Those rules are governed by the Lobbying Disclosure Act. To meet the federal definition of a lobbyist, people must be paid by clients, spend at least 20% of their time engaged in lobbying activities, and make at least two contacts with a covered federal official seeking to influence policy. 

Rogers’ cease and desist letter said he never met those definitions under federal or Michigan law.

Rogers received a $30,000 payment from the lobbying firm CGCN Group before his 2024 Senate run, according to a financial disclosure. The firm represented more than 50 clients in 2022 and 2023, including drug companies and medical tech companies. 

Rogers campaign spokesperson Alyssa Brouillet said Rogers worked for the strategic communications side of the business, not the lobbying side, and advised on telecommunications issues. It’s not uncommon for lobbying firms to employ people who aren’t lobbyists, Beckel said, though they may still work to influence government decisions.  

"Accusing someone of earning a particular amount of money for paid lobbying work is a very specific criticism," Beckel said.

El-Sayed’s more recent statements have focused on contributions Rogers received while in office from pharmaceutical political action committees. Donations to a candidate’s campaign aren’t the same as lobbying, and they’re not personal payments to the candidate.

Political action committees tied to the pharmaceutical industry donated tens of thousands of dollars to Rogers’ campaign each cycle from 2004 to 2014, according to OpenSecrets. It was the No. 1 industry donor in PAC contributions in 2008 and 2014. In his current Senate campaign, Rogers has received $2,000 from pharmaceutical company PACs. 

$14 million payout description is distorted

Although Rogers became significantly more wealthy after leaving office in 2015, El-Sayed’s narrative is a major misrepresentation of the financial picture. 

When Rogers left office in 2015, he had non-property assets between $415,600 and $605,600, according to his financial disclosure. Business Insider estimated his net worth at between $800,000 and $1.7 million when combining his property values and liabilities. Rogers’ 2025 financial disclosure reported assets held by him and his wife valued between $6.7 million and $13.5 million and no debt. Combined with assessed property values of his homes in Michigan, Virginia and Florida, his net worth is estimated between $10.1 million and $16.9 million.

We don’t know every payment he received for the last 10 years, but his recent financial disclosures cover income between 2022 and 2025. The 2023 report includes more than $1 million in payments for corporate advising and consulting. Some of those positions he’s held since shortly after leaving Congress, and any payments before 2022 aren’t included in the disclosures. Investment and property value growth also account for part of the increase over the last decade. 

Rogers also owns homes that aren’t included in those financial reports. A 2024 research memo from the Democratic group Defend the Senate said Rogers owned homes in Michigan, Virginia and Florida, with assessed values totaling $3.2 million, according to property records. In 2015, Rogers owned the Virginia home and a home in Maryland, worth a combined $1.8 million. 

Taking the investments and property together, it’s plausible that Rogers’ net worth has increased by more than $14 million since he left office. The growth between the mid-point estimates is around $12.3 million. But that does not prove a specific "payout" for lobbying for pharmaceutical companies.

Our ruling 

El-Sayed said Rogers "took a $14 million payout as a pharma lobbyist." 

The statement mislabels Rogers’ post-Congress consulting as lobbying and offers a mangled interpretation of his net-worth growth, all while inserting a pharma connection that doesn’t exist. 

Rogers never worked as a lobbyist and we found no record he ever advised or worked for pharmaceutical companies after leaving Congress. His wealth has increased substantially since leaving office, but not tied to any payment from pharmaceutical companies.

El-Sayed offered no evidence to support the statement.

We rate the statement Pants on Fire!

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 15:00

The Godot Foundation will stop accepting AI-authored code, agent-submitted pull requests, and AI-generated text in contributor communications after maintainers were overwhelmed by low-effort submissions. "It is time for us to recognize that these problems aren't going away and therefore we need to take steps to reduce the burden on maintainers while ensuring we still have a pipeline to mentor new contributors to become future maintainers," the Godot Foundation said in a blog post. Contributors may still use AI for limited "menial things" if they disclose it, but humans must understand, own, and be able to fix the code they submit. PC Gamer reports: The Foundation says the pileup of Godot pull requests pending review isn't all bad: It's a sign that interest in using and contribution to Godot is increasing. But the influx of contributions authored or submitted by AI is sapping the projects' maintainers of their willingness to confront the "already tedious" work of reviewing pull requests. "If your feedback on PRs is just being absorbed by a machine and not going towards mentoring a potential future maintainer, it becomes much harder to justify spending your free time on PR review," the Foundation said. As the problem becomes increasingly unsustainable, the Godot Foundation says it's in the process of updating its contribution policies, focusing on "adding barriers to low-effort slop" contributions, encouraging maintainers to review code, developing new contributors into future maintainers, and crucially, requiring that all contributions come from humans who are accountable for their code -- and fixing it if it fails. "AI cannot take responsibility, and we can't trust heavy users of AI to understand their code enough to fix it," the Foundation said. The Foundation says we can expect Godot's contributing policy to soon include explicit rejections of AI-authored code, noting that contributors should only use AI assistance for "menial things" and must disclose its use. Additionally, the Foundation will reject any AI-generated text in human-to-human communications, saying it's "a basic principle of respect" -- though it says machine translations "are still acceptable" if the original text was human-authored. "Things change every day with respect to the current suite of AI tools available," the Foundation said. "We will continue taking a conservative approach in our policies towards them, but we will re-evaluate as things evolve."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 14:51

Utz Quality Foods voluntarily recalled select varieties of potato chips due to potential salmonella contamination in the seasoning powder.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 14:46

Exclusive: Findings cast doubt on Keir Starmer’s claims that reallocation of funds to MoD will boost British jobs

Keir Starmer’s decision to cut billions of pounds of infrastructure spending to pay for more defence equipment will end up costing the UK 10,000 jobs, according to an analysis of the government’s own figures.

The prime minister announced this week he was putting an extra £15bn into defence investment to revamp the country’s armed forces and boost British manufacturing.

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2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 14:20

The president made $2.2bn last year, with plenty of help from his own political decisions. This is called corruption, folks

In financial disclosures released on Tuesday, Trump reported earning more than $1bn last year from his several cryptocurrency ventures.

All told – including other parts of his vast holdings, such as his real estate assets – Trump made at least $2.2bn last year, as opposed to the roughly $622m his businesses raked in in 2024, before he returned to the presidency.

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2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 14:15

Google owes 4.1 billion euro ($4.7 billion) for anticompetitive practices involving Android, rules Europe's top court.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 14:14

CAMPBELL, Calif., July 2, 2026 — OXMIQ Labs Inc., a unified GPU and AI architecture company founded by Raja Koduri, has closed its $35 million Series A financing, bringing the company’s total capital raised to $60 million. The funding will scale OxCore, OXMIQ’s licensable GPU architecture that allows semiconductor companies and AI system builders to build custom AI silicon without a full chip program.

The round was co-led by Fundomo and Samsung Catalyst Fund, with participation from MediaTek, AM Intelligence Labs, Pegatron Venture Capital, CDIB-TEN, Darwin Ventures, and Morgan Creek Digital, among other financial and strategic investors. OXMIQ’s expertise spans the full AI stack, from renewable power and data center infrastructure to silicon IP, electron-to-token machines (ETMs), along with the software that runs AI factories and agents.

One Core, Three Engines

Token demand is outpacing the world’s ability to build infrastructure to serve it. OXMIQ was founded to re-architect the GPU stack from Atoms to Agents, building the silicon IP, configurable systems and software platform that enable semiconductor companies and AI infrastructure builders to drive down the cost of intelligence at every layer of the stack.

At the center of the architecture is OxCore, a scalable, licensable GPU core that integrates three distinct compute engines: a CUDA-compatible GPU engine, a tensor processing engine, and an orchestration engine (CPU) responsible for coordinating workloads and agents across the system. OxCore tightly couples compute functionality that is typically split across three chips, and was purpose-built for near-memory compute, minimizing data movement to enhance compute and energy efficiency of AI workloads. OxCore was designed for scalability and the architecture scales efficiently from single-core AI deployments to large-scale datacenter configurations. OxCore is running on FPGA today, with live demonstrations available.

OxQuilt, OXMIQ’s chiplet integration architecture, combines heterogeneous compute chiplets and memory in a single package. Most AI silicon designs are locked to a specific foundry and memory type. OxQuilt instead adapts to any supply chain, with configuration tools that let customers design across logic process nodes, memory types, interconnect standards, and advanced packaging options. By making high-performance AI compute licensable and configurable, OXMIQ lets any design team build custom AI silicon packages without needing cost-prohibitive full chip programs. The architecture is also designed to incorporate emerging interconnect technologies such as silicon photonics as they reach production readiness.

OXMIQ pairs the hardware with a software stack spanning OxCapsule for high-level orchestration to low-level kernel optimization. OxPython runs existing CUDA and PyTorch code on OxCore without code changes, giving developers full portability across hardware. This stack supports emerging silicon architectures for optimized inference at scale and delivers day-zero support for new models. OxPython has been validated on third-party platforms with live demos available.

OXMIQ’s IP-first model is built for capital efficiency. By focusing on new architecture IP rather than full SoC development, the company generates revenue from customer engagements while preserving capital for building the stack.

“We are very excited to co-lead OXMIQ’s financing round and back Raja Koduri and the strong team at OXMIQ,” said David (Dede) Goldschmidt, SVP & Managing Director, Head of the Samsung Catalyst Fund.“OXMIQ’s novel AI core and software platform enable heterogeneous compute for efficient, custom inference solutions serving large-scale agentic workloads.”

“Raja has built silicon at every layer of the stack, and he knows exactly where the constraints sit. Most compute IP makes the customer bend their memory, packaging, and foundry around the chip. OXMIQ does the opposite, and that flips a cost center into leverage. We backed this team because they will define how AI compute gets built this decade,” said Rajeev Surati, Partner at Fundomo.

An Expanding Team

OXMIQ has strengthened its board and advisory ranks with two additions that bring decades of silicon pedigree. Jim Keller, CEO of Tenstorrent and among the most influential chip architects in the industry, joins the board of directors alongside existing board member Dr. Ker Zhang. Dr. Valluri (Bob) Rao, a renowned Fellow who retired from Intel’s process technology group, joins as an advisor. Together, they deepen OXMIQ’s leadership as the company moves from architecture to customer integration.

“I am excited to join the OXMIQ board. Raja and this team are creating an open GPU architecture, a much-needed step toward removing the artificial boundaries around AI innovation. As the industry concentrates around a few incumbents, this is more important than ever. OXMIQ’s open, configurable foundation, which developers can build on and own, is exactly where compute should be heading,” said Jim Keller, CEO of Tenstorrent and OXMIQ board member.

Raja Koduri, OXMIQ founder and CEO, added: “A licensable core with an open architecture means design teams everywhere can build the custom AI silicon their work needs. Today, state-of-the-art AI reaches most people through a handful of channels, and the cost of the compute underneath is the reason. Bring that cost down, and you widen who gets to build with it. I believe AI is a force for good when it is a tool everyone can pick up and use, not just the few who can afford to build with it. Closing this round with investors who own the supply chain tells us we can get there.”

About OXMIQ Labs

OXMIQ Labs is a GPU and AI architecture company with expertise spanning every layer of the AI stack, from renewable energy and data center infrastructure to silicon IP, electron-to-token machines, and cloud software for AI factories and agents. OXMIQ develops licensable compute IP and adaptive AI infrastructure software. The OXMIQ stack, OxCore, OxQuilt, OxPython and OxCapsule, enables semiconductor companies, neoclouds, and AI system builders to develop and deploy custom AI compute across the full spectrum of AI applications. The company’s mission is to re-architect the GPU stack: from Atoms to Agents, making high-performance AI compute available, affordable, and within reach of design teams and builders who need it. Founded by Raja Koduri, OXMIQ is headquartered in Campbell, California, with a development site in Hyderabad, India. Learn more at oxmiq.ai.


Source: Intel Capital

The post OXMIQ Raises $35M to Scale OxCore Architecture appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 14:05

Meta is introducing a subscription for expanded access to advanced smart-glasses features. According to Wired, "[U]sers will need the Meta One Premium Plan to unlock expanded access to some features for their smart glasses, whether it's the Ray-Ban, Oakley, or Meta-branded version." They'll still be usable with a subscription, but "certain features will be limited," the report says. From the report: Specifically, a feature called Conversation Focus, which boosts the audio of the person you're speaking with so you can hear them better in loud environments. You'll get three hours per month without a subscription, but if you want to use it more often, then you'll need to pay up. Though even then, you're still capped at 15 hours. Subscribing also nets you "Premium Device Support," where you'll get faster access to what Meta says are "human experts" trained on the smart glasses' features, should any problems arise. Guess humans are better at some things after all. A Meta spokesperson tells WIRED that this is "not an AI rate limit." Rate limits are common on other AI platforms -- users get free access to a feature until they hit a certain cap, then they'll need to subscribe to use it more until the limit resets at the end of the month. However, the Conversation Focus feature runs on-device, meaning it doesn't need to head to Meta's servers for AI processing. There's no real-time way to monitor how many hours you've used Conversation Focus, but you'll receive a notification when you get near the limit. "The subscription supports that ongoing work and gives power users expanded access along with premium device support," the spokesperson says. "We're going to start testing new optional subscription plans that offer more premium features and advanced capabilities for those who want to unlock more from our apps and AI glasses."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 14:04

Russia launched a massive attack on Ukraine's capital, killing at least 21 people and prompting President Zelenskyy to call for sped-up weapons support from his partners.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 14:01

NEC told it must take steps to address fears – including not hiring Everton stadium to announce new leader before nominations even open

Labour chiefs have been warned they must placate disgruntled Labour members who are angry at the lack of party democracy because Andy Burnham is not expected to face a challenge to become Labour leader.

MPs have told the party there are growing complaints from members about the lack of involvement from members if Burnham does not face a leadership contest from any other MP.

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2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 14:00

Study suggests even light activity such as ironing could reduce health risks linked to prolonged sedentary behaviour

Sitting for longer than half an hour at a time each day raises the risk of dying from cancer, a study suggests.

Researchers who tracked more than 90,000 people over a decade found that sitting or lying down while awake for more than 30 minutes in one period each day was associated with an increased risk of cancer death. The risk increases for every additional hour of continuous inactivity, the findings suggest.

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2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 13:59

Have a CD account with a July 2026 maturity date? Here are three things to avoid doing before that point.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 13:46

No matter what you're looking for in a 3D printer, we've found the best around in 2026.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 13:43

Culture secretary says her department will stop using platform, citing concerns over far-right content fuelling violence and division

The UK’s culture and media department will stop using X because the site “now favours abuse and misinformation over meaningful debate”, Lisa Nandy has announced.

The culture secretary’s department is the UK’s second to quit the Elon Musk-owned platform over increasing concerns about the way it highlights and prioritises often inaccurate far-right and racist content and is used to incite violence and division.

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2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 13:37

Interest earnings on a CD of this size and length will be substantial, but that's not the only advantage for savers.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 13:28

Couple pledges millions to children’s hospitals, food banks and educational programs in advance of their big day

Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce are donating $26m to charities in advance of their rumored wedding at New York’s Madison Square Garden this weekend, a representative for the couple has confirmed to the Guardian.

The 20 named charities include organizations in meaningful locations to the couple such as Nashville (where Swift got her start in music), Kansas City (the home of Kelce’s Chiefs NFL team) and New York City, where Swift and Kelce’s wedding is reported to take place.

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2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 13:25

The FBI is asking for analysts to help evaluate thousands of records for a "priority" investigation ordered by FBI Director Kash Patel.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 13:24

Security guard Hernán Alberto Gil Flores, 43, initially told rescuers not to tell his wife in case he did not survive

A 43-year-old security guard who survived last week’s devastating earthquakes in Venezuela thanks to a pocket of air in his workstation cabin has been pulled from the collapsed basement of a shopping centre amid huge cheers from international rescue teams.

Hernán Alberto Gil Flores had been trapped for eight days under the rubble of the Galerías Playa Grande in the hard-hit coastal port city of La Guaira since the back-to-back quakes struck.

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2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 13:21

Yorgen Fenech said to have spent €400,000 on fees for men convicted of car bombing that killed investigative journalist

A businessman accused of commissioning the murder of the Maltese journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia spent more than €400,000 (£343,000) on legal fees for the hitmen convicted of her killing, prosecutors claim.

Yorgen Fenech, the 44-year-old heir to one of Malta’s largest fortunes, arrived in court for the second day of his trial on Thursday in an unmarked armoured police vehicle. He is on house arrest having pledged a record bail estimated at €50m.

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2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 13:10

The White House declined to say how much President Trump paid in taxes on his crypto windfall.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 13:07

The latest news and reaction on day 22 of the tournament after England set up a last-16 clash with Mexico

And I appreciate all this has been forgotten because England won but Harry Kane should have been awarded a first-half penalty. When a goalkeeper slides and does not get the ball, of course the forward is going to take the contact. Kane is just being punished for being as clever as the officials desire.

Maurico Pochettino was rather unhappy with Folarin Balogun’s dismissal. The striker painfully caught the Bosnia and Herzegovina defender Tarik Muharemovic on the ankle but it was a complete accident with two players going for the ball.

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2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 13:07

Raw performance has long been the benchmark for success in HPC. However, as AI and exascale systems grow larger, power is becoming just as important as speed. Today, it’s not just about building faster supercomputers – it’s also about energy efficiency. 

The growing emphasis on energy efficiency is reflected in the latest Green500 rankings, announced alongside the TOP500 list at ISC 2026.

China’s LineShine claimed the title of the world’s fastest supercomputer. KAIROS, ROMEO, and Levante GPU extension systems at DKRZ successfully defended the top three spots on the Green500. This reinforces Europe’s leadership in energy-efficient HPC.

The Green500 has historically seen more turnover than the TOP500 list, where the arrival of a single flagship system can dramatically reshape the rankings. 

One reason for this is that vendors continually work on extracting more performance from watts of electricity. This could come from refined processor architectures and new system designs. 

Also, with the latest advances in cooling technologies and interconnects, you might expect the rankings to change from the last release in November 2025. However, none of the top 10 systems were displaced. This suggests that the current leaders continue to set a formidable benchmark for energy-efficient supercomputing.

Commenting on the stability of the Green500, Erich Strohmaier, senior scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and a co-founder of the TOP500 rankings, said “I think it has never happened in the Green500 that the top ten has not changed because the Green500 is about technology, not about size… Not just the top three stayed the same. Actually, the whole top ten in the Green500 did not change.”

KAIROS offers an energy efficiency of 73.28 Gigaflops/Watt and achieved 3.046 Petaflop/s on the HPL benchmark. ROMEO performed at an HPL benchmark of 9.863 Petaflop/s with an efficiency of 70.91 Gigaflops/Watt. The Levante GPU extension achieved 6.747 Petaflop/s HPL performance and an efficiency of 69.43 Gigaflops/Watt.

The top three systems all have a degree of architectural consistency. The top ranked KAIROS, operated by CALMIP at the University of Toulouse, and the No. 2 ranked ROMEO at the University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne are both built by Eviden on its BullSequana XH3000 platform and powered by NVIDIA GH200 Grace Hopper Superchips. 

Germany’s third-ranked Levante GPU Extension follows a similar approach, pairing HPE Cray EX infrastructure with NVIDIA Grace Hopper processors.

Achieving leadership in performance per watt requires more than just a single breakthrough technology – it needs optimizing every layer of the system. 

The top three systems serve different institutions and workloads, but they share many of the same engineering principles: Tightly integrated CPU-GPU architectures, high-bandwidth memory, direct liquid cooling, and optimized software stacks. 

The growing emphasis on performance per watt also reflects broader changes taking place across the HPC industry. There is no doubt that AI training, inference, and large-scale scientific simulations are driving demand for ever-larger computing systems, however, power has become one of the industry’s most significant constraints. 

Building the next generation of supercomputers is no longer simply a matter of adding more processors or accelerators—it also requires sufficient electrical capacity, cooling infrastructure, and operating budgets.

(Matveev Aleksandr/Shutterstock)

As a result, energy efficiency has moved well beyond being a benchmark statistic. Performance per watt is increasingly shaping procurement decisions, system architecture, and long-term operating costs. The Green500, once viewed primarily as a companion to the TOP500, is becoming an increasingly important indicator of how future leadership-class systems will be designed.

Nvidia also pointed to the growing role of accelerated computing in HPC, writing in a blog accompanying the latest rankings that “accelerated computing is becoming the foundation for the systems taking on the world’s most demanding work, across AI and science.” The latest Green500 appears to support that observation, with Grace Hopper-based systems occupying several of the top positions.

The TOP500 will remain the industry’s definitive measure of raw computing performance, but the Green500 is emerging as an important indicator of how those systems are built and evaluated. 

As large-scale scientific workloads continue to grow, simply adding more processors or accelerators is no longer enough. Future systems will also need to make better use of available power and cooling resources. 

The post Green500 Shows Performance per Watt Is Becoming HPC’s New Arms Race appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 13:05

NCA says offenders arrange to sexually assault and film victims via online networks with crimes often taking place in trusting relationships

Criminal investigators in the UK say they have uncovered a “truly international network” of organised drug-facilitated sexual assault in which victims are sedated before being raped and sexually assaulted.

The National Crime Agency [NCA] has said online networks, “many as yet unidentified by law enforcement”, were allowing offenders to arrange to rape and abuse victims or arrange for sexual assaults to be filmed.

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2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 13:01

The Other Lobby

Regime change in Venezuela; a punishing siege of Cuba; election meddling in Honduras, Argentina, and Colombia; economic sabotage and terrorist designations in Brazil; boots-on-the-ground militarism, knife-to-the-throat death squads, and torture in Ecuador; lawfare, psy-ops, and CIA kill teams in Mexico; mass deportations and support for a gulag state in El Salvador; a deadly crackdown on protesters in Bolivia; and outright murder in the Caribbean and Pacific — a year and a half into his second term, President Donald Trump has deployed, with significant success, the full range of U.S. hard power on Latin America.

Even as the White House has proved reckless and self-defeating in Iran, it has maintained a menacing, disciplined focus on Latin America. The siege of Cuba and informal annexation of Venezuela are the centerpieces of this program, but there’s not one country, except perhaps Uruguay, where Washington isn’t in deep. The State Department was even micromanaging the recent Colombian elections, with Secretary of State Marco Rubio personally approving the deportation of Beto Coral, a Colombian national who lives in Texas, because he has been critical of Trump’s preferred candidate.

A narrow, wealthy Latin American diaspora geographically concentrated in Miami has captured U.S. hemispheric policy.

The extent of this power projection is impressive, even if the power asymmetries make operations in Latin America easy compared to the Middle East. You can pressure Ecuador with a gang designation and $20 million in security aid and get results. You can’t do that with Iran.

But asymmetry alone doesn’t explain the Trump administration’s overwhelming focus on Latin America. Florida, to a large degree, does. A narrow, wealthy Latin American diaspora geographically concentrated in the greater Miami area has captured U.S. hemispheric policy — not through persuasion or broad public support, but through the state’s electoral math and alliance with the Republican Party. This informal lobby represents a Latin American propertied class who fancy themselves dispossessed, who imagine their interests threatened by the mildest of democratic reforms. The members of this class see Trump and Rubio as their personal repo men. 

The Cause

Florida’s outsized role in U.S. politics begins with the backlash to Cuba’s 1959 revolution. Those who fled Fidel Castro’s socialist government in its early days overwhelmingly came from the middle and upper classes. They turned the peninsula into a sanctuary state. After the failure of the Bay of Pigs invasion — the CIA’s 1961 bid to use exiles as an expeditionary force to invade Cuba and dislodge Castro — the more ideological of these agency-trained exiles continued to populate the counterinsurgent gothic. These Cuban emigres allied with rogue elements in the CIA and FBI, Colombian drug traffickers, and mafiosi to advance “The Cause,” as the novelist James Ellroy calls efforts to liberate Cuba through the violent overthrow of Castro’s government.

Cuban exiles, drawn into covert operations and the ranks of the then-fringe U.S. New Right, would go on to participate in many of the storied black-bag operations that defined the middle to late Cold War: the conspiracies surrounding JFK’s assassination (as the House Select Committee on Assassinations put it in 1979: “anti-Castro Cuban groups, as groups, were not involved in the assassination, but the available evidence does not preclude the possibility that individual members may have been involved in the assassination) and the execution of revolutionary Che Guevara in Bolivia, led by Bay of Pigs veteran and CIA operative Félix Rodríguez, who then went to Vietnam to train the death squads of the Phoenix Program. Other Bay of Pigs alumni flew CIA combat missions over the Congo strafing Simba rebels and carried out the Nixon White House’s Watergate break-in and the Iran–Contra affair, in which Reagan administration officials secretly sold weapons to embargoed Iran and diverted the illegal profits to right-wing Contra rebels in Nicaragua, directly violating a congressional ban.

The Cold War ended but the Cause continued. In 2000, the notorious Republican operative Roger Stone recruited Cuban American protesters for the infamous Brooks Brothers riot — the mob action that shut down the Miami-Dade recount of presidential ballots and handed George W. Bush the White House — by instrumentalizing exile grievance through Cuban radio broadcasts. “The idea we were putting out there,” Stone later said, “was that this was a left-wing power grab by Gore, the same way Fidel Castro did it in Cuba.”

Drug profits financed many of these operations. “Every major area of operation in which the CIA has worked has left behind a major functioning drug cartel,” as CIA operative-turned-whistleblower John Stockwell put it. So too the Western Hemisphere with the Cubans. The beginning of the modern cocaine trade “had developed largely under the control of exile Cuban criminal organizations based in Miami,” Bruce Bagley, an expert on Latin American drug trafficking, observed in Foreign Affairs.

By the late 1970s, Miami prospered, even as the rest of the country was suffering from a prolonged economic downturn, high unemployment, and urban decay. Laundered cocaine money in effect provided Miami a covert Keynesian stimulus, a massive injection of cash into construction, retail, banking, and services at the exact moment the U.S. government was abandoning such policies as inflationary. While nearly every other Federal Reserve district was running a deficit, the vault of Miami’s Fed was stuffed with a $5 billion surplus made up of manicured bundles of $50 and $100 bills, evidence of large cash transactions conducted outside normal financial channels. Real estate boomed. Employment boomed. Car dealerships, paid in cash, boomed. Buildings went up, the city’s traditional pastel stucco and red tiles giving way to glass, glitz, and gleam.

Cuban Americans came to dominate Miami’s independent banking sector. Continental National Bank, the first Cuban American-owned bank in the United States, was founded in 1974 by exile Carlos Dascal in Miami’s Little Havana neighborhood. Typical of the small Latin American-owned banks that proliferated in this period, Continental went from $12 million in annual deposits in the mid-1970s to over $600 million by 1980 — a dramatic illustration of the narco-dollars flooding Miami’s banking system.

Related

How Henry Kissinger Paved the Way for Orlando Letelier’s Assassination

It was a wild time in Miami’s exile community. Cocaine and covert ops were a dangerous mix. No two figures better embodied the era than Luis Posada Carriles and Orlando Bosch — both CIA-trained Bay of Pigs veterans, both connected to the New Orleans mob and the drug trade. Together, they founded the Coordinación de Organizaciones Revolucionarias Unidas, or CORU, which the FBI described as “an anti-Castro terrorist umbrella organization” that served as a subcontractor for Operation Condor, Chilean military dictator Augusto Pinochet’s hemisphere-wide assassination program. In 1976, Cuban CORU operatives planted the car bomb that killed former Chilean ambassador Orlando Letelier and his U.S. colleague Ronni Moffitt in Sheridan Circle in Washington — the first case of state-sponsored international terrorism in the nation’s capital. Posada and Bosch also carried out the bombing of Cubana de Aviación Flight 455 off the coast of Barbados, killing all 73 people aboard, including the Cuban national fencing team, soon after.

Democracy Promotion in Hialeah

Ronald Reagan’s 1980 presidential election victory changed the calculus. His advisors were hard-line: the New Right had moved from the fringe to the halls of power. Cocaine continued to finance Miami, but the off-the-books exiles had become a liability. The historian Alan McPherson writes that by the mid-1970s, Cuban exile militants had carried out, in addition to the attacks described above, more than 100 bombings on U.S. soil and in 1974 accounted for 45 percent of all terrorist bombings in the world. The Reagan White House didn’t want to dim exile passion, but it also didn’t want planes being shot down over the Caribbean and bombs exploding in Sheridan Circle. And so mercenaries were out, and lobbyists were in.

Reagan’s national security adviser Richard Allen worked with Jorge Mas Canosa, who had left Cuba in 1960, to create the Cuban American National Foundation, or CANF. Allen explicitly modeled CANF on the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, better known as AIPAC — telling fellow Cubans to study the Israeli lobby and replicate its methods, as documented by political scientists Patrick Haney and Walt Vanderbush. The goal was not just to sideline terrorists like Posada and Bosch but to marginalize more moderate perspectives within the Cuban American community who wanted some accommodation with the Cuban government. Reagan needed a respectable political vehicle for hard-line Cuba policy that could operate in the open. That was CANF.

Mercenaries were out, and lobbyists were in.

Note the self-reinforcing loop: The Reagan White House organized the creation of a lobbying group to lobby itself for policies it already wanted to pursue, generating the appearance of popular democratic pressure for what was in fact long-standing government hostility toward the Cuban Revolution.

Mas Canosa put his own personalistic imprint on the AIPAC model. He combined, as Saul Landau put it, the style of an “old-style political ward boss” — getting himself and his allies appointed to local utility, road, and electoral commissions; awarding contracts; doing incoming immigrants favors; finding them jobs and housing — “with the pragmatic lobbying techniques” of AIPAC, cultivating congressional allies to enforce and strengthen the Cuba sanctions. His anti-Castro ideology was both genuine and lucrative: a Cuba opened to U.S. capital would be an enormous prize, and he and his inner circle would be best positioned to seize it.

In 1989, CANF won its first congressional seat, when Cuban-born Ileana Ros-Lehtinen defeated her Democratic opponent to succeed Claude Pepper, the New Deal lion who had championed labor, Medicare, and Social Security from the same Miami district for more than two decades. The symbolism was stark: “Red” Pepper’s left-liberal tradition eclipsed by Cuban exile politics.

Allen explicitly modeled the Cuban American National Foundation on AIPAC, telling fellow Cubans to study the Israeli lobby and replicate its methods.

Ros-Lehtinen would serve for 30 years, becoming the powerful chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and what the South Florida journalist Juan David Rojas called a founding figure of the “Miami neocons.” She was simultaneously the exile community’s most aggressive Cuba hard-liner, a champion of Israel in its Lebanon and Gaza wars, the author of Iran sanctions legislation, and a vocal defender of the accused Flight 455 bomber Orlando Bosch. Her former intern was Marco Rubio, now Trump’s national security adviser and secretary of state.

Over in Broward County, Florida’s 25th Congressional District, with its large Jewish, Colombian, and Venezuelan population, Debbie Wasserman Schultz is another Miami neocon, a Democratic one, advocating for hard-line policies in both Israel and Latin America. An AIPAC favorite, Wasserman Schultz shortly after first being elected in 2004 worked closely with Trump’s current Venezuela viceroy, Mauricio Claver-Carone, to squash five initiatives that would have diluted Cuba sanctions. 

At the time, Claver-Carone, born in Miami, was running both the U.S.–Cuba Democracy PAC and the Cuba Democracy Advocates. Since 1996, the National Endowment for Democracy, a nongovernmental organization, and the U.S government have channeled more than $100 million into similar “democracy” programs, many of them headquartered in Hialeah and Coral Gables. Democratization in Cuba was the stated objective, but the work of the NGOs and their subcontractors are often protected from disclosure as “trade secrets” under FOIA exemptions.

Mas Canosa died in 1997, and the conventional wisdom at the time was that the Cuban American lobby had peaked. The old guard was dying off, and poll after poll showed that younger Cuban Americans — U.S.-born, English-dominant, less connected to the island — were open to normalization and an end to the embargo. President Barack Obama’s surprise announcement in December 2014 that the United States and Cuba would restore diplomatic relations — the most significant shift in Cuba policy in more than half a century, negotiated secretly with the help of Pope Francis — seemed to confirm the lobby’s decline.

And yet the U.S. government, in the last two years of Obama’s presidency, continued to flood Miami with “democracy promotion” grants, a direct federal stimulus to activists who would become some of Donald Trump’s staunchest supporters. With Trump’s election, what looked like the lobby’s last gasp turned out to be its renaissance.

Trump ended the normalization of relations with Havana and, listening to Florida’s then-Sen. Marco Rubio, imposed harsh sanctions on the island. After Ron DeSantis’s 2018 gubernatorial victory turned the state hard right, Florida (home to a good number of the nation’s billionaires, including Jeff Bezos and Google co-founder Larry Page) became the command center of MAGA power.

A Febrile Complex

Beyond Trump, something was transforming Miami that would change the lobby’s nature entirely. Through the 2000s and into the 2020s, the city was absorbing a new wave of Latin American capital flight on a scale that dwarfed anything produced by the original Cuban exodus.

Across Latin America, economic liberalization, a policy pushed by Washington since the 1980s, failed to generate prosperity and stability, leading many nations to elect left-leaning governments. Venezuelans had been arriving in Florida since Hugo Chávez’s first election in 1998. Now they were joined by wealthy Brazilians, Bolivians, Argentines, Nicaraguans, and Mexicans. Colombians had been coming for decades, fleeing the violence of their country’s civil war.

“When governments in Latin America go left, buyers go north.”

Even the mildest of leftists could spark a flight of capital northward. When it looked like Gabriel Boric would win Chile’s 2021 presidential election, two Chilean law firms opened offices in Miami to help wealthy Chileans move their assets to South Florida. Boric did win, and investors pulled money out of Chile at a record pace, leaving behind what Bloomberg estimated as a $50 billion hole. Chileans ranked eighth among foreign buyers of real estate in South Florida in 2021.

“When governments in Latin America go left,” as one prominent Miami realtor put it, “buyers go north.” Latin Americans bought nearly half of all new luxury units in South Florida through mid-2025, most of them in cash.

The city of Doral, just west of Miami, became so heavily Venezuelan it is informally known as Doralzuela. Miami’s Brickell neighborhood is filled with Colombian and Brazilian private banking offices. The Biscayne corridor attracted Mexican, Argentine, and Peruvian capital. These were not the huddled poor who arrived in the 1980 Mariel boatlift, an exodus of Cubans, or the desperate Haitians who came after the 1991 coup. These were the propertied business classes — and they were looking for ideological allies in Washington to beat back the social democrats at home.

The Cuban exile network absorbed and nurtured the grievances of these new arrivals. Following the 2009 military coup in Honduras — which ousted the elected center-left president Manuel Zelaya and replaced him with a right-wing government — a delegation of Miami Cubans, working with Sen. John McCain, the Republican Party’s most prominent neoconservative, served as a bridge between AIPAC and the greater Latin American lobby and hosted Honduras’s coup leaders in Washington to validate their takeover. For a brief moment, President Obama opposed the coup government, but when Cuban Americans and other conservatives began associating him with Castro and Chávez, he backed down and recognized the regime as legitimate.

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The new Latin American arrivals found a common language in a single word: “castro-chavismo.” The term had been popularized in Álvaro Uribe, Colombia’s former president and leader of its far right. Uribe himself imported the term into the U.S. as part of a campaign to derail the Colombian government’s Cuban-brokered peace agreement with the FARC guerrillas. Flanked by then-Sen. Marco Rubio and Rep. Mario Díaz-Balart, Uribe gave a rallying speech at a Doral restaurant, Mondongo’s, in October 2016. He warned the crowd of Colombian and Venezuelan expats that castrochavismo would come to Colombia if the peace deal were ratified. Uribe used this trip to deepen his ties with Trump’s people: Policy analyst Adam Isacson and historian Christy Thornton, separately, note Uribe’s influence on Trump’s first reelection campaign, when he ran ads in Florida linking President Joe Biden to the Latin American left. “Joe Biden is a PUPPET of CASTRO-CHAVISTAS,” he tweeted in 2020.

The Cuban lobby had long been motivated by the specific wounds of the Castro revolution: the confiscations, the executions, the broken families, what Joan Didion called in her 1987 book “Miami” the “febrile complex of resentments and revenges and idealizations and taboos” that united the exiles. The newcomers from across Latin America were equally febrile, but their cause was not just a free Cuba — it was a continent liberated from the likes of left-leaning presidents like Mexico’s Claudia Sheinbaum, Brazil’s Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, and Colombia’s Gustavo Petro.

“Empire’s Workshop” by Greg Grandin Available on Bookshop.org

Unlike the Cuban lobby, which had operated under the tight discipline of Mas Canosa and CANF, the newer Latin American exile community had no single institutional home. The Trump transition team after the 2024 election moved quickly to capture these new constituencies, reaching out to figures like Félix Maradiaga, a Miami-based Nicaraguan opposition leader whom former guerrilla fighter and strongman president Daniel Ortega had stripped of his citizenship. Maradiaga says that Trump’s envoys were urging the opponents of Nicaragua, Cuba, and Venezuela to “unite our points of view so that the actions that come from the United States have a joint impact in the quest for democracy.”

Mar-a-Lago became the diaspora’s clubhouse, a palace-in-exile for Latin America’s displaced elites — where Brazil’s Bolsonaro family bends Trump’s ear, Venezuelan opposition figures convene with White House officials, and Colombian magnates attend fundraisers alongside Cuban American politicians and businessmen to discuss business opportunities and coordinate the hemisphere’s restoration.

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The scale of what was being plotted there has been partially revealed: a cache of forensically authenticated voice notes leaked from former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández. Convicted of drug trafficking, Hernández had been serving a 45-year sentence in a West Virginia federal penitentiary until Trump pardoned him in December 2025. The leaked memos reveal that Hernández was being financed by both Israel and Argentina (he spent his first night of freedom in the five-star Waldorf Astoria hotel) and that his political proxy, current Honduran President Nasry Asfura, was meeting with investors at Mar-a-Lago to discuss sketchy deals with U.S. officials and to plan a broader destabilization program targeting Mexico, Colombia, and Brazil.

Miami Rules

The new, greater Latin American lobby operates differently from the old CANF model, trading a single-issue ethnic lobby focused on one country for a class-based hemispheric operation united by a common enemy: reformism of even the blandest sort. CANF itself continues to exist but has fallen into irrelevance. Its PAC went dormant and its lobbying function was absorbed into a broader, more decentralized Latin America lobby. Florida’s Republican Party has largely absorbed CANF’s electoral machinery.

Class divisions had long existed in the Cuban diaspora, especially after the Mariel boatlift. But a singular focus on liberating Cuba had muted the cleavages. Now, though, as the diaspora became hemispheric in scope, the gap between the haves and have-nots has become more visible. Doral’s gated communities sport lovely names — Doral Isles Riviera, Doral Isles Venetia — and wealthy Venezuelans play golf at Trump National. Tens of thousands of poorer Venezuelans — many of whom risked their lives trekking the Darién Gap to get to the U.S., many of whom work at that same golf resort — live in constant fear: Trump has revoked their Temporary Protected Status, leading to more than 15,000 deportations. Some have been sent back to Venezuela, others to El Salvador’s infamous maximum-security CECOT prison.

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The cruelty is not limited to Venezuelans. The Trump administration has targeted other poor immigrants, including Hondurans, Nicaraguans, and Haitians. Even poor Cubans — who in the past could expect automatic residency — are now being shipped to Mexico, where many, elderly and sick, find themselves sleeping on the streets of random cities, such as Villahermosa, the humid capital of Mexico’s southern state of Tabasco. “They’re casting us aside to die,” said Harold A, a 58-year-old Cuban national who was deported to Mexico earlier this year. “They don’t give us anything, nothing. … How are we supposed to eat?”

The wealthy members of the diaspora tend to see these deportations as harsh but necessary to protect their reputation as “exceptional migrants.” Poor Venezuelans are referred to by some of their better-off compatriots as orcos — orcs, subhumans — a class contempt that Oxford scholar Erick Moreno Superlano has documented in detail. The lobby that presents itself as the agent of Latin American freedom is, in fact, a staunch defender of the hemisphere’s status and class hierarchy.

These new well-to-do exile groups vote in their national elections as a bloc, and often decisively so for their country’s most Trump-like candidate. Last month in Peru, the daughter of former President Alberto Fujimori — who spent 16 years in prison for human rights violations committed during his presidency, including death squad killings — would have lost the presidential election if only votes cast in Peru were counted, but ultimately beat her center-left opponent thanks to the votes of the Peruvian diaspora. The roughly 9,000 Miami-Dade votes helped her win by less than 1 percent.

More recently, Colombians living in Miami turned out in unprecedented numbers to vote for the hard-right Trump mimic Abelardo De la Espriella, helping him win a presidential election that was as close as Peru’s. De la Espriella is a U.S. citizen and was a long-time resident of a multimillion-dollar mansion in Miami, where he worked as a defense lawyer for Colombian clients, among them paramilitaries, right-wing politicians, and money launderers.

Be it by the bullet or the ballot, Miami rules.

The Dogs That Caught the Car

Both AIPAC and the greater Latin American lobby had, in the second Trump term, achieved close to their maximal ambitions simultaneously: a war on Iran and a full-court press on Latin American leftists of all stripes, with the deployment of U.S. Special Operations forces, CIA assassination teams, naval blockades, and sanctions. War powers resolutions to stop Trump’s actions — in Iran, Cuba, and Venezuela — are routinely blocked by a Republican caucus dependent on AIPAC money and Florida’s electoral votes, often with an assist from a handful of AIPAC Democrats.

Yet both lobbies now find themselves something like the dog that caught the car, and then was run over.

Trump’s war in Iran was a tactical and strategic disaster, leading the White House to lash out at Israel in ways that, just a month ago, would have been unimaginable. Vice President JD Vance just lectured Israel that it “can’t just kill your way out of solving every single national security problem.” And Trump warned Benjamin Netanyahu “you will be on your own very soon.” AIPAC’s maximalist project — permanent war, permanent leverage, permanent intertwining with U.S. power — is in tatters.

Whether the same reversal comes for the Latin American lobby remains to be seen. Trump is still pressing Cuba hard, demanding a “deal.” But the deal Trump is pushing looks less like regime change than an investment prospectus. It’s less the Monroe than the Capone Doctrine: Sanctions destroy foreign competitors, Helms–Burton lawsuits punish anyone who stays, and Trump-connected U.S. investors move in to pick up assets at distressed prices. Recently, a business connected to a former Trump official Ray Washburne muscled out a Canadian mining and cobalt corporation.

Trump’s sanctions worked too well. They broke Cuba’s economy so completely that Havana was forced, recently, to enact sweeping economic liberalization — reforms that serve investors, not exiles.

In Florida, Cuban Americans who have never set foot in Cuba, like Nicolás J. Gutiérrez — a Miami-born lawyer whose “young millionaire” father lost his sugar fields to Castro — founded organizations such as the “National Sugar Mill Owners of Cuba,” hoping that Trump would make a country they have never seen theirs again. 

For many, that hope is dissipating quickly as they face their nightmare scenario: a repeat of what happened recently in Venezuela, where Trump entered into a partnership with the existing government, letting demands for root-and-branch regime change take a back seat to oil industry dealmaking. ExxonMobil, which has a large role in setting Trump’s Venezuela policy, just won a Supreme Court Case that allows it to sue Cuban state-owned companies in U.S. federal courts to win compensation for property confiscated more than 65 years ago. This ruling will give the company enormous leverage in what comes next for Cuba. At the same time, Trump, in his second term, has deported nearly 8,000 Cuban nationals, many of the low-income asylum-seekers but also a considerable number of middle-class business and property owners.

The sugar fields, it seems, will not be returned to the children of their former owners any time soon, though they might be put out to bid. But those hoping for restoration will always have Mar-a-Lago.

The post How Florida’s Cuban Diaspora and the Israeli Lobby Came Together — and Are Coming Apart appeared first on The Intercept.

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Politicians of both political parties have blamed either the Trump or the Biden administration for the arrival of the New World screwworm, a flesh-eating fly that affects the cattle industry, in the U.S. after decades of eradication. But experts say the reasons are different or more complicated than either side is saying — and that it’s no one administration’s fault.

The agriculture secretary, meanwhile, has said that the previous administration “hadn’t really done anything” to combat screwworm, wrongly claiming that there had been “no funds” secured and “no plan deployed.” The Biden administration approved nearly $275 million in emergency funding to fight screwworm starting in late 2023.

Since the Department of Agriculture announced a confirmed screwworm detection in a calf in Texas on June 3, politicians on both sides of the aisle have lobbed blame at the other. The return of the fly is a major threat to the cattle industry, and its arrival in Mexico has already contributed to rising beef prices in the U.S.

Several Democrats and some in the media have been pointing the finger at President Donald Trump, noting staffing cuts at USDA or funding cuts to screwworm programs made in early 2025 by DOGE, the so-called Department of Government Efficiency.

“Apologized yet for the Screwworm outbreak?” Rep. Ted Lieu, Democrat of California, wrote in a June 8 X post addressed to Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins. “You agreed to the DOGE cuts to federal programs that were designed to prevent Screwworm outbreaks.” He repeated a similar statement at a June 9 press conference.

“The Trump administration is directly responsible for this crisis: Last year, it decimated the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS), which oversees prevention and response efforts related to pests and diseases that pose a threat to U.S. agriculture, including the New World screwworm,” a June 8 Democratic National Committee press release said.

Republicans, meanwhile, have pinned the blame on former President Joe Biden.

“This is another thing we can thank Joe Biden for — that when millions of people came out of … Central America, they brought this screwworm with them. It was on their pets, maybe on their flesh as well,” Sen. Roger Marshall, Republican of Kansas, said in a June 8 Newsmax interview.

“The threat didn’t appear overnight; it was the direct result of the Biden-Harris Admin’s WEAK foreign policy agenda and FAILED immigration policies (and wide open border…),” Rollins wrote in a June 4 X post, noting that the biological barrier for the fly at the border of Panama and Colombia “broke down in 2022,” during the prior administration.

“The Biden-Harris admin … ran a wide-open border that turned the Darien Gap into a nonstop highway for illegal migration, infested animals and all,” she wrote in another post the same day. “That single policy did more to introduce NWS into the US than anything we’ve seen in 60 years.”

Rollins repeated some version of this story on multiple occasions, including in two congressional hearings.

Experts, however, told us that both parties are off-base. A couple of entomologists we spoke with suspect that what precipitated the barrier breakdown in Panama was a fly strain failure, which in some ways was decades in the making. Better monitoring — particularly as late as 2025 — would have perhaps slowed but not prevented the arrival. And while illicit cattle movement could be a major way the screwworm travelled north, an expert told us it had nothing to do with Biden’s immigration policies (any travel on humans would be minor).

“Neither of them are to blame,” David Taylor, an emeritus adjunct professor of entomology at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, told us, of the Biden and Trump administrations.

The return of screwworm “should not be reduced to a simple partisan blame story,” Dr. Joseph Annelli, a former director of emergency programs for veterinary services at the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, told us. “The more accurate explanation is a long-term preparedness failure involving multiple administrations, multiple Congresses, international partners, workforce shortages, infrastructure limitations, and the natural human tendency to underinvest in prevention until a crisis occurs.”

‘A Scientific Marvel’

Screwworm was once native to the southern U.S., but through the use of sterile fly releases starting in the 1950s, the parasite has largely been eradicated from the country for more than 40 years.

The flies lay eggs in open wounds and the resulting larvae then burrow like screws into live tissue. After about a week of feeding, the larvae then drop off the wound and complete their transformation into flies in soil, the USDA explains. While the fly can infest open wounds in any warm-blooded animal, including people, pets and wildlife, the insects prefer larger mammals and human cases are rare.

Eradication efforts began last century due to the burden on ranchers. Screwworm infestations can sicken or kill livestock, especially newborns, and they can be expensive to treat and monitor for. According to the USDA, before the eradication of the pest, livestock producers lost tens of millions of dollars or more to screwworm every year. 

Annelli called it “a scientific marvel” to figure out how to use sterile flies to control the pest. Because the female flies mate only once, releases of sterilized males stop reproduction, and the population dies out. Scientists devised ways to rear the flies, irradiate them to sterilize them, and release them into the wild, over time pushing screwworm out of the U.S., down through Mexico and as far as the Darien Gap in Panama.

With the exception of Darien province, Panama had been free of screwworm since 2006, with a dedicated facility producing tens of millions of sterile flies each week that were dropped over the isthmus, preventing spread of the fly from South America, where it has remained endemic.

A New World screwworm fly being examined at a USDA facility in Texas. Photo by Lance Cheung/USDA.

The U.S. declared the screwworm eradicated in 1966, although Taylor said that there were large outbreaks through the 1970s. It was “not really until 1980 that the U.S. became screwworm-free,” he said. Since then, there have been some imported cases, but only one self-sustaining outbreak, largely in deer, in Florida in 2016, which ended after bringing in sterile flies.

“Unfortunately, we are the victim of our success,” Anneli said. “People don’t even know about screwworm anymore because it was eradicated so long ago.”

Screwworm began its return to North and Central America sometime around 2022, with Panama experiencing an increase in cases that year. By mid-2023, screwworm was in Costa Rica, and in Nicaragua by March 2024. Mexico reported its first case, near the border with Guatemala, in November 2024.

Since the U.S. detection in early June, the USDA has identified 31 animal cases as of July 1, primarily in cattle, but also in sheep, goats and dogs. All of the cases have been in Texas, except for one dog in New Mexico. (Rollins said in a hearing and elsewhere that the dog had been brought across the border with Mexico, but state officials have said that is not true.)

The Democratic Argument

In assigning blame for screwworm, some Democrats, such as Lieu and the DNC, have focused on funding and staffing cuts made under the Trump administration.

It’s true that the USDA is significantly smaller under Trump. In one year, the department lost around 20,000 employees, including around 2,000 members, or 23%, of the agency’s inspection service, according to an analysis of federal data by the National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition. The Agricultural Research Service, the agency’s chief scientific arm that is involved in sterile fly efforts, also lost nearly 2,200 people, or 31% of its staff.

However, it is not known how many of those individuals worked on screwworm. 

Using Office of Personnel Management data and figures through April, we got similar staffing reductions for the inspection and research departments. Overall, USDA staffing has dropped by about 16,000 employees.

Three former USDA officials told Politico for a June 17 story that the staffing cuts complicated the agency’s screwworm response, particularly because more experienced veterinarians were gone.

Rollins has said that when she came into office there were just 10 people working full time on screwworm, and that she has now expanded that to over 110 or 120 people. She has denied any negative impact on screwworm from funding or staffing reductions.

An April 2025 memo from Rollins indicates that employees dedicated to screwworm would be exempt from a hiring freeze.

Four former USDA officials have disputed Rollins’ figure of 10 employees, with one calling it “definitely false” and an underestimate, according to reporting in Agri-Pulse, a trade publication.

A few Democrats, including Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York and Rep. Shontel Brown of Ohio, who is the vice ranking member of the agriculture committee, have also cited a separate March 2025 Agri-Pulse story about funding cuts. Lieu’s press office also directed us to the story, among several others, when asked for support for his claims. It reported that among the administration’s many cuts to USAID were “animal disease monitoring projects” operated by the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization, including $250 million specifically for global health security projects.

“Among the GHS projects killed were some dedicated to monitoring and containing avian flu and New World Screwworm in Central America,” the trade publication reported. It went on to say that the stop work orders went out in late January, “just days before” the Trump administration reopened the border for cattle trade that the Biden administration had closed due to concerns about importing screwworm.

Reporting by KBHB Radio in South Dakota at the same time confirmed the cuts via a Food and Agriculture Organization spokesperson, but offered little additional detail. “Throughout Central America, FAO monitored and responded to New World Screwworm, preventing the spread of the disease to the U.S.,” the spokesperson said, giving an example of the FAO program’s impact.

FAO did not reply to our request for more information, but confirmed the cuts to Agri-Pulse in a separate June 24 story, stating that “the reductions meant that some planned country support — including disease surveillance, laboratory strengthening, veterinary training and outbreak preparedness — could not be implemented as originally planned or had to be delayed or scaled back.”

Many of the scientists we interviewed were not able to comment directly on any funding or staffing reductions. But given the timing of the grant cancellations, it is unlikely that those had a large impact. Screwworm had already been detected in southern Mexico in late November 2024, two months before Trump took office.

Taylor said that once the outbreak reached Nicaragua, it was “inevitable” that the flies would reach the U.S. because there was not enough sterile fly production capacity.

“You might have been able to do better surveillance. You might have been able to track it better,” he said. “But I don’t see that you are going to stop it.”

“I would be cautious about attributing the problem solely to recent USAID, USDA, or other federal funding reductions,” Annelli, who is also the executive vice president of the National Association of Federal Veterinarians, said, noting that he was speaking for himself and not for any organizations. “Surveillance and prevention funding are important, and reductions can certainly weaken preparedness. However, the northward progression of screwworm reflects broader and longer-term vulnerabilities that predate any single administration.”

The Republican Argument

Some Republicans, meanwhile, have been pushing a narrative that Biden’s immigration policies are to blame for bringing screwworm stateside again. 

“With open borders and the proliferation of the Mexican cartels and their illicit cattle trafficking, the New World screwworm began to make its way north,” Rollins said in recent congressional testimony. 

Setting aside that Biden’s approach was not one of “open borders,” there are several flaws with this argument.

First, to be clear, experts do not think migrants themselves are carrying screwworm frequently enough to spread the pest. Paul E. Kaiser, a retired insect geneticist who had leadership roles in two sterile screwworm production facilities, told us that to the best of his knowledge, “no data” support that idea.

Illegal cattle movement, including from the cartels, however, likely did play a role in bringing screwworm north. Researchers and journalists have documented how cartels traffic cattle with falsified veterinary papers to launder money and how those trade routes align with the spread of the pest. But scientists told us that this does not explain what originally went wrong because illicit trade has long been a problem — and yet screwworm had remained at bay.

Illegal livestock movement “had nothing to do with the outbreak” itself, Kaiser said. Animals “infected with screwworms are brought illegally from Colombia into the Darien every year,” he explained. “So illegal cattle trade exacerbated the problem, but it didn’t start the problem.”

Taylor agreed. The illegal cattle trade “may have accelerated the pace of the advance, especially once they made it through Panama and Costa Rica,” he said, “but I think the flies would have made it to Texas with or without cattle smuggling.”

“Illegal livestock movements can certainly contribute to spread, but the biology of the parasite does not support immigration policy as the principal explanation for what occurred,” Annelli similarly said.

Moreover, Jennifer Ann Devine, a Texas State University geographer and political ecologist who has studied narco-ranching, told us that it is inappropriate to link the illegal cattle trade to immigration policies.

“If we’re to point blame for screwworm re-emergence, a big part of the puzzle is not immigration policy, but the war on drugs,” she said.

Somewhat counterintuitively, Devine explained, efforts to clamp down on the drug trade have arguably driven the cartels more toward activities such as narco-ranching, which not only offers a source of funding and plausible cover, but also develops new smuggling routes as traffickers seek out more remote areas for their operations.

In terms of drug policy, the Biden and Trump administrations are “much more similar than not,” Devine said, although Trump has perhaps amplified the traditional approach of interdiction, seizure and criminalization.

“Both administrations have contributed to the spread of illegal cattle ranching,” Devine said. “We can’t say that the Biden administration [specifically] made this worse.”

What Scientists Suspect Really Happened

Several scientists told us that one possibility is that the sterile flies being used to maintain the border in Panama became less effective or stopped working. The specific strain in production had been in use for 16 years by 2022, even though entomologists told us that they should have been swapped out at least every eight years, or even every two to three years.

“The fault lies with, in my opinion, very possibly with strain deterioration,” Taylor said, although he cautioned that this was only a suspicion at this point.

As the flies are mass produced, he explained, they could have developed genetic mutations that made the flies less compatible with wild flies or in some way diminished their ability to reduce fly populations in the field. Although the sterile fly facility in Panama — a joint effort between the U.S. and Panama called COPEG — runs tests on the produced flies to check basic functions, Taylor said, there is no direct way to test for effectiveness.

The strain “was obviously not competitive in the field against wild males,” Kaiser told us, calling the breach in the Darien “completely avoidable.” He believes the APHIS employees in charge at USDA in 2022 should have recognized the problem faster, immediately restricting animal movement and collecting a new strain. Panama did not declare a state of emergency until 2023, and a new strain was not established until 2024, which by then was too late, Kaiser said.

This would have occurred under the Biden administration, but multiple administrations had the opportunity to swap out strains or maintain viable backup strains. 

Both Taylor and Kaiser also said that these sorts of mistakes would come down to management of the sterile fly program itself, rather than a president or even a USDA chief.

“The blame goes down to the local level for not changing the strain,” Kaiser said.

“I think there have been systematic problems in the program since the early 2000s,” Taylor said. He believes there needs to be an external review.

Enrique Samudio, the then-Panamanian director of COPEG, told a Panamanian newspaper in July 2023 that the “fly wasn’t being effective enough” and said a new strain, which had been cryopreserved, was in production by March 2023. He also attributed the surge in screwworm cases to a variety of other factors, including a larger population of cattle in the Darien than when the program started, ranchers not recognizing the problem and climate change. 

COPEG did not respond to our request for more information. According to a February 2026 research study, the current production strain was established in 2024 from 11 lines of flies collected from animal infestations in Panama and Costa Rica during 2022 and 2023.

A variety of other missteps over many years have contributed to the current situation, experts said.

The only facility capable of producing sterile flies until recently was in Panama, with a capacity of 100 million flies per week. Experts say that left no contingency plan in case of a larger outbreak that would need significantly more flies.

“There are not enough flies to do the control,” Taylor said. “You’re putting Band-Aids on mortal wounds until you get more flies.”

There had been another production facility in Chiapas, Mexico, that the U.S. was involved with, but it closed in 2012. “While that closure occurred during the Obama administration period, it would be inaccurate to portray it as solely an Obama administration decision,” Annelli said. “Rather, it reflected a broader perception shared by multiple governments and administrations that screwworm had been sufficiently controlled and that maintaining excess production capacity was no longer necessary.”

Annelli also said that both Republican and Democratic administrations had made cuts to the USDA’s veterinary workforce over the years, leading to staffing shortfalls particularly during emergencies.

Entomologists also bemoaned the fact that the government has not more aggressively pursued the use of an all-male screwworm strain, which would make fly rearing cheaper and much more efficient. As it is now, half the sterile flies that are produced are females and are worthless or worse, since the sterile males may end up mating with them rather than with wild females.

“It’s absolutely ridiculous that we don’t have an all-male strain,” Kaiser said, noting the general concept for such a screwworm strain goes back to at least the 1990s.

Maxwell Scott, an entomologist at North Carolina State University, has been working on such an effort. He said he tested one strain in the field in 2018 but that COPEG decided not to use it for mass production.

“There were opportunities years ago to develop much more effective genetic methods to control a screwworm,” he said, and “no one funded them.”

Scott said it might never be known why the boundary in Panama failed, but “it’s probably going to be a mix of factors,” noting that there had been an increasing number of cases along the border in Colombia, putting more pressure on the barrier. The blame game politicians are participating in, he said, is “not particularly helpful.”

Rollins’ Claims About Biden’s Actions

On multiple occasions, Rollins has portrayed the previous administration as taking little or no action against screwworm.

In a June 10 Senate hearing, Rollins said, “I was sort of shocked that the last USDA really had no plans, hadn’t really done anything,” regarding screwworm. She later asked, “Why did no one do anything about it until we walked in the door in January and February of last year?”

During an interview in Texas a day after that, Rollins said that when she began as secretary last year, she realized “that really not much had been done to prepare for this moment — no funds had been secured, very little staff … really no money invested, no plan deployed.”

While it’s a matter of opinion whether the Biden administration could or should have done more, it’s not the case that it did nothing and had no funding or plans in place.

In December 2023, then-Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack approved a transfer of $109.8 million in emergency funding to combat screwworm “in areas of Panama and other areas that are critical to preventing the pest from spreading back into North America,” according to an agency press release.

In November 2024, when Mexico notified the USDA of a screwworm detection, the agency immediately halted imports of live cattle and bison from Mexico. 

Then, a month later, Vilsack approved another $165 million in emergency funds.

In a letter Vilsack wrote to his counterpart in Mexico just before his departure in January 2025, he said that the authorized emergency funding “has allowed us to increase sterile fly production fivefold in the past year” and to scale up “dispersal, surveillance, education, and partnerships in the region.” He also asked for Mexico’s assistance in setting up “two planned sterile fly dispersal centers in Southern Mexico.”

In two trade publications in June, Vilsack disputed Rollins’ claims, saying it was not true that the Biden administration’s USDA had done nothing, pointing to the sterile fly additions, funding for a Mexican dispersal facility, bolstered surveillance measures and closing the border to imports, which Vilsack said at the time “was perceived to be a very aggressive step.”

One of the reports also noted that Rollins said that some of the $1.3 billion in screwworm funding under Trump came from Biden administration programs.

Two anonymous former USDA officials also told Politico that the Biden administration had left plans and funding to convert a fruit fly facility in Metapa, Mexico, into a screwworm production facility. The Trump administration took four months to review the spending, officials told the outlet. Agri-Pulse published a similar account. Rollins announced the $21 million renovation project in late May 2025.

USDA did not respond to repeated requests for comment. A spokesperson, however, told Politico that the agency “has moved at lightning speed to obtain any and all necessary funding and approvals to fight New World screwworm,” having “aggressively moved dollars and project timelines at a pace unprecedented for [the] U.S. government.”

In early February 2025, the Trump administration resumed cattle imports from Mexico, but halted them again a few months later in May.

Taylor said the Biden administration’s decision to block imports was a “good move” primarily because it slowed the movement of cattle from southern to northern Mexico.

“There were very, very strong feelings amongst my colleagues in Texas that [Trump] should not have reopened the border, and they were quite happy when it was closed again,” he said. “But it was such a short period of time, I don’t think it really had an impact.”

Now, the emphasis is on building up sterile fly production. Rollins has said that the U.S. now needs as many as 500 million sterile flies a week to begin pushing the screwworm back out of the country, essentially starting the eradication process over again.

On June 27, the retrofitted production facility opened in Metapa, Mexico. It will eventually produce as many as 100 million sterile flies a week.

In March, the USDA announced a contract to build a new sterile fly facility at Moore Air Base in Edinburg, Texas, that eventually can produce 300 million flies a week. But the first flies aren’t expected until around November 2027, with an initial start of 100 million per week.

Kaiser said it would likely take several years before screwworm is out of Texas again, and over a decade before the flies are pushed once more back to the Darien.


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 Democrats’ and Republicans’ Screwworm Blame Spin appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 12:29

Eleven-year-old developed symptoms 19 days after encounter in Ontario in ‘exceedingly rare’ case

Doctors in Canada say a child who awoke to find a bat resting on his nose and mouth while visiting an Ontario cottage later died of rabies, in an “exceedingly rare case” that highlights the need for better public awareness.

In a report published this week in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, infectious disease physicians confirmed that the 11-year-old boy died from rabies, a fatality they said probably could have been prevented with greater awareness of how the virus is transmitted.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 12:29

Electric scooters are a simple and efficient way to get where you need to go.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 12:19

The NHS will divert billions of pounds from essential services to pay for new medicines, under the terms of the US-UK trade deal agreed in December, which could lead to more than 200,000 excess deaths, analysis has found.

Ministers have defended the deal as a way of helping British drug exports avoid US tariffs and giving patients access to vital medication, but critics accuse the Labour party of caving into pressure from Donald Trump.

Lucy Hough speaks to columnist Aditya Chakrabortty watch on YouTube

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 14:51

Two elite event designers shared their thoughts on how Taylor Swift's team might transform Madison Square Garden.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 23:45

Hernan Gil was brought out on a stretcher as elated rescuers cheered and hugged each other. He was loaded into a waiting ambulance and driven away.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 12:19

June's payroll gains were much lower than the 100,000 new hires that economists had predicted.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 14:14

A man who sold land for a controversial, Jared Kushner-backed luxury development in Albania is suspected of money laundering and drug trafficking.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-03 11:23

Extremely dangerous heat, coupled with humidity, could result in heat index readings of 100 to 115 degrees from the Midwest to the East Coast, forecasters said.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 12:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: WhatsApp this week started rolling out username reservations ahead of the broader launch planned later this year. The feature -- which lets people find and message each other by handle instead of phone number -- is already raising impersonation concerns, drawing scrutiny from security experts and regulators in India, the app's largest market, with more than 500 million users. The rollout marks a shift in how people identify one another on WhatsApp. Instead of relying on phone numbers as the primary identifier, users will increasingly interact through platform-managed usernames, a change that Meta says improves privacy but that critics argue could create new opportunities for impersonation. [...] Asked about how it protects against impersonation, Meta told TechCrunch it reserves usernames for public figures, government entities, and "some variations" of those names so only the legitimate owner can claim them. The company did not explain, however, how it decides which lookalike usernames get proactively reserved and which don't. The concerns have already reached regulators in India, where cyber fraud schemes frequently exploit messaging platforms to impersonate police, banks, and government officials. [...] Rachel Tobac, chief executive of SocialProof Security, called usernames a net privacy gain because they reduce the need to share phone numbers, which can expose users to SIM-swap attacks, phishing, and account takeovers. Still, she said, lookalike usernames still create opportunities for impersonation. "Ultimately, usernames are a great idea to avoid leaking your phone number to folks you don't know, but it's important to verify identity with the username function too," Tobac told TechCrunch. Her advice for most users: Pick a username that isn't easily guessable, so it's harder for attackers to find you, message you cold, or harass and spam you. [...] The Mozilla Foundation said the introduction of usernames is likely to bring new tradeoffs. "Increased scams and impersonation from fake handles are potentially a big one," it told TechCrunch. "Checking a phone number can be a useful verification tool, but these harms are also permitted by the platform's fundamental design choices." Mozilla also flagged a broader interoperability question -- one worth logging if you're building on top of, or competing with, Meta's ecosystem. While letting users claim their existing Facebook and Instagram usernames may cut down on impersonation, it also shows how easily Meta can stitch identity together across its own apps, even as users still can't take that identity, or their contacts, to a rival platform. For now, WhatsApp says it is taking a gradual approach to the rollout. "We're taking our time and listening to feedback so that when it rolls out later this year we get it right," the company said in its FAQ.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 11:59

Hey everyone. New Indy Speed Control battery is finally arriving today so I’ll be doing the GTFO kit swap on my GT with the new battery/bms tomorrow. I’ll be following the Fungi pdf install doc, and Indy speed video guide, but wanted to make sure there weren’t any steps/additional tips to make note of when installing (besides the update to leave the can bus disconnected until after battery is plugged in)

submitted by /u/adultbaby
[link] [comments]

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-02 11:58

Hey everyone. New Indy Speed Control battery is finally arriving today so I’ll be doing the GTFO kit swap on my GT with the new battery/bms tomorrow. I’ll be following the Fungi pdf install doc, and Indy speed video guide, but wanted to make sure there weren’t any steps/additional tips to make note of when installing (besides the update to leave the can bus disconnected until after battery is plugged in)

submitted by /u/adultbaby
[link] [comments]

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 11:48

The price of silver has dropped substantially from a January high. Here's why it's still a good investment anyway.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 11:46

Government seeks workaround after licensing rules threaten to force pubs to shut before World Cup tie finishes

Keir Starmer is exploring ways to keep pubs open into the early hours of Monday after facing backlash over strict licensing rules that would force many venues to close during England’s next World Cup game.

The team’s win over the Democratic Republic of the Congo on Wednesday night booked a last-16 tie against Mexico that is due to run until at least 3am UK time.

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 11:45

Knowing when to stop paying a loved one's bills after they die can help you avoid costly financial mistakes.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 11:33

The woman, 31, suffered some injuries but was found alert and in good spirits on Mount Shasta, officials said

A novice climber was rescued after surviving a 1,500ft fall down California’s Mount Shasta on Sunday, officials said.

The woman, 31, was attempting to ascend the mountain along the Left of Heart variation of the popular Avalanche Gulch route alongside two other novice climbers at an elevation of about 13,000ft when she fell.

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2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 11:30

In part two of a two-part series, Charles Sahm explains how no group has been more steadfast in their devotion to the core beliefs of the Declaration or more determined to make them a universal reality than African Americans. Part one reviewed events up to 1830.

As the abolitionist movement gained momentum in the 1830s and 1840s, it became more common for Black abolitionists like William Wells Brown, Henry Highland Garnet, Thomas Paul, and David Ruggles to cite the Declaration. The “colored convention” movement that emerged in the 1830s employed the Declaration’s preamble in numerous proclamations. For example, a “Declaration of Sentiments” issued at the 1834 convention in New York and repeated at the 1835 convention in Philadelphia quoted the Declaration’s preamble and plead “that the laws of our country may cease to conflict with the spirit of that sacred instrument, the Declaration of American Independence.”

Part One: Constitutional Voices: African Americans’ early responses to the Declaration of Independence

White abolitionists also cited the Declaration with increased frequency. In 1833, William Lloyd Garrison, who later denounced the Constitution as a “covenant with death,” described the Declaration’s preamble as “the corner-stone upon which is founded the Temple of Freedom.” In 1841, former president John Quincy Adams referenced a copy of the Declaration hanging on the wall of the Supreme Court to argue for the freedom of the Africans who took over the slave ship La Amistad. A few months before his Harpers Ferry raid, John Brown authored an abolitionist “Declaration of Liberty,” modeled after the Declaration of Independence, ending the document with the Jefferson quotation: “Indeed; I tremble for my Country, when I reflect; that God is Just; And that his Justice; will not sleep forever.”

Frederick Douglass’s 1852 speech “What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?” is the most iconic use of the Declaration as a political weapon. After denouncing the hypocrisy of a nation founded upon the premise that “all men are created equal” keeping millions of enslaved people in bondage, Douglass changed his tone toward the end of the speech to one of hope: “I have said that the Declaration of Independence is the ringbolt to the chain of your nation’s destiny; so, indeed, I regard it. The principles contained in that instrument are saving principles. Stand by those principles, be true to them on all occasions, in all places, against all foes, and at whatever cost.”

The Declaration during the Civil War and Jim Crow

The Civil War was fundamentally a war about the meaning of the Declaration. In the lead-up to the war, pro-slavery forces began to insist that the words “created equal” were a mistake. In 1848, South Carolina senator John C. Calhoun argued that the Declaration’s preamble was a “great error.” In 1857, the Supreme Court’s infamous Dred Scott decision gave this anti-equality reading of the Declaration the force of law. The meaning of the Declaration was the central focus of debates between Abraham Lincoln and Senator Stephen Douglas in 1858. “All men are created equal.… This they said and this they meant,” said Lincoln. Douglas called this reading of the Declaration “a monstrous heresy.”

Lincoln lost the Senate election to Douglas, but two years later won the presidency. And then the war came. In his “Corner Stone Speech,” Alexander Stephens, vice president of the Confederacy, declared that the original Union “rested upon the assumption of the equality of the races,” an error that the Confederacy was formed to correct. “Our new government,” he insisted, “is founded upon exactly the opposite idea.”

Two and a half years later, Lincoln would dedicate the nation to the proposition that “all men are created equal,” and the Civil War Amendments began, at last, to give that principle constitutional force. Reflecting on this transformation, Senator Charles Sumner titled his eulogy for Lincoln “The Promises of the Declaration of Independence,” arguing that while the founders had “cut the connection with the mother country” and opened the path to popular government, Lincoln had set in motion the consummation of “all the original promises of the Declaration” and time and time again had “summon[ed] his countrymen back to the truths in the Declaration of Independence.”

Although Reconstruction briefly offered hope that those promises might finally be realized, the rise of Jim Crow and the persistence of white racial violence betrayed them. Yet Black leaders continued to invoke the Declaration as a moral claim on the nation. In 1895, at the close of his final speech, “Why Is the Negro Lynched?” Frederick Douglass still expressed faith that white Americans might one day overcome their prejudices and fulfill the nation’s founding ideals. Echoing the Declaration, he urged his listeners to remember “the sublime and glorious truths with which, at its birth, it saluted and startled a listening world … the advent of a nation, based upon human brotherhood and the self-evident truths of liberty and equality.”

In the 20th century, civil rights leaders often grounded their arguments in the Constitution and the Fourteenth Amendment’s promise of equal citizenship. But the poetry of the Declaration’s preamble still offered a powerful rhetorical weapon. In The Souls of Black Folk (1903), W. E. B. DuBois stated that “there are to-day no truer exponents of the pure human spirit of the Declaration of Independence than the American Negroes.” In 1910, Ida B. Wells cited the Declaration in an essay honoring the 40th anniversary of the Fifteenth Amendment: “Here at last was squaring of practice with precept, with true democracy, with the Declaration of Independence and with the Golden Rule.” On July 28, 1917, the NAACP organized a silent march down Fifth Avenue in New York to protest the horrific racial violence of the era. At the front was a simple banner containing the words of the Declaration’s preamble.

Thurgood Marshall cited the Declaration in a 1954 brief that the NAACP submitted to the Supreme Court for Brown v. Board of Education, echoing an argument that Charles Sumner had made a century earlier in the nation’s first school desegregation case, Roberts v. the City of Boston. “It was one thing, and a very important one, to declare as a political abstraction that ‘all men are created equal,’ and quite another to attach concrete rights to this state of equality,” Marshall wrote.

Martin Luther King, Jr. famously called the Declaration a “promissory note to which every American was to fall heir” in his 1963 “I Have a Dream” speech. But it was not the only time he cited the Declaration. He also invoked it in his “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” and in a 1965 Independence Day speech that praised the Declaration for expressing “in such profound, eloquent, and unequivocal language the dignity and the worth of human personality.” In his final sermon, delivered in Memphis on April 3, 1968, King referenced the Declaration when he intoned, “All we say to America is, be true to what you said on paper.”

Malcolm X also invoked the Declaration but, in contrast to King, emphasized its right of revolution. In his 1964 “Ballot or the Bullet” speeches, he made the Lockean argument that Black disfranchisement rendered the government illegitimate and justified resistance: “This is not even a government based on democracy…. Half the people in the South can’t even vote…. Half of the senators and congressmen … are there illegally, are there unconstitutionally.” The Black Panther Party’s 1966 Ten-Point Program concludes by echoing the Declaration’s preamble. In 1970, the National Committee of Black Churchmen issued a Black Declaration of Independence that mimicked the original.

Other groups not originally included in the Declaration’s promise of equality have fought to make the words “all men are created equal” apply to them. Famously, the 1848 Declaration of Sentiments drafted by Elizabeth Cady Stanton states: “We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men and women are created equal.” In 1917, Carrie Chapman Catt, president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association, wrote to Congress: “Woman suffrage became an assured fact when the Declaration of Independence was written.” In 1978, gay rights advocate Harvey Milk stated: “In the Declaration of Independence, it is written: ‘All men are created equal, and they are endowed with certain inalienable rights.’…That’s what America is. No matter how hard you try, you cannot erase those words from the Declaration of Independence.” Native Americans, Latinos, farmers, and laborers have all cited the Declaration in their demands for equal treatment under the law.

But over the past 250 years, no group has been more steadfast in their devotion to the core beliefs of the Declaration or more determined to make them a universal reality than African Americans. These stories deserve more attention in this semi quincentennial year and beyond.

Charles Sahm is the director of content strategy and program development at the National Constitution Center.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 11:28

People are seeking refuge from intense temperatures and humidity this week.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 11:24

From space to healthcare and artificial intelligence, what could the next 250 years of the United States look like?

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 11:23

Strong figures suggest Tesla’s auto business is regaining momentum after two straight annual sales declines

Tesla blew past ​Wall Street estimates for second-quarter deliveries on Thursday, posting a record for the period as recovering demand in Europe outweighed persistent weakness in North America.

The strong figures suggest Tesla’s ⁠mainstay auto business is regaining momentum after two straight annual sales declines, providing the spending cushion needed to power its ambitions in autonomous driving and artificial intelligence – the main drivers of the company’s roughly $1.6tn valuation.

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 11:20

Loan revamp affects how much students and families can borrow to pay for college, as well as their repayment options.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 11:16

U.S. Army Air Forces 1st Lt. Franklin H. McKinney disappeared after leaving China for a spy mission over Thailand in November 1944.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 11:15

See where a “ring of fire” weather pattern could produce disruptive thunderstorms.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 11:04

Damage recorded in 30 locations across in the city from overnight attacks, with ‘most of them ordinary residential buildings’

in Dublin

Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said he hopes not to wait too long for the results of an Irish government investigation into alumina exports to Russia thought to be feeding the Kremlin’s war machine.

“Unfortunately there are companies in Europe that are owned or effectively controlled by Russia and its sanctioned oligarchs. They keep supplying the aggressor with essential materials even now.”

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2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 11:04

‘Rooftopers’ Angela Nikolau and Ivan Kuznetsov were arrested after allegedly scaling the New York skyscraper

Two Russian “rooftoppers” who staged an apparent marriage proposal at the peak of the Empire State Building’s spire were reportedly arraigned in New York City on Thursday on a slew of charges including reckless endangerment.

Angela Nikolau and Ivan Kuznetsov were arrested on Wednesday after the stunt, which featured the pair, dressed in all black, unfurling a peace banner and kissing.

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 11:02

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 11:00

Despite a deadly heatwave sweeping through Europe, the US president’s ineptness has created reason for optimism on the climate crisis

Two real-life climate-themed movies are playing in parallel across the globe. They are about the world today, but they are also a snapshot of the future. The first is a slow-building horror story; the second, a feelgood summer hit. Both are worth watching.

Horror films are suddenly box-office gold, so let’s start there. The World Health Organisation says the extreme, record-breaking heatwave blanketing Europe has killed more than 1,300 people. But everyone knows that number will end up a dramatic understatement.

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 11:00

OnePlus is directing customers in some European markets toward OPPO devices, with its German website presenting OPPO as the natural upgrade path for existing users. The regional handoff adds to "months of speculation that the smartphone brand is slowly being folded into its parent company," reports Android Authority. From the report: The banner, seen on OnePlus' German website, tells visitors seeking "the experience you trust" that OPPO offers the same speed, performance, and compatibility that OnePlus users have come to expect. It hosts devices ranging from earbuds and tablets to OPPO's latest foldables, with each button taking users straight to OPPO's website. Particularly revealing is the wording. Instead of pushing future OnePlus hardware, the company focuses on the fact that OPPO's products are built on the hardware and software that users already know, while promising seamless compatibility with current OnePlus devices. In other words, if you're up for your next upgrade, OnePlus seems to be saying OPPO has what you're looking for right now. Reports in the past several months have said OnePlus has been scaling back operations in several global markets. Previous restructuring reportedly included cutting headcount, a more focused regional strategy, and greater dependence on OPPO's infrastructure. The two brands have been sharing engineering resources, software development, and supply chains for years now, particularly as OxygenOS and ColorOS have begun to look more and more alike. Interestingly, the change appears to be regional. OPPO already has a retail footprint in Germany, so the handoff is fairly straightforward. In the United States, however, things are very different, where OPPO does not officially sell smartphones. That means American OnePlus customers aren't getting the same messaging, mostly because there isn't an OPPO lineup waiting to step in.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-02 10:57

More than 70 missiles fired at Ukraine capital as Russia faces fuel shortages after strikes against its oil refineries

At least 27 people were killed and dozens injured overnight in Kyiv, local authorities said, in what the city’s mayor, Vitali Klitschko, called the worst Russian attack on the capital during more than four years of air assault on Ukraine.

Russia used nearly 500 drones and more than 70 missiles in the hours-long attack on Kyiv and other parts of the country in the early hours of Thursday. Loud explosions shook the capital for several hours as waves of drones as well as cruise and ballistic missiles came towards it and Ukraine’s air defence attempted to shoot them down.

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 10:56

Keir Mather and Virginia McVea’s claims follow decision by Maritime and Coastguard Agency to reject worker status of coastguard rescue officers

A government minister and a senior official have been accused of misleading MPs over their plans to strip coastguard officers of their hourly pay.

Keir Mather, the maritime minister, was said to have made false claims on Wednesday, while Virginia McVea, the chief executive of the Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA), was accused of having done so during a meeting with MPs a week earlier.

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 10:46

Worried about your card account going to collections? You may have more control over that debt than you think.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 10:41

HAMBURG, Germany, July 2, 2026 — The ISC 2026 event concluded last Friday, drawing 4,035 attendees from 64 countries for five days of discussions on the latest advancements in supercomputing. Participants also witnessed the announcement of a transition in the community’s most-watched benchmark, as stewardship of the TOP500 project passed to Association for Computing Machinery (ACM).

ISC 2026: 4,035 attendees from 64 countries

Held from June 22 to 26, ISC 2026 featured a strong community-driven technical program, including invited and contributed sessions, as well as an international exhibition with 188 exhibitors from 26 countries.

A Milestone Handover for TOP500

It was announced that a new steering committee, consisting of existing authors Jack Dongarra, Erich Strohmaier, Horst Simon, and ACM Special Interest Group on High Performance Computing (SIGHPC) chair Christine Harvey, along with new members Satoshi Matsuoka, Wu Feng, and Anders Jensen, will oversee the transition and the new governance. A new technical committee will manage the list’s production, starting with the 68th November list.

The project was founded in 1993 by the late Hans Werner Meuer and Erich Strohmaier at the University of Mannheim, Germany.

“After managing the TOP500 since our father’s passing in 2014, we are pleased to hand it over to ACM,” said Martin Meuer, co-managing director of ISC Group. “We retained the project for over a decade to protect our father’s legacy and that of the other founding authors. We sought an organization that prioritizes the community’s interest and will not monetize the TOP500 project, and we are confident that ACM is the right home.”

A Successful ISC

Registration data from ISC 2026 revealed a diverse international audience, with participants from 64 countries. By sector, 39.5 percent of attendees were from academic and research institutions, while 33.9 percent were from hardware, software, or services vendors. Of the attendees, 63.6 percent identified their role as Industry and 30.4 percent as Academia.

Data on attendee interests indicated clear trends in the field. AI applications driven by HPC technologies and AI factories were the two most-cited areas of interest, significantly ahead of topics such as data center infrastructure, cooling, and quantum computing integration. This highlights the evolving landscape that ISC 2027 will aim to address.

Beyond the data, attendees consistently highlighted networking and ISC’s human-scale atmosphere as distinguishing features. They praised its environment compared to larger international HPC events, noting the ease of meeting peers, partners, and collaborators face-to-face.

The next ISC will take place in Hamburg from June 7 to 11, 2027, under the program leadership of Professor Rio Yokota of the Institute of Science, Tokyo, and the RIKEN Center for Computational Science.

More from HPCwire

About ISC High Performance

Established in 1986, ISC High Performance is the world’s oldest and Europe’s most-attended event dedicated to HPC, AI, and quantum computing. The conference and exhibition bring together researchers, engineers, technology providers, system operators, policymakers, and students from around the world to exchange knowledge and discuss the future of supercomputing.


Source: ISC

The post ISC 2026 Concludes with Record Attendees and TOP500 Moves to ACM appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 10:40

The fathers of a camper and a counselor who died last July Fourth after flash floods swept through Camp Mystic in Texas reflect on the tragedy a year later.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 10:40

BROMONT, Quebec, July 2, 2026 — Pasqal, through its Canadian subsidiary Aeponyx, today announced the creation of a specialized center of competency focused on assembling and packaging key components used in quantum and advanced sensing technologies in Canada. The Center of Competency in Photonic Integrated Circuit (PIC) Packaging for quantum and sensing applications will be based at C2MI in Bromont, Quebec.

Supported by the Canadian government, the initiative brings together Aeponyx, HOP Technologies, and Phantom Photonics to strengthen Canada’s domestic capabilities in advanced photonics and quantum technologies.

Bridging Research and Industry at C2MI

Anchored at C2MI, one of Canada’s leading R&D and commercialization hubs, the initiative is intended to bridge the gap between research, prototyping, and low-volume manufacturing in a field that is critical to enabling scalable quantum systems. It will focus on advanced PIC packaging processes tailored for PIC based quantum technologies, with the objective of standardizing and making novel packaging capabilities available to the broader ecosystem – solving a bottleneck that is critical to scaling PIC based quantum technology. Central to the project is the installation at C2MI of state-of-the-art packaging equipment specifically designed for PIC based quantum computing applications, made possible through Aeponyx’s long-standing partnership with Aixemtec Gmbh, a leading German equipment manufacturer.

“Building on more than a decade of strong collaboration with C2MI on silicon nitride PICs, this initiative directly supports Pasqal’s roadmap by enabling a reliable, domestic supply chain for advanced photonic packaging in Canada,” said Philippe Babin, CEO of Aeponyx. “Creating this Center of Competency is an important step in strengthening the capabilities that will firmly position Canada as a global leader in the next generation of quantum and sensing technologies.”

“With Aeponyx, we validated our active-alignment technology on quantum photonics prototypes, and we believe the collaboration has created a strong foundation for scalable production,” said Tobias Müller, Chief Commercial Officer at Aixemtec GmbH. “We look forward to supporting Aeponyx as it advances capabilities that are important to Pasqal’s quantum hardware roadmap.”

Complementary Experience Across Canada’s Innovation Landscape

The consortium brings together complementary experience that reflects the breadth of the opportunity. HOP Technologies leverages photonic integration for physiological monitoring and wearable biosignals applications, targeting real-world human health impact. Phantom Photonics adds strong expertise in next-generation LiDAR and optical sensing designed for demanding environments including autonomous systems and defense. We believe this international consortium demonstrates that the packaging capabilities being developed at C2MI extend far beyond a single application field, they can serve a growing range of high-stakes applications across Canada’s innovation landscape.

The project is backed by $4 million in combined federal and provincial support, including $3 million from Next Generation Manufacturing Canada (NGen) through its Advanced Manufacturing Technology Program. The total project budget is $7.9 million and marks the first phase of a broader effort to develop a domestic supply chain for advanced PIC packaging.

The first phase of the project will establish low-volume manufacturing capabilities and is intended to support thousands of devices. The second phase aims to scale production to 500,000+ modules per year.

C2MI has built a strong and recognized leadership in advanced packaging through years of close collaboration with the industry,” said Marie-Josée Turgeon, CEO of C2MI. “With this Center of Competency, we are now activating that expertise at scale, partnering with new players and unlocking new applications to fast-track the development and commercialization of next-generation photonic and quantum technologies.

A Strategic Move for Pasqal’s Quantum Roadmap

For Pasqal, the project highlights the strategic importance of PIC technology to the company’s long-term leadership in neutral-atom quantum computing. Aeponyx, acquired by Pasqal with the intention of bringing PIC experience in-house, will help enable Pasqal to strengthen the precision, robustness, and scalability of the photonic layer underpinning its quantum hardware roadmap.

“This PIC Packaging Center of Competency at C2MI, launched in collaboration with Aeponyx and our partners, helps turn advanced integrated photonics into repeatable, industrial-grade capabilities in Canada — a key step toward more robust, scalable controls for our neutral-atom quantum processors,” said Loïc Henriet, CTO of Pasqal.

About Aeponyx Enterprises Inc.

Aeponyx is a Canadian photonic integrated circuits (PICs) company specializing in silicon nitride (SiN) and hybrid photonic integration technologies. Founded in 2012 and headquartered in Montréal, Quebec, Aeponyx designs, develops, and manufactures advanced photonic chips and modules for high‑performance applications, including quantum computing, optical communications, and sensing.

Aeponyx’s core experience spans PIC design, wafer‑scale fabrication, advanced packaging, and opto‑electronic integration, with a strong focus on scalable, manufacturable solutions. The company has built a robust intellectual property portfolio and works closely with industrial, academic, and government partners in North America and Europe.

Aeponyx is a subsidiary of Pasqal, a global leader in neutral‑atom quantum computing, and enables large‑scale, laser‑based quantum processors through advanced photonic technologies.

For more information, visit www.aeponyx.com.

About Pasqal

Pasqal is a global leader in delivering practical quantum computing at scale utilizing neutral atom technology and dedicated software for industry, science, and governments. Since its founding in 2019, Pasqal has leveraged Nobel Prize winning research to build high-performance quantum systems and cloud-ready software designed to address complex challenges in optimization, simulation, and artificial intelligence.

Headquartered in France, Pasqal employs over 275 people and serves over 25 clients and partners, including Aramco, CMA CGM, OVHcloud, Thales, IBM (Pasqal is part of the IBM Quantum Network), and Sumitomo.

Backed by more than USD 300 million in total private funding from international investors, Pasqal is pursuing a listing on Nasdaq in partnership with Bleichroeder Acquisition Corp. II (Nasdaq: BBCQ) and is accelerating the adoption of scalable, high-performance quantum computing worldwide.


Source: Pasqal

The post Pasqal Expands Canadian Quantum Supply Chain with New PIC Packaging Center appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 10:37

First judge found to have erred by giving 15-year-olds youth rehabilitation orders for rape of two girls in Hampshire

Two 15-year-old boys who were spared custody for raping two girls have been sentenced to four years’ detention after the court of appeal ruled their sentences were “unduly lenient”.

After a national outcry, the attorney general, Richard Hermer, referred the case to the court to consider whether the sentences given to three boys – identified only as X, Y and Z – were too light

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 10:35

It isn't approved by the FDA, but we found an experimental weight-loss drug called retatrutide for sale at a local convenience store.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 10:34

National Weather Service warns heat index could reach 115F (46.1C) as heat grips midwest, Ohio valley and east coast

A “prolonged, dangerous heatwave” is expected to intensify across parts of the central and eastern United States over the next few days and into the holiday weekend, bringing record-breaking temperatures, humidity, and dangerous conditions to millions of Americans.

The National Weather Service (NWS) warned on Thursday that temperatures between 95F (35C) and 105F (40.5C), combined with high humidity, will push heat index values across parts of the region to between 100F (37.7C) and 115F (46.1C).

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 10:31

For all its gloss and elitist governance, football will not bend to the will of a president so eager to demonise and exclude

At 4.38pm on 28 June Donald Trump dropped a Truth. Nothing unusual in that. Trump’s Truth Social feed is relentless and ever-giving.

That same afternoon he also Truthed at 3.58pm, 3.59pm, and twice at 7.42pm, all in the same instantly recognisable, weirdly cartoonish tone, as if a giant maize-based salted snack from a jaunty 1970s TV advert has been pumped full of voodoo and vitamins and propped up behind a lectern to explain geopolitics to the world, but only in the kind of words you might use while arguing with your nine-year-old sister.

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 10:19

PM’s former chief of staff opens up on political mistakes and shares Trump’s theories about wind turbines

Morgan McSweeney, the prime minister’s former chief of staff, has said Labour was not prepared enough for government or for the volatile world when Keir Starmer was first elected.

McSweeney, who had been Labour’s elections guru credited by many in the party for the size of their victory in 2024, said the party did not have an idea about how to make things happen quickly for people who wanted change.

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2026-07-03 12:04
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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 10:15

Indictment against alleged leader of gas pipeline attack claims former Ukrainian army officer was directed by state

German prosecutors have accused Ukrainian “state authorities” of ordering the 2022 explosives attack on the Nord Stream gas pipelines linking Russia with Europe, a charge likely to ignite tensions between Kyiv and Berlin, its biggest military backer.

The sabotage in the Baltic Sea by a team of assailants almost entirely destroyed the seafloor infrastructure of the key source of Russian gas to Germany.

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 10:10

How does artificial intelligence use tokens, and should we be worried that AI now has claws? Here's a quick primer on the vocabulary of today's inescapable technology.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 10:05

Schism caused by Society of Saint Pius X ordaining four bishops without consent presents first crisis for Pope Leo

The Vatican has excommunicated a rebel group of ultra-conservative Catholics who defied Pope Leo by ordaining bishops without his consent, creating a schism in the Roman Catholic church.

In a statement on Thursday, Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández, who heads the Holy See’s Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, said the group from the Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX), founded in the Swiss village of Écône in 1970, had “committed an act of a schismatic nature” which, under canon law, was punishable with automatic excommunication.

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 10:00

A recent survey suggests that using apps and artificial intelligence for health advice may be linked to vaccine distrust.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 10:00

The midfielder had to work hard to win his place in Mauricio Pochettino’s squad for this tournament. He is more than repaying his coach’s faith

While Malik Tillman was unsure what to expect from the United States’ last-32 clash with Bosnia and Herzegovina, he certainly must have assumed he would finish the game with his boots intact.

Tillman has been one of the US’s most important players in their run to the World Cup last 16, a vital part of the team’s buildup and a tricky technician for opponents to contend with when he’s maneuvering through the final third. While everyone else waited to learn whether or not Folarin Balogun would be sent off during the second half of Wednesday’s 2-0 victory, Tillman noticed some discomfort with his right boot. There was a good reason: the top of it had been ripped after a stomp from an opponent.

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 09:59

Reports say up to 80,000 people waiting by mid-afternoon for chance to see historic artwork at British Museum

People keen to see the Bayeux tapestry faced online queues of up to nine hours when tickets went on sale for the first time on Wednesday morning.

The British Museum, which is hosting the tapestry from September, saw huge traffic to its ticketing website as a scramble for access began.

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2026-07-03 12:04
2026-07-02 09:38

The US government’s latest U-turn on Anthropic’s Mythos sends mixed signals on AI governance Expert comment thilton.drupal

The Trump administration’s approach to controlling US companies’ powerful AI capabilities is volatile. It undercuts global safety and governance at a pivotal time.

US president Donald Trump displays a signed executive order on AI

On Tuesday, the United States Department of Commerce removed restrictions on two of Anthropic’s new advanced AI models that have prompted security concerns: Mythos 5 and Fable 5. This is a major change in the way the US controls frontier AI and comes after recurring flip-flopping on the issue.

The move, described in a letter by Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnik to Anthropic, lifts the export control directive issued by the Trump administration less than three weeks ago. That 12 June directive banned non-US nationals from accessing the two models. This ban included foreign employees at US companies and cyber defenders from international partners. In response, Anthropic suspended access to Mythos and Fable for all users a day later.

The administration then partially changed its approach. On 26 June, Anthropic said the US government had allowed it to release Mythos 5 but had reserved access to the model to only a select group of ‘trusted’ big companies and agencies: all of them, unsurprisingly, from the US.

Now, Anthropic says it is coordinating with the government to expand Mythos access to a broader group including international partners. As of 1 July, Fable 5 – which Anthropic says has stronger safeguards than Mythos 5 – is available to public users globally.

A volatile approach

Since Anthropic’s initial limited release of Mythos in April, the model’s apparently powerful cyber hacking capabilities have led to concerns over who has access. Initially, Anthropic had limited access to trusted partners in ‘Project Glasswing’: a select group of companies and agencies that were granted access in order to fix vulnerabilities in their systems and browsers. Since then, the question of access has remained contentious.

Many companies and allies will applaud the US administration’s latest policy reversal. Access to models like Mythos can be helpful for cyber defenders the world over. Information about model capabilities is critical for regulators and officials.

This latest U-turn on Mythos aside, the bigger picture is that the US government is regulating powerful AI in a way that it previously indicated it wouldn’t. OpenAI’s latest models – GPT-5.6 Sol, Terra and Luna – have also recently come under government pressure due to security concerns, and will be initially released to only ‘a small group of trusted partners’.

However, the government’s changeable approach is not a win for security. The policy volatility is concerning. Its unpredictability sends confusing signals to markets and is bad for investors.

It also represents competing dynamics at the heart of the US’s frontier AI strategy, each with global consequences. These include anxiety about China’s access to cutting-edge capabilities, a lack of clarity over what the technology can actually do and how transformative it really is, and distrust in the partnerships required to develop and deploy it.

Deregulation, re-regulation?

This flip-flopping on Mythos is just the latest chapter in the dispute between the Trump administration and Anthropic. Earlier this year, the Department of War (DoW) labelled the company a ‘supply chain risk’ to national security: the first US company ever to receive this designation. The DoW and Anthropic remain in a legal battle. Regardless, Anthropic engineers reportedly help the National Security Agency to use Mythos in cyber operations targeting adversaries.

The administration’s turbulent relationship with Anthropic has global consequences, including for US allies. In early June, Anthropic offered the EU access to Mythos after weeks of negotiations, only for the EU to lose it days later following the export control directive (and now, presumably, regain it). The G7 also saw attempts to re-negotiate a ‘trusted partners’ scheme for access to cutting-edge AI capabilities. 

The US government is regulating powerful AI in a way that it previously indicated it wouldn’t.

This turbulence also highlights the unstraightforward relationship between US political leaders and the country’s most powerful technology companies, two of which are on the cusp of IPOs. Generally, the Trump administration has been in favour of deregulation. It fears stifling innovation, preventing adoption and losing the US’s competitive edge over China.

But the US government’s recent turn towards a more proactive but volatile regulatory approach is a significant change; the Anthropic saga is just one part of this recent shift towards ad hoc government control.

On 2 June, an executive order called for AI companies to voluntarily submit their models for safety testing for 30 days before general release. The order was reportedly watered down from a 90-day period after lobbying. On 5 June, a national security directive instructed government agencies to end contracts with AI companies that limit how the government uses their tech. (Some policy experts consider this a response to the Pentagon-Anthropic legal battle.) And OpenAI’s limited release of its GPT-5.6 models last week reportedly came at the request of the US government.

This approach has its flaws. First, Chatham House experts have previously argued that tightening restrictions around valuable technology – so-called ‘golden eggs’, whether software (like models) or hardware (like chips) – will not fully prevent their proliferation.

Second, clamping down on models immediately pre-release doesn’t control or slow down the frontier of development. And clamping down on ‘foreign access’ to AI cyber capabilities – which includes restricting access for non-US AI safety institutes and allies – does not improve US readiness for an AI-enabled global crisis, like a global financial crash. It weakens the evidence base and trusted cooperation needed to navigate a shared shock.

Not-so-global governance

Next week’s inaugural United Nations meeting on AI – the UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance – faces an impossible balancing act. This is because AI risks are shared, whether to global health, nuclear security or financial systems. They demand a minimum level of global governance to regulate them. This includes monitoring and information-sharing, technical measures like model ‘kill switches’, or decision-making pathways like emergency backchannels.

This is a non-starter without the US and its powerful AI companies. But the unpredictability and protectionism of US frontier AI governance creates barriers to these types of international cooperation. This is complicated by the dynamics of the US-China AI race, which makes it hard to get Beijing and Washington to reach a consensus on safety, despite promising signs of future intergovernmental talks.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 09:26

The Vatican says bishops from the ultra-conservative Catholic SSPX society were automatically excommunicated after ignoring Pope Leo's plea for unity.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 09:23

Independence Day celebrations are a great time for fireworks photos. Here's how to capture them with just your phone.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 09:21

The country’s unemployment rate dropped slightly to 4.2% as US job growth also slowed for the month

US job growth slowed in June as employers added 57,000 new jobs – just about half of what economists had predicted – and the Bureau of Labor Statistics revised its figures from the past two months down by a total of 74,000.

The country’s unemployment rate dropped slightly to 4.2%, but the number of unemployed people changed little, according to the latest data, as 720,000 people left the labor force. The bureau revised the unexpectedly high May figures from 172,000 new jobs to 129,000, and revised the April figures from 179,000 to 148,000.

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2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 09:12

SANTA BARBARA, Calif., July 2, 2026 — Qolab Inc., a leader in quantum computing hardware, today announced the initial closings of its Series B Preferred Stock financing, which, together with the conversion of an aggregate of $12.6 million in convertible securities and a commitment for an aggregate of $10 million in future convertible securities, represents total funding of $54.2 million for the company.

The round was led by UC Investments (the University of California Office of the Chief Investment Officer). The Series B Preferred Stock financing and prior convertible financing included participation from existing financial and strategic semiconductor investors including Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF), Octave Ventures, and Phoenix Venture Partners.

The announcement was made during the 75th Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting, where Qolab co-founder and Chief Technology Officer Dr. John Martinis, recipient of the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics, joined fellow Nobel Laureates, leading scientists and emerging researchers from around the world. The gathering provides a fitting backdrop for Qolab’s next phase of growth at the intersection of breakthrough semiconductor manufacturing and quantum innovation.

Among other things, the Series B Preferred Stock financing will support Qolab’s continued development of scalable superconducting quantum computing technologies, expansion of strategic semiconductor collaborations, and acceleration of the company’s target toward fault-tolerant quantum computing.

“Quantum computing is entering a new era, where decades of scientific research are beginning to translate into technologies capable of addressing real-world challenges,” said Martinis, also a distinguished professor at UC Santa Barbara. “This investment enables Qolab to accelerate development of scalable quantum systems while deepening our collaborations across the University of California ecosystem and the broader scientific community.”

The investment by UC Investments further deepens Qolab’s ties across the University of California’s world-class research ecosystem. Qolab collaborates with Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory through the Quantum Systems Accelerator — a U.S. Department of Energy National Quantum Information Science Research Center led by the Berkeley Lab — and with researchers from UC Santa Barbara to explore next-generation quantum algorithms using Qolab technologies.

“Our mission at UC Investments is to help ensure that our great public research university system continues to thrive for generations to come,” said Jagdeep Singh Bachher, UC’s chief investment officer. “That’s why we seek transformative investment opportunities that we believe will speed scientific discovery and innovation, and, in the end, make the world better.”

The announcement also coincides with the seventh year of a highly competitive UC Investments fellowship that supports UC graduate students and post-doctorates’ participation in the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings, a collaboration dedicated to fostering scientific excellence, encouraging emerging researchers and advancing breakthrough innovation.

“The Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings create a unique environment where pioneering scientists, young researchers and visionary institutions come together to exchange ideas and inspire future discoveries and perhaps, future Nobel Laureates,” said Bachher. “UC is proud to continue supporting this extraordinary forum and to help cultivate the next generation of scientific leaders.”

“Solving the most difficult challenges in quantum computing requires deep collaboration with the semiconductor industry to effectively scale manufacturing,” said Alan Ho, co-founder and CEO of Qolab. “The support of UC Investments, together with our existing financial and semiconductor investors, strengthens our ability to deliver scalable quantum technologies that can transform computing.”

The Series B financing builds on significant momentum for Qolab as the company continues advancing its superconducting quantum computing platform and expanding partnerships across the global quantum ecosystem.

About Qolab

Qolab is a hardware company developing utility-scale superconducting quantum computers. By combining deep physics and engineering expertise with strategic semiconductor partnerships, we solve the toughest challenges on the path to fault-tolerant quantum computing.


Source: Qolab

The post Qolab Secures $54.2M Series B Funding for Quantum Hardware Development appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 09:10

Charges yet to be filed over incident in Mukdahan involving 11-year-old, as police seek to establish circumstances

An 11-year-old boy has driven his parents’ truck into a Buddhist procession in Thailand, killing at least nine monks.

CCTV footage shared by a local rescue group showed the moment the monks, wearing orange robes, were run over as they walked in procession along a road. The timestamp on the footage was shortly before 11am local time on Thursday.

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 09:01

The 19th annual competition features photographers from 48 countries, most using older iPhone cameras.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 09:01

Samsung's book-style folding phone lineup may be expanding to include both a widescreen variant along with an Ultra model.

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Critics say the Trump administration is trying to rewrite and whitewash history by removing and altering scores of signs on public lands

Jerry Bransford, a former US National Park Service (NPS) ranger, has always had a deep connection with the land he grew up on – and the land hundreds of feet below it. His great-great-grandfather, Materson “Mat” Bransford, was one of the earliest explorers of Mammoth Cave in south-central Kentucky, the largest known cave system on the planet.

But for decades, Mat wasn’t paid for his work. Enslavers rented him out for $100 a year to a man who wanted to turn the site into a tourist attraction – what would later become Mammoth Cave national park.

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 09:00

Estimated 650,000 bags of potato chips are affected as US agency upgraded recall of popular brands made by Utz

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has upgraded a recall of several popular brands of potato chips to its most serious level because of the risk of salmonella contamination.

Manufacturer Utz issued a voluntary recall in May for varieties of its Zapp’s and Dirty potato chips products, citing the possible presence of salmonella in dry milk powder sourced from a third party used to make a seasoning ingredient.

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 09:00

July 2, 2026 — Quantum computers could one day solve problems beyond the reach of even the world’s most powerful supercomputers, accelerating everything from drug discovery to the development of advanced materials and cleaner energy technologies.

But the fragile quantum states that make such machines possible are notoriously easy to disrupt. Even tiny changes in the environment — such as stray radio waves, small fluctuations in temperature or slight physical vibrations — can interfere with calculations, introduce errors and disrupt quantum coherence.

Assistant Professor Han Zhao in his UCF lab, standing beside superconducting hardware and lab equipment. Zhao’s work on stabilizing quantum operations with mechanical vibrations is supported by the Oak Ridge Associated Universities Ralph E. Powe Junior Faculty Enhancement Award. Photo credit: Antoine Hart.

To help address this challenge, University of Central Florida Assistant Professor of Physics Han Zhao is developing a new approach that combines superconducting quantum systems with nanomechanical devices to make quantum operations more resistant to noise and errors.

Supporting New Quantum Research

“The future of quantum computing will be its real-world breakthrough applications in science and the economy,” Zhao said. “So it is absolutely true that practical quantum computers need to address the fragility of quantum states.”

The project is supported through the highly competitive Oak Ridge Associated Universities Ralph E. Powe Junior Faculty Enhancement Award program, which provides seed funding to early-career faculty conducting research in science and engineering. The funding supports graduate student research and the acquisition of specialized superconducting quantum hardware used in the experiments. The project will also leverage UCF’s nanofabrication facilities and quantum research infrastructure, including advanced waveform control systems and superconducting quantum hardware.

“The most inspiring aspect of receiving the award for me is to know that the scientific merit of the proposed research received extremely positive recognition in the community,” Zhao said. “This means our lab is on the right track to accomplish research of high importance. We are also grateful for the support of getting students involved in advanced experimental quantum research.”

Entangling Quantum States Through Braids

There are generally two approaches to mitigate error rates in quantum computing, Zhao said. The first is quantum error correction (QEC), which uses multiple physical qubits (the basic unit of quantum information) to protect logical qubits, the encoded units of quantum information used for computation. However, QEC requires substantial hardware resources.

Zhao’s research explores an alternative approach that seeks to make quantum operations themselves more resistant to noise and errors. His efforts focus on developing a more fault-tolerant method for quantum entanglement using superconducting quantum systems and nanomechanical devices operating at temperatures near absolute zero.

At the center of the project are tiny mechanical resonators — microscopic vibrating structures capable of interacting with microwave signals inside superconducting quantum circuits. By carefully controlling these interactions, Zhao aims to create a topological “braiding” process in which quantum states cyclically exchange properties in a predictable and stable way.

Unlike conventional quantum operations that rely on extremely precise control sequences, the braiding process is designed to be inherently more resistant to environmental noise and small operational errors. Because the process depends more on the overall pattern of the interaction rather than every exact microscopic detail, the approach could help reduce the impact of noise and small hardware imperfections. Zhao compares the process to tying a shoelace.

“Braiding means winding multiple strands to form or undo knots,” Zhao said. “The formation of a knot, like how you tie a shoelace, does not need to be exact every time and can tolerate large wiggle room for the strands to deviate.”

“Now, imagine the strands as the evolution of the quantum excitations and the knots as the entangled quantum states,” he continues. “The process of achieving a certain quantum state, i.e., the knot, can have various wiggles due to noise and control imperfection, but as long as it follows a certain pattern, it will result in a high-fidelity quantum operation. And this certain pattern is dictated by the intrinsic topology of the engineered interaction between superconducting quantum circuits and the mechanical resonators in an open quantum system.”

A Stable Quantum State at Absolute Zero

To perform these experiments, Zhao’s lab uses superconducting quantum systems inside a specialized dilution refrigerator. Operating at these extreme temperatures helps eliminate thermal noise that would otherwise disrupt delicate quantum behavior. The refrigerator, which cools the system to just a fraction of a degree above absolute zero, creates the ultra-stable environment needed for superconducting circuits and quantum mechanical interactions to function reliably.

Within this environment, Zhao’s team studies how microwave signals and tiny vibrating mechanical resonators can exchange quantum information through carefully controlled interactions.

Traditionally, researchers have sought to isolate quantum systems from the external environment as much as possible when building quantum computers, says Zhao. However, these physical systems are constantly interacting with their environment and should be used to generate new ways of thinking about the methods of quantum information processing.

“Practically, the ultimate success will be a big step towards a fault-tolerant quantum computing that solves problems beyond the capability of modern computing technology for applications in quantum simulations, complicated optimizations in relevance with the global economy and information security,” said Zhao.

This research is supported by the Oak Ridge Associated Universities Ralph E. Powe Junior Faculty Enhancement Award program under Award No. FP00012463. Matching support for the project is provided by UCF.


Source: Andrew Miller, UCF

The post UCF’s Han Zhao Advances Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computing with Nanomechanical Devices appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 08:47

Federal prosecutors to focus on issue despite court backing constitutional guarantee of birthright citizenship. Plus: Greek priest whose metal music has become cult smash

Good morning.

The acting attorney general, Todd Blanche, has said federal prosecutors and law enforcement officers will focus on combating so-called birth tourism – which involves tourists, temporary visitors, or undocumented immigrants traveling to the US primarily to give birth and secure birthright citizenship for their children.

What did Blanche say? “There’s other things … the federal government can do in the visa process, and the application process, to try to minimize or limit the opportunity of folks coming here not to visit, and not to do what they’re saying they’re doing on the tourist visa, but just to have a baby that can then be a US citizen. What we have to do as Department of Justice is make sure our agents … and the FBI are focused on stopping that.”

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 08:43

President Trump has signed "Lulu's Law," which requires the FCC to allow emergency alert messages for shark attacks. It was inspired by shark attack survivor Lulu Gribbin.

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Rebels shoot pilot and set his civilian ⁠plane on fire amid long-running low-level battle for independence in region

Separatist rebels in Indonesia’s restive easternmost region of Papua have shot dead an American pilot and set a civilian ⁠plane on fire, in what a spokesperson for a local militant group described as a “message” to the US and Indonesian governments.

Sebby Sambom, ⁠a spokesperson for the West Papua National Liberation Army (TPNPB), named the pilot as Nicholas F Gosselin and said separatist fighters had set his ⁠plane on fire after it landed in the Yahukimo region of Highland Papua province.

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 08:17

Two people climbed to the top of New York City's Empire State Building, unfurled a banner, and then apparently got engaged Wednesday afternoon.

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Between 1949 and 1976, an estimated 185,000 babies were taken from unmarried mothers and placed for adoption in England and Wales

Starmer said what happened to the mothers, and their children, should never have happened. He said:

What happened to them, and to tens of thousands of mothers, children, and families, should never have happened. It is a stain on our history.

Mothers, many young, vulnerable, and without support were coerced, bullied, or misled into feeling that they had no choice but to have their children taken away from them. What a thing to do.

I have to confess, as I said to them this morning, I found it hard to read the testimonies and to hear their stories.

I find it particularly hard, as a dad. How much harder it must have been for them to go through that, to set out their testimonies and tell their stories over and over again.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 10:48

The two people taken into custody for climbing New York City's Empire State Building where they apparently got engaged have been identified as Ivan Kuznetsov, 32, and Angela Nikolau, 33.

2026-07-02 08:04
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The FBI said in a statement Wednesday that some ransom notes in Nancy Guthrie's disappearance have been "deemed to be extortion attempts without legitimacy," and other "demands may potentially be legitimate and are still being investigated as such."

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2026-07-02 19:26

The sect, the Society of St. Pius X, defied a direct plea from Pope Leo XIV and sought to consecrate four bishops without the Vatican's approval.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 08:02

Exclusive: Finance experts warn against investing in bitcoin treasury companies after Stack BTC assets plunge

A bitcoin company that Nigel Farage has advertised lost more than 15% of its asset value, prompting finance experts to warn investors against those types of firms.

The Reform UK leader has invested £215,000 in a bitcoin treasury company named Stack BTC. A bitcoin treasury buys the cryptocurrency on behalf of its shareholders, and Stack aims to purchase other companies with the increase in value it gets from holding bitcoin.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 08:00

The restoration of capital punishment in 1976 was based on a fantasy of fairness. It must be abolished

Thursday will mark the 50th anniversary of the rebirth of the death penalty in the United States. On 2 July 1976, the supreme court handed down decisions in five cases that laid out a formula for passing constitutional muster.

The formula the court devised and explained at length in one of those cases, Gregg v Georgia, was built on a wish and a prayer. It was a fantasy of fairness, powerful enough, its authors thought, to keep capital punishment alive and to lend it legitimacy, but it was a fantasy nonetheless.

Austin Sarat, associate dean of the faculty and William Nelson Cromwell professor of jurisprudence and political science at Amherst College, is the author of Gruesome Spectacles: Botched Executions and America’s Death Penalty

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 08:00

Pennsylvania families note promised investment has yet to deliver safer mills or cleaner air in the Mon Valley

It was two days before Father’s Day, and Trisha Quinn was wondering how her six, 12 and 17-year-old nieces and nephews would handle the first of many without their dad.

Timothy Quinn, 39, worked at the Clairton Coke Works plant south of Pittsburgh, one of US Steel’s biggest production sites and the largest of its kind in the western hemisphere, for 18 years. Last August, he and colleague, Steven Menefee, were killed there in an explosion.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 08:00

Birthright citizenship ruling only a surface level setback, with the court granting president’s multiple power grabs

The symbolic and high profile defeats cannot obscure a more uncomfortable truth.

The US supreme court a vital cog in the US constitutional framers’ vision of an intricate system of checks and balances aimed at reining in an excessively assertive president has made Donald Trump stronger than ever, and shows little inclination to stop.

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 08:00

Get your deep freezer ready. Summer grilling season is here, and it's time to stock up on all your favorite cuts of meat.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 08:00

Contract-free flexibility isn't always a flex, especially when your ISP is nickeling and diming you.

2026-07-02 08:04
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Jaylen Brown is headed to Philadelphia in a stunning trade. The Celtics get Paul George and draft picks in return.

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Weather this year has encouraged smaller but earlier cropping of sweet and bountiful fruit in gardens, RHS says

If your bowl of strawberries and cream tastes particularly sweet this year, you’re not mistaken.

It is a bumper summer for strawberries, with the recent weather conditions making them more abundant and delicious than ever, according to the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS).

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2026-07-02 08:04
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Two people were arrested after an apparent marriage proposal atop the Empire State Building’s spire on Wednesday, having climbed well above the section open to the public. The pair were identified as Angela Nikolau and Ivan Beerkus, Russian 'rooftoppers' known for carrying out similar stunts in cities including Los Angeles and Tianjin in China. Dressed in black and with their faces covered, they unfurled a large black banner bearing the words: 'When the power of love beats the love of power, the ‌world knows peace.'

It remains unclear how they reached the uppermost section of the building, which rises 1,454ft (443 metres) above midtown Manhattan. The New York police department said charges were pending and the investigation remained ongoing. CBS News later reported that the pair were facing charges including burglary, criminal trespass and reckless endangerment

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 07:30

More than 100 million people could be affected in week leading to 4 July, with increased risks of droughts and wildfires

Meteorologists are anticipating a tumultuous summer that could rank as one of the US’s hottest ever.

New data released on Tuesday showed the first six months of the year were the hottest ever measured for parts of eight western states.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 07:20

Man once called ‘godfather’ of Calais migrant camps lives in Leicestershire and is said to be trying to claim asylum

A convicted people smuggler who has reportedly been found living in Britain should be arrested and deported, the Conservatives have said.

The man, once labelled “the godfather” of the Calais migrant camps, was tracked down by the BBC to Leicestershire, where he reportedly changed his name from Twana Jamal and was working illegally while attempting to claim asylum.

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 07:04

July 2, 2026 — Researchers from the University of Sydney, working with IBM, have identified and quantified important factors limiting the performance of quantum computers and demonstrated ways to overcome their impact.

The findings, which improve our understanding of how errors emerge during quantum computations, could significantly advance the reliability of quantum technology.

IBM Quantum System Two in Poughkeepsie, New York. The machine was used in the experiments conducted by University of Sydney quantum physicists. Photo: IBM

The paper has been published in Nature Communications.

Project lead Professor Stephen Bartlett from the University of Sydney Nano Institute said quantum computers remain highly susceptible to ‘noise’, or external interference, and instability, making their scaling up to useful machines difficult to achieve.

“Quantum computers will become even more useful if we can reliably detect and correct errors while calculations are taking place,” said Professor Bartlett, Director of Sydney Nano.

“This joint project with IBM helps us understand which parts of today’s quantum hardware are introducing the most problems and where engineering improvements will have the greatest impact.”

Quantum computers promise to solve certain classes of problems beyond the reach of conventional computers, including modelling complex chemical systems, designing new materials and pharmaceuticals or potentially improving optimisation problems. But their basic units of information – quantum bits or qubits – are extremely fragile and can lose information through even tiny disturbances introduced by their environments.

To address this, quantum computers use error-correction systems that repeatedly check qubits for mistakes during calculations. This means some of the physical qubits in the system are being used to find errors in the qubits doing the information processing. However, those checks themselves can introduce new errors.

Mid-Circuit Measurements

To analyze where the errors emerged, the research team looked at the role of mid-circuit measurements. As a quantum system undergoes an operation, specific qubits are measured at intermediate stages of the operation. This measurement collapses those qubits to classical states, while allowing other qubits to maintain their coherence.

Measuring these states gives immediate feedback on how to manage the overall operation.

Professor Bartlett said: “This occurs many, many times during each step of the quantum computation. Each such mid-circuit measurement takes time and everything else in the operation has to ‘idle’ while the measurement is completed. This is a major stumbling block.

“But we can’t get around this step – it is an essential element of quantum error correction. What we have done in this study is pin down quantitatively what kind of performance we need out of these error checks. This is vital to design systems that can scale up and work.”

Using an IBM Quantum Computer

Using a 156-qubit IBM Quantum Heron r2 superconducting quantum processor, the researchers tested how well different error-correction methods preserved quantum information and enabled quantum logic operations.

Specifically, the team investigated how to reduce the ‘idling’ noise caused by the mid-circuit measurements.

By redesigning the error-correction circuitry to reduce the idling time, the researchers substantially improved performance. The revised approach increased logical qubit survival rates from below 90 percent to more than 96 percent for each error-correction cycle.

The researchers also found that measurement noise is one of the dominant limitations affecting the reliability of quantum logic operations on present-day devices.

Lead author Dr Robin Harper, from Sydney Nano and the School of Physics, said the research focused on understanding why error-corrected quantum operations fail.

“Quantum error correction is essential for building large-scale quantum computers, but it introduces a very complex set of engineering challenges,” Dr Harper said.

“We wanted to identify which physical processes were limiting performance on modern quantum devices. What we found is that the act of measuring qubits during a calculation can itself create instability.

“By redesigning how those measurements are performed, we were able to significantly improve the reliability of the logical qubits.”

The work is a direct outcome of the University of Sydney’s collaboration with IBM, announced in 2024, to advance quantum error correction and benchmark different approaches to fault-tolerant quantum computing. That collaboration is funded by Intelligence Research Projects Activity (IARPA), a research funding agency of the US government.

It also builds on an international collaboration and talent exchange program between the University of Sydney and University College London focused on next-generation quantum technologies. Co-author Constance Lainé is a PhD student from UCL who was embedded in the Sydney Nano research group as part of the talent exchange.

Professor Bartlett said the collaboration demonstrated the importance of collaborations between universities and industry in advancing quantum technologies.

“Testing these ideas on advanced quantum hardware allows us to better understand the practical challenges involved in scaling up quantum computing systems,” he said.

“This kind of collaboration is essential if we want to develop quantum technologies that are useful outside the laboratory.”

IBM quantum scientist, co-Principal Investigator on the IARPA grant, and co-author of this research Dr Ben Brown helped design the quantum error correction benchmark that characterised the mid-circuit measurements. Before joining IBM, Dr Brown completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Sydney.

Professor Bartlett said the research highlights Australia’s growing role in international quantum technology through collaborations spanning academia, government and industry.


Source: University of Sydney

The post University of Sydney and IBM Identify Major Source of Quantum Computing Errors appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 07:01

Authorities say rainy season getting deadlier, with Ghana reporting 13 dead and floods hitting Benin, Togo and Nigeria

Floods in Côte d’Ivoire have killed 59 people since May, the communication minister told a cabinet meeting in Abidjan.

There are fears the toll could further rise as rescue teams continue to search for victims during the rainy season, which runs from May until July, the minister, Amadou Coulibaly, added.

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 07:01

On its 250th birthday, the US is still defined by its fault lines Expert comment jon.wallace

The most urgent fault line in US politics is between those who believe in the system of government and those who do not. It is, in fact, the foundational US fault line being relitigated for modern times.

US flags at a 'No Kings' rally in Minnesota, including a flag saying 'defend democracy'

For 250 years, the United States of America has been defined by its fault lines, which have bound the landmass and its people together and, at times, have driven them apart. It is a history of rupture and repair. 

The original fault line was between the thirteen American colonies and British imperial rule. The Declaration of Independence stated that ‘When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another…they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation’. 

For the American colonists, those causes emerged from British rule, which had brought a series of ‘abuses’ and ‘usurpations’ amounting to a form of ‘Tyranny’. Pursuing their unalienable rights to ‘Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness’, required an altering of ‘their former Systems of Government’, and a setting of a new course. 

In the centuries that followed independence, the US wrestled with a set of homegrown fault lines. The Civil War erupted along the great dividing line between the North and South over slavery, nearly ripping the country apart in the 1860s. 

The most urgent fault line in US politics is between those who believe the current system of US democracy can provide rights, equity and prosperity for all, and those who do not.

The American Industrial Revolution in the decades that followed created booming urban population centres, setting up an enduring tension between the US farming heartland and its cities. The social revolutions of the 1960s and 70s fractured the country along generational, gender and racial lines. Threaded throughout has been a series of disputes about economic distribution and equality, from ‘taxation without representation’ to the Great Depression, the Seattle anti-globalization protests of 1999 and the Occupy Wall Street movement. 

Today, as the US looks to celebrate its 250th anniversary, the most urgent fault line in US politics is between those who believe the current system of US democracy can provide rights, equity and prosperity for all, and those who do not. It is, in fact, the foundational US fault line being relitigated for modern times. A long unthinkable question is being asked by Americans: is it necessary again to dissolve the political bands which connect them?

The new (old) fault line

This fault line can be seen at play in the emergence of New York City mayor and self- described ‘democratic socialist’ Zohran Mamdani. It can be seen in the near daily reporting of outside political voices performing well in primaries running up to this year’s mid-term elections. Americans want new leadership. 

It can be seen in shifting views of wealth and anti-billionaire sentiment: Americans want affordability, and a majority now view billionaires as a threat to democracy. And it can be seen in the growing skepticism around artificial intelligence (AI), which has become the engine of US economic growth. More Americans now think AI will have a negative impact on society and are concerned about the personal dangers it poses. 

The fault line can also be discerned in a shift over the last decade from partisanship and polarization to radicalization: on 6 January 2021 citizens overtook the US capital to reject an election outcome they viewed as fraudulent. Politically motivated attacks have surged: In 2022 House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband, Paul Pelosi, was attacked in his home. In 2024 and in 2026, attempts were made on the life of Donald Trump. In 2025, Melissa Hortman, a Democratic member of the Minnesota House of Representatives, was assassinated with her husband. Charlie Kirk, a right-wing political activist, was also assassinated that year. Meanwhile US governmental departments have flagged the threat posed by the accelerationist movement, an ideology holding that the democratic state is so corrupt and irreparable that violent action must be taken against it to precipitate its replacement. 

This turn towards the use of violence is not isolated. As many a third of Americans polled agree that the US government is corrupt and it may soon be time to take up arms against it. Americans are increasingly considering bullets over ballots. 

A loss of faith

Together, these fractures reflect a catastrophic loss of public trust in the US government from 49 per cent at the turn of this century to just 18 per cent as of 2025. Approval ratings of the executive, legislative and judicial approval ratings have also waivered. 

Especially telling is that even as Americans believe their freedoms are under threat, Supreme Court favourability has reached historic lows. The Supreme Court this cycle eased some restrictions on campaign finance caps, limited the scope of the Voting Rights Act and affirmed the president’s right to remove members of independent governmental agencies. But it also allowed mail-in ballot rules to stand and upheld birthright citizenship. Americans searching for clarity from the Court will be left wanting. 

As political skepticism grows, the two party-system that has defined US politics for centuries is showing cracks. A record-level 45 per cent of Americans now identify as independent of a political party. This surge in independents has overlapped with a declining number of Americans strongly identifying as either Republican or Democratic. Both parties are feeling this heat. 

For Republicans, questions of party cohesion and direction have for the last decade been answered by US President Donald Trump and the Make America Great Again movement. But defections from former prominent faces of the party including Representative Marjorie Taylor Green and journalist Tucker Carlson are revealing. 

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 07:00

First phase of inquiry identified multiple failings to prevent murders of three girls, which government will ‘urgently’ address

Downing Street has accepted all recommendations for changes made by an inquiry that found the Southport killings could have been prevented and identified “fundamental failings”, the home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, has said.

Mahmood said the government would do “whatever is needed to protect the public” as she accepted the recommendations in full from the first phase of the Southport inquiry.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 07:00

IEEE Spectrum argues that orbital data centers remain far from economically or technically practical despite Elon Musk's prediction that space will become the cheapest place to run AI within a few years. Deploying SpaceX's proposed million-satellite constellation would require enormous increases in launch and manufacturing capacity, while cooling, radiation, maintenance, latency, orbital debris, and astronomical interference present major unresolved obstacles. Longtime Slashdot reader xetdog shares the report: Consider this: There are roughly 14,500 active satellites in orbit. Musk's Starlink constellation accounts for about two thirds of those. Both the launch cadences and satellite-manufacturing capacity would have to scale up astronomically to deploy a million orbital data center satellites. For context, there have been roughly 7,000 orbital launches in all of human history. To loft 1 million satellites into low Earth orbit on SpaceX's Starship, which is designed to carry up to 60 satellites per vehicle, would require 16,666 launches exclusively devoted to satellite deployments. Considering that SpaceX launched a record 165 orbital missions in 2025, even at 10 times that cadence, it would take a decade. And how long would it take to build 1 million satellites, given Starlink's current pace of around 4,000 per year and a generous tenfold increase in capacity? Short of a manufacturing revolution, try 25 years. Dissipating heat in space also requires enormous radiators. As IEEE Spectrum editor Dina Genkina noted, startup Starcloud has sent only one Nvidia H100 GPU into orbit, and "their radiator was too weak to let the chip run at full power." A single 700-watt H100 would require about 1.4 square meters of radiator area, while a 100-megawatt data center could need 2,500 radiators measuring 80 square meters each. So, why are the hyperscalers hyping orbital data centers? Answer: because it's lucrative. "The Elon Musk part of it is honestly genius because he's got xAI building the data centers, SpaceX sending them to space, and Tesla building solar panels," Genkina says. "It's almost like he's paying himself."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-02 07:00

As GLP-1s drive the current protein craze, a supplement once only taken by powerlifters is now so popular US producers are struggling to keep up

For generations, the Meives family made cheese. Tony Meives’s grandfather, a Swiss immigrant, and his father both ran small cheese factories in Wisconsin, in the heart of America’s dairyland. “I worked in the cheese factory my whole life,” Meives says. “I have four world-class cheesemakers in my family.” But when it came time to inherit the family business, Meives found there was more money in the industrial runoff that his grandfather would have once thrown away. Today, the 39-year-old bodybuilder and gym owner runs a company that sells whey protein powder, the watery byproduct of cheesemaking that was once considered waste. “Twenty years ago, the only people who took whey were bodybuilders,” he says. “Over the past five years, the market has really opened up to each and every type of person you can probably think of.”

When Robert F Kennedy Jr, the US health secretary, declared late last month, that “the war on protein is over”, he sounded a bit like one of those Japanese soldiers of second world war lore, who spent years hunkering in the jungles of south-east Asia, oblivious to the fact that hostilities had long ceased. Perhaps there was a time when advice leaned more towards a diet based around fruit, vegetables and carbohydrates – but by May 2026, the war on protein was surely over. Protein had won.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 06:56

After decades of campaigning by those affected, PM says state ‘did not do enough to protect’ mothers and children

Keir Starmer has formally apologised for the British state’s role in past forced adoptions after decades of campaigning by mothers and children affected.

The prime minister said “the shame is ours” and that he was “deeply and profoundly sorry” for what had happened, as he announced extra funding to help people access their adoption records and reconnect with biological families.

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2026-07-02 08:04
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Police said the boy had taken his parents' pickup truck without permission before losing control of the vehicle and crashing into the monks.

2026-07-02 08:04
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To reach a more durable peace agreement with Iran and open the Strait of Hormuz, Trump needs Israel to uphold the terms of a deal with Lebanon that Hezbollah says it will block by "any means necessary."

2026-07-02 08:04
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The gang "has committed numerous attacks targeting civilians, law enforcement officers, and government officials," Secretary of State Marco Rubio said.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 06:30

Apple raised the prices on its products, but not its phones. We tested and reviewed every iPhone the company sells. Here's which one you should buy.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 06:28

Writer says ‘Trumpish’ decision to ban staging is warning of what may happen if National Rally runs country

In the Anglo-French playwright Alexis Michalik’s play Passeport, a young man has been beaten and left for dead in the notorious Calais refugee camp known as “the Jungle”.

When he wakes up, he has no idea who he is – and his only possession is a blue Eritrean passport containing the name Issa. With two others from the camp he decides to leave, not to take the perilous Channel crossing to the UK but instead to try to integrate into France and obtain the necessary papers to remain.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 06:24

After weeks of testing Dyson's HushJet Mini Cool and comparing it to other handheld fans, these are my thoughts.

2026-07-02 08:04
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Democracies rarely last, but ours has. That alone is worth celebrating

One reason to celebrate America’s national big birthday – our 250th on the Fourth of July – is to honor the unusual longevity of our democratic experiment. Democracies rarely last, but ours has. Even if we know its flawed history – the land grab and slaughter of the indigenous population; slavery; enduring racial, gender and economic inequalities – it’s hard to fault the admirable, high-minded idealism of the Bill of Rights and the US constitution.

I’m all for celebrating democracy. The bicentennial was fun. I lived outside a small rural town where there was a parade, a fife and drum corps, tricornered hats, flags and fireworks. Then president Gerald Ford had sponsored civil rights legislation. Roe v Wade was three years old. There were brilliant and honorable judges serving on the US supreme court. The Vietnam war had ended. Obviously there were problems: our growing military presence in Central America, the bankrupting and colonization of American inner cities, growing disparities. Even so, there was a hope in the air, a sense that things might be looking up.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 06:00

House Democratic subcommittee report outlines web of alleged corruption, wire fraud and pay-to-play schemes

Donald Trump staged a hostile takeover of the US’s 250th anniversary celebration to enrich political allies, harvest voter data and promote Christian nationalist ideology, according to a congressional investigation released on Thursday.

The interim report, “From Vanity to Insanity: How the White House Cheated the American People Out of Their 250th Birthday”, outlines a web of alleged corruption, wire fraud and pay-to-play schemes orchestrated through a shadow corporation embedded within the National Park Foundation (NPF).

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2026-07-02 08:04
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Some of these games are more casual while others offer a challenge.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 06:00

Across the United States, the way you speak is filled with cultural authenticity and central to identity.

2026-07-02 08:04
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Why Should Delaware Care?
The popularity of artificial intelligence has sparked a boom in demand for facilities, called data centers, which house the servers that power the internet. But those facilities have also drawn criticism from local communities for their water and electricity usage. 

New Castle County Councilman Tim Sheldon says he recently brokered a handshake deal to pause a data center development project near Newark. 

Sheldon, who represents the Newark area, said the deal followed private negotiations with the developer’s prominent Delaware attorney, Shawn Tucker, who told him the New York-based developer behind the project, Shelbourne, agreed to consider the Newark site for uses other than a data center. 

“This is my art of the deal,” Sheldon said.

But the deal is dependent on the county finalizing an approval for an exploratory plan application from the developer, which would grandfather the land into zoning rules that existed prior to this year, Sheldon said.

That means the developer would not have to follow the county’s recently-passed data center regulations if the company ultimately decides to build a data center there. Since the property’s zoning already allows data center projects, the county likely does not have the legal authority to deny that exploratory plan application. 

An email sent between Sheldon and Tucker, dated June 10, shows that Tucker agreed to pause the data center project under those conditions. 

Neither Tucker nor Shelbourne representatives responded to requests for comment about this deal.  

Last year, Shelbourne filed documents with the county that showed plans to demolish the existing White Clay Center office and industrial buildings and construct a three-building data center campus that covered about 850,000 square feet. 

After the filing, the plans became wrapped into a larger community backlash in northern Delaware against the growth of the data center industry. Neighbors have voiced fears that such data centers would use too much water and energy, and be too noisy. 

Sheldon’s handshake agreement is not binding, and the developer still has the legal right to build a data center.

New Castle County General Manager of Land Use David Culver said he saw the email from Tucker but has no other information. 

Sheldon noted that the agreement is between him and Tucker — and not with the county as a party. He further stated that if he decides not to run for reelection in 2028 or loses to a challenger, “it may be null and void.”  

“If I’m not there, there’s no promises,” Sheldon said. 

Asked if he would try to secure an official county deal barring a data center on that property, Sheldon said the project is “too far in the process” and he doesn’t want to risk the progress he’s made. 

Plans submitted by developer Shelbourne show a three-building data center campus covering about 850,000 square feet. | IMAGE COURTESY OF NEW CASTLE COUNTY

He said he will instead work to find another company to lease or buy the land. He said in a text after the interview that the deal is “the best I could’ve got.” 

“Nobody else has  even done this much and it seems like I’m getting hammered because I did something,” Sheldon said in the text. 

Sheldon said an Amtrak train maintenance site will open next door to the White Clay Center property in the next few years, and he thinks the track upgrades needed for that project could make the neighboring site more attractive for manufacturing. 

Delaware Public Media reported last week that Alstom, which conducts maintenance on Amtrak’s high-speed Acela trains – will open a new facility on 1601 Ogletown Road, next to the White Clay Center office and industrial buildings. 

Alstom did not immediately respond to requests for comment. 

What’s the status of data centers in Delaware?

Beyond Shelbourne’s proposal, several other building projects proposed in Delaware could become data centers. 

The biggest is Project Washington, a 1.2-gigawatt data center campus planned for the land just north of the Delaware City Refinery. It would use enough energy to power almost a million homes.

That plan faced a major setback in March after a state board unanimously upheld Environmental Secretary Greg Patterson’s decision that the project is not permitted under Delaware’s Coastal Zone Act, a landmark law designed to limit heavy industry along the state’s shorelines.  

Developer Starwood Digital Ventures was expected to appeal that decision, but it is unclear whether it will. Representatives from Starwood did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

Another potential data center plan is slated for land near the southern approach to the St. Georges Bridge off U.S. Route 13. The St. Georges project includes the land that hosts the popular Halloween attraction Frightland.  

A proposal to develop the lands just south of the St. Georges Bridge, including the Frightland attraction, could end up a data center. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JACOB OWENS

County records show plans for three distribution centers covering 3.6 million square feet on farmland, along with 150 homes.  

The records say the buildings will be warehouses. But project engineer Verdantas also submitted letters to the county suggesting that the buildings could be a data center campus. 

Delmarva Power filings this winter showed two other potential data center projects. But Technical.ly reported that only one of those projects is still on the table, which would be located in Harrington. 

City officials are still in the preliminary stages of discussions about that plan, according to the report.

The post County Councilman says Newark data center plan paused after deal appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 06:00

A deadly 1993 heat wave led to a pioneering program that scientists say continues to save lives.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
The Delaware legislature reassesses the public education system through new legislation filed each year. In 2026, lawmakers passed a string of consequential bills that reforms school funding. 

When Delaware’s legislative session came to an end early Wednesday morning, lawmakers had approved a string of education bills that reform how the state and how school districts collect and distribute money for schools.

Among them is one that would enable the Delaware Department of Education to begin implementing its hybrid public school funding model, which would distribute more money to schools with large numbers of low-income students or English-language learners.

Delaware Secretary of Education Cindy Marten said in a statement to Spotlight Delaware that the passage of the hybrid funding bill, and others, does not represent a “victory lap” but marks the “beginning of the next phase of a shared civic project.” 

“The work ahead is implementation,” she said.

Here’s a look at Delaware education bills that have passed through or stalled within the General Assembly this year. 

A new public education funding formula? 

Two years ago, Delaware’s Public Education Funding Commission — tasked with recommending reforms to the state’s 85-year-old school funding system – launched an initiative to analyze whether public education in the state was serving all students.

Last year, the commission unanimously recommended that lawmakers approve their hybrid school funding framework, which would shift education spending away from a per-student basis to one that directs more dollars toward students with higher needs. 

In May, two bills that would lay the groundwork for Delaware to implement a new school funding system advanced out of a Senate committee.

One of the bills, sponsored by State Sen. Laura Sturgeon (D-Brandywine Hundred), would enable the Delaware Department of Education to begin implementing the hybrid school funding model. It also includes a provision to mandate that no school receive less money under the model than it would have under the previous funding model. 

Sen. Laura Sturgeon sponsored two bills that would set Delaware up for a new school funding system. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY NICK STONESIFER

If signed into law by Gov. Matt Meyer, the hybrid model would be implemented during the 2028 fiscal year.

Sturgeon, who serves as chair of the Delaware’s Public Education Funding Commission, also introduced Senate Bill 303, which establishes it as a permanent body to continue studying and evaluating the state’s funding formula in the years to come.

Both bills await the governor’s signature. 

School referendum reform

Lawmakers have spent the last year attempting to address Delawareans’ concerns about school district tax increases following last year’s first-in-a-generation property reassessment

Sponsored by Senate President Pro Tempore David Sokola (D-Newark), Senate Bill 322 was spurred by school districts’ decision last summer to increase their property tax revenues by 10% following Delaware’s statewide property reassessment. 

Sokola’s bill follows two failed attempts by Republican lawmakers earlier this year to scale back districts’ ability to take those automatic tax increases in the future.

While Senate Bill 322 would rescind school districts’ current ability to automatically implement a 10% tax increase after property reassessments, it would allow them to seek additional funding without holding a referendum vote.

Instead of taking an automatic 10% hike, districts – should they meet certain criteria – would be able to implement an up to 2% tax increase each year without seeking approval from voters. 

That approach mirrors the process in many other states.

The bill now awaits Meyer’s approval. If signed, Senate Bill 322 would not take effect until 2031, after the state’s next property reassessment. 

Funding school construction projects

Late last week, lawmakers released Delaware’s $1.26 billion capital budget. The 103-page bill includes scores of spending items, including traditional appropriations for roads, parks, and school buildings. 

During a legislative committee meeting last week, Delaware’s Controller General Ruth Ann Miller said the bill will also allow the state to “forward fund” school districts’ Certificate of Necessity requests. 

If a school district wants to build a new school, add an expansion, or complete a substantial renovation, officials must seek out state funding and get approval from the Department of Education through the Certificate of Necessity (CN) process. 

If state officials approved the requests, then a percentage of the cost would be funded through state bonds. The district would then need to secure a local contribution through a referendum vote for the remaining funds. 

Multiple CN requests have failed in recent years and as a result, many districts have turned to unique ways to address overcrowding in schools. In Delmar, teachers hold classes in the high school auditorium. 

The Delmar middle and high school replacement was one of dozens of school projects statewide that would not be funded under the state budget proposal last year. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JULIA MEROLA

“The hope is that by forward funding all of these schools that were already in the pipeline, that opens the door next year for new CNs to actually be allowed in,” Miller said. 

The bond bill ultimately passed in the early hours of Wednesday morning, and now awaits the governor’s signature. 

Not passing last week was a measure to require union workers on school construction sites. Senate Bill 272 would have mandated that a school district sign an agreement with the Delaware Building and  Construction Trades Council – the umbrella organization for the state’s various unionized trades – to use union labor for construction projects that cost at least $5 million and have at least two bidders. 

Multiple major industry groups, including the Associated Builders and Contractors of Delaware and organizations representing minority-owned businesses, opposed the bill and held protests over it for months.

Expanding the childcare tax credit

Earlier this spring, two pieces of legislation that would each expand tax credits for Delaware parents also saw action in the state house.

One was a Democratic bill that proposes to double the amount of money that parents could receive from a Delaware childcare tax credit. The other, which had bipartisan sponsors, would expand the credit for lower-income parents and allow them to redeem more money than they pay in. 

Rep. Melanie Ross Levin (D-Brandywine Hundred) first introduced House Bill 274 in January as a means to ease financial pressure on parents in need of childcare.

In March, a revised version of her bill – which would increase Delaware’s match of the federal Child and Dependent Care Credit from 50% to 100% – passed the House Revenue and Finance Committee.

The federal Child and Dependent Care Credit allows working parents to reduce their tax liability if they pay for childcare.

Democratic Rep. Melanie Ross Levin (center) | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY TIM CARLIN

During testimony at a committee hearing, Ross Levin noted that her proposal was not in Gov. Matt Meyer’s recommended budget in January. Still, she called the bill “fiscally, potentially doable,” and noted that the credits were designed so that taxpayers do not receive more cash from the government than what they pay in taxes. 

The bill was assigned to the House Appropriations Committee in March but did not make movement. 

The second bill, House Bill 284, was sponsored by Rep. Lyndon Yearick (R-Dover). It would double the childcare and dependent care expense tax credit for single individuals with an income of less than $60,000 and would make the credit refundable – meaning beneficiaries could receive payments even if they own little in taxes.

In an interview, Yearick said his bill is designed to attract “a qualified workforce” to the state by making childcare more accessible to parents who do not qualify for programs, such as Purchase of Care or Head Start.

Among the additional and co-sponsors of the bill were two Democrats — Rep. Alonna Berry (D-Milton) and Sen. Kyra Hoffner (D-Leipsic).

Yearick’s bill has also awaited consideration in the House Appropriations Committee since May.

The post Delaware General Assembly roundup: Public school funding appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 05:50

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is taking a beat from his busy day job ending the scourge of vaccines and modern medicine to take up a right-wing push attempting to link the largest Muslim civil rights organization in the United States to terrorism. 

The MAHA enthusiast announced last month that HHS was demanding federal action on allegations that the Council on American-Islamic Relations, also known as CAIR, and its California and Washington affiliates had misused federal grant funds. “If there is evidence of fraud, abuse, or ties to designated terrorist organizations, we will act,” he wrote on X. 

The post came as a shock at CAIR’s national headquarters in Washington, D.C., because the organization had never received nor solicited federal funding from Health and Human Services.

“Not even a penny,” said Edward Ahmed Mitchell, national deputy director of CAIR. “[Kennedy] would know that if he had spent any amount of time doing research before he decided to publicly attack us in this way.”

Kennedy’s mystifying crusade appears to be an attempt to satisfy the demands of a group of Republican members of Congress led by Rep. Chip Roy of Texas, as an emboldened right wing chomping at the bit to target Muslim Americans dictates the decisions of the executive branch. After Roy and his colleagues argued without evidence that CAIR and its affiliates were connected to international terrorist organizations and had misused federal funds intended to help settle Afghan refugees, Kennedy’s fumbling attempt to address their concerns set off a bizarre chapter in the Trump administration’s efforts to crack down on dissent that left the intended targets wondering whether they were under a real investigation or had become pawns in a challenging midterm cycle.

“During election cycles we see the ramping-up of this type of anti-Muslim rhetoric,” said Saher Selod, director of research at the Institute for Social Policy and Understanding. “Saying we need to investigate CAIR national is following a playbook of trying to motivate a base to come out and vote, and Muslims have become the bait in this moment.”

CAIR, which advocates for the civil rights of Muslims in the United States, has been a thorn in President Donald Trump’s side since his first administration, when the group sued to block his infamous “Muslim ban.” In Trump’s second term, CAIR national and its local chapters have continued to push back against the administration’s anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim agenda through the courts and in public statements.

“Saying we need to investigate CAIR national is following a playbook of trying to motivate a base to come out and vote, and Muslims have become the bait in this moment.”

While CAIR national has never received HHS funding, CAIR California and CAIR Washington, which operate separately from the national branch and are overseen by their own boards of directors, have received federal health dollars to provide legal services to Afghan refugees fleeing after the Taliban took power in 2021.

Both chapters vehemently denied any wrongdoing and emphasized the extensive vetting process required by both their respective states and the federal government to use the funds under contention. 

“They won’t get anything out” of an investigation, said Hussam Ayloush, executive director of CAIR California. “It is merely an attempt to create smear and destruction, to silence … the most important American Muslim voices in the country when it comes to issues dealing with Israeli abuses and the U.S. funding of those abuses.”

The allegations levied against CAIR and its local affiliates come amid a larger wave of anti-Muslim attacks as Republicans fight to hold onto power in a midterm cycle where they’re likely to lose seats. In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis joined Texas Gov. Greg Abbott in December in designating CAIR as a “foreign terrorist organization.” In Tennessee, Republican Rep. Andy Ogles posted on X that “Muslims don’t belong in American society.”

Democrats have hardly been immune from spreading Islamophobic rhetoric. During last year’s New York City mayoral election, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand had to apologize for comments characterizing now-Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who is Muslim, as supportive of a “global jihad.” Before winning New Jersey’s June primary, Dr. Adam Hamawy faced attacks from some of his Democratic opponents over a brief 1995 trial testimony he gave for a religious leader convicted of plotting terror attacks, in what Hamawy’s campaign described as well-worn Islamophobic tropes.

Roy, who has been leading the charge against CAIR in Congress, was running his own campaign for Texas attorney general when he sent a letter to Kennedy urging HHS to investigate and suspend CAIR and CAIR California, accusing the organization of having long-standing ties to Hamas and documented “misuse of federal grant funds.” 

In response, CAIR California sent a letter to Kennedy refuting Roy’s claims as “lies, smears and defamatory statements.” The group noted that it was selected and vetted by the state of California to provide these services, and argued that its “use of public funds are fully accounted for, transparent and compliant with its legal obligations.” 

Over a month later, CAIR California received what Ayloush, its executive director, described as an “amicable” and “reassuring” response from HHS. In the letter, obtained by The Intercept, the director of the HHS Office for Civil Rights, Paula M. Stannard, said she was directed by Kennedy to respond to CAIR California on his behalf.

“OCR plays a critical part in the effort to ensure that people are able to lead healthy lives free of discriminatory barriers,” Stannard wrote. “OCR’s policy and enforcement efforts continue to protect all Americans from unlawful discrimination; ensure equal access to health and human services and respect the inherent worth and dignity of every person.” 

The letter did not commit to anything, but Ayloush said that he did not get the sense that the secretary would be joining in on what he described as the “bashing of Muslim organizations.” 

So it came as a surprise when only a few days later, the secretary posted about an investigation not only into CAIR California, but also CAIR national and CAIR Washington. 

“There’s an interesting divergence between what he said privately to CAIR California in writing, and then what he said on social media,” Mitchell, the national deputy director, said. 

“No subpoenas, no nothing at all, just this shot across the bow in the court of public opinion.” 

So far, all three organizations told The Intercept that they have not received any correspondence from HHS. “To this point, we have not received any communication from him indicating that he’s looking into anything,” said Mitchell. “No subpoenas, no nothing at all, just this shot across the bow in the court of public opinion.” 

Roy, who founded the Islamophobic “Sharia-Free America Caucus,” thanked Kennedy in June for “investigating CAIR’s alleged ties to the groups such as Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood.” 

Imraan Siddiqi, executive director of CAIR Washington, said that accusing Muslim Americans of fraud had become a convenient line of attack politically. He pointed to attacks in Washington state on predominantly Somali Muslim childcare workers after conspiracy theories that Somalis were committing child care grant fraud spread in Minnesota.

Related

GOP Megadonor Leonard Leo Is Bankrolling a Website on the Warpath Against Somalis

“They’ve found a line of attack that some people are responding to or resonates with them,” he said, particularly in an era where social media can easily amplify misinformation for an audience eager to confirm their own biases. 

Hatem Baizan, an Ethnic Studies lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley, said the administration does not need to prove these claims to smear CAIR and its affiliates.

“Facts are immaterial for this current administration,” he said. “The aim is to throw as much dirt as possible, use as many investigative tools as possible with the hope that you have enough delegitimization, enough doubt, to actually get people to distance themselves from CAIR.” 

The post RFK Jr. Claims He’s Investigating Terrorism Now, Too appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 05:18

Unmarried man and woman whipped 21 times each because they had violated province’s version of Islamic law

A young couple in Indonesia’s conservative Aceh province have been publicly caned after a Sharia court convicted them of violating Islamic law by kissing during a TikTok livestream.

The court ordered the couple, a 22-year-old man and a 25-year-old woman, to be whipped with a rattan cane 21 times each for kissing without being married. At least 100 people witnessed the caning, carried out by a group of people wearing robes and hoods on a stage in Bustanussalatin City Park in Banda Aceh.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 05:01

Another generation of Lenovo's powerhouse tower PC delivers plenty of performance and style, but it doesn't fully address its predecessor's prior issues.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 05:00

If we don’t know the source, not only do humans remain at risk but wildlife can suffer needlessly via retaliation

While virologists and public health departments were palpitating over the news of an Andes virus infectious disease outbreak on a cruise ship (13 cases, three deaths), in the Democratic Republic of the Congo the Bundibugyo virus, the root of the current Ebola outbreak (currently more than 1,250 cases and at least 362 deaths), was smouldering under the radar.

Bundibugyo virus is a horrifying, highly fatal pathogen. Symptom onset is sudden and includes headaches, diarrhoea, malfunctioning kidneys and liver, and, less frequently, internal and external bleeding (hence the term “haemorrhagic disease”). Grimly, contagiousness remains after death, meaning the family and loved ones of the deceased can be exposed when they wash and clothe the body in preparation for the funeral.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 05:00

A website search bar is surrounded by a large spiral on a light blue background.
Collage by Alex Bandoni/ProPublica

Last month, my colleagues and I published an investigation into a Texas oil refinery startup, America First Refining, that had secretly gotten investment from Donald Trump Jr. We discovered a saga involving the Trump administration’s tariff policy, sanctioned Russian oil and an Indian billionaire family’s private zoo. 

At the center of the story was the CEO of the refinery company, Texas businessman John Calce. We’d spent weeks examining Calce — pulling old lawsuits, property records, corporate registry filings — and had pieced together a portrait of what appeared to be an obscure serial entrepreneur who’d for years tried and failed to secure funding for his long-shot refinery project.

Then, not long before our story was set to publish, we decided to do a scrub on a separate company he had incorporated called Brownsville Energy Storage Terminals.

Pulling up the company’s website, I felt a brief flash of panic: Had we somehow missed the existence of a major business owned by the man at the center of our next story? 

“From Houston to Rotterdam, Jurong to Fujairah. Our network connects the world’s most vital energy markets with speed, safety, and precision bulk oil storage,” announced the front page of the company’s website.

On the main page of Brownsville Energy Storage Terminals there is a large photo of an energy site on the water with “Strategic Oil Hubs Worldwide” written over it.
Screenshot by ProPublica

Brownsville Energy Storage Terminals, per the website, had more than 850 employees and 28 million barrels of oil storage capacity across six global hubs. This was puzzling: Our reporting had led us to believe Calce was struggling to raise enough money for a single project in the U.S., not overseeing a massive, multinational oil storage corporation. 

Had we been wrong? 

We turned to Google to learn more about the company’s top executives. Its CEO, Sarah Jenkins, had more than 20 years of experience at major energy firms. And its chief technology officer, David Chen, “built the company’s proprietary inventory management portal and integrated AI-driven predictive maintenance systems,” according to his bio. But we couldn’t find any trace of either of them online. Chalk it up to common names? 

We then Googled one of the more distinct names: Vice President for Sustainability Dr. Sofia Rossi, who had “spearheaded the ‘Future Fuels’ program, preparing assets for biofuels and hydrogen.” But, again, nothing. The links to their LinkedIn profiles were dead.

On the page about the executive leadership of Brownsville Energy Storage Terminals there are four employees with their credentials listed.
Screenshot by ProPublica

When we searched the company’s Texas phone numbers, we found the same numbers listed online for a Houston baklava caterer, a Dallas-area taxi service and an OB-GYN office.

We called the Texas numbers: dead. Then we tried the numbers for the company’s facilities in the Netherlands, Singapore and China. Also dead. 

We were beginning to suspect this company did not actually exist, at least as described on its website. 

What was going on with this website? We looked at the source code and noticed an odd notation, “This feature isn’t implemented yet, but don’t worry! You can request it in your next prompt!”

A collection of numbers and letters making up the code of a website.
Screenshot by ProPublica

We checked the site’s domain registration, and we had our (apparent) answer: It was created this year and traced back to a company called Hostinger that offers an AI website builder for $2.99 per month. “Describe it, and AI builds it,” its homepage says. “Appear on Google and AI search automatically.”

Indeed, Google’s “AI Overview” search response, now thrust on users by default with more and more regularity, seemed to ratify the company’s bona fides:

A Google search of “what is Brownsville Energy Storage Terminals” reveals a long “AI Overview” response.
Screenshot by ProPublica

When I searched for an award the company claimed on its website to have won, the Google AI Overview said that “Recent notable recipients include Brownsville Energy Storage Terminals, recognized for their rapid expansion in the independent oil and terminal operations sector.”

A Google search of “‘energy review’ magazine ‘Emerging Tech Award’” reveals a long AI Overview response.
Screenshot by ProPublica

Brownsville Energy Storage Terminals is a real LLC. But everything on its website — from its history of the company, to its job postings, a diversity and inclusion policy — appears to be fictional. But perhaps more troubling is that Google, the proprietor of the world’s primary research tool, has rolled out AI Overviews that can indiscriminately take in fake material and authoritatively spit it back out as real.

In response to questions, a Google spokesperson said in a statement: “AI Overviews are rooted in our core Search ranking systems, surfacing reliable and high-quality information for the vast majority of queries. For uncommon search terms like these, there might not be high quality information published that matches the query — and we use these examples to improve our search systems.”

After we reached out to Hostinger, the company pulled down the site. “After receiving your inquiry, we carried out an internal review. Based on the violations identified, we suspended the website and the account behind it in line with our Terms of Service,” a spokesperson said in a statement.

What we encountered is a particular species of a larger problem that is beginning to be better understood. In April, The New York Times reported on an analysis that found Google’s AI Overviews were accurate approximately 9 out of 10 times, noting that that added up to “tens of millions of erroneous answers every hour” given vast search volumes. (A Google spokesperson told the Times that the study has “serious holes.” The company has acknowledged that AI Overviews “can make mistakes.”) 

A BBC reporter wrote a fictional article naming himself the best tech journalist at eating hot dogs, and Google’s AI as well as ChatGPT quickly picked it up and parroted it back.  

And the source material for the AI Overviews also appears eminently gameable, even when not trafficking in actual fiction. “It Is Trivially Easy to Use Reddit to Manipulate AI Search, Research Suggests,” ran a recent headline in 404 Media. 

The mystery website ended up as just a single paragraph in our story. But the larger implication is obvious: fakes, counterfeits and frauds that would have taken considerable effort to create just a few years ago can now be churned out pretty much instantly.

While preparing this piece, we reached out to Calce asking about the site. An attorney for his company, America First Refining, replied to us with a letter dated June 24 that the attorney sent to Hostinger. The attorney also addressed the letter to several email addresses listed on the Brownsville Energy Storage Terminals website.  

“I write to demand immediate removal from the brownsvilleenergyterminals.com website of all unauthorized references to America First’s office address on your website,” the letter said. “As you are aware, America First has no connection or affiliation with the brownsvilleenergyterminals.com website and has not authorized the use of its corporate address there.”

I’m left with lingering questions about the website: What was it for? Was it put up by some malicious actor who simply found the company’s LLC records and decided to create a website? Was it a test site that was mistakenly put online? Or could it have been designed for consumption by someone who was meant to think it was real? 

We don’t know, and our emails to the press contact listed on the website, media@brownsvilleenergyterminals.com, bounced back.

The post How Google and AI Nearly Made a Seasoned Reporter Spiral appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 05:00

Summer cooking doesn't have to mean a sweltering kitchen. Here's how I keep my cool during the warmest months.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 05:00

People can begin depositing money in the new tax-deferred investment accounts on Saturday, with eligible children receiving a $1,000 government contribution.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 05:00

Christian groups see the nation’s semiquincentennial as bringing history, emotion and faith together in a way that is ripe for spreading the gospel.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 04:30

Researchers say Moscow acted with ‘substantial impunity’ in 144 incidents, including over RAF Lakenheath

The Kremlin orchestrated a concerted surveillance campaign using drones launched from shadow fleet vessels over an 18-month period which targeted nuclear sites in the UK, France, Belgium and the Netherlands, researchers have said.

Analysis by the International Institute of Strategic Studies (IISS) of 144 incidents in more than a dozen countries beginning in late 2024 concluded Russian intelligence had operated with “substantial impunity”, leaving authorities across Europe flat-footed and confused.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 04:30

Nintendo/TNX; Nintendo Switch
A joyful collection of vibrant rhythm games includes catching veggies in mid-air, practising dance choreographies and speaking to an alien

It has been a strange decade for the rhythm game genre. The legendary progenitors Rock Band and Guitar Hero are seemingly gone, yet companies are manufacturing plastic guitars again. Tango Gameworks, a studio best known for delivering survival horror hauntings, made Hi-Fi Rush and it ruled, but Microsoft sold the studio. Indie titles such as Sayonara Wild Hearts and Rift of the NecroDancer have done well on the margins, but now Epic Games has swept in, adding a rhythm action mode to Fortnite so now its mainstream again. All these titles have reinforced the ideas laid out by their forefathers: rhythm can intersect with video games as much as it already intersects with our everyday lives.

Few series hold this ethos to heart as strongly as Rhythm Heaven. Dormant since 2015, a new entry, Rhythm Heaven Groove (known as Rhythm Paradise Groove in Pal territories), doubles down on the concept of offering bitesize, rhythm-based experiences where you follow auditive cues to perform all manner of increasingly exhilarating actions with just a few buttons. Whether you’re catching veggies in mid-air, practising dance choreographies, or speaking to an alien, each mini-game is intended to be a vibrant, micro cacophony with its own rules.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-02 04:10

What can financial regulators learn from Formula 1? Expert comment jon.wallace

Formula 1’s regulator uses a diverse toolkit of rules and penalties to deliver multiple objectives. This could hold lessons for financial regulators as they respond to a rapidly evolving financial system.

F1 Grand Prix in Austria.

Formula 1 (F1) racing is arguably the most complex sport in the world – and one of its most successful. This weekend’s British Grand Prix at Silverstone will attract around half a million spectators and 80 million TV viewers, while F1 commercial rights alone are valued at $23 billion. The F1 movie, released last June, is the most successful sports film ever made.

F1 governance is not without its critics or its controversies, both historic and present day. But at the core of the sport’s continued success is the way it is regulated by the Fédération International de l’ Automobile (FIA). The FIA’s approach to regulation may offer the world’s national and international financial regulators some valuable pointers on how to meet current challenges.        

F1 regulation 

Liberty Media, a public company, is responsible for F1 ’s commercial exploitation. However, the FIA controls almost every aspect of F1. It sets the technical standards for the cars and the racetracks. It determines how races are run, how much each team can spend on competing, and even what media activities the drivers should undertake.  

F1 regulations are designed to achieve multiple goals – from ensuring the safety of drivers and spectators to creating the spectacle that underpins the sport’s commercial success, to driving technical innovation with potential benefits across the entire automotive sector. 

While they are highly detailed, F1 regulations also deliberately leave scope for teams to compete through driver skills, race strategy and technical innovation. Thus, while F1 cars are very fast, with a maximum speed of around 230 mph, they are not designed to be the fastest possible. Nor in some areas do they use the latest available technologies. Electronic driver aids were banned in 1994 for safety reasons and because they reduced the role played by the driver. 

F1 technical regulations are frequently tweaked and periodically go through a major overhaul. The 2026 regulatory update was one of the most far reaching ever, eliminating complex systems for recovering engine heat and assisting overtaking through drag reduction. 

In their place is a larger electric engine and smaller internal combustion engine within the hybrid system, creating a roughly 50:50 split between petrol and electric power. To overtake, drivers can draw on a power boost from the electric engine, but having exhausted the battery are vulnerable to being overtaken themselves.   

The changes have not been popular with some. But it is hard to dispute that races have become more exciting, featuring frequent changes of position among the leading cars. Meanwhile the rule changes have focused the teams’ technical skills and resources on advancing the design of hybrid power units, and in particularly those that use 100 per cent sustainable fuel – a new requirement in 2026. The intensely competitive innovative environment in F1 is one of the main reasons that major car manufacturers such as Mercedes, VW and Renault own F1 teams. 

Regulations are developed through close consultation with F1 teams. But once in place they are rigorously enforced. Some penalties are applied in real time while the race is running. There are also frequent inquiries into possible breaches of technical standards, sometimes resulting in a team’s demotion or disqualification. Investigations are usually quick and teams and drivers do not hesitate to report on each other. 

Financial regulation and F1

F1 is by no means the only sport with enormous viewing figures, an evolving rule book and vast financial resources. But it is arguably unique in three respects: the central role played by technical innovation; the high importance of safety regulation; and its relevance to growth in the wider economy. It also stands out for the diverse range of objectives that F1 regulators seek to satisfy and the complexity and sophistication of its regulation.  

These features underpin the parallels between the role of the FIA and that of national and international financial regulators: The FIA must keep F1 drivers and spectators safe while promoting exciting racing, technical innovation and commercial success. Similarly, financial regulators must protect bank depositors – and indeed the whole economy – while promoting improved financial services, employment and economic growth. 

Lessons for financial regulators

So, what insights could financial regulators take from F1? Here are two suggestions. 

First, safety. F1 cars frequently crash and sometimes overturn, but in modern F1 drivers are very rarely hurt. Highly detailed regulations combined with innovation – such as the titanium ‘halo’ which was made mandatory in 2018 to improve cockpit protection – have made an enormous difference in reducing driver deaths. 12 drivers died during races from 1970 to 1999, while only one has been killed since 2000. 

Financial regulators seek to prevent losses to retail consumers of financial services and/or the governments that provide insurance. But they typically do not seek to eliminate all risk on the grounds that the level of regulation required would be so high as to prevent the financial system delivering on its core functions. However, the experience of F1 suggests policymakers should test this assumption. 

A key lesson from F1 could be that regulators should be more willing to block innovation by financial institutions in some areas…and instead focus it even more proactively on areas like cybersecurity.

For example, digital communication and artificial intelligence could allow regulators to collect and process much higher volumes of data on what financial institutions are doing with minimal cost to those being regulated. This appears highly intrusive, but it may also improve identification of illegal practices or excessive risk-taking without reducing the value the financial system can deliver to society. 

A further possible step, echoing F1’s enforcement regime, would see financial regulators imposing more varied  prudential penalties more swiftly and with fewer grounds for appeal. 

The second insight is on innovation. The FIA does not think all innovation will necessarily benefit F1. Instead, it uses detailed regulation to block innovation in some areas and drive it forward in others. By doing so it focusses constructor competition and resources on areas that it judges to be of most benefit to the sport (for instance driver safety) or the wider economy (such as sustainable fuels). 

By contrast financial regulators tend to start from the assumption that innovation is likely to be of general benefit to the financial system and only seek to limit it when they see evidence of substantial risk. A key lesson from F1 could be that regulators should be more willing to block innovation by financial institutions in some areas, such as stablecoins, where the benefits to society are hard to demonstrate, and instead focus it even more proactively on areas like cybersecurity, where the benefits are clear and the risk of slow progress is high.  

More broadly, a regulator inspired by the FIA’s approach would find decisions on, for instance, whether to address perverse incentives through ‘bonus caps’ a lot more straightforward. Similarly, central banks and financial regulators would not hesitate as much as they now do to use regulation to force the financial system to support the transition to net zero. And competition authorities might be more willing to use size caps on financial institutions to drive competition and broader economic growth. 

Of course, financial regulators might reasonably say that they already do many of the regulatory things that the FIA does. They might add that international competition, political lobbying and resource constraints prevent them from taking a more proactive approach in some areas. But the experience of Formula 1 suggests that a more complex, intrusive and ultimately directive regulatory approach can sometimes produce the best result not just for safety, but also for innovation and growth.    

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 03:31

CEO Sam Altman argued move would share benefits of AI and it would involve other firms doing similar, report says

OpenAI is reportedly in early stage talks to give a 5% stake in the ChatGPT developer to the US government as artificial intelligence companies attempt to smooth relations with Donald Trump’s administration.

The OpenAI chief executive, Sam Altman, has argued that giving the US public a financial stake in the company is the best way to share the benefits of AI, according to the Financial Times, which cited two unnamed people familiar with the discussions.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 03:00

According to the Wall Street Journal, SpaceX showed investors an early prototype of a slim, "handset-like" AI device running a proprietary operating system and integrating xAI technology. Elon Musk, however, denied the report, calling it "utterly false." TechCrunch reports: SpaceX, alongside sister company Tesla, does have the manufacturing expertise to pull off mass-producing a bunch of AI devices -- not to mention access to the chips needed to power any on-device compute. SpaceX has also signaled that it's keen to expand into wireless, with Starlink Mobile as a potential competitor to Verizon and AT&T. One analyst even went as far as to speculate that T-Mobile or AT&T would make fine acquisition targets for the rocket builder, though such a purchase would, undoubtedly, be pricey. It's also not clear if SpaceX is just throwing spaghetti at the wall or if it will attempt to really mass-produce and market such a device. But one thing that seems clearer is that if OpenAI is doing it, Musk would, perhaps, want to try to do it better. [...] Like OpenAI, SpaceX's prototype is reportedly designed to run on a proprietary operating system and integrate technology from xAI, Musk's AI company that SpaceX acquired earlier this year. This would prevent these new devices from being trapped inside another company's platforms (like Google's Android). But the intent also appears to be to create something new, with native AI interfaces. That said, the graveyard is crowded with the unsuccessful launches of AI devices from companies like Humane and Rabbit. A company wanting to sell an AI device does not equate to consumers wanting to buy such a thing. Yet.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 02:00

Former public defender Sara Bennett spent 13 years photographing women convicted of homicide. She traces their lives in prison – and what happens as they re-enter the outside world

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 01:11

The versatile striker was dangerous in his time on the field on Wednesday, but that time was prematurely ended with a surprising ejection

The day after the US supreme court upheld birthright citizenship, Folarin Balogun – a player who wouldn’t have even been on the pitch if not for the longstanding, constitutional law – pushed the United States through to the World Cup last 16. Just two days short of his 25th birthday, Balogun scored the opening goal in the US’s 2-0 victory over Bosnia and Herzegovina, his third of the tournament.

Then, about 20 minutes later, Balogun was sent off, given a straight red card for what appeared to be inadvertent contact with Bosnia and Herzegovina defender Tarik Muharemović. It was a shocking turn of events for the Monaco forward, who was among the US’s best performers on Wednesday, as he has been for the entirety of the tournament.

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2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-02 00:34

New collaborations are helping researchers across Australia harness advanced computing, artificial intelligence and quantum technologies to tackle complex challenges in science, health, climate and industry.

July 1, 2026 — Some of Australia’s most ambitious research questions require more than traditional approaches. Understanding how galaxies form, predicting climate change impacts, designing new medicines and accelerating renewable energy innovation all depend on the ability to analyze vast amounts of data and run increasingly sophisticated computational models.

Through Pawsey Supercomputing Research Centre’s PULSE collaboration scheme, researchers from across Australia are working with Pawsey experts to optimize workflows, explore emerging technologies and unlock the potential of advanced computing for discovery.

The latest round of PULSE collaborations has commenced, supporting 12 projects spanning supercomputing and quantum computing applications across universities and research organizations, including the University of Western Australia, Curtin University, CSIRO, the University of Queensland and the University of Sydney.

Together, these projects demonstrate how national research infrastructure enables Australian researchers to push the boundaries of what is computationally possible.

Accelerating Discoveries Across Science and Technology

In astrophysics, researchers at the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR) have been granted Pawsey expert support to investigate the physics of galaxy formation through the SolAs Simulations Suite.

By improving the computational performance of these simulations, the project aims to help researchers explore the complex processes that shape galaxies and better understand the evolution of the Universe.

PULSE projects are also supporting advances in Earth and climate science.

The Pawsey team is working with researchers from The University of Western Australia to improve computational approaches for modeling subglacial sediment processes, helping advance ice-sheet models that contribute to our understanding of changing environments.

Supporting Health and Biotechnology Innovation

High-performance computing is becoming increasingly important across health and life sciences, where researchers are using computational approaches to accelerate discovery.

A number of PULSE projects are applying advanced computing and machine learning techniques to biomedical challenges.

Researchers at the University of Western Australia are exploring quantum computing approaches for high-dimensional decision-making problems related to personalized cancer therapy, investigating how emerging technologies could contribute to future treatment strategies.

Other projects are applying computational modeling and machine learning to drug discovery and molecular design, including work by researchers at the University of Sydney that predicts protein stability and supports the design of mRNA and miniproteins.

By helping researchers optimize their workflows and access advanced computing environments, PULSE supports the translation of complex biological questions into computational problems that can be explored at scale.

Exploring the Future of Quantum Computing

PULSE is also helping Australian researchers investigate practical applications for quantum computing.

Researchers from the University of Western Australia, The University of Queensland and CSIRO are exploring hybrid quantum-classical approaches, combining traditional supercomputing with emerging quantum technologies.

These projects are investigating potential applications in areas including molecular modelling, quantum chemistry and complex optimization problems.

This work contributes to Australia’s growing capability in quantum technologies by building expertise, developing workflows and identifying where quantum approaches may provide future research advantages.

Building National Capability Through Collaboration

Beyond individual scientific outcomes, PULSE plays a critical role in strengthening Australia’s national research capability by improving how researchers use advanced computing infrastructure.

A core focus of the program is supporting researchers to optimize their workflows for high-performance computing environments. This includes improving code efficiency, adapting algorithms for GPU and multi-core architectures, and redesigning computational pipelines to run more effectively on national supercomputing systems such as Setonix.

These improvements do more than accelerate individual projects. They also make research more computationally efficient, enabling researchers to achieve more science within the same allocation of compute time. In practice, this translates into greater scientific output per unit of energy and infrastructure use — improving both sustainability and the overall return on Australia’s investment in national research infrastructure.

Projects supported through this round include researchers working on:

  • Climate and Earth system modeling
  • Astrophysics and gravitational wave science
  • Medical research and biotechnology
  • Computational chemistry
  • Renewable energy modeling
  • Maritime archaeology
  • Advanced engineering simulations

The diversity of these projects reflects the foundational role of supercomputing as a critical national infrastructure that underpins scientific discovery across Australia’s priority research areas.

More from HPCwire: Pawsey Welcomes Continued Australian Government Investment Through NCRIS

About Pawsey Supercomputing Research Centre

The Pawsey Supercomputing Research Centre is Australia’s premier high-performance computing facility for science, located in Perth, Western Australia. Pawsey is driving scientific breakthroughs through exascale-ready compute, data infrastructure, and expertise that support nationally significant research and international collaboration. Home to Setonix, one of the most powerful and energy-efficient research supercomputers in the Southern Hemisphere, Pawsey also advances quantum–classical integration through its Supercomputing Quantum Innovation Hub. Pawsey is a nationally funded NCRIS facility, supported by the Western Australian Government, and a joint venture between CSIRO and leading Western Australian universities.


Source: Karina Nunez, Pawsey

The post Pawsey PULSE Backs 12 Australian HPC and Quantum Research Projects appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 00:27

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 00:00

The limits of "America first" in Africa.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-02 00:00

The convenient fiction of continued menace.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 23:43

Folarin Balogun got the scoring going with a goal in the 45th minute, but was sent off with a controversial red card in the 64th minute.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 23:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: US homeowners have embraced home batteries in record-breaking numbers in early 2026, spurred on by state incentives while seeking to offset rising residential electricity costs. The trend could even unlock a more flexible energy supply for power grid operators and even AI data centers. New home battery installations reached a record 673 megawatts of energy storage in the first quarter of 2026, according to the US Energy Information Administration. That trend was driven by states with high electricity prices that have implemented policies to incentivize home battery installation, Bloomberg News reported. This residential battery trend stands out as a natural next step for states that have already successfully boosted rooftop solar adoption among homeowners, given how batteries enable homeowners to use stored solar energy at night. California and Hawaii accounted for the majority of new residential battery storage, while Texas and Arizona also saw significantly higher numbers of installations. California incentivizes homeowners with solar panels to also install batteries by offering better pricing for residential electricity exported to the grid after sunset, Bloomberg reported. Hawaii offers a one-time payment of $400 for every kilowatt of battery storage that homeowners install. However, the record-breaking home battery installations coincided with a slowdown in residential installations of solar panels -- the result of the Trump administration and Republican-driven One Big Beautiful Bill having eliminated a 30 percent federal solar tax credit for homeowners. Nonetheless, US electricity generation from solar power continues to rise and even surpassed coal-fired generation in April. The battery installation spree also coincides with rising electricity costs for US residential customers. The Energy Information Administration's latest data shows that the nationwide average for residential electricity costs increased by more than 7 percent in April 2026 when compared to electricity costs in April 2025. So homeowners with smart home battery-management systems could benefit from storing energy when electricity prices are lowest and draining them during peak demand periods.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 23:20

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for July 2.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 22:55

debating on going with a lite weight downhill MB helmet or if anyone has any better or specific recommendations hurry I need one asap lol

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2026-07-02 08:04
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This live blog is now closed.

While fielding questions from reporters ahead of his flight to North Dakota today, Donald Trump batted down questions about the $1.2bn he earned from crypto businesses, according to his latest annual financial disclosure.

“We have funds that run my money well. I’ve made a lot of money before I became president,” Trump said. “They’re big institutions, and they run it … I think it’s called a ‘blind account’, but they basically they take it, and I purposely I never speak to any of the people that run the money.”

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 21:17

Law comes into effect that critics fear will further erode rights of Uyghurs and Tibetans, as well as allow Beijing to pursue dissidents abroad

A new ethnic unity law has come into effect in China despite warnings from Taiwan, the United Nations and rights groups that it could threaten freedoms, especially for minorities.

The Law on Promoting Ethnic Unity and Progress aims to forge a “shared” national identity among ethnic groups, for example by strengthening the status of Mandarin as the official language. But overseas campaigners have argued it will further degrade the rights of ethnic minorities, such as Uyghurs and Tibetans, that Beijing is accused of persecuting.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 21:06

The automaker became a case study in AI hubris, bringing back 350 "gray beard" engineers to teach its automated quality systems to build cars that don't suck.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 20:46

Statement comes a day after report that three messages received in case were determined to be fake

The FBI is investigating extortion demands related to Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance that “may potentially be legitimate”, the agency said on Wednesday.

The update comes a day after Reuters reported that kidnapping notes received in Guthrie’s case were fake.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 20:41

Bizarre 250th spectacle in North Dakota sees Trump take ride on red, white and blue train – and speak with hologram of 26th president

The sound of YMCA by the Village People booming through the badlands of North Dakota could only mean one thing: Donald Trump’s 250th anniversary travelling circus had reached a remote corner of America more familiar with bison, wild horses and bighorn sheep.

The US president visited Medora on Wednesday to dedicate a $450m library and museum honouring Theodore Roosevelt, the 26th president, in the region where he roamed as a cowboy and big-game hunter in the 1880s.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 20:11

The 19th annual competition includes photos made solely with iPhone cameras.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-02 12:27

As a proposed billionaire tax in California moves forward, Gov. Newsom says other approaches are needed, including closing a tax loophole used by the ultra-rich.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 19:58

On the same morning Sen. Mitch McConnell was hospitalized last month, EMS personnel went to his home to respond to an unconscious person who appeared to experience "cardiac arrest," according to a dispatch call.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-01 19:57

It’s easy to get bogged down micromanaging HPC infrastructure. But focus too much on one aspect, and other things can quickly get out of hand in today’s complex HPC environments. With the latest release of the Fuzzball orchestration platform, the folks at CIQ hope to give customers a sense of simplicity and control of their HPC environments.

Fuzzball is a containerized HPC orchestration platform from CIQ, which was founded by Greg Kurtzer, the creator of the Apptainer container management system for HPC (among other popular software projects). It’s been adopted by organizations ranging from Sandia National Lab to the biotech FYR.

Fuzzball was designed by the same team of engineers that built Apptainer to efficiently schedule HPC jobs to run efficiently on containerized infrastructure, whether it’s a Kubernetes cluster running in the cloud, a small workstation running on a desk, or a multi-thousand-node cluster running in a national lab.

As Wolfgang Resch, a research computing engineer with CIQ, explained to HPCwire during a demo at ISC 2026 last week, there are essentially two pieces to Fuzzball.

“One is a set of services that are all the services you need to run a cluster: database, scheduler, provisioner, sequence management,” he said. “And the other side of it is the actual engine, the containerization engine that actual work is running under. And it’s a spiritual successor to Apptainer. Essentially, it behaves more or less like Apptainer as far as performance.”

The goal of Fuzzball is to allow customers to take a containerized environment and make it schedulable, reproducible, and scalable for their HPC workloads. Essentially, it’s about building a bridge from the world of traditional HPC technologies and workflows into the new world of containers and portable workflows.

“It adds things from the container world to orchestrating HPC workflows without giving up the good heritage of HPC,” Resch said. “It still thinks in terms of batch jobs, but for example, it brings along the notion of services. So you can define a workflow that has a set of jobs that are dependent on each other, but they also run a service that all the jobs can talk to.”

For instance, if your HPC workflow needs to grab something from a MySQL database or write to a database, or run a job on a Juypter server or a Web UI, Fuzzball can bring it all together. What’s more, Fuzzball gives the user a browser-based way to submit, monitor, and reproduce jobs (although they can always drop into the command line interface if they need or want to).

CIQ recently released Fuzzball 4.0, which brings several new features designed to bolster the product’s mission and make containerized infrastructure easy to use for HPC users. For starters, Fuzzball now supports an integrated container registry, which will make it easier for users to pull multi-service deployments into a single platform.

Jonathon Anderson, CIQ’s principal HPC product manager, explains why this is important.

“Fuzzball was developed with a little bit more leaning towards that cloud perspective, where it’s just one service among many that’s on the Internet somewhere and it interacts with them,” Anderson told HPCwire at ISC 2026. “One place that that’s obvious is a container registry. It’s talking to Docker Hub or GHCR [GitHub Container Registry] or your local Harbor or something like that, to get containers.”

Another characteristic of these types of services is that they expect to be able to ingress data from an external object or send it back out, Anderson said.

“That is well and good if you have those services, but it’s a barrier to entry for new users who just want to deploy it and try it,” he said. “We kept confronting this user expectation of people wanting to put push containers to Fuzzball or put data into Fuzzball. So that’s what we’ve added this object cache for.”

The new object cache in Fuzzball 4.0 is “roughly S3 compatible,” Anderson said. That means customers can upload data with the command line interface, Web interface, or through the API, and then pull that data into a job for execution. HPC customers could use this to, for example, run a simulation or generate a movie, and save it into this object store to enable functions such as real-time previews, Anderson said.

The third major new feature in Fuzzball 4.0 is streamlined access to file systems. User can now just import existing multi-petabyte Lustre, GPFS, and BeeGFS volumes directly into Fuzzball, thereby enabling workloads to run against data where it already lives. This is a meaningful difference in how Fuzzball works, Anderson said.

“In the past, Fuzzball expected to be the arbiter and kind of the originator of all volume storage, so it wanted you to just point it at a file system that it would own, and anything on there was a volume that it created and then you loaded the data,” he said. “That’s not how people really work, on prem at least anyway. So we’ve reoriented the way that those provisioners work, and now it’s easier to point it at an existing file system with existing data. It can import that data as volumes that are arbitrary.”

CIQ is already working on version 4.1 and is setting up for 4.2. Version 4.1 will bring a new priority ranking system that augments the existing scheduling capabilities, and CIQ eventually will build a preemption feature into the product. That will allow customers to prioritize certain workloads, such as AI inference, over other workloads, such as AI training, Anderson said.

The company is also working on a new MCP layer that will allow more integration with the world of agentic AI. It’s currently working in the lab, with a possible release targeted for version 4.2.

For more information on Fuzzball, check out www.ciq.com

 

The post CIQ Simplifies HPC Admin on Containerized Infra with Fuzzball Update appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 19:44

NCAA President Charlie Baker told CBS News he doesn't think the group will need to change its rules on transgender athletes in light of a Supreme Court ruling that allowed states to ban their participation.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 19:37

⚽️ Kick-off time: 5pm local/10am AEST/1am BST/8pm EDT
⚽️ Player guide | Golden Boot | Bracket | Mail Beau

The pregame show on Fox Sports 1, which is distinct from the pregame show on Fox, is hyping this as a can’t-lose game for the USA.

Dax McCarty, who has a serious playing resume, is reminding his chest-puffing co-host that Paraguay beat Germany.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 19:34
Tooting my own Float

Adv2 Say what!!!

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2026-07-01 20:04
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  • Celtics to get Paul George and draft picks in deal

  • Brown had been unhappy with treatment by Celtics

The Boston Celtics are trading 2024 NBA finals MVP Jaylen Brown to the Philadelphia 76ers for Paul George and a slew of draft capital in yet another blockbuster offseason move in the league.

Boston will also receive two first-round picks and two second-rounders as part of the deal.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 19:05

Pair also unfurled a large black banner displaying a message of peace on top of New York City landmark

Two people were arrested following an apparent marriage proposal atop the Empire State Building’s spire on Wednesday, after they climbed to the very pinnacle of the New York City landmark – well above the level open to the public.

The two people were identified as Angela Nikolau and Ivan Beerkus, two Russian “rooftoppers” who have conducted similar stunts in other cities including Tianjin, China, and Los Angeles. They were both wearing black clothing and appeared to be masked as they unfurled a large, black banner at the top of the skyscraper with the words: “When the power of love beats the love of power the ‌world knows peace.”

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2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 19:01

Watchdog criticises ‘lack of proactive, effective casework quality assurance’ but says CCRC ultimately fit for purpose

The Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC) must urgently improve its investigations to avoid a repeat of failings such as those in the Andrew Malkinson scandal, a watchdog has found.

Anthony Rogers, the chief inspector of the Crown Prosecution Service, delivered the warning after carrying out an independent inspection of casework by the body that investigates potential miscarriages of justice.

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2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 19:01

AI-generated overview found to gloss over allegations of sexual harassment and describes hotel being sued over hygiene as ‘spotless’

A hotel being sued for mass food poisonings was described as “spotless” and a resort where guests complained of sexual harassment by staff was praised for “friendly” service by an AI intended to summarise millions of Tripadvisor reviews.

The overviews of customer feedback downplayed serious complaints, ranging from the stench of mould to a lack of mains water, according to an investigation by the consumer campaign organisation Which?

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2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 19:00

T-Mobile appears to be migrating its 303,000-core VMware environment to another platform while fighting Broadcom in court for the extended support it says its perpetual-license agreement guarantees. "The matter is somewhat urgent," The Register reports, because a court-ordered support arrangement expires August 3, "so T-Mobile may soon be unable to get support for its very substantial VMware estate." The Register reports: The dispute relates to a deal T-Mobile struck with VMware in August 2023, which saw the telco acquire perpetual licenses and two years of support for some software, plus the option for a further year of support. When Broadcom acquired VMware in 2023, it stopped selling perpetual licenses and standalone support deals for customers with those licenses. Broadcom also reduced the virtualization giant's product range from over 150 products to two subscription-only bundles. Broadcom now mostly sells its Cloud Foundation (VCF) private cloud suite. Customers including AT&T and Tesco tried to exercise their right to extended support, but Broadcom declined to do so. AT&T settled on confidential terms. Tesco is pursuing the matter in the courts. When customers exercise their option for extended support, Broadcom argues it can't deliver because the products covered by the contract don't exist anymore, its contracts allow it to deny support for dead products, and subscriptions are now the industry standard. T-Mobile started using VMware's products in 2008. In one hearing, the carrier's counsel described T-Mobile's VMware implementation as "the base of the entire internal network" and "the place where 1,000 applications reside." Another filing, from Broadcom, says the telco runs VMware software on over 303,000 CPU cores. Court documents allege that in 2024 Broadcom notified T-Mobile it would not renew support after the initial two-year deal expired in 2025. The two parties kept talking about possible new arrangements. T-Mobile also sought an injunction that would compel Broadcom to provide extended support. Broadcom opposed the injunction, arguing that T-Mobile deliberately waited too long to seek it. At one point T-Mobile suggested a $20 million deal for another two years of support. An affirmation filed last week by T-Mobile vice president of technology Kevin Luu says the carrier sought that arrangement "to be able to complete T-Mobile's transition away from VMware at a more deliberate pace." The court eventually granted the injunction forcing Broadcom to offer support beyond August 2025, but required T-Mobile to pay $5.28 million and post a $500,000 undertaking. Broadcom continued to provide support but also sought damages on grounds that the injunction meant it missed out on a new deal with T-Mobile. The telco has rubbished that argument in part because the two parties were still talking about a new deal. Broadcom later proposed to charge $24 million for extended support covering six products, a sum it said would cover over 20 staff needed to support T-Mobile. The carrier fired back by pointing out that it has made just two support calls in 2026, which hardly justifies such a massive staff and expense.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 18:52

Premium subscribers can listen to narrations by both Jim Dale and Stephen Fry.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 18:33

Body of 18-year-old man located after search involving Mountain Rescue, police and the fire service

A student has drowned while on a Duke of Edinburgh’s Award (DofE) trip in Wales, police have said.

Emergency services were called to the River Wye in Glasbury, Powys on Tuesday evening after it was reported an 18-year-old male had entered the water and could not be found.

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2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 18:30

Analysis reveals extent of impact on NHS of placating Donald Trump over price of British medicine exports

The NHS will have to divert £45bn from essential services to pay for new medicines under the terms of the UK-US trade deal agreed last December, leading to more than 200,000 avoidable deaths of patients, analysis has found.

Ministers have defended the deal as a way of helping British drug exports to the US avoid tariffs, and giving patients in England access to potentially life-extending drugs that would otherwise be denied.

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2026-07-02 16:04
2026-07-01 18:30

After the Supreme Court struck down President Donald Trump’s executive order seeking to end birthright citizenship, the president called on Congress to end it through legislation, saying a “long and unwieldy” constitutional amendment was not necessary. But constitutional and immigration law experts disagree.

These experts say the majority opinion from the Supreme Court — which interpreted the 14th Amendment as providing citizenship to anyone born in the country, with very limited exceptions — indicated that a constitutional amendment would be needed.

Shortly after the Supreme Court’s ruling on June 30, Trump wrote on Truth Social, “The Supreme Court upheld Birthright Citizenship, which is too bad for our Country, but we can easily make it up in Congress through Legislation, with the support of the President, that has now been determined during this process. No long and unwieldy Constitutional Amendment is necessary! Congress should start TODAY to work on ending expensive and unfair to our Country, Birthright Citizenship. They will have my Complete and Total Support!”

Trump is right about the significant hurdle constitutional amendments present. They must be supported by a two-thirds majority in both the House and Senate, and then need to be ratified by three-fourths of the states.

But constitutional scholars, and even some Republican supporters of ending birthright citizenship, say that’s now the path to end it.

According to the 14th Amendment, ratified in 1868, “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and the State wherein they reside.”

On the first day of his second term, Trump issued an executive order to deny birthright citizenship to children born to parents in the country unlawfully or who are in the country lawfully but only on temporary visas. It never went into effect, though, because lower federal courts blocked it.

People demonstrate on April 1 outside the U.S. Supreme Court ahead of oral arguments in Trump v. Barbara to determine if President Trump’s executive order ending birthright citizenship is constitutional. Photo by Al Drago/Getty Images.

The case Trump v. Barbara made its way to the Supreme Court and in the majority opinion on the case, Chief Justice John Roberts wrote: “Citizenship, then and now, was the right to have rights— to freely participate in our political community. The Framers of the Fourteenth Amendment extended that promise to ‘every free-born person in this land.’ … We keep that promise today.”

That includes “children born of parents unlawfully or temporarily present in the United States,” Roberts wrote for the majority. “Under the Constitution,” he said, “they are citizens at birth.”

According to constitutional scholars we interviewed, that leaves no wiggle room for doing away with birthright citizenship through normal legislation. Legislators have been trying for years to end birthright citizenship for children of people in the country illegally, though no bill has ever passed. Now, many experts say, it is clear that any such legislation would be struck down by the courts.

“Trump is grasping at straws,” Garrett Epps, a professor of practice at the University of Oregon School of Law and a constitutional expert, told us via email. “There is no language in the majority opinion in Barbara that suggests Congress could change the birthright citizenship rule of the Fourteenth Amendment by statute.”

While the court’s 6-3 decision struck down Trump’s executive order, Justice Brett Kavanaugh concurred with the majority only in part. He wrote in a separate opinion that he disagreed that Trump’s order violated the 14th Amendment. He said Congress alone has the authority to “enact new legislation establishing exceptions to birthright citizenship for children born to foreign citizens unlawfully or temporarily in the country.”

Although three justices voted against the majority opinion, Kavanaugh’s was “the only voice of the nine that raises that possibility” of reversing birthright citizenship through legislative action, Epps said.

“Nothing—nothing—in the majority opinion suggests that Congress has the power to limit or abolish” birthright citizenship, Epps said. “Maybe—maybe—the three other dissenters would agree; but they do not say so in writing. Meanwhile, there’s no indication from any of the five in the majority that they are basing their decision on statutory grounds. As of today, there are five votes on this court to hold that the Citizenship Clause establishes a clear constitutional rule that cannot be overturned by act of Congress, any more than the Equal Protection or Due Process Clauses could be.”

Muzaffar Chishti, a lawyer and senior fellow at the Migration Policy Institute, told us via email that Trump is “wrong” to say birthright citizenship could be reversed by legislation.

“He lost this one plain and simple!” Chishti, director of the MPI office at the New York University School of Law, said.

“Unfortunately for the President, the majority of Justices (5-4) did not support his position,” Chishti said on the day of the ruling. “The majority, in an extraordinarily strong opinion by the Chief Justice, ruled that only a constitutional amendment can reinterpret the current understanding of the 14th amendment: that every child (with the minor exceptions of children born to diplomats and enemy aliens) are citizens at birth. So, the only way that can now be changed after today’s decision is either a constitutional amendment or by the Supreme Court overruling today’s decision.”

Jorge Loweree of the American Immigration Council agreed.

“The Supreme Court did not say Congress can end birthright citizenship through legislation,” Loweree told us via email. “The majority held that the Citizenship Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment protects citizenship for nearly everyone born in the United States, relying on more than a century of precedent. While several dissenting Justices argued that the Clause should be interpreted more narrowly, those views did not prevail.”

“If Congress enacted a statute that conflicted with the Court’s interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment, it would face immediate constitutional challenges,” Loweree added. “Unless the Supreme Court changes its interpretation in a future case, Congress cannot override the Constitution by statute.”

At least two prominent Republicans, both lawyers who oppose birthright citizenship, also agree it would now take a constitutional amendent.

“This was not a decision on procedural grounds (ie, POTUS can’t do this through executive order but Congress could legislate it); it is a substantive decision that says the 14th amendment requires citizenship for those born to, among others, birth tourists or those unlawfully present in the country,” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis wrote on X. “Will need either a constitutional amendment or a future court to overrule this.”

Sen. Mike Lee of Utah also saw the decision as a call to pursue “the long fight” for a constitutional amendment.

“Neither the Founding Fathers, nor the authors of the 14th Amendment, nor the millions of Americans who fought and died for their country through the ages intended to establish a nation whose citizenship could so easily be purchased, whether through birth tourism of China’s communist party members or a vast border invasion enabled by faithless presidents,” Lee wrote on X. “This is the cheap and cheated citizenship the Supreme Court upholds today. The long fight for a constitutional amendment begins now. We must explicitly exclude foreign nationals who break our laws, violate our borders, or exploit loopholes to make their families American citizens.”

Birth tourism refers to pregnant women coming to the U.S. on tourism visas in order to obtain birthright U.S. citizenship for their newborn children.

Andrew Arthur, a resident fellow in law and policy at the Center for Immigration Studies, an organization that favors low immigration, told us there are “any number of actions that Congress could take that would address the issues that the president is raising.”

For example, he said, the government could restrict the nonimmigrant entry of pregnant women, crack down on birth tourism, or limit the ability of birthright citizens to petition for family members to be admitted to the U.S.

“Not to say that any of those are good or bad ideas (except for cracking down on birthright tourism, which most agree with)– but they are steps Congress could take,” Arthur said.

As we have written, there is no direct government data on the scope of birth tourism in the U.S., though the Center for Immigration Studies estimates it could be over 20,000 births per year. And it is against the law for those who purposely enable it. There have been some high-profile arrests of people accused of running birth tourism operations.

“There are means, short of tampering with the Constitution, to tackle what is without doubt immigration fraud and a misuse of the immigration system,” Michelle Mittelstadt, director of communications for the Migration Policy Institute, told us, referring to cracking down on birth tourism. In fact, she said, the Trump administration has already taken some steps.

Arthur, of the Center for Immigration Studies, also believes it may still be possible for Congress to narrow the definition of who would be eligible for birthright citizenship.

But Samuel Breidbart, counsel in the Democracy Program at the Brennan Center for Justice, said any such narrowing of who would qualify for birthright citizenship would not stand unless a future Supreme Court reversed its opinion.

“There are five votes that said firmly, unequivocally that birthright citizenship is part of the Constitution, and that’s the law,” Breidbart said. “Now, is it true that a 5-4 outcome might be an invitation to the conservative legal movement to keep trying? I’m sure that’s how they’re thinking about this. I’m sure that they’re thinking that they can pursue future litigation. … But right now the law is as it has always been, that there’s birthright citizenship for all who are born here, and we require a constitutional amendment to change that. What the court did yesterday did not open the door to Congress legislating.”

Evelyn Cruz, a professor and director of the immigration clinic at Arizona State University’s law school, told us via email that Kavanaugh’s suggestion that Congress could amend who is eligible for birthright citizenship “stands on thin ice.”

But there may be political gain to such an effort, she said.

“Whether Justice Kavanaugh’s suggestion is legally sound or not, the fact that he has opened the door to a potential way for Congress to delineate access to birthright citizenship, even if the legislation is later ruled unconstitutional, leaves the birthright citizenship issue viable for political purposes,” despite the court’s unequivocal decision, Cruz said.

Lori Robertson and Justine Weng contributed to this article.


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 Trump’s Dubious Claim that Birthright Citizenship Could Still Be Overturned with Legislation appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 18:29
7 Blinks Error Code, Pint X

I get this error once a week. Almost every time it’ll happen within the first 1 min start of a ride. Rebooting the Pint X fixes it, but days outside are very normal temp and it’s stored properly. Not sure how concerning this error is?

submitted by /u/draggingalake
[link] [comments]

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 18:27

Recently, there has been a surge in slopcoded new/hobby “operating systems”. Such slopcoded projects – which, due to the nature of “AI” tools, effectively consist of stolen code – will not be featured on OSNews and submitting them is fruitless.

Other websites may choose to employ lower standards, as is their prerogative, but OSNews will not. I obviously cannot guarantee nothing will ever slip through the cracks, but I will take utmost care to ensure OSNews remains free of these so-called “sloperating systems”. Plagiarism, license-washing, and code theft have no place in the world of enthusiast and hobby operating systems.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 18:21

European governments are rolling out digital identity wallets, which are to be used by citizens to access services, and to verify their age online. As reported by Follow the Money and Android Authority, there is a serious problem with this: these wallets rely on safety services of Google and Apple. These are known as Google Play Integrity API, and Apple’s Managed Device Attestation. Such safety services (known as “remote attestation”) are used to ensure that wallet apps run on hardware that is not tampered with. In this article we explain why the EU-wallet case is part of a bigger problem: by embedding these safety services in public infrastructure, Europe risks making society dependent on private companies while serving their corporate interests.

↫ Danny Lämmerhirt

Setting aside the age verification nonsense, the fact that some European government are tying their identification services to iOS and Google Android is absolutely bonkers, especially in this day and age. There’s endless talk about reducing European dependence on the American tech giants who seem all too eager to do roll over when the Trump regime so much as glances in their general direction, and yet, they seem to want to effectively force us citizens to use American tech products.

Essential online tools, like banking, government services, communication services, digital driver’s licenses, and more, should not require the use of iOS or Google Android.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 18:20

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 18:13

There’s a lot you can say about macOS, but one thing Apple used to be incredibly good at were making beautifully crafted, detailed icons. As with almost every other aspect of macOS, this deteriorated sharply over the years, with the recent macOS releases with Liquid Glass being an absolute low point. Not only have they become bland and featureless, Apple also started forcing every icons to have the exact same rounded-rectangle shape, making them even harder to distinguish from one another.

Rogue Amoeba, a company with a long history of developing applications with beautiful iconography, published a blog post pleading Apple to go back to proper icon design.

With last year’s release of MacOS 26 (Tahoe), Apple made a mess of app icons. In the first betas of MacOS 27 (Golden Gate), however, there are signs of a turnaround. We’re urging Apple to continue making improvements, by restoring the ability for MacOS app icons to have distinct shapes.

↫ Paul Kafasis at the Rogue Amoeba blog

I really hope Apple will turn its icon ship around.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 18:07

Parents and grandparents charged as police say case in Hamden not human trafficking but ‘intra-family situation’

Sixteen children were rescued from a dilapidated home in rural Ohio after being confined to just one room in “deplorable conditions” for much of the past four years, authorities said on Wednesday.

The children, who officials said are from the same family and were living in squalor with human waste all around, ranged in age from one and a half to 18 and included boys and girls. Some of them were unable to speak and one – an 18-year-old who was developmentally disabled – could not even spell her name.

Continue reading...

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 18:07

Prosecutors said members of the a gang targeted about 51 underage girls and women along LA’s Figueroa corridor

Ten people accused of facilitating a sex-trafficking operation that targeted about 51 underage girls and women have been arrested as California authorities conducted their latest operation to curb trafficking along the Figueroa corridor in Los Angeles, according to a Wednesday news release.

Prosecutors said on Wednesday that members and associates of the south Los Angeles-based gang the Hoovers acted as pimps, recruiting minors and women, some of whom were runaways or foster kids, with the “false promise” of a better life or with violence into sex work between February 2021 and June 2026.

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2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 18:04

Boy, 16, in hospital with gunshot wounds after incident in Alum Rock area

A teenage boy sustained “potentially life-threatening” gunshot wounds in a shooting near a mosque in Birmingham, police have said.

Officers were called to reports of an incident on Bowyer Road, near St Saviours Road in the Alum Rock area, shortly before 5.30pm on Wednesday.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 18:02

EDIT: Solution found - Once you connect to the board using the VESC app tap the little CAN in the lower right, give it a second to populate, and select the Thor301 from the menu that pops out.

ORIGINAL MESSAGE:

Anyone ever have the AppUI absent on the top tabs?

I am trying to connect an X7 but the VESC tool is not behaving at all like the setup tutorial says. It connects to the THOR / X7 controller but does not give the two notifications the setup guide says.

There is a Start Tab, then RT Data, BMS etc.

Anyone ever have this issue?

submitted by /u/Eegore1
[link] [comments]

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 18:00

Meta is reportedly developing its own cloud business that could sell access to its AI models and lease data-center computing capacity to other companies. The move would put Meta in direct competition with Amazon, Google, and SpaceX. Engadget reports: The cloud business could offer multiple services, according to [Bloomberg], like selling access to AI models run on Meta's infrastructure, or leasing the computing power of its data centers to other companies looking to train AI. Offering something akin to Amazon Web Services could help make back some of what Meta has already spent on its new bet. As part of its AI plans, the company has committed to investing $600 billion in the US by 2028. Meta has also already made more than a few expensive hires to build its AI superintelligence team. Meta Compute, the data center and AI-focused initiative Meta created in January, is currently developing the new cloud business, according to Bloomberg.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 17:54

Almost 60,000 buildings may have been damaged or destroyed in Venezuela after two powerful earthquakes last week, according to a NASA satellite assessment.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 17:53

Sony is bringing Modern Warfare 3, For the King 2 and more to all PS Plus subscribers in July.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 17:49

From controllers and gaming keyboards to headphones and consoles, here are the top gifts to surprise the gamer in your life.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 17:46

Ruling marks second time that Trump’s plan to restrict mail ballots across the US has suffered a setback in court

A federal ⁠judge blocked a proposed restriction on mail-in voting across the US, challenging a crackdown on elections ordered by Donald Trump.

Judge Emmet Sullivan of the US district court for the District of Columbia ruled that a US Postal Service (USPS) plan to deny ballots to voters in states that do not turn over their voter rolls to the federal government should not proceed.

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2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 17:30

Tariffs, inflation and changing consumer habits are reshaping how much Americans spend to tie the knot.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 17:25

Investigations are underway into possible fraudulent activity at some of these kinds of facilities across New York, CBS News has learned.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 17:15

The new survey comes amid a campaign for governments to keep kids off social media.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 17:09

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 17:02

A vulnerability in Apple's privacy-focused iCloud Plus feature allows attackers to discover users' real email addresses.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 17:00

BrianFagioli writes: Cloudflare announced new controls that give publishers more say over how AI companies access and use their content. Beginning September 15, new Cloudflare sites will allow traditional search indexing while blocking AI training and AI agent access on ad supported pages by default. The company is also expanding its monetization efforts with a Pay-Per-Use model that aims to compensate publishers when their content contributes to AI generated answers rather than simply being crawled. Cloudflare argues that publishers should not have to choose between being discoverable online and giving away their work for free to AI systems.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-01 17:00

This term, the US supreme court handed down decisions on issues ranging from voting rights to immigration and birthright citizenship, reshaping life for millions of people. Kai Wright speaks with Elie Mystal, justice correspondent for the Nation, about how the court got all its power in the first place, and why Mystal thinks court reforms to rein in that power aren’t just constitutional – they’re necessary.

Continue reading...

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 16:49

Free users will get just three hours a month of conversation focus, which amplifies the speech of the person you're talking to.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 16:44

It might not be much longer before gamers cannot find physical versions of new games.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 16:43

Plan safe indoor activities for the holiday weekend ahead. Heat indices could reach over 110 degrees in some areas.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 16:33

July 1, 2026 — A new strategic partnership has been announced between Lenovo and the University of Southampton to deliver next-generation high-performance computing (HPC) capabilities that will power advanced research and innovation.

Under a four-year framework agreement, Lenovo will serve as the University’s preferred supplier for HPC infrastructure, supporting its ambition to enhance research computing capabilities and re-establish its position within the global Top500 ranking of the world’s most powerful supercomputers.

The partnership builds on a long-standing relationship between Lenovo and Southampton spanning more than a decade and marks a renewed collaboration following a competitive tender process.

As part of the agreement, Lenovo has secured an initial order valued at approximately £7 million, with delivery planned over summer 2026. The new HPC system will significantly expand the University’s computational power, enabling researchers to accelerate discoveries across a wide range of disciplines.

“This partnership represents a major step forward in strengthening our research infrastructure,” said Professor Mark Spearing , University of Southampton Vice-President (Research and Enterprise). “These new HPC capabilities will play a vital role in enabling cutting-edge research and innovation, helping to raise the global profile of Southampton’s research community and compete at the highest international level.”

“As research demands continue to grow in scale and complexity, access to powerful, scalable computing is critical,” said Andy Rhodes, Managing Director, Lenovo UK & Ireland. “Lenovo’s latest HPC solutions, including next-generation GPU-accelerated systems, will enable the University of Southampton to tackle data-intensive workloads and accelerate breakthrough research. We are proud to support their ambition to further elevate their global research standing.”

The first phase of deployment will include Lenovo ThinkSystem SR675 V3 servers, equipped with NVIDIA H200 GPUs and NVLink technology, designed to support demanding AI and simulation workloads. A second phase is expected to introduce a next-generation cluster based on NVIDIA Grace Blackwell architecture with Lenovo ThinkSystem SC777 V4 Neptune Servers, further enhancing performance and scalability.

Together, these systems will provide the foundation for cutting-edge research, helping the University strengthen its global research profile and drive innovation across key scientific fields.

Beyond infrastructure, the partnership creates opportunities for deeper collaboration between Lenovo and the University of Southampton. This includes exploring initiatives to expand end-user computing capabilities, support researcher engagement, and promote adoption of new technologies across the academic community.


Source: University of Southampton

The post University of Southampton Selects Lenovo for Four-Year HPC Partnership appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 16:28

Yorgen Fenech, heir to property empire, on trial for alleged involvement in murder of journalist, which he denies

One of Malta’s wealthiest businessmen plotted to kill the investigative journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia, paying €150,000 (£130,000) for three hitmen to carry out the murder, a jury has heard.

Yorgen Fenech, the 44-year-old heir to a property empire that includes the Hilton Malta hotel and casino, is on trial for the 2017 murder.

Continue reading...

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 16:24

NEW CASTLE, Del., July 1, 2026 — FS, a trusted provider of ICT products and solutions, has launched its 800G OSFP/QSFP-DD ZR/ZR+ coherent optical module solution, delivering high-capacity optical connectivity for AI scale-across architectures and data center interconnect (DCI) networks. Featuring high transmission rates, high reliability, simplified operations, monitoring visibility, standardized packaging, and interoperability, the solution enables efficient and scalable optical connectivity for AI and cloud deployments.

As AI infrastructure expands beyond a single data center, inter-data-center traffic is growing rapidly, placing greater demands on network bandwidth, fiber efficiency, and operational scalability. To help customers address these evolving requirements, FS has introduced its 800G coherent optical module solution, providing a scalable optical transport platform for AI scale-across and DCI environments.

FS 800G ZR/ZR+ Coherent Modules: Built for High-Capacity and Reliable Optical Networks

FS’s 800G ZR/ZR+ coherent optical modules combine high-capacity coherent transmission, carrier-grade reliability, operational visibility, and broad interoperability in a pluggable form factor. Designed for modern optical transport networks, the solution helps customers simplify deployment, improve operational efficiency, and scale network infrastructure with greater flexibility.

High-capacity Coherent Transmission

Powered by a Marvell 5nm DSP and advanced modulation schemes, the modules support up to 800G transmission over distances of 120km and 500km over single-mode fiber, enabling flexible deployment across metro and regional networks.

Efficient Spectrum Utilization

Support for C-band and L-band operation improves fiber resource utilization and increases overall network capacity for AI and cloud traffic.

Carrier-grade Reliability and Interoperability

Compliant with OSFP and QSFP-DD MSA standards as well as 800ZR, OpenZR+, and OIF specifications, the modules ensure broad interoperability across multi-vendor environments. Open FEC further enhances transmission stability and reliability.

Simplified Operations and Visibility

With CMIS and C-CMIS support, the modules enable real-time monitoring, alarm reporting, and streamlined management to reduce operational complexity.

“The growth of AI and DCI traffic is driving greater demand for scalable and efficient optical transport. FS 800G coherent modules are designed to help customers simplify network expansion and scale network capacity more efficiently,” said Kyrie Zhang, Senior Technical Director at FS.

The FS 800G coherent optical module solution achieves a balanced combination of performance, efficiency, and interoperability. In future, FS will keep iterating on its products to meet the demands of high‑capacity, DCI, and long‑haul transmission.

About FS

FS Inc. is a trusted provider of ICT products and solutions to enterprise customers worldwide. Established in 2009, the company focuses on HPC, Data Center, Enterprise, Telecom, providing tailored product development and solution design based on professional customer needs. Leveraging dedicated R&D and testing teams, comprehensive technical service experts, a robust supply chain system, globalized warehousing centers, and convenient shopping platform, FS delivers a wide range of highly efficient customer-centric ICT products, solutions and services to global vertical industry and enterprise customers across ISP, telecom, retail, education, etc.


Source: FS

The post FS Launches 800G ZR/ZR+ Coherent Optics: High-Capacity, Reliable Connectivity for AI and DCI Networks appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 16:24

July 1, 2026 — An international team that included scientists from the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory used neutron scattering, X-ray diffraction and high-resolution digital modeling to discover a simpler, cheaper way to create a prized form of silicon not found in nature.

A team that included ORNL researchers found a simpler, cheaper way to synthesize R8, a rare form of silicon prized for energy storage. Credit: GS Jung/ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy

The results hold promise for energy storage and electronics production.

“This question has been a long-standing problem in materials science, and 10 years of research have gone just into this project,” said Stephan Irle, an ORNL senior computational scientist and co-author of the study published in Materials Today. “This method would achieve tremendous energy savings and should be highly scalable for industry.”

Silicon, the most abundant material on the planet after oxygen, offers efficient conductivity at low costs for various forms of batteries. R8, a rare form of silicon so far produced only under laboratory conditions, offers even greater flexibility and higher efficiency.

Because R8 doesn’t occur in nature, scientists previously produced it only by crushing crystalline silicon at extreme pressure — an expensive, complicated and time-consuming process.

The research team, led by Bianca Haberl, an associate professor of physics at Australian National University in Canberra and former staff scientist at ORNL’s Spallation Neutron Source, sought to find an alternate way. The answer lay in density matching, which occurs when materials align perfectly by density and naturally organize themselves.

“You could imagine it as autonomous building blocks that sort themselves out and come together into just the right pattern,” Irle said.

The team found amorphous silicon — a disordered, glassy version of the element that’s easier to produce due to its simpler structure — could be compressed at room temperature under pressures roughly 25 percent lower than traditional methods to reach the necessary density level, known as a medium-density amorphous state. As the amorphous silicon compresses, its jumbled structure realigns into the crystalline structure of R8.

The research team used neutron diffraction at SNS and X-ray diffraction at Argonne National Laboratory’s Advanced Photon Source to measure density-driven transformations in silicon in real time. The unique tools and capabilities of the SNS and APS, both DOE Office of Science user facilities, captured the necessary details of the process for the team to reproduce the transformation digitally.

The team ran simulations of the data on ORNL’s Compute and Data Environment for Science high-performance computing cluster to model various methods under a wide range of conditions in detail.

“We tried to figure out all the available approaches for modeling the R8 phases and screen for the best one,” said Gang Seob Jung, an ORNL research scientist and co-author of the study. “The modeling was key to demonstrating that what we observed was accurate and scientifically sound.”

The modeling showed the disordered nature of the amorphous silicon gave the material enough structural flexibility to bypass the rigid pathways followed by crystalline materials. That flexibility allowed the starting amorphous material to bypass the usual complex pathway through various metallic phases and take a direct shortcut to the desired R8 structure. The team demonstrated this density-matching principle worked not just for silicon but for germanium, a sister element used in fiber optics and other electronics systems.

“With further exploration, we may determine this method can be used for other important materials as well,” Irle said.

Besides Haberl, Irle and Jung, the research team included Malcolm Guthrie and Jamie Molaison of ORNL, Leonardus B. Bayu Aji of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Guoyin Shen of Argonne, and Jodie Bradby of ANU.

This research was supported by the DOE Office of Science’s Advanced Scientific Computing Research program, the National Nuclear Security Administration’s Office of Experimental Sciences, the National Science Foundation and the Australian Research Council. SNS and APS are DOE Office of Science user facilities.

Versions of this story were originally published by Argonne and ANU.

UT-Battelle manages ORNL for DOE’s Office of Science, the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States. DOE’s Office of Science is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, visit https://energy.gov/science.


Source: Matt Lakin, ORNL

The post ORNL: Researchers Use HPC and Neutron Science to Simplify R8 Silicon Production appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 16:11

Surging membership and pro-Palestinian activism reshape debate on how campaigning movement governs in office

Inside a Brooklyn industrial garage turned underground event venue, local leaders of the Democratic Socialists of America urged hundreds of mostly young people last month to avoid complacency. Sure, New York City had a democratic socialist representative in the US Congress, and just elected a democratic socialist mayor. But they had so much more to do.

“If we only elect Zohran, we only elect AOC, our project will have been a failure,” Gustavo Gordillo, co-chair of the city’s DSA chapter, told the assembled crowd. “Our ambitions are so much higher than just a position in government. We want to transform the world.”

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2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 16:09

Trump and US officials opted to keep USMCA alive on short leash of annual reviews rather than longer term renewal

Donald Trump has refused to renew the North American trade pact he once championed as his signature deal, opting instead to keep it alive on a short leash of annual reviews rather than committing to another 16 years.

Wednesday was the deadline built into the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) for the three countries to jointly decide its fate, which is set to expire in 2036.

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2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 16:06

Todd Blanche to target tourists and migrants despite such births accounting for less than 1% of US babies born yearly

A day after the US supreme court upheld the constitutional guarantee of birthright citizenship, the acting attorney general, Todd Blanche, has said federal prosecutors and law enforcement officers will focus on combating so-called “birth tourism” – the process of tourists, temporary visitors and undocumented immigrants traveling to the US and giving birth.

“There’s other things that [the Department if Homeland Security] can do, and the federal government can do in the visa process, and the application process, to try to minimize or limit the opportunity of folks coming here not to visit, and not to do what they’re saying they’re doing on the tourist visa, but just to have a baby that can then be a US citizen,” Blanche told reporters.

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-02 05:01

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for July 2, No. 1,117.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-02 05:01

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for July 2, No. 1,839.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-02 05:01

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for July 2 No. 851.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-02 05:01

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for July 2, No. 647.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 16:31

The United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement will remain in effect until it expires in 2036, unless the countries strike another deal to extend it.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 19:07

Here's a look at how events have unfolded in the Karen Read case.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 16:01

There's no shortage of big shows and movies this month on Hulu.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 16:00

AleRunner writes: The first fully synthetic cell ("SpudCell") has been created in the Department of Genetics at the University of Minnesota. Strictly speaking, it's described as a "cell-like system constructed entirely from known chemical components that can perform a complete cell cycle." It is able to replicate, but only for approximately five generations. The key advance is that the cell is "built entirely bottom-up from individually purified, non-living components," although it still contains material from E. coli bacteria. "PURE is a defined mixture of 36 purified enzymes from E. coli bacteria," including ribosomes, that provides the infrastructure for genetic replication. CNN has an article on the advance, including interview material with Professor Kate Adamala, who led the research. "I know the full ingredient list of the cell. I know exactly what chemicals, what molecules, at what concentrations," she said. "It is fully defined, which means we can engineer it." "Humans did not create life," notes an anonymous Slashdot reader. "Researchers call it a constructed cell, not 'life created in the lab' but a 'genuine milestone on the road toward that question.' It lacks full autonomy (needs feeding, no independent evolution)." Special thanks to Slashdot readers kemosabi and AleRunner for submitting the story and additional sources, including reports from The New York Times and The Guardian, as well as information from the University of Minnesota Twin Cities.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 15:42

SEOUL, South Korea, July 1, 2026 — Classiq, a global leader in quantum computing software, announced today that it has signed a significant commercial agreement with quantum-AI datacenter specialist QAI Co., Ltd. to provide nation’s first local Quantum-as-a-Service offering in Korea.

The integrated offering combines Classiq’s enterprise-grade quantum software engineering platform with QAI’s domestic AI datacenter infrastructure and commercialization capabilities, enabling Korean enterprises, public institutions and research organizations to easily evaluate, develop, validate, test and execute quantum computing applications across a variety of quantum computing hardware. The joint QaaS business model will be tailored to Korean users and market needs, accelerating Korean quantum computing innovation.

Classiq’s SOC 2-accredited software platform automatically transforms high-level functional models into optimized, hardware-executable quantum programs that are portable across various hardware environments. Through this partnership, Classiq and QAI aim to expand access to advanced quantum software and cloud-based quantum resources in Korea, supporting customers as they apply quantum computing in real-world business and research environments.

By bringing together scalable quantum software innovation and QAI’s domestic infrastructure, the partnership creates an integrated pathway from quantum application ideation to execution. The companies will also explore local infrastructure options to address the stringent data sovereignty and security requirements of Korean public institutions and major enterprises, helping establish a sovereignty-focused quantum cloud service model.

QAI will launch and operate the QaaS business in Korea under its own brand and will be responsible for customer acquisition, business development, service operations and local partnership expansion. Classiq will support service enhancement and the establishment of a technical support framework aligned with the needs of Korean users, leveraging its quantum development platform and technical expertise.

The companies will also pursue mid-term and long-term commercialization roadmaps, including joint marketing, engineer enablement, customer education programs and technical support infrastructure to support successful market entry and adoption.

“Quantum computing will not flourish through hardware access alone. Combining software that allows enterprises, researchers and public institutions to design, test and scale quantum applications in a practical way is a catalyst for progress and innovation,” said Nir Minerbi, CEO and co-founder of Classiq. “Our offering with QAI is an important step toward making advanced quantum software and cutting-edge quantum resources seamlessly accessible in Korea, supporting a Korean QaaS offering that reflects the market’s infrastructure, security and adoption needs.”

“This partnership is meaningful in that it combines a global quantum computing software platform with QAI’s infrastructure and commercialization capabilities to establish the foundation for a quantum cloud service optimized for the Korean market,” said Seman Im, CEO of QAI. “We will accelerate the advancement of the service model and market expansion so that major Korean institutions and enterprises can more realistically evaluate quantum computing and apply it in practical business settings.”

About Classiq

Classiq is the leading quantum computing software company, providing the technology that makes it practical for enterprises and researchers to access and harness the power of quantum computing. Classiq’s agentic quantum software engineering platform enables an enterprise-grade workflow that transforms high-level functional models into optimized, hardware-ready quantum circuits automatically. This enables teams to develop algorithms faster, optimize them for cost and performance, and make quantum applications usable sooner on any quantum computer, all without requiring deep hardware expertise.


Source: Classiq

The post Classiq and QAI Launch Quantum Cloud Offering in Korea appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 15:37

Many seabirds are starving to death as a marine heat wave lingers off California and fish seek deeper, cooler waters

Within minutes of walking on a San Diego beach, marine ornithologist Tammy Russell found the feathered carcasses – one after another.

Some were mixed in with washed up kelp. Others were under rocks.

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 15:28

Hundreds watched England in first round of knockout stages at Prospect Building in Bristol

Sisters Angela and Christine hugged, danced and shed a tear or two at the final whistle as England squeezed past the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

“That was brilliant,” said Christine, a 51-year-old lifeguard. “Watching England is exhausting, emotional, often heart-breaking but we love it. You’ve got to relish the ups and downs.”

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 15:27

A CD account has been especially worth opening in recent years, but especially so this July. Here's why.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 15:17

Panel proses shared framework for responsible AI development as adoption grows unevenly across world

A new United Nations report warns that the development of artificial intelligence may exacerbate global inequality and proposes a shared framework for how to responsibly develop AI, as adoption and investment into the technology accelerates unevenly across the world.

“The more AI advances without shared rules, the less say governments and people will have in the outcome,” said António Guterres, the UN secretary general, at a press conference on Wednesday. “Our message to governments is simple: do not wait … the science is here. We can no longer say we did not know what we do.”

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 15:15

Catch these titles -- plus a new season of Batman: Caped Crusader and much more -- this month.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 15:06

Interest earnings on a CD account of this size will be substantial. Here's what savers need to know right now.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 15:04

July 1, 2026 — Quantum technology is advancing faster than most government planning cycles anticipate. Fault-tolerant quantum computers, machines capable of solving problems beyond the reach of classical supercomputers, now have a clear engineering path and a delivery timeline measured in months, not decades. The first applications will be in scientific computing workloads with deep relevance to federal agency missions, from energy research to materials science to national security. And as quantum hardware improves, so does the urgency of protecting today’s encrypted data from tomorrow’s quantum-enabled attacks, a migration that every agency will need to execute under hard deadlines.

Credit: Shutterstock

Last week, the White House reinforced that urgency with two Executive Orders that represent the most significant federal commitment to quantum technologies in a generation. The first, Ushering in the Next Frontier of Quantum Innovation, directs a whole-of-government approach to accelerate deployment and commercialization of quantum computing, sensing, and networking, and it establishes the Quantum Computer for Application Development and Discovery Science (QC-ADDS) Effort to deliver a quantum computer at the scale needed for scientific discovery to a Department of Energy (DOE) facility. The second, Securing the Nation Against Advanced Cryptographic Attacks, mandates that all federal high-value assets and high-impact systems transition to (National Institute of Standards and Technology) NIST-approved post-quantum cryptography (PQC) by the end of 2030 for key establishment and 2031 for digital signatures.

This week, DOE acted on that mandate, launching the Quantum Genesis initiative and the Q Competition to develop and deploy the world’s first scientifically relevant fault-tolerant quantum computing systems by 2028. The initiative will establish a National Quantum Supercomputing User Facility integrated with DOE’s exascale high performance computing (HPC), AI, and networking infrastructure.

Amazon Web Services (AWS) has been building toward this moment for years, on both sides of the quantum equation. On the computing side, AWS announced this month its expanded strategic collaboration with QuEra Computing to bring the first fault-tolerant quantum computers to the cloud through Amazon Braket, with scientifically relevant applications starting in 2028. On the security side, AWS security experts have been contributing to post-quantum cryptography research and standards-setting efforts for years, including the NIST standards that now underpin the federal PQC mandate. AWS has a well-defined migration plan already in execution across its infrastructure in alignment with the 2030 and 2031 deadlines outlined in the Executive Order. AWS has already achieved FIPS 140-3 validation for AWS-LC, the cryptographic library deployed across its infrastructure, which means agencies running workloads on AWS are already operating on a PQC-ready cryptographic foundation without needing to procure or deploy separate solutions.

This post will explain a little more about why both quantum computing and post-quantum cryptography matter for federal missions, and what agency leaders should be doing now.

The Computing Opportunity: From Experiments to Mission Applications

Quantum error correction has advanced rapidly. Research teams have demonstrated the core building blocks of fault-tolerant computation: logical qubits that outperform their physical components, real-time error correction at scale, and coherent operation of thousands of qubits in a single system. Based on these advances, AWS and QuEra are bringing Libra, a megaquop-scale device capable of executing one million quantum operations over hundreds of logical qubits, to Amazon Braket customers by 2028.

This matters for federal missions because the problems it can address are ones where classical supercomputers hit fundamental limits. At the megaquop scale, with 250 logical qubits and up to 100,000 hard fault-tolerant operations, researchers will be able to generate scientifically meaningful data that complements and validates what classical methods produce, reducing uncertainty and strengthening scientific conclusions in domains where classical simulations require approximations that can’t be rigorously verified today.

The specific applications are directly aligned to DOE and national security priorities:

  • Quantum chemistry and energy science: Simulating the molecular processes behind next-generation solar cells and industrial nitrogen fixation, where classical methods are forced to make approximations they can’t verify. Quantum algorithms provide rigorous validation that no classical approach can deliver.
  • Materials science: Understanding the behavior of strongly correlated materials relevant to high-temperature superconductivity, where classical computers can’t accurately model the quantum interactions that drive the physics.
  • High-energy physics: Simulating the real-time dynamics of fundamental forces, a class of problems that is exponentially hard for classical supercomputers and directly relevant to the understanding of the universe at its most basic level.
  • Nuclear physics: Validating the theoretical models used to predict nuclear behavior, where classical simulations rely on assumptions that currently can’t be independently confirmed.

Each of these represents a specific computational bottleneck where the physics of the problem aligns with the capabilities of the hardware being delivered, and where DOE researchers and their national laboratory teams have been co-designing applications with AWS and QuEra for years. And although DOE science missions represent the earliest applications, the same class of computational advantage extends across the federal government: drug discovery and genomics at National Institutes of Health (NIH), logistics and supply chain optimization at the Department of War, and financial risk modeling at Treasury. As fault-tolerant systems scale, the set of agencies with mission-relevant quantum workloads will grow rapidly.

The Executive Order makes the federal intent explicit: the United States must move quickly beyond quantum research and into deployment of systems capable of scientifically relevant computation. The order directs the Department of War to establish activities and programs to advance readiness for national security applications of quantum computing and calls on the Department of Energy to define technical specifications for transformative scientific applications within 90 days. DOE’s Quantum Genesis initiative and Q Competition define exactly what “scientifically relevant” means: fault-tolerant systems with hundreds of logical qubits, targeting applications in chemistry, materials science, plasma physics, and high-energy physics, delivered by 2028. The system AWS and QuEra are building matches those targets directly, with 250 logical qubits, up to 100,000 hard fault-tolerant operations, and cloud-native integration with classical HPC at scale.

Amazon Braket brings fault-tolerant quantum computing directly to the cloud, integrated with the classical HPC and AI infrastructure agencies already use. This is a critical point: fault-tolerant quantum workloads are inherently hybrid, requiring tight coordination between quantum processors and large-scale classical compute for preprocessing, error decoding, and postprocessing at every step. Braket delivers this as a single environment, inherently connected to AWS elastic HPC resources, GPU-accelerated compute, and workflow orchestration, so agencies can build end-to-end quantum-classical pipelines without standing up separate infrastructure or managing a second security posture.

“This is a very special moment. For the first time, a dream of realizing useful, fault-tolerant quantum computers is in our direct line of sight,” said Prof. Mikhail Lukin, Chief Science Officer, QuEra Computing. “Designed to enable quantum computation at an unprecedented scale, these systems should realize truly unique applications. We are proud to significantly expand our collaboration with AWS to bring these unique capabilities to the broader community of scientific users.”

The Security Imperative: Post-Quantum Cryptography Can’t Wait

Adversaries can harvest internet traffic today with the intent to decrypt it when quantum computers mature. This makes it urgent to upgrade encryption for data in transit that must remain confidential for 10-plus years. Similarly, long-lived devices such as industrial controllers, vehicles, and satellites that establish their cryptographic roots of trust at manufacture and often can’t be updated post-deployment need quantum-resistant roots of trust starting now. As quantum computing continues to advance, the timeline to a device capable of breaking today’s public-key cryptography is also compressing, and agencies can’t afford to assume that timeline is distant.

The new Executive Order on cryptographic security requires every agency to designate a PQC migration lead within 30 days. It mandates transition of all high-value assets and high-impact systems to NIST-approved PQC algorithms on hard deadlines. It directs the Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council (FAR) Council to amend acquisition regulations to require contractor compliance by 2030. Global regulators beyond the U.S. have set hard deadlines for quantum-resistant confidentiality as early as 2027 and quantum-resistant authentication as early as 2029, making this a worldwide migration, not merely a federal one.

AWS has been leading this migration since before the standards were finalized. AWS has been active in the development and deployment of PQC since 2013. AWS employees contributed to the three new FIPS standards (ML-KEM, ML-DSA, and SLH-DSA) published by NIST in August 2024. The AWS open source cryptographic library, AWS-LC, already implements these algorithms. AWS’s TLS implementation, s2n-tls and s2n-quic, has supported post-quantum key exchange since 2019.

AWS’s migration plan is structured across four workstreams:

  • Inventory and standards development: Completing cryptographic inventory, defining how PQC integrates into specific applications and protocols
  • PQC on public endpoints: Deploying ML-KEM across all AWS service endpoints to protect long-term confidentiality of data in transit
  • Long-lived roots of trust: Delivering ML-DSA across key services to enable secure code, document, and firmware signing
  • Session authentication: Migrating to PQC digital signatures for server and client certificate validation

For government customers, this means the cloud infrastructure you run on is already preparing for the post-quantum era, providing a foundation your agency’s migration plan can build on. AWS’s goal is to deliver PQC in alignment with secure-by-default principles: transparent use, imperceptible performance impact, and minimal configuration required. A proactive and well-scoped migration strategy makes these upgrades a strategic decision rather than a deadline-driven fire drill, and organizations running on modern cloud services are better positioned than ever to migrate faster with least operational impact. AWS offers no-cost consultations to help agencies get started on PQC plans for legacy and on-premises workloads.

AWS Is Ready to Support Your Mission

Quantum computing and quantum security are deeply connected, and agencies that treat them with equal mission priority will be the ones best positioned to lead.

AWS is prepared to meet agencies on both. Amazon Braket gives teams access to quantum hardware today, with managed development environments, leading software frameworks, and direct integration with AWS HPC and AI infrastructure, so they can build skills and co-design applications now rather than starting from zero when fault-tolerant systems arrive. On the security side, AWS open source cryptographic libraries already implement NIST-standardized PQC algorithms, AWS Key Management Service (AWS KMS) and AWS Private Certificate Authority support the new quantum-resistant signing algorithms, and AWS security specialists are working with federal customers to map migration plans grounded in how workloads are deployed. AWS has been running this model with national laboratories, defense research organizations, and intelligence community collaborators for years.

Quantum matters to your mission. The question is whether you’re moving at the speed the moment demands.


Source: David Appel, AWS

The post AWS Highlights Quantum Computing and PQC Readiness for US Federal Agencies appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 15:02

We’d like to find out how Americans feel about Donald Trump’s $2.2bn earnings since returning to the White House

Donald Trump has earned more than $1bn from his crypto businesses since returning to the White House, according to recent financial disclosures.

According to a 927-page document released on Tuesday by the US Office of Government Ethics, in all the US president made more than $2.2bn last year, benefiting from a vast global network of businesses and investments.

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 15:00

Brennan is seeking a court order to force the preservation of records in the investigations targeting him. His attorneys say he's being "vindictively singled out for investigation."

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 15:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Reddit will start requiring people to be logged into Reddit to use old.reddit.com. The new requirement will take effect "over the next month," a Reddit employee going by the username boat-botany announced on the social media platform today. The person claimed that the change is part of an ongoing effort to "tighten how automated systems access Reddit." The Reddit employee wrote: "Old Reddit's logged-out experience is a significant source of abusive scraping and automated traffic on the platform. It's also an important interface for many long-time mods and Redditors. To strike the right balance between preserving your access to Old Reddit while preventing abusive scraping and automated traffic, over the next month we will start requiring everyone to log in." In a follow-up comment, boat-botany defined abusive behavior as that which violates Reddit's rule prohibiting activity that interferes with the platform's "normal use" or that "create[s] programs or applications" that break Reddit's (controversial) API rules. "By logging in, we get a lot more signal that allows us to detect whether an account is breaking the rules, and then we can block that traffic or enforce those accounts," boat-botany said. Asked why boat-botany scrapes New Reddit less frequently than Old Reddit, the Reddit employee pointed to another commenter's explanation. "[T]he shape of malicious traffic is always changing," the user, Nestramutat, wrote. "It's going to be a constant cat and mouse game[.] As you ban one method, a new one gets developed. It's easy to see abusive traffic in hindsight, but it's harder to pre-emptively block it. Given that they're claiming Old Reddit doesn't have the modern security stack, this is likely proving to be an even greater challenge." Nestramutat said that the login requirement will add a barrier against threat actors. "You're also now attaching an account ID to every malicious request, plus account creation is only available on New Reddit (with the enhanced security stack)." As for how long Old Reddit will exist, boat-botany left the door open for its retirement. "We can't promise it will be around forever, but [Reddit CEO Steve Huffman] himself has said we'll keep supporting it while folks are still using it," boat-botany wrote. "That said, it doesn't have the same modern security tech stack reddit.com has, so we need to tighten security on old reddit to keep it viable."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 14:59

If you have a Sega Mega Drive, you obviously want to run Linux on it. That’s something you can do now. You do need to have an EverDrive, but don’t worry, the port in question contains a custom fork of Qemu for those of us that don’t.

I don’t know what else to say, other than I wonder why nobody did this sooner.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 14:56

With the much-anticipated release of Grand Theft Auto VI only available as download, Sony is following suit

Sony said on Wednesday that it would stop releasing new video games for the PlayStation console on disc in January 2028 following a shift in consumer preferences.

“Following this date, new games will be available on PlayStation Store and at retailers in digital formats only,” the company said on its official PlayStation blog.

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2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 14:52

Judge hands down 50-year sentence to defendant Ines Soto, whose wife Elizabeth was sentenced to same prison term

Seven more people were sentenced to prison Wednesday over a shooting outside a Texas immigration detention center that wounded a police officer and has left many protesters facing decades behind bars.

All but one of the defendants sentenced in Fort Worth courtrooms pleaded guilty to charges related to the shooting outside the Prairieland detention center near Dallas last 4 July. They each were sentenced to between nearly two and 15 years in prison.

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 14:49
  • Three of the victims died from suffocation

  • More than a million people gathered in Mexico City

Four people died, three ⁠from suffocation, as thousands of fans crowded Mexico City streets during World Cup celebrations, the capital’s health secretariat ⁠said in the early ⁠hours ​of Wednesday.

The deaths occurred near the Angel of Independence landmark, where thousands of fans had gathered to ⁠celebrate Mexico’s 2-0 victory over Ecuador in the last 32.

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 14:38

Start tuning and serving AI models on a single DGX Spark with ready-made templates, then scale the same workflows to thousands of GPUs without a rebuild

RENO, Nev., July 1, 2026 — CIQ, the enterprise software company behind Rocky Linux and the Fuzzball AI and HPC orchestration platform, has announced that its Fuzzball platform now delivers a production-ready AI compute and inference environment for the NVIDIA DGX Spark stack. AI teams get one consistent environment to develop, tune and deploy AI workloads on infrastructure they own and control. That environment runs the same way from a single Spark system to large GPU clusters and data-center infrastructure, with no rebuild as compute grows. NVIDIA DGX Spark is the first supported platform, with additional platforms planned.

The challenge teams now face is that before any model reaches production, AI teams must spend months assembling storage, container registries, schedulers, inference servers and deployment pipelines by hand. That assembly restarts every time the underlying compute changes, turning every infrastructure upgrade into a project that delays workload deployment and monetization.

Fuzzball replaces this with a ready-to-run AI compute and inference environment, designed specifically for private, local inference on DGX Spark. For organizations building sovereign AI workloads where data cannot leave the premises, that means a path from private model tuning to production inference that maintains control of the infrastructure underneath it. The time between a model idea and a running inference service compresses from months to days.

“Fuzzball is the Kubernetes of performance-intensive computing, and it is what AI teams have needed to truly own their infrastructure. The hard part of AI has never been the model. It has been operating that model at scale without rebuilding everything underneath it every time compute changes, and most teams spend months on that problem before a single workload reaches production. Fuzzball ends that. With hundreds of built-in workflow templates, a single DGX Spark becomes a complete environment for AI development, testing and validation from day one, and those same workflows run unchanged across thousands of systems and GPUs. CIQ stands for controlling intelligence. Fuzzball is how teams actually do it,” said Gregory Kurtzer, CEO and founder of CIQ and founder of Rocky Linux.

With Fuzzball, a single DGX Spark becomes a fully operational AI development and deployment environment from day one, with a direct path to larger infrastructure when the project demands it. Multiple DGX Spark systems can work together under a common Fuzzball environment, giving small teams a practical way to expand local compute capacity incrementally. When workloads grow beyond local capacity, the same containers, model assets and workflow definitions seamlessly move onto larger NVIDIA GPU deployments allowing you to scale from NVIDIA DGX Spark to NVIDIA GB300 NVL72 without changes to the application, Fuzzball orchestration model, or Fuzzball deployment process.

For AI teams and HPC teams that have historically managed separate toolchains, Fuzzball eliminates the operational split that slows AI from experimentation to production across the enterprise. Fuzzball bridges local DGX Spark systems and existing HPC clusters with cloud capacity and large GPU infrastructure including NVIDIA GPU systems, all under a single operational model. The result is a new generation of accelerated computing where job-based orchestration, workflow portability, containerized execution and production inference work together.

“Organizations in regulated industries have had to choose between moving AI to production and keeping data on infrastructure they control. That has never been an acceptable tradeoff. Fuzzball removes it. Teams can tune models privately on DGX Spark, operationalize those models as production inference services and expand onto larger controlled infrastructure without changing the environment underneath their work. For sovereign AI to be practical it has to run the same way at every compute tier, and that is exactly what Fuzzball on DGX Spark delivers. DGX Spark is the first platform this runs on, and it will not be the last,” said Bjorn Hovland, president of CIQ.

To see Fuzzball in action, join CIQ’s upcoming webinar, “How to deploy your own LLM and take it to production with Fuzzball” on Thursday, July 16, 2026 at 12pm PDT / 3pm EDT. Register at https://events.ciq.com/fuzzball-inferencing-ai-workload.

About CIQ

CIQ is the founding support and services partner for Rocky Linux and a leading provider of Enterprise Linux infrastructure. CIQ delivers commercially supported Linux offerings, high-performance computing solutions, and AI infrastructure to enterprises, government agencies, research institutions and supercomputing centers worldwide. CIQ’s products include the Rocky Linux from CIQ (RLC Pro) family of operating systems, Ascender Pro for IT automation, Fuzzball job-based container orchestration, Warewulf cluster provisioning and Apptainer, the leading container system for high-performance computing. For more information, visit ciq.com.


Source: CIQ

The post CIQ Delivers Ready-To-Run AI Development and Inference Environment with Latest Fuzzball Capability appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 14:30

Powered by Broadcom’s Tomahawk 6 ASIC, the new 1.6 Tbps platforms maximize the performance of very large AI clusters with hundreds of thousands of XPUs

RA’ANANA, Israel, July 1, 2026 — DriveNets, a leader in large-scale networking, today announced the expansion of its AI Fabric portfolio, introducing DriveNets 2600SL and 2601S, networking platforms designed for large-scale AI infrastructures with hundreds of thousands of XPUs. These high-performance platforms are based on Broadcom’s Tomahawk 6 (TH6) ASIC with a total capacity of 102.4Tbps, across 64 ports of 1.6Tbps – which industry analysts expect to make up the majority of new AI ports deployed by 2027.

The platforms will ship in Q3 2026, in air-cooled (DriveNets 2601S) and liquid-cooled (DriveNets 2600SL) configurations to support diverse data center environments. Unlike solutions from other vendors, DriveNets 2600SL delivers a true 100% liquid-cooled design, ensuring consistent thermal efficiency across the entire system to maximize power efficiency.

“The most expensive idle asset in the world today is an XPU waiting on the network,” said DriveNets co-founder and CEO Ido Susan. “The new additions to our AI portfolio deliver industry-leading performance at massive cluster scale and let our customers maximize infrastructure utilization and power efficiency on any AI accelerator. These capabilities will only become more critical as the industry moves to Heterogeneous AI architectures.”

Maximized Performance and Economics

The new platform extends DriveNets’ AI Fabric portfolio supporting scale-up, scale-out, scale-across, and integrated front-end and storage networking at rack-scale performance and high reliability for massive cluster sizes. The platforms support the most demanding performance and scale requirements with flexible radix (64x1600Gbps, 128x800Gbps or 256x400Gbps, and 512x200Gbps) and low latency.

The new platforms:

  • Support both current and next-generation XPU data rates and clusters – utilizing 1.6Tbps or 2x800Gbps NIC connectivity, via various network architectures (2-level fat tree, 3-level fat tree, and 2-level fat tree multi-plane), enabling hundreds to hundreds of thousands of XPUs in a cluster deployment.
  • Provide high-performance alternative on par with a single-vendor solution, at a lower cost – DriveNets’ AI Fabric portfolio enables open, multi-vendor AI clusters to achieve performance comparable to single-vendor clusters while reducing infrastructure costs.
  • Improve token economics – DriveNets’ solution provides full-stack performance optimizations across the entire AI cluster, including Network Interface Card (NIC) drivers, kernel, and Collective Communications Library (CCL) optimizations, as well as hardware efficiency (due to the high capacity and radix fewer platforms are needed).
  • Address a wide range of AI use cases – DriveNets’ AI solutions address a wide set of AI use cases, including training and inference, and for customers ranging from hyperscalers and foundation model developers to NeoCloud providers and enterprises.

“As AI systems scale to hundreds of thousands of XPUs, the network fabric has become a critical factor in AI performance, infrastructure utilization, and overall token economics,” said Charlie Kawwas, President, Semiconductor Solutions Group, Broadcom. “Broadcom’s Tomahawk 6 silicon, paired with DriveNets’ high-performance AI Fabric, delivers unprecedented performance and reliability at massive cluster scale. This collaboration reflects how open Ethernet is becoming the foundation of the next-generation AI data center.”

Performance Optimization Tools and Services

The software running on the new platforms benefits from full-stack optimization that fine-tunes network performance end-to-end, from the NIC through drivers, kernel and Collective Communications Library (CCL) optimizations, up to the network protocols. This tightly integrated stack is complemented by the DriveNets AI Cluster Orchestrator which manages the entire cluster lifecycle, including provisioning, benchmarking, and Day-N operations at scale. It enables fast and efficient deployment with built-in performance validation and tuning. In addition, DriveNets Infrastructure Services provides expert professional services, including cluster bring-up and advanced software optimization services, ensuring each deployment reaches optimal performance quickly and reliably.

“What DriveNets is delivering reinforces what we’re already seeing in the market: Ethernet is the dominant fabric for AI infrastructure across scale-out, scale-across, and increasingly scale-up, overtaking the proprietary alternatives that came before it,” said Alan Weckel, Founder and Technology Analyst, 650 Group. “At the same time, the rack itself is changing fast: liquid cooling, tremendous AI bandwidth, and a new class of high-performance systems. This is no longer an incremental networking opportunity — it’s a brand-new market that didn’t exist two years ago and is now heading toward a TAM of more than $100 billion.”

About DriveNets

DriveNets is a leader in large-scale networking solutions for AI infrastructure and service providers. The company pioneered a disaggregated networking architecture that transforms the economics of large-scale networks while maximizing performance, utilization, and operational efficiency. Its high-performance AI fabric maximizes XPU utilization and accelerates deployments by optimizing the AI stack end-to-end, resulting in higher tokens-per-second and lower cost-per-token. DriveNets’ solutions power production networks for global tier-1 operators like AT&T and Comcast, and scale multi-vendor AI infrastructures at foundation model labs, NeoClouds, and enterprises.


Source: DriveNets

The post DriveNets Extends AI Networking Portfolio with High-Capacity AI Fabric Platforms appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 14:27

Jury also finds Riad Bouchaker guilty of assaulting two other children and a childcare worker in 2023 stabbings

A man has been found guilty of attempting to murder three children during a stabbing attack in Dublin in 2023, a crime that horrified Ireland and triggered a riot in the capital.

A jury at the central criminal court on Wednesday also found Riad Bouchaker, 52, guilty of assault causing serious harm to a childcare worker, Leanne Flynn, and of assaulting two other children and a teenager.

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 14:19

Proposed development of protected shorelines and wildlife zones violates EU environmental policy, says MEP

MEPs have warned Albania that EU accession talks are at risk if the government does not “change course” over plans for a luxury resort backed by Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner.

Tineke Strik, the Dutch MEP heading a European parliament fact-finding mission to the Balkan nation, said Albania’s leadership was “playing with fire” by pursuing the €1.4bn (£1.2bn) real-estate venture that would, she said, wreak havoc on virgin coastline.

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 14:09

Our shopping experts track the biggest discounts and send the best finds directly to your phone before they're gone.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 14:04

Supreme court rulings, and revelations of the president’s enrichment since his return to office, show that he has turned back the clock

Donald Trump is not known for his reverence for the US constitution. But in his second term, he is doubling down on his claim from the first: that the text grants him “the right to do whatever I want as president”.

This is, to put it mildly, an extremely unusual interpretation of article 2. But it is the thread that draws together the headlines dominating recent days: a spate of supreme court rulings, mostly to his benefit, and the revelation that he has raked in $2bn since returning to office, half of it from cryptocurrencies.

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.

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 14:02

Labour leader-in-waiting wants to close loophole preventing deportation of sex offender

Andy Burnham will explore “all possible options”, if he becomes prime minister, to close a legal loophole that prevented the deportation of a “vile” Rochdale grooming gang leader.

In his first significant intervention as Labour leader-in-waiting, Burnham said nothing would be “off the table” in the case of Shabir Ahmed, 73, who is expected to be released from prison on Thursday.

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 14:01

The helicopter, which was assigned to the USS George H.W. Bush, is not believed to have been taken down by hostile action, the Navy said.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 14:00

Longtime Slashdot reader AmiMoJo shares a report from the BBC: New PlayStation games will no longer be released on discs from January 2028, the gaming giant has announced. Sony said in a blog post new games would still be able to be bought in shops, but they would come with a digital code. It comes just days after Rockstar announced the hotly-anticipated Grand Theft Auto VI would similarly launch without a physical disc. It marks a significant moment for the gaming industry, which has in recent years begun to rely more and more on digital distribution. Sony said the move came "as consumer preferences and the broader entertainment industry continue to shift away from physical discs to digital." "This is a natural direction for Sony Interactive Entertainment to adapt to consumer trends as the general preference for digital media significantly outpaces physical discs," it added. [...] PlayStation said the move would have no impact on games which are already released, or would be released before January 2028.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 13:57

More than 1,000 grand jury presentations are under review after charges were dismissed in the "Broadview Six" case​ due to grand jury abuses and prosecutorial misconduct, Chicago's top federal prosecutor said.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 13:53

With the next Federal Reserve meeting looming at the end of July, borrowers may want to make these three moves now.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 13:32

Get the right standing desk for your space and health.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 13:31

Trump and Republican states are reviving this archaic death penalty method, and lawyers say for one man killed by gunfire, the process went very wrong. Guardian US reporter Sam Levin breaks down how we got here and speaks to advocates raising alarms

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 13:23

A federal judge rejected Meta's bid to dismiss claims from 29 state attorneys general alleging that Facebook and Instagram were designed to addict children while concealing the harms. The judge found significant factual disputes that must be decided at trial. They also ruled that Meta failed to comply with federal parental notice and consent requirements for children under 13, "and granted summary judgement to the states on that issue," reports Reuters. From the report: In a separate statement, California Attorney General Rob Bonta called the decision a "critical win" in holding Meta accountable for fueling a mental health crisis among American children. Gonzalez Rogers also oversees related multidistrict litigation by more than 2,600 individuals, school districts and local governments over whether social media platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, Google and YouTube, Snapchat and TikTok addict children. The states said research has shown that children's use of Facebook and Instagram could lead to depression, anxiety, insomnia, interference with education and daily life, and self-harm including suicide. Meta countered that the attorneys general had no evidence it misled consumers about its platforms' alleged addictiveness, including in congressional testimony by Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg. The Menlo Park, California-based company said this was because "social media addiction" is not an established psychiatric condition, and therefore statements that its platforms are not addictive could not be false. Meta also said it didn't violate the children's online privacy law because it directed Facebook and Instagram to a general audience, not just children under age 13. In a 38-page decision, Gonzalez Rogers found material factual disputes over whether Meta's social media platforms are addictive, whether Meta falsely denied it designed them that way, and whether it "partially" directed the platforms at children. "The AGs present a reasonable interpretation of [Meta's] statements that Facebook and Instagram are not designed in ways that cause teens to compulsively use the platforms to their detriment," the judge wrote. "To the extent plaintiffs' evidence shows that the platforms are in fact designed to do just that, a jury could reasonably find the statements were untrue to a reasonable person," she added. A trial over California, Colorado, Kentucky and New Jersey's claims against Meta is scheduled for August 18, court records show. Further reading: Will Social Media Change After YouTube and Meta's Court Defeat?

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 13:18

Paying down debt matters, but pausing retirement contributions to do so may not be the smartest financial move.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 13:12

Upgrade your office with the best desk of 2026.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 13:10

Squeaking at higher speeds and knocking on sharp
Right turns? Would this be the bearings?

submitted by /u/Sreamgnome
[link] [comments]

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 13:08

It's a major shift toward digital distribution.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 13:06

Despite its understated design and single-motor setup, the VMAX VX2 Hub delivers acceleration and real-world performance that rival those of many dual-motor scooters, all while remaining surprisingly practical for everyday commuting.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 13:03

Federal agents took three people into custody at immigration courts in New York City over the last week in what lawyers said appears to be the first grave violations of two orders by federal judges barring such arrests.

On Thursday, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrested an Ecuadorian man at a court at 26 Federal Plaza and a man from the Dominican Republic at another court at 290 Broadway, both in Lower Manhattan. The arrests continued on Monday, when ICE agents detained a third man, originally from Guatemala, at 290 Broadway.

In legal filings challenging the detentions of the men taken Thursday, advocates with the nonprofit Make the Road New York accused ICE of not only violating their clients’ right to due process, but also of brazenly flouting a federal court order.

The judge’s order barred ICE from making arrests at Manhattan immigration courts in all but a narrow handful of exceptions, while a similar ruling issued on June 23 from a federal court in California applies nationwide.

By detaining the men at court on Thursday, ICE appears to be directly contravening the New York order without yet providing a justification, according to Rep. Dan Goldman, D-N.Y.

“ICE continues to flagrantly violate the law by arresting immigrants who are attending their mandatory court hearings, despite a court order mandating an end to courthouse arrests,” Goldman said in a statement to The Intercept, adding that his office was working to get the men released.

ICE appears to be acting outside the law, according to Murad Awawdeh, the head of the advocacy group New York Immigration Coalition.

“We’re witnessing ICE, yet again, operate in a lawless and rogue fashion and not following court orders.”

“We’re witnessing ICE, yet again, operate in a lawless and rogue fashion and not following court orders,” Awawdeh said. “We’re supposedly a nation under the rule of law, and our judicial branch has said that this agency must stop engaging in this lawless behavior, and they continue to do so.”

In its habeas corpus filings, lawyers from Make the Road demanded that the two men arrested Thursday be released and allowed to continue navigating the immigration process.

In a statement to The Intercept, a spokesperson for ICE denied that the agency had violated any court order. The spokesperson did not explain how the arrests fit into the exceptions to the ban on courthouse arrests put in place by the federal judge.

No Exceptions

From May 18 until last week, just two arrests had taken place at Manhattan immigration courts; in both cases, the detainees were swiftly released after lawyers and immigrant rights groups mobilized to invoke the federal judge’s order.

That has not been the case for the men arrested on Thursday and Monday. All three men have since been transferred to detention centers, according to ICE records.

Related

“Warehousing Human Beings”

The Dominican man arrested Thursday is currently being held at ICE’s Delaney Hall detention facility in Newark, New Jersey, while the Ecuadorian man arrested the same day is being held at the D. Ray James ICE Processing Center in Folkston, Georgia. The Guatemalan man arrested on Monday is being held at the Orange County Detention Facility in upstate New York. (The Intercept is withholding the detained men’s names because of the sensitive nature of their cases.)

The arrests appeared to end a brief period of calm at Manhattan immigration courts in the wake of the May 18 ruling by Judge Kevin Castel requiring ICE to revert to a policy put in place in 2021. The Biden-era policy allowed for courthouse arrests with prior authorization in only a handful of instances, including when a person might pose a threat to national security or to public safety — narrowly defined as cases in which agents are in direct pursuit of a subject or if it would not be possible to make the arrest in another location.

In their statement, the ICE spokesperson pointed to a conviction for trespassing on the part of the Dominican man and a 2025 conviction for disorderly conduct on the part of the Ecuadorian man.

One immigration lawyer said the courthouse arrests were part of a growing pattern of increased ICE detentions.

“For whatever reason, that order is essentially being disregarded, and we’ve seen a pretty significant uptick in detentions,” said Benjamin Remy, senior coordinating attorney at the immigration protection unit of the New York Legal Assistance Group.

Related

ICE Defied Direct Order From Federal Judge and Re-Detained Elderly Palestinian

In the year and a half since President Trump returned to office and unleashed the agency as part of his mass deportation agenda, ICE has repeatedly been found in violation of orders around the detention of immigrants. The alleged violations have been ramping up in recent months, according to advocates and court records.

“We’ve seen ICE have a fairly flexible and adaptive relationship when it comes to the truth and the facts,” Remy said, “and to complying with court orders and frankly to rule of law as a fundamental concept.”

An Impossible Bind

Beginning in May 2025 and continuing for almost exactly a year, ICE arrests at 26 Federal Plaza, 290 Broadway, and another immigration court at 201 Varick Street were commonplace, with hundreds of people swept up by masked ICE agents when they showed up for scheduled hearings. According to an analysis published last August by The City Reporter, a local news site, more than half of courthouse arrests nationwide were taking place in New York.

Related

ICE Held an NYC Child Incommunicado at Secret Hotels, Then Deported Him

Like the overwhelming majority of people arrested in immigration courts over the past year, the men arrested over the past week were following demands made of them by the immigration system.

Both men arrested last week had fled home due to persecution, entered the U.S., and been detained before obtaining release as their cases proceeded, according to petitions filed on their behalf by Make the Road New York. When summoned to court, both showed up as instructed.

ICE has repeatedly defended the arrests as legitimate. Immigration advocates, however, have warned that it puts immigrants in an impossible bind, forcing them to decide between risking arrest by following the law and showing up to court, or losing any chance of lawfully remaining in the country by skipping a hearing.

“It is not uncommon for me to encounter folks walking into court in the morning already just sobbing,” Remy told The Intercept. “These arrests are discouraging the legal process. It’s discouraging people’s fundamental constitutional right to due process and to be able to have their day in court.”

The post ICE Flouting Federal Judge’s Order to Stop Arresting Immigrants at New York Courts appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 13:00

Minister and MPs have raised concerns that his ‘poisoned chalice’ plan will take cash from much-needed road projects

Dan Sabbagh is the Guardian’s defence and security editor.

Andy Burnham is a “true patriot” who will provide the money needed to maintain Britain’s security when he becomes prime minister, the new defence secretary, Dan Jarvis, said on a visit to a factory in Cambridge today.

I’ve known Andy Burnham for more than 15 years, he is a true patriot, and I absolutely believe that he will make sure that we have the resources that we need to field the kind of capabilities that are required given the nature of the world that we’re operating in.

I know what we need to do to keep Britain safe, and I’m absolutely confident that Andy Burnham, as the next prime minister, knows that as well, and we’ll make sure in the context of the next spending review that we’ve got the resources we need to keep the country safe.

Continue reading...

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 13:00

Attendance at the Great American State Fair is sparse and the heat is extreme, but at least you can pay $25 for a pretzel

I have been to some disappointing fairs in my time. There was one, in a small town in north-west England, where the main attraction was a little slide that you rode down on a burlap sack: except the guy who owned the slide had forgotten to bring the sacks, so me and my sister slid down on a T-shirt.

Another time, at a village fete in a place called Longton, I won the main prize at the bingo. It was a whisky decanter with a bottle of whiskey. I was 11 years old, the decanter was broken and some bigger boys took the whiskey. More recently, I looked on as two farmers engaged in a shouting match over whose pumpkin was larger at a fair in Iowa.

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 12:59

Country is first to join since Australia in 2015 as event director says it ‘continues to welcome the world’

Canada will ​join the Eurovision song contest in 2027, becoming the first new ⁠participant since Australia in 2015, organisers have announced.

Participation is not limited to countries in geographic Europe and instead is open to all members of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), which Canada joined last week. Australia is an associate member.

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2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 12:51

Donald Trump cashed in on more than $2bn from crypto and other business ventures last year.

As the US races to become the self‑declared ‘crypto capital of the world’, the president and his family have turned digital tokens, meme coins and merchandise into an unprecedented revenue stream.

But just how rich can a sitting US president get? Lucy Hough speaks to the Guardian reporter Aisha Down

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 12:47

Prime minister has said his successor in No 10 should use fiscal headroom to fund a £4.7bn gap in defence spending

Keir Starmer has suggested Andy Burnham borrow billions more to cover the hole in the government’s defence investment plan (Dip), in a move economists say would severely reduce the likely next prime minister’s headroom against his fiscal rules.

The prime minister said on Wednesday that his successor – who is very likely to be the Makerfield MP – should use the headroom to fund a £4.7bn gap in defence spending over the next four years.

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 12:42

President Donald Trump celebrated the Supreme Court’s June 30 ruling that states can ban transgender girls and women from girls’ and women’s school sports teams. 

The ruling upheld laws in West Virginia and Idaho that prohibited transgender girls and women — people who were assigned male at birth but identify as women — from competing on girls’ and women’s sports teams at publicly funded schools and colleges.

"The United States Supreme Court  just RULED AGAINST MEN PLAYING IN WOMEN’S SPORTS," Trump said in a June 30 Truth Social post, saying the ruling "takes that ridiculous situation off the table." 

The White House cast the decision in the same light, posting a photo on X that read "No men in women’s sports," with the caption, "From now on, women’s sports will only be for women."

But the court’s ruling is not a nationwide ban on transgender women participating in women’s sports. Rather, it ruled that states are allowed to determine eligibility for women’s and girls' sports based on biological sex, meaning states can exclude transgender athletes from those teams. It also means states that allow transgender athletes to compete can continue to do so.

The court’s majority opinion says that explicitly, noting the cases are not asking whether "schools may allow biological males who identify as female to participate on girls’ and women’s sports teams," and saying "nothing in this opinion is intended to decide that question."

Doriane Coleman, a Duke University law professor, said Trump’s statement is overly broad. 

The ruling "means, for example, that West Virginia can lawfully exclude transgender girls from girls’ sports teams and that California can continue to include them," Coleman said in an email to PolitiFact.

Twenty-nine states have laws or policies that prohibit transgender athletes from participating on women’s and girl’s sports teams.

We asked the White House for additional information to support Trump’s statement. 

White House spokesperson Allison Schuster said, "Today’s ruling is a win for women everywhere and empowers concerned parents to demand their local governments uphold fairness in girls’ sports and put their safety above bowing down to the woke mob."  

The ruling is a partial victory for the Trump administration, which has pushed for a nationwide ban on transgender girls and women competing on girls’ and women’s sports teams. 

Trump signed a 2025 executive order seeking to ban transgender women’s sports participation under Title IX, and his Education Department has launched investigations into several state education agencies and athletic institutions that allow transgender athletes to compete on girls’ teams. 

The Justice Department has sued Maine, California and Minnesota over their laws or policies allowing transgender athletes to participate on girls’ teams, and those cases are ongoing. 

Although the ruling does not require states to prohibit transgender women from women’s sports teams, the administration is likely to argue that the ruling gives more weight to its push for a nationwide ban, said Elena Redfield, the federal policy director of the UCLA School of Law’s Williams Institute. 

Redfield said the majority opinion emphasizes that "the court is not yet addressing these implications" about state laws protecting transgender athletes and that "some ambiguity exists in how Title IX has been enforced in the past."

Supreme Court ruling greenlights transgender athlete bans

The majority opinion, authored by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, focused on discrimination protections under the landmark education equality law Title IX and the equal protection clause of the Constitution’s 14th Amendment. 

Title IX, passed in 1972, prohibits discrimination in education on the basis of sex and requires federally funded education institutions to provide "equal athletic opportunity," while allowing for sex-segregated sports teams. 

The court ruled that those protections refer to "biological sex," rather than gender identity, and Title IX does not grant transgender women the right to compete on women’s teams. 

On the constitutional question, the court ruled that state laws banning transgender women from women’s sports teams don’t violate the equal protections enshrined in the 14th Amendment. 

Laws that classify by sex are subject to what’s known as intermediate scrutiny, requiring the state to show that the law is substantially related to an important government interest in order to survive constitutional review. The court found that the state’s stated interests in preserving fair competition and preventing physical injuries in girls' and women’s sports survived that review. 

The court also ruled that states with these bans do not need to make exceptions for transgender women who took puberty blockers and hormone therapy to avoid or mitigate male puberty, though Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson split from the majority on that point. 

Our ruling 

Trump said the Supreme Court "ruled against men playing in women’s sports." Trump referred to transgender women competing on women’s athletic teams. 

The ruling set a meaningful precedent that federal law and the Constitution don’t require states and schools to allow transgender girls and women to compete on girls’ and women’s teams. But the court didn’t require that all states adopt bans.

Trump’s statement is partially accurate, but he overstated it by saying the court "ruled against" transgender athletic participation with no qualifications. States that allow transgender athletes to compete can continue to do so.

We rate the statement Half True.

PolitiFact Staff Writer Grace Abels contributed to this report.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 12:38

July 1, 2026 — Registration is now open for the 2026 Real-World Quantum Computing workshop, jointly hosted by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) and San Jose State University (SJSU). The two-day workshop is designed for upper-level undergraduates and graduate students in engineering, physics or related fields. Interns are encouraged to apply. Applications will be accepted on a first-come, first-served basis.

Participants and instructors work through a hands-on activity at the 2025 Real-World Quantum Computing workshop.

The workshop aims to orient participants to the physical principles of using superconducting hardware for quantum computing, focusing on low-level calibration and physical controls.

This free, in-person workshop will be held at the University of California Livermore Collaboration Center in Livermore, from Aug. 20-21, 2026.

Previous quantum computing experience or coursework is not required, but participants should have some experience with computer programming as tutorials are done using Python.

The workshop will feature research talks and tutorials by staff scientists at LLNL and SJSU professors, hands-on training in controlling quantum hardware and access to LLNL’s innovative Quantum Design and Integration Testbed (QuDIT) testbed.

Previous workshops have reached capacity ahead of the posted registration deadlines, so early registration is encouraged.

Registration for U.S. citizens must be complete by July 20. Non-U.S. citizens are welcome to register; however, access for foreign nationals may be limited due to approval timelines and site access restrictions. Non-U.S. citizens should apply before July 8.

More information about the workshop can be found on the workshop website here.


Source: LLNL

The post LLNL Opens Registration for Real-World Quantum Computing Workshop appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 12:35

The agency also said it was considering repurposing a Mars rover development model for use as a moon rover.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 12:31

Culture secretary launches first review of how money is spent in more than two decades

Funding from the national lottery is too heavily concentrated in the south, the culture secretary has said, as she launched the first review in more than 20 years into how billons raised by ticket sales is spent.

In comments that chime with Andy Burnham’s pledge to devolve more power from London if he becomes prime minister, Nandy said the model governing how lottery money is spent was “showing its age”.

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 12:30

The climate crisis and worsening disparity could be responsible for more than 100,000 deaths a year in Europe, which should set off alarm bells for policymakers

Don’t get This Is Europe delivered to your inbox? Sign up here

Call it a tale of two heatwave experiences.

As brutally hot conditions brought much of western Europe to its knees, an American writer living in Paris asserted that, for many, the heat was not “nearly as apocalyptic” as most media were suggesting. He said he had yet to buy a fan, instead relying on closed shutters, misting sessions and open windows in the evening to keep his ground-level flat cool.

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 12:30

Oh, and don't forget about the return of Shark Week.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 12:18

The US president flies to North Dakota on first trip aboard Qatar-gifted 747-8, as critics raise corruption concerns

Donald Trump traveled to North Dakota on Wednesday for the first trip onboard the new Air Force One, a luxury Boeing 747-8 aircraft gifted by the Qatari government.

The US president introduced the $400m aircraft last month as the replacement for the military-grade 747-2 that has transported US presidents for more than three decades. The gifted Boeing 747-8 is expected to remain in service until the air force receives a new fleet of Boeing presidential aircraft in the next two years.

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 12:13

A proposed class action suit filed in California accuses Samsung, Micron and SK Hynix of deliberately inflating memory prices.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 12:14

Acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche said "the Constitution is not a suggestion" and that "the Second Amendment is a sacred right belonging to all Americans."

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 19:44

President Trump is traveling Wednesday to North Dakota in what marks his first trip aboard the new Air Force One, which was gifted to the U.S. by the Qatari government last year.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-02 07:10

Vance says the U.S. has accomplished its "core mission" in Iran, as Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner meet mediators in Qatar, but not Iranians.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 12:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Space.com: NASA provided an Artemis update today (June 30), announcing new lunar landing contracts for its Moon Base initiative and a surprise new possible rover mission that could be headed to the moon's south pole. During the second monthly update that NASA has provided for its moon base plans, the agency named Astrobotic, Firefly Aerospace and Intuitive Machines as the providers of four robotic landers that will deliver scientific payloads to the surface of the moon, as NASA tests and expands the technologies needed for a permanent human outpost. "This is this drawing on the playbook that worked very well for NASA during the 1960s," NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said during the livestreamed update, explaining the experiential approach to a crewed lunar return. "We didn't just jump right to Apollo 11." Isaacman also announced the potential repurposing of an engineering development model built to mirror the agency's Perseverance and Curiosity rovers on Mars. "There is another," Isaacman said, quoting Yoda's line from "Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back." That test rover is called PROMISE, short for "Polar Rover for Observation, Mapping, and In-Situ Exploration" (though it was formerly known as Optimism). PROMISE was developed at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Southern California, where it has been used as a test platform for fixes or commands that engineers want to try on the ground before permanently sending them to Perseverance and Curiosity. Now, NASA wants to send PROMISE on a mission of its own. Though sending PROMISE to the moon would leave Perseverance and Curiosity -- both of which remain active on Mars -- without an Earth-based testbed, Isaacman thinks it would be worth it. "We've had years now of experience operating the two rovers on the surface of Mars, and we've got this hardware that the taxpayers have invested a lot in," he said. "So the question was posed: 'What if we send it to the moon?'" With a little refurbishment, PROMISE would help advance NASA's lunar plans, Isaacman added. Like Perseverance and Curiosity, the test rover is powered by a radioisotope thermoelectric generator (RTG), which converts heat from naturally decaying radioactive material into electricity. So it wouldn't require sunlight to operate -- a real benefit on the moon, where most locations experience long stretches of darkness. (NASA plans to build its Artemis base near the moon's south pole, which is thought to harbor an abundance of water ice and also has a relatively complex lighting environment.) The other robots currently in the works to launch on future missions to the moon, including the landers announced during today's update, are all solar powered. Through 2029, NASA hopes to launch up to 20 such missions as part of the CLPS (Commercial Lunar Payload Services) initiative to support the first phase of the agency's moon base plans, and the landers announced today will be some of the first in that lineup.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 11:55
  • Brother of Calais Campbell charged with murder

  • Police found Campbell’s mother dead in Atlanta

  • Family asks for privacy after mother’s death

The brother of NFL player Calais Campbell has been charged with murder after police found their 71-year-old mother dead at a home in Atlanta during a welfare check.

Arrest warrants say Nateal Campbell’s throat was cut and Ciarre Campbell was found in possession of a knife. Officers found her unresponsive when they arrived at around 12.30pm Tuesday, according to a police statement.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 11:55

Charged it up fully, took it outside, and it made a click noise and I stumbled while trying to mount.

Device won’t turn on.
Makes a high pitched noise when pressing the power button that can be heard in quiet room
AC adapter stays green. No lights at all from one wheel.

Sucks because I was gonna take advantage of this nice weather.

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 11:53

Avi Loeb, a Harvard astronomer who has made headlines with his theories about alien encounters, will lead a White House scientific advisory council on UFOs.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 11:47

Your spouse isn't automatically responsible for your credit card debt after you die, but there are some exceptions.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 11:47

Collaboration aims to accelerate electric grid interconnection of AI data centers in support of the Genesis Mission

UPTON, N.Y. and WASHINGTON, July 1, 2026 — The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory and Amazon Web Services (AWS) have announced a partnership that will leverage AWS’ advanced cloud computing infrastructure and artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities to accelerate the development of Brookhaven Lab’s GridSearch project. GridSearch is an innovative AI-driven solution designed to transform how new generation facilities connect to America’s electric grid. The partnership was announced this week during the AWS Summit Washington, D.C.

Chief AI Scientist for Innovation, Science, and Security Hendrik Hamann demos GridSearch at Brookhaven Lab. The software can help accelerate the connection of AI data centers, energy production facilities, and advanced manufacturing plants to the electric grid. Photo credit: Brookhaven National Laboratory/Tim Kuhn.

“This partnership will demonstrate the power of public-private collaboration in support of DOE’s Genesis Mission, a national initiative to build the world’s most powerful scientific platform to accelerate discovery science, strengthen national security, and drive energy innovation,” said Brookhaven Lab Director John Hill. “GridSearch is a great example of how we can apply Genesis Mission capabilities to real-world applications, helping the nation to achieve AI leadership and energy dominance.”

GridSearch uses a Grid Foundation Model (GridFM) developed as an open-source project under the Linux Foundation Energy, with major contributions from organizations including IBM Research, Hydro Quebec, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Stony Brook University, Argonne National Laboratory, and others. GridFM is an AI system that enables significantly faster grid simulations while maintaining accuracy and robustness.

“GridSearch is an excellent example for AI enabling AI — what we call ‘AI4AI,’” said Hendrik Hamann, chief AI scientist for Innovation, Science, and Security at Brookhaven National Laboratory and joint appointee at Stony Brook University. “It aims to provide critical decision support to stakeholders and help them accelerate the data center interconnection process with optimal affordability and minimal disruption to the electric grid.”

This breakthrough technology will help address a critical national challenge: the lengthy and costly process of connecting new infrastructure to the electrical grid. This includes AI data centers, energy production facilities, and advanced manufacturing plants. Traditional interconnection studies can take years and require extensive infrastructure investments. GridSearch changes this paradigm by prescreening thousands of potential interconnection locations to identify optimal connection points with minimal grid impact.

“AWS is deeply aligned with DOE’s Genesis Mission to build the world’s most powerful scientific platform, and GridSearch is exactly the kind of AI-driven innovation that brings that mission to life,” said Christian Hoff, Director of Global Civilian Government at AWS. “Our collaboration with Brookhaven National Laboratory reflects AWS’s commitment to advancing American AI leadership by putting cutting-edge cloud and AI capabilities in service of the nation’s most critical energy and security challenges. Together, we’re demonstrating how public-private collaboration can accelerate discovery, strengthen national security, and ensure the United States leads the world in AI.”

Through this collaboration, AWS will provide the computational infrastructure and AI expertise necessary to scale GridSearch across major transmission grids nationwide. By reducing interconnection timelines from years to months and enabling data-driven infrastructure planning, this initiative directly supports national priorities in energy security, economic development, and technological leadership. It also exemplifies how collaboration can help accelerate America’s energy infrastructure modernization while supporting the Genesis Mission’s goal of doubling U.S. research productivity through AI-accelerated innovation.

“Grid interconnection has long been one of the greatest opportunities for unlocking America’s energy potential — from new data centers to advanced energy projects,” said Joseph Santamaria, General Manager, Energy & Utilities at AWS. “AWS is committed to modernizing the grid, and cloud and AI are powerful enablers that help energy companies accelerate that process, raise productivity, and reduce operating costs. This is the kind of work AWS was built to do across the entire energy industry.”

This announcement builds on the recently executed Memorandum of Understanding between DOE and AWS, which establishes a framework for advancing artificial intelligence and advanced computing initiatives across the DOE complex and its 17 national laboratories.

GridFM is supported by DOE’s Office of Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation.

 


Source: Brookhaven National Laboratory

The post Brookhaven Lab and AWS Partner to Connect AI Data Centers appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 11:41

After January 2028, new games will be available exclusively in digital format from the PlayStation Store and at retailers, Sony said.

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 11:36

Like a moron I road my NEW one wheel to close to the ocean and it submerged if only briefly…think I further added injury to insult by continuing to ride and plugging in when I got home.

Seems the battery is toast but wondering if anyone has repaired similar for any guidance?

submitted by /u/OrmondBeach_Brian
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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 11:34

Figure is more than five times the widely used 600,000 figure widely cited in apologies by king and politicians

At least 3.3 million people were enslaved in the Netherlands during the transatlantic slave trade, research claims – more than five times the 600,000 figure widely used in history books and cited in apologies by the king and politicians.

King Willem-Alexander referred to the more than 600,000 people who were brought from Africa on Dutch ships to be sold as enslaved people when he apologised three years ago for the role of the Netherlands in the transatlantic slave trade.

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 11:31

Ahead of the Fourth of July weekend, experts are warning about the dangers of rip currents and the importance of water safety.

2026-07-02 12:04
2026-07-01 11:23

Elizabeth Warren and colleagues demand tighter rules on political figures’ crypto dealings, citing disclosures of large-scale Trump family profits

Donald Trump has again been accused of “brazen crypto corruption” after financial disclosures revealed his family’s cryptocurrency ventures generated more than $1bn in his first year back in the White House.

A 927-page disclosure, released on Tuesday by the US Office of Government Ethics, showed that the US president had been paid more than $2.2bn last year in total, from real estate, golf resorts, branded merchandise, licensing deals and court settlements.

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 11:14

Dramatic video showed the moment a rescue team pulled a small dog from the rubble nearly a week after twin earthquakes​ devastated Venezuela.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 11:07

Ukrainian leader among guests in Dublin as Micheál Martin says ‘we will stand unswervingly by your people’

Pistorius talks about changes in the German military reserve system, with “the Bundeswehr building up.”

He talks about reforms needed to allow to mobilise reservists better and more efficiently.

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 10:57

When it comes to interest, what happens after death depends on the debt, the estate and the settlement timeline.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 10:54

Check out our favorite Windows laptops and MacBooks for work, tested and reviewed by CNET's laptop experts.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 10:52

Actor Danny Glover spoke about his Alzheimer's diagnosis in an interview with NBC's "Today" show, revealing that he has been living with the disease for several years.

2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 10:48

July 1, 2026 — The ETH Zurich team ‘RACKlette’ has won first place in the 15th Annual ISC Student Cluster Competition, held during ISC 2026 in Hamburg, one of the largest high-performance computing (HPC) conferences, gathering more than 4,000 attendees to discuss advances in HPC and artificial intelligence (AI).

ETH Zurich students in Hamburg: Team RACKlette won the prestigious international ISC Student Cluster Competition for the second time. Credit: CSCS.

Competing in the in-person finals against ten teams from leading universities around the world, RACKlette finished ahead of Tsinghua University (China) and Nanyang Technological University (Singapore), highlighting the exceptional talent and preparation of the Swiss students.

This is the second time that team RACKlette has won this prestigious international competition, which is typically dominated by contestants from East Asian countries.

From Classroom to Cluster: Students Gain Expertise in Supercomputing and AI

Beyond being a world-class competition in its field, the ISC Student Cluster Competition is widely regarded as one of the world’s leading training opportunities for the next generation of high-performance computing (HPC) and artificial intelligence (AI) professionals.

Students are challenged to design, build and optimise a high-performance computing cluster while running demanding scientific and AI applications under strict power constraints. The experience develops not only technical expertise but also teamwork, problem-solving and systems engineering skills.

Hands-On Expertise in Designing Advanced Computing Systems

The team prepared for the competition over several months with guidance from Professor of Computer Science Torsten Hoefler (ETH Zurich) and Senior HPC System Engineer Hussein Harake (CSCS). Their mentorship and technical expertise helped the students prepare for one of the leading international competitions in high-performance computing.

“Congratulations to the ETH Zurich students, their mentors and everyone who contributed to this outstanding achievement. The victory highlights ETH Zurich’s strength in educating the next generation of HPC experts, supported by CSCS’s hands-on expertise in designing and operating advanced computing systems”, says CSCS Associate Director Maria Grazia Giuffreda.

In this video, the members of the ETH team RACKlette discuss their preparation, strategy, and performance during the Student Cluster Competition at ISC26. We are delighted to share that, since filming, RACKlette has been crowned the winner of the ISC26 Student Cluster Competition — making this interview a particularly special behind-the-scenes look at a championship team before they knew they had won.


Source: CSCS

The post ETH Zurich Team Wins 15th Annual ISC Student Cluster Competition appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 10:35

Two-seat Cessna aircraft was being used for short flight experience when it crashed in Ongar on Tuesday, police say

Two people have died after a light aircraft on a “short flight experience” crashed in a field near Ongar in Essex, police have said.

The two-seat Cessna plane crashed in a field off Mill Lane, Ongar, on Tuesday after taking off from North Weald airfield about seven miles west, Essex police said. The two people onboard have not been formally identified.

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 10:27

Consecrations by Society of Saint Pius X bring automatic excommunication for bishops – and crisis for Pope Leo

A rebel group of ultra-conservative Catholics has defied Pope Leo by ordaining bishops without his consent, which they declared a “sacred duty” despite it causing their automatic excommunication.

In a ritual-filled ceremony on Wednesday, streamed live from the Swiss village of Ecône, the Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX) went ahead with the consecrations of four bishops, one from Switzerland, one from France and two from the US.

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 10:27

Anger at authorities and government grows as local people, volunteers and rescue teams continue search for survivors

Four Venezuelan police officers have been arrested and are facing dismissal after being accused of looting cash from the rubble of a building that collapsed during last week’s devastating twin earthquakes.

Local people and national and international rescue teams continue to search for survivors in the aftermath of the back-to-back quakes, which have killed almost 2,000 people, injured more than 10,000, and left tens of thousands missing.

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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-07-01 10:27
FlowLED progress update!

Quick little demo on FlowLED PRO - runs on VESC Express and maybe soon a lot for stock OW boards & esk8s!

I've been building this up for awhile, originally as a VESC package but now with dedicated hardware and a dedicated flash. If you like Float Accessories, you're gonna love FlowLED

Edit:

I am working on a custom LCM for FlowLED - but it'll be a bit before I have a demo unit ready!

If you want a full lighting experience with any pre-built boards from Fungi or even the ADVs (and other diy vescs), I'd recommend getting a LCM from Ava or flashing an esp32-c3 with FlowLED PRO if you're comfortable with soldering your own signal/power wires to the strips. This is what I've used/done during development.

If you have a purple UGLAND WLED controller, use FloWLED vesc package (in the RepairFlow discord) but assume it's half broken since I had a ton of hardware & memory constraints that no longer exist in FLED PRO. FloWLED runs on any standard VESC Express w/ CAN connection in Station Mode to connect to the WLED controller

submitted by /u/repairflowdev
[link] [comments]

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 10:16

Potus pocketed over $2.2bn last year – but with an algae-filled reflecting pool and his State Fair a fiasco, what price happiness?

From certain angles, it might appear as if President Trump is having a tough month. He messed up the renovation of the Lincoln Memorial reflecting pool, which he blamed on acts of vandalism no one has been able to stand up. The supreme court rejected both his bid to appeal against the $5m (£3.8m) civil judgment against him for defaming and sexually abusing E Jean Carroll, and his executive order to end birthright citizenship. And the war with Iran keeps rumbling on. And yet, after Trump’s mandatory financial disclosure report was released on Tuesday, headlines drew attention to the fact the president made more than $2.2bn in revenue in 2025 – more than three times what he pulled in the year before his inauguration. Contrary to appearances, perhaps everything is going exactly to plan.

It is always a question with Trump as to how much the wealth he has accrued in his second term in office is the spoils of strategy rather than the lucky result of his scattergun but industrial-scale hustle. Looking at the numbers in his financial report, one is reminded that before he became president, Trump piloted a series of failed businesses – six of which declared bankruptcy – and gave every indication of being a lousy businessman. It’s often pointed out that if Trump had simply invested the vast inheritance left to him by Fred Trump, his father, in a standard tracker fund, he would’ve made more money than through his lacklustre business career, and there’s nothing to suggest this was likely to change.

Emma Brockes is a Guardian columnist

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 10:09

Less than halfway through Trump’s second term, the U.S. Department of Justice has authorized a rash of new death penalty prosecutions, already surpassing the total number of capital cases brought during Trump’s previous four years in office.

Since Trump returned to the White House, DOJ prosecutors have moved to seek the death penalty against at least 42 defendants in 34 cases, according to figures compiled by The Intercept, based on legal records and data from the Justice Department and Federal Capital Trial Project. In at least two additional cases, federal prosecutors have conveyed their plans to seek death but have not yet submitted a notice of intent — the formal legal filing telling the defense and presiding judge that the DOJ seeks to execute a defendant. By comparison, the DOJ authorized some 38 capital defendants total over the course of Trump’s first term.

Many of the new cases have originated in places where the death penalty has been abolished — states like New Mexico, Colorado, and Maryland — as well as jurisdictions where there is no history of capital punishment, like the U.S. Virgin Islands. More than 70 percent of the defendants are people of color, most of them Black.

The spike in new death penalty cases is a striking illustration of Trump’s longtime enthusiasm for capital punishment, which led him to carry out an unprecedented execution spree in the months before he left office in 2021. It’s also in stark contrast to the Justice Department under President Joe Biden, who put capital prosecutions almost entirely on hold — and whose attorney general, Merrick Garland, deauthorized dozens of pending death penalty cases upon taking office.

Trump’s ramped up authorizations won’t necessarily bring a wave of new death sentences. Only a relative handful of federal capital authorizations end up going to trial — and fewer still result in a death sentence. Although executions have been on the rise across the United States since Trump retook office, new death sentences have been on a consistent decline for decades. Prosecutors have become more reluctant to seek death sentences, and jurors have also been less and less willing to send defendants to death row.

“The American public has made a very, very decisive turn away from the death penalty during the last 20 years,” said Robin Maher, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center. “Twenty years ago, we had five times the number of new death sentences than we had last year.” Although Trump’s DOJ “purports to be acting consistent with the will of the American people,” she said, “those are American juries that are making different decisions now.”

The Trump administration’s death penalty plans have already come apart in many cases. Since then-Attorney General Pam Bondi first started filing notices of intent last year, roughly a third of the defendants have seen the death penalty taken off the table. In numerous cases, the presiding judge has struck down the government’s authorizations. In one case involving two co-defendants, the DOJ has withdrawn its prior authorization. And two cases have been resolved with guilty pleas.

This still leaves at least 27 defendants currently facing capital trials. With Blanche, who was previously Trump’s criminal defense lawyer, vying to become attorney general, there is no reason to expect the push to send people to death row to slow down anytime soon.

The defendants facing the death penalty under Trump have been accused of grisly crimes, from mass shootings to gang murders. But if there’s one thing driving Trump’s escalating pursuit of new death sentences above all else, it is his sustained rage at Biden, who took the historic step of commuting 37 death sentences before leaving office, leaving three people on federal death row. Trump railed against the commutations in a Truth Social post on Christmas Day, wrongly referring to them as pardons and telling the commuted prisoners themselves to “GO TO HELL!”

Upon returning to the White House in January 2025, Trump immediately signaled his intent to repopulate federal death row, proclaiming in an executive order that his administration would “pursue the death penalty for all crimes of a severity demanding its use.” Framed as a rebuke to Biden’s act of clemency, which he derided as a “mockery of justice,” it also called on states to step up their own efforts to execute people — and to try to seek new death sentences at the state level against the 37 men whose federal sentences were commuted.

Related

Pam Bondi Is Pushing Death Sentences for People Spared By Her Predecessor

A month later, in February 2025, newly installed Attorney General Pam Bondi issued a memo to DOJ prosecutors directing them to seek death wherever possible. “Absent significant mitigating circumstances, federal prosecutors are expected to seek the death penalty in cases involving the murder of a law-enforcement officer and capital crimes committed by aliens who are illegally present in the United States,” Bondi wrote. She ordered prosecutors to prioritize capital cases involving gang members and people accused of international drug crimes. And in an unprecedented move, Bondi announced that the DOJ would review every decision in which the Biden administration declined to seek a death sentence to determine whether prosecutors should pursue the death penalty after all.

The attempt to turn Biden’s “no-seeks” into capital prosecutions has proven mostly unsuccessful. Of hundreds of cases reviewed by the DOJ, prosecutors ended up filing a notice of intent against 15 defendants who had previously been told they would not face the death penalty. One by one, the new capital authorizations were smacked down by presiding judges, several of whom scolded Trump’s prosecutors for their ham-fisted efforts to win death sentences in cases that, in many instances, were already set for trial. Currently three cases remain in which prosecutors are still seeking to move forward with a capital trial despite the Biden DOJ’s previous decision not to seek death.

It did not take long after Bondi was fired for her replacement, acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, to make clear he intended to continue Trump’s death penalty push. In late April, he released a 48-page report by the Office of Legal Policy, which outlined in detail Trump’s plans to ramp up new death sentences and speed up executions. Titled “Restoring and Strengthening the Federal Death Penalty,” the document again framed Trump’s commitment to capital punishment as a response to Biden’s dereliction of duty — and in particular to his betrayal of victims’ families.

“It was more like a campaign website instead of a measured legal document by a government agency.”

The report included a chart showing Biden’s DOJ’s rejection of capital cases, casting Garland as an outlier among other attorneys general. By contrast, the report devoted little space to Trump’s new authorizations, avoiding entirely its mostly failed attempts to reverse Biden’s “no-seeks.” Nor did it hint at the fact that Blanche, like previous attorneys general, would himself issue a flurry of no-seeks in death-eligible cases upon taking over — something that is standard practice at the DOJ. Death penalty cases are, after all, at least in theory, reserved for only the most serious crimes. “To pursue use of the death penalty in the manner that is set forth in Trump executive order would require an almost singular focus on seeking death sentences to the exclusion of so many other priorities,” Maher said.

While the Blanche report is certainly cause for concern, Maher said a lot of it read as a wishlist more than an achievable blueprint. “The majority of that report, I thought, reflected the Trump administration’s grievances about lawful decisions made by the previous administration,” she said. “To me it was more like a campaign website instead of a measured legal document by a government agency.”

“These executive orders, these memoranda — everything is changing by the day,” she said. “We just don’t know how this is all going to play out.”

What might be most sobering about Trump-era capital punishment is not the way it differs from past presidents but how it remains consistent. In the hands of an administration overtly committed to white supremacy, the defendants chosen by Trump’s DOJ for capital trials look a lot like the defendants who have always faced the federal death penalty.

More than 70 percent of Trump’s authorizations have been against people of color, most of them Black. This is strikingly consistent with the federal death penalty’s overall track record; according to the Death Penalty Information Center, 73 percent of capital defendants authorized for death penalty pros­e­cu­tions from 1989 to June 2024 were people of color.

The racial disparities in the federal system have been well-documented for decades. Yet, apart from the most high-profile cases, Americans are generally unaware of capital prosecutions brought at the federal level since most authorizations never lead to a death penalty trial — let alone a death sentence. This leaves the most dramatic racial disparities hidden from view. Data from the Federal Capital Trial Project shows that, in the state of Maryland, for example, which has sent only one person to federal death row since the late 1980s, DOJ prosecutors have authorized death penalty prosecutions against more than 30 people, the majority of whom were Black. The rest were Latino.

Trump’s recent authorizations replicate this trend, with DOJ prosecutors in Maryland filing notices of intent against four defendants, three of them Latino and one of them Black. (The former three, alleged MS-13 gang members from Baltimore, have since seen their authorizations thrown out by a judge.)

Since last year, Trump’s DOJ has also authorized death penalty prosecutions of four people in the Eastern District of Missouri, which is home to St. Louis. As with every other federal authorization from the same jurisdiction to date, all of them are Black. (Two of these defendants have since seen their authorizations withdrawn by the DOJ.)

Related

Amid the Lingering Trauma of Trump’s Executions, a New Project Brings Families to Federal Death Row

Trump’s execution spree six years ago briefly put the racism of the federal death penalty on display. The eighth man put to death, Orlando Hall, had been sentenced to die by an all-white jury in Texas, where, according to his lawyer’s last legal filings, federal prosecutors were “nearly six times more likely to request authorization to seek the death penalty against a Black defendant than a non-Black defendant.” Co-defendants Christopher Vialva and Brandon Bernard, who were executed less than three months apart, were sent to death row by a federal prosecutor who openly told me that people considered him “crazy” for allowing a single Black man to serve on their jury.

At that time, the U.S. was experiencing a supposed reckoning over race, which made such cases all the more disturbing to those paying attention. Yet the executions had been made possible by a Democratic party that paved the way for Trump’s killing spree by expanding the death penalty in a way that was racially skewed from the start. That Trump’s aggressive death penalty push is no more racist than what came before speaks volumes about what capital punishment has always been.

The post Trump Has Already Launched More Death Penalty Prosecutions Than in His Entire First Term appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 10:01

Commentary: The music rhythm game has returned, and I'm in love again

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 10:00

A super-resolution image of SpudCell’s liposomes with an encapsulated genome and active protein expression.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 10:00

AI datacentres, memory scarcity and factory capacity are costing consumers –and console makers

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It was once a truth universally acknowledged that an ageing console in possession of good revenue must be in line for a price reduction. Those days may be over. In March, Sony announced a price increase of £90 for the PS5, while last month Microsoft informed gamers that it would be charging at least £75 more for the Xbox Series S and X consoles from August. All three were first released back in 2020. The Switch 2 will also be more expensive globally from September.

The main culprit, of course, is AI, or more specifically the exploding demand for semiconductors and memory to power datacentres. Console manufacturers could once source these components cheaply, but now they’re in high demand and manufacturers can’t keep up, so deals are being struck. “Initially, the wave of price increases seen in gaming were driven by tariffs imposed by Donald Trump early last year,” says Andy Robinson, editor in chief of gaming news site VGC. “Then, in October, OpenAI announced a deal with Samsung and [Korean chip manufacturer] SK Hynix to acquire a huge portion of their DRAM output for datacentres, causing prices to increase by almost 200%. According to Xbox, those prices have since doubled again, and they’re not expected to come back down any time soon.”

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 10:00

You can put a battery-powered security cam nearly anywhere. Here are the best models for your home.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 09:53

Bloc’s ‘made in Europe’ regulations risk shutting out British manufacturers in ‘most spectacular own goal in history’

The EU’s car industry has called for the UK to be fully included in new “made in Europe” rules that threaten to shut out British manufacturers from their biggest export market.

The European Automobile Manufacturers Association (Acea) on Wednesday urged Brussels to give the UK, Turkey and Morocco “justified, targeted exemptions” to the rules, which will require cars and parts to be made within the EU to qualify for subsidies or public procurement.

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 09:48

Trump administration is requiring borrowers to choose new options after Biden-era plan ruled unconstitutional

More than 7 million Americans will be forced to change their student loan repayment plan beginning on Wednesday, as the Save plan officially ends. The termination of the Biden-era initiative, which was launched in 2023, coincides with a larger overhaul of the US student loan repayment system.

The seismic changes to the student debt landscape are the results of the Trump administration’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act passed in 2025 and a March 2026 federal court ruling that the Save plan, an income-driven repayment program created with the goal of cutting undergraduate loans in half, was unconstitutional.

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 09:30

US president raked in more than $1bn from crypto – an industry he has sought to deregulate – and a total of $2.2bn last year, files reveal

Donald Trump’s money-making ventures enriched him by more than $2bn last year, according to newly released financial disclosures.

The revenue was supercharged by the Trump family’s crypto projects, with the documents showing the US president made more than $1bn (£0.76bn) from crypto – an industry he has sought to deregulate.

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 09:30

Fable 5 was available for a week before the government demanded access limits.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 09:25

Dreambeans is unlike any other social media or AI app I've tested in a good way.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 09:18

Yorgen Fenech, who denies all charges, appears in court more than nine years after the journalist’s death

The businessman accused of ordering the murder of the Maltese journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia goes on trial on Wednesday, more than nine years after her death in a car-bomb attack that sent shockwaves through Europe.

Yorgen Fenech, the heir to a property empire worth hundreds of millions, is one of seven men prosecutors accused of involvement in the killing, and the last to face trial.

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 09:18

RESTON, Va., July 1, 2026 — An ASRC Federal team was responsible for completing development and implementation of NASA’s newest supercomputer, Athena — an advanced system designed to help tackle complex challenges in space and science.

Athena, NASA’s newest supercomputer, is housed at the agency’s Modular Supercomputing Facility at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley. Credit: NASA/Brandon Torres-Navarrete.

This high-performance computing (HPC) system – housed at NASA’s Ames Research Center – will help NASA scientists, engineers and researchers while lowering operational costs and improving energy efficiency. The NASA Ames Research Center conducts critical research and development for the technologies that make NASA missions possible.

According to NASA, Athena will provide “the computational power necessary to simulate rocket launches, design next-generation aircraft and spacecraft, train large-scale artificial intelligence foundation models and analyze massive datasets to uncover new scientific insights”.

“We worked hand-in-hand with our customer to help bring their vision for this transformational platform to life,” said Eric Velte, ASRC Federal Chief Technology Officer. “The team focused on balancing system stability, user adoption and performance optimization while minimizing disruption to ongoing scientific workloads.”

Interesting facts about NASA’s newest supercomputer include:

  • Athena surpasses the capabilities of its predecessors, Aitken, Electra and Pleiades, in both power and efficiency, delivering over 20 petaflops of peak performance – a measurement of the number of calculations it can make per second – all while reducing the agency’s supercomputing utility costs.
  • The system includes 1,024 nodes across four racks, delivering 262,144 CPU cores. For perspective, this four-rack cluster has as many cores as 16,000 to 22,000 modern laptops combined.
  • Athena currently holds the 116th spot on the TOP500 list, that ranks high-performance computing systems used for advanced scientific and engineering applications worldwide.
  • Athena was named after the Greek goddess of wisdom and warfare and was selected through a contest held last year among NASA’s High-End Computing Capability workforce – which was chosen because she is the half-sister of Artemis (the agency’s lunar exploration program).

Extensive planning, coordination and technical innovation were required to successfully guide the system through design, integration testing and rollout phases. This initiative relied on collaboration across multiple organizations, such as infrastructure, applications, cybersecurity, operations and vendor partners. ASRC Federal also provides continuous 24/7/365 operational support for Athena HPC.

More from HPCwire: NASA Brings Athena Supercomputer Online at Ames Research Center

About ASRC Federal

ASRC Federal delivers solutions and services to more than 30 U.S. government agencies in support of some of our Nation’s most critical missions – from space exploration to cyber defense to military base operations and public health. Our capabilities include IT modernization, mission systems engineering and other engineering solutions, software applications and analytics, critical infrastructure and base operations, supply chain management and logistics and professional services. As a family of Alaska Native-owned companies, our work helps secure an enduring future for more than 14,000 Iñupiaq shareholders from Alaska’s North Slope. Since inception, ASRC Federal has contributed to over $2 billion in shareholder dividends paid by its parent company, Arctic Slope Regional Corporation. For more information, please visit www.asrcfederal.com.


Source: ASRC Federal

The post ASRC Federal Enables Next-Gen NASA Supercomputer appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 09:01

Check out some old classics and great new releases on Netflix now.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 09:01

If you can navigate yourself to Google Earth, you can take off and fly.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 09:00

Some adults aged 65 and above will be able to get the drug for $50 through Medicare GLP-1, a temporary program

Kathryn, a retiree who worked in healthcare, has throughout her life experienced “cyclical weight-loss, weight-gain”.

“Every time that that has happened, it’s been a little bit greater of the loss and the gain, which is really unhealthy,” said the 66-year-old who lives in Denver, Colorado, and requested that only her first name be used. At her heaviest, the 5ft 1in-woman weighed 220lbs.

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 09:00

Lower costs in Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky and Ohio raise questions about whether Republican strongholds will shift

While it’s regarded as a quiet, safe place, many would agree that there’s not much to Greene county, Ohio.

It’s a mix of urban, suburban and rural communities east of Dayton, Ohio’s sixth largest city, with Greene county much like the rest of the midwest: a mix of strip malls, corn fields and an interstate connecting Columbus with Cincinnati.

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 09:00

July 1, 2026 — IQM Quantum Computers Plc on February 22, 2026 entered into a definitive business combination agreement with Real Asset Acquisition Corp. (RAAQ), a Nasdaq-listed special purpose acquisition company, pursuant to which RAAQ would merge with and into IQM US LLC, an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of IQM, with Merger Sub surviving the merger as an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of IQM. On June 25, 2026, the extraordinary general meeting of RAAQ was held, at which the RAAQ shareholders approved the Business Combination and the merger by the requisite votes. Since the conditions precedent of the Business Combination have been met, IQM and RAAQ have today completed the Business Combination and the merger has become effective, thereby consummating the Business Combination Agreement.

The Board of Directors of IQM, as authorized by the unanimous shareholder resolution of February 27, 2026, has issued 14,381,747 existing shares held by IQM as consideration in the Business Combination to the RAAQ shareholders. The RAAQ shareholders will receive the consideration in the form of American depositary shares (ADSs) issued by BNY (NYSE: BNY), a global financial services company, acting as depositary bank for the purpose of issuing and distributing the ADSs, with each ADS representing one share in IQM. Trading in ADSs will commence on the Global Select Market of the Nasdaq Stock Market on July 2, 2026 under the trading symbol “IQMX”.

The warrants issued by RAAQ were assumed by IQM and became warrants to purchase one share in IQM represented by one ADS (each, an “IQM Warrant”) at an exercise price of USD 11.50 per share, on substantially the same terms and conditions as were applicable to the corresponding warrant issued by RAAQ prior to the consummation of the Business Combination. A maximum of 12,530,975 new or existing shares may be subscribed for with the IQM Warrants. Trading in IQM Warrants will commence on Nasdaq on July 2, 2026, under the trading symbol “IQMX WS”.

Concurrently with the Business Combination, the Board of Directors of IQM, as authorized by the unanimous shareholder resolution of February 27, 2026, has issued 14,548,000 existing shares held by IQM in a private placement to institutional and other accredited investors at a subscription price of USD 10.00 per share, for an aggregate purchase price of EUR 127.7 million (USD 145.5 million). The subscription price is based on the subscription agreements between the PIPE Investors and IQM.

In total, IQM received net proceeds of approximately EUR 198.7 million (USD 233.5 million) in the Business Combination and PIPE Investment, taking into account the remaining funds in RAAQ’s trust account.

The closing marks a significant milestone for IQM as it advances its mission to accelerate the commercialization and adoption of quantum computing worldwide. Since its founding in 2018, IQM has become one of the leading providers of full-stack superconducting quantum systems, serving enterprises, research institutions, universities, high-performance computing centers, and national laboratories across Europe, North America, and Asia.

Jan Goetz, Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder, IQM, said: “We founded IQM with the conviction that quantum computing would become a foundational technology for nations, scientific institutions, and industry. Today, quantum computing is increasingly being viewed as strategic infrastructure, and customers around the world are investing accordingly. This transaction strengthens our ability to execute on our long-term vision, expand our global presence, and continue delivering the full-stack quantum systems that are helping define the next era of computing.”

Peter Ort, Principal Executive Officer and Co-Chairman of RAAQ, said: “IQM has distinguished itself through its technological leadership, global customer footprint, and proven ability to deliver quantum systems into production environments. We are proud to have partnered with the team on this transaction and look forward to supporting the Company’s continued growth as a public company.”

Advisors

J.P. Morgan SE is serving as financial advisor and capital markets advisor to IQM. J.P. Morgan Securities LLC and TD Cowen are serving as PIPE placement agents to IQM. Rothschild & Co is serving as financial advisor and capital markets advisor to IQM and its Board of Directors. TD Cowen is serving as financial advisor and capital markets advisor to RAAQ. Cohen & Company Capital Markets is serving as a capital markets advisor to RAAQ. Cooley LLP, Borenius Attorneys Ltd, Mourant Ozannes LLP and Loyens & Loeff N.V. are serving as legal advisors to IQM, and Ashurst Perkins Coie US LLP, Krogerus Attorneys Ltd and Conyers Dill & Pearman LLP are serving as legal advisors to RAAQ. DLA Piper LLP (US) is serving as legal advisor to J.P. Morgan Securities LLC and TD Cowen. The Blueshirt Group is serving as investor relations advisor to IQM.

For further information, please contact: Blair Robertson, Vice President, Strategy & Corporate Development,, Investor Relations Officer, Investors@iqm.tech.

About IQM Quantum Computers

IQM Quantum Computers is a global leader in superconducting quantum computing, delivering full-stack quantum systems and cloud platform access to enterprises, research institutions, high-performance computing centers, and national laboratories worldwide. IQM’s open and modular architecture enables customers to own, control, and integrate quantum systems directly into their workflows. Founded in 2018 and headquartered in Espoo, Finland, with major operations in Munich, Germany, it has over 400 employees globally and one of the industry’s strongest track records in deployed quantum systems across Europe, Asia, and North America.


Source: IQM

The post IQM Completes SPAC Merger and Begins Trading on Nasdaq as IQMX appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 08:52

Economic squeeze and anti-immigration raids have hit Hispanic communities, prompting people to shop online and reuse oil

The US cooking oil market is shrinking and unlikely to improve soon because of economic and immigration enforcement pressures on Latino households, the owner of the Mazola brand has said.

George Weston, the chief executive of Associated British Foods (ABF), told City analysts that cooking oil sales had suffered as “our heavy use consumer is that Hispanic population who are under financial pressure, who are under pressure from Ice [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] and are feeling a bit miserable”.

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 08:52

Progressive Manny Rutinel is the projected winner in the Democratic primary in Colorado's 8th Congressional District, a GOP-held seat that is one of a handful of toss-up districts in the country.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 08:45

Report accuses paramilitary force of crimes including ethnic cleansing in systemic campaign against civilians

The Sudanese paramilitary Rapid Support Forces committed crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing during its campaign to capture El Fasher, Amnesty International has alleged.

Many of the crimes, including murder, torture, rape, enslavement and sexual slavery, were carried out as part of a widespread and systematic attack against civilians and amounted to crimes against humanity, the human rights organisation said in a report released on Wednesday.

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 08:44

Jamir Nazir’s The Serpent in the Grove, which critics allege has ‘obvious markers’ of AI use, was described as ‘original, poetic and deeply moving’ by the judging chair

A story widely accused on social media of being written using AI has gone on to win the overall Commonwealth short story prize.

Jamir Nazir’s story The Serpent in the Grove went viral after being named as a regional winner in mid-May, with critics on X and Bluesky claiming it showed “obvious markers” of AI use. The literary magazine Granta subsequently pulled out of its long-running agreement to publish the Commonwealth winners.

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 08:25

Netanyahu is caught between Trump and a hard place Expert comment LToremark

As Trump and Netanyahu fall out over Iran war – and how to end it – the Israeli prime minister is caught between US pressure and domestic opinion ahead of crucial elections.

US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The relationship between US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has grown increasingly tense since the start of the Iran war and seems to have reached an all-time low amid Trump’s efforts to end hostilities in both Iran and Lebanon. His memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Iran was largely criticized in Israel. Netanyahu – who always bragged about his great relationship with Trump – was seen as responsible. Another MoU between Israel, the US and Lebanon followed last week. Although it looks more favourable to Israel, it has nevertheless been met with a great deal of suspicion in Israel where the majority supports military action against Hezbollah.

Before last week’s deal, the US president had grown increasingly frustrated that Israel’s actions in Lebanon would jeopardize the ceasefire deal with Iran. Trump has confirmed reports he called Netanyahu ‘crazy’ and used an expletive during a tense phone call. A new book claims there was a similarly angry phone call just days before the public announcement of the ceasefire deal to end the war in Gaza. 

These revelations paint a picture of two leaders who have always emphasized their close alliance and ‘beautiful friendship’ but no longer seem to be on the same page. But does this mean Trump is ready to translate his growing resentment towards Netanyahu into new policy? If so, how would it affect Israeli politics and the upcoming elections?

The end of the Trump–Netanyahu bromance

Quite possibly, no one was happier than Netanyahu after Trump’s election victory in November 2024. He reportedly used to stall to buy time during the Biden administration, postponing key decisions such as a normalization agreement with Saudi Arabia, and fateful decisions on Gaza and the hostages until Trump returned to the White House. And indeed, the Israeli cabinet approved the ceasefire deal with Gaza, that allowed for the release of 33 hostages, just in time for Trump’s inauguration.  

But from that moment on Trump and Netanyahu have struggled to reach a consensus. Trump started his term with a plan to ‘relocate’ Palestinians from Gaza to Libya and a promise there would be ‘all hell to pay’ for Hamas if the hostages were not released. But just months later he presented his 20-point peace plan for Gaza and effectively forced a ceasefire on both Israel and Hamas. 

Just a few weeks prior to Trump’s peace plan announcement, Netanyahu had promised to continue the fight in Gaza to retrieve all hostages and eradicate Hamas. However, he later embraced Trump’s peace plan and the subsequent hostage deal. The families of hostages have argued that Netanyahu sabotaged previous chances for such a deal and eventually only succumbed to Trump’s pressure.

But the war with Iran provided ultimate proof that Netanyahu and Trump have very different worldviews and geopolitical goals. As the proclaimed goals of the war began to look increasingly unachievable, Trump increased cooperation with Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Turkey and Pakistan to secure a ceasefire. Netanyahu, meanwhile, wanted to maintain the military pressure on both Iran and Hezbollah in Lebanon, despite the heavy price of the war – and even as the IDF admitted that eradicating Hezbollah without a full-scale invasion is unrealistic

Netanyahu’s dream that Trump would provide a carte blanche for Israel in Gaza, Lebanon and Iran did not come true. While Trump wanted quick victories for national and personal gains, Netanyahu was more interested in precisely the type of ‘endless war’ that Trump had promised to avoid. The disparity between their goals was made even clearer as the US signed a shaky MoU with Iran and demanded that Israel halt its military activity in Lebanon. 

The terms of the new Israel–Lebanon MoU allow Israeli troops to remain in southern Lebanon until Hezbollah disarms – and Netanyahu has already reiterated that they will. Significant pullouts of Israeli forces would be a highly unpopular move among Israelis and Netanyahu will want to avoid this ahead of the election. Trump, meanwhile, desperately needs this ceasefire to last to stabilize the situation in Iran. It remains to be seen how much pressure the US will exercise to enforce this agreement. So far, timeframes are vague and there are minimal demands on Israel – but this could change.

Consequences for Israel’s election 

Netanyahu will be running in the October parliamentary elections weakened by his rift with Trump – and with many of Israel’s international relationships already strained by the war in Gaza. US Vice President JD Vance’s recent statement that Trump is Israel’s last powerful ally rings painfully true.  

Polls in Israel indicate that Netanyahu currently cannot secure a coalition. Support for the prime minister and his Likud party has been eroded by the 7 October 2023 Hamas attacks, his handling of the prolonged hostage crisis and inability to secure a decisive victory over Hamas, as well as the judicial reform and corruption. It remains to be seen whether the MoU with Lebanon will have an impact on the polls but for now it does not appear to be a game changer.

It is harder to establish whether the rift with Trump has had an impact. In 2015, Netanyahu skilfully used his confrontation with then US president Barack Obama over the JCPOA deal to win the elections. Now, 11 years later he will attempt to pull the same trick with Trump. Polls indicate that over two thirds of Israelis believe that Trump’s policies are damaging to Israel, while pro-Netanyahu media describe Trump as weak and undecisive. So, while some voters may be concerned by the very public rift between Israel and the US, others seem inspired by it.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 08:20

A woman suffered injuries but survived falling 1,500 feet down California's Mount Shasta, which she had attempted to climb, officials said.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 08:12

President made more than $1bn from crypto businesses last year while federal government oversaw regulation. Plus, giant seal causes havoc in Tasmania – but locals love him

Good morning.

Donald Trump has raked in more than $1bn from his crypto businesses since returning to the White House, according to financial disclosures, making him substantially richer and ringing alarm bells over a conflict of interest.

Where else is Trump getting money from? The US president made millions last year from selling Trump-branded bibles, sneakers and other small items in another unprecedented move for the presidency. In the Trump-branded watches category alone, the president earned $4.7m. Trump also racked up tens of millions from fees and licensing deals in a flurry of new hotel, resort and condo deals overseas. Many of those countries were at the same time negotiating with the US over tariffs, military aid and other important matters.

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 08:05
  • Former champion tweaked right knee in defeat against Joint

  • The 44-year-old made return after nearly four years away

Serena Williams’ appearance in the women’s doubles alongside her sister Venus later this week is in doubt because of a knee injury.

The 23-time grand slam singles winner played her first singles match since the 2022 US Open on Tuesday, which ended in a 6-3, 6-7 (6), 6-3 loss to the 20-year-old Australian Maya Joint on Centre Court, and is due to play with Venus at Wimbledon for the first time since they won their sixth doubles title a decade ago.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 11:01

Victor Willis, lead singer of the disco group Village People, whose hit "Y.M.C.A." became a fixture at rallies for President Trump, has died at the age of 74, his wife and the band said.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 14:01

Challenger Melat Kiros, a democratic socialist, is the projected winner of the Democratic primary in Colorado's First Congressional District.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 08:00

We've tried dozens of meal kit and prepared meal delivery services to find the most affordable options that deliver not only on value, but taste, too.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 08:00

With Motorola serving as the World Cup's official smartphone partner, I couldn't resist snapping some photos on its latest foldables.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 08:00

The Vera C. Rubin Observatory has begun its 10-year Legacy Survey of Space and Time, using the world's largest digital camera to image the entire southern sky every few nights. The project is expected to catalog billions of stars and galaxies, track changing and transient objects, and generate an enormous dataset for studying dark matter, galaxy formation, asteroids, and unexpected cosmic phenomena. The New York Times reports: "This is the end of a 30-year wait," said Phil Marshall, the deputy director of the telescope's operations at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory in California, in a statement to The New York Times. "It's a major milestone for us." Astronomers expect this collection of data, known as the Legacy Survey of Space and Time, to revolutionize their knowledge of our galaxy's birth, the invisible matter permeating the cosmos, what shaped the universe into the structure it has today and more. According to Dr. Marshall, the survey is designed to see everything, "even the things we don't know we're looking for yet," he said. The team behind the observatory, a joint effort funded by the U.S. Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation, unveiled several images of the cosmos that were jampacked with celestial goodness -- a peek at what the Rubin could do -- last year. Since then, scientists have been busy conducting final tests and reviews of the telescope's operations and systems. According to Bob Blum, the director of Rubin operations at the National Optical-Infrared Astronomy Research Laboratory, the team has also been hard at work ensuring that the telescope can operate reliably in different environmental conditions for the next decade.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 08:00

The success of democratic socialists has led to an establishment backlash, fueling divisions over how to respond

A recent chair of the Democratic National Committee apparently wants democratic socialists to get out of his party. “If you hate the Democratic Party, then please don’t run for our nomination,” Jaime Harrison tweeted on election day last week, shortly before results showed that three of those socialists had won Democratic primaries for Congress in deep-blue New York City. He didn’t identify his targets, but the implication was clear.

Harrison’s call for self-expulsion was the bizarre opposite of a welcome mat: “Don’t use our resources. Don’t rely on our volunteers. Don’t use our infrastructure. Don’t ask Democrats to invest their time, money, and energy in your campaign.” The tweet turned reality on its head. Socialist candidates have been winning because they inspired multitudes of people to volunteer and provide what’s needed to win.

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 08:00

In Wednesday’s last-32 match, the US team have more than just a chance to win against Bosnia and Herzegovina. They’re playing to win over their country

It took Mauricio Pochettino a little while to understand that he had accepted an innately vibes-based job.

If club soccer boils down to managers exerting control and fitting their players into an intricate system, buttressed by cutting-edge tactics, ultra-modern analytics and first-in-class sports science, international soccer demands a different job entirely. And it tends to take long-time club coaches who are managing in the international game for the first time a bit to catch on to the difference.

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 08:00

Gen Z conservative women may be fewer in numbers than their male counterparts, but they are no less consequential

On the steps of the US supreme court on Tuesday, a group of women celebrated. They cheered and held up signs with phrases like “Girls’ Sports for Girls Only” and “Truth, Fairness, Biological Reality”. Penny Young Nance, the CEO of Concerned Women for America, told the gathering that after a decade of these conservative women’s activism: “The court agrees with us that a man cannot be a woman.”

“The decision will affect the law across the country,” she said. “We will have a better opportunity to protect young women.”

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 08:00

Advocates describe this moment as both a crisis and an opening to reimagine the promises of freedom and democracy

This Fourth of July marks 250 years since the Declaration of Independence promised liberty and equality for all – even as it excluded most of the people living on the land it claimed to liberate.

For many Americans, the semiquincentennial is less a celebration than a reckoning. The country arrives at this milestone amid sustained attacks on voting rights, civil rights and democratic institutions – challenges that organizers say are taking the country back generations. It’s a moment that activists and advocates describe as both a crisis and an opening to reimagine the promises of freedom and democracy.

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 08:00

After a recent study found New Orleans is at a ‘point of no return’ amid the climate crisis, some locals say they will ‘only leave if forced to’. But what would it take to stay?

When a study in May concluded that New Orleans has hit a “point of no return” due to the climate crisis that will require people to eventually retreat from their storied yet ultimately doomed city, the local reaction was swift and fiery.

The onward march of rising seas around a sinking city was unsettling, but the study is “more focused on generating publicity and clickbait headlines” than coming up with solutions, said Helena Moreno, New Orleans’ mayor. There is flooding in Miami, and wildfires and earthquakes near San Fransisco, Moreno pointed out, “yet no serious movement exists to declare those cities lost causes”.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 07:59

Longtime labor activist Dolores Huerta says President Trump's disparaging remarks about Mexicans show he "does not know history," and called on Latinos in California, Texas and other states to push for change.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 07:47

Technical talks reportedly under way in Doha, with Qatar and Pakistan acting as mediators

UK manufacturing activity cooled in June despite a boost from ⁠companies stockpiling ahead of price increases and supply chain problems stemming from the Middle East conflict, according to closely ⁠watched industry survey.

The final reading of S&P Global’s purchasing managers’ index for June fell to 52.5, ⁠below a preliminary estimate of 53.1, and May’s reading of 53.9. Readings above 50 indicate an expansion in activity.

The UK ‌manufacturing sector ended the second quarter of the year on a positive note.

Sustaining the upturn is becoming a bigger concern. Manufacturers are currently benefiting from client strategic stockpiling, as they safeguard against supply chain ‌disruptions and expected price rises. A drop in the rate of growth of new work intakes suggests this boost ​is already starting to fade.

A further rise in manufacturing output in June adds to signs of encouraging resilience in the eurozone economy. June’s expansion in fact rounds off the strongest calendar quarter for euro area manufacturing production since the opening months of 2022, and will offset the recent decline that’s been recorded in the services economy.

This sustained growth was accompanied by a welcome cooling of cost pressures, largely reflecting the sharp drop in oil prices seen during the month, alongside an easing of supply worries.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-07-01 07:47

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware’s legislative session ended after lawmakers sent scores of bills to the desk of Gov. Matt Meyer. Amid negotiations over the state’s capital spending bill, they also overrode a veto that Meyer issued last year.

The fate of Delaware’s billion-dollar Bond Bill as well as a string of other measures was in question until early Wednesday morning as lawmakers jockeyed over which bills they could squeeze into the final hours of the state’s 2026 legislative session. 

In the end, they passed a mountain of legislation, including new data center regulations, wetlands rules, omnibus spending bills, and the first leg Constitutional amendment to codify the legality of marriage between people of any gender and any race.     

The lawmakers also voted to override Gov. Matt Meyer’s veto last year of a bill that limits the land-use restrictions a county can impose on marijuana shops.

Notable bills that did not pass the legislative chambers included a measure to require union workers on school construction sites, and another that would remove a statute of limitations on certain sexual assault claims. 

Senate Majority Leader Bryan Townsend (D-Glasgow) said it took time for legislators to work through negotiations Tuesday. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY ELLA WALKER

Lawmakers ended the all-night session just as the sun was beginning to rise. For many, it also marked an unofficial beginning of what is expected to be a contentious summer political campaign. 

Asked whether the early-morning rush of bills was a cause for concern, Senate Majority Leader Bryan Townsend (D-Newark) said the time it took lawmakers to consider legislation reflected the “sorting out of a lot of viewpoints.” 

“And to some extent, the piling up of items on the final day is part of the nature of the beast,” Townsend said. 

Expressing similar comments was House Minority Whip Jeff Spiegelman (R-Clayton) who called the early morning proceedings the end of a normal June. 

“It’s a normal June between Republican and Democrat, and House and Senate,” he said.

In closing remarks to her chamber, House Speaker Melissa Minor-Brown (D-New Castle) celebrated the dozens of bills that passed the legislature in recent days and weeks, including those that she described as protecting “fundamental freedoms” and expanding “healthcare access.”

And in a possible scolding of certain legislators, she said she was grateful to those who “chose collaboration over division” and “solutions over headlines.”  

House Speaker Melissa Minor-Brown (D-New Castle) oversaw a jam-packed final day of the 2026 legislative session. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY TIM CARLIN

House deliberates over Bond Bill

The biggest bill considered Tuesday into Wednesday was the state’s Bond Bill – a $1.26 billion spending package that funds public construction projects, including a planned port container terminal in Edgemoor. 

Bill sponsor Rep. Debra Heffernan (D-Bellefonte) called the bill the “largest jobs bill that we pass in Delaware.”

And just like one year ago when Republicans blocked the Bond Bill to gain concessions on wind energy, the legislation sat at the center of late-night negotiations. 

Just before 3 a.m., the Delaware House opened its debate on the spending bill. Republicans almost immediately requested a recess to deliberate among themselves. 

They briefly left the House chamber as a group. When they returned, the GOP leaders, including Spiegelman, gathered with Minor-Brown and other Democrats to quietly negotiate further. 

The remaining Republicans continued to quietly talk among themselves. References to veto overrides could be heard coming from the group. 

House Democrats and Republicans confer at the desk of Speaker Melissa Minor-Brown on Wendesday, July 1. SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY KARL BAKER

Shortly thereafter, the House session resumed with Heffernan asking her colleagues to table the Bond Bill. They promptly approved the request. 

House Majority Whip Ed Osienski (D-Newark) then brought a motion for the chamber to consider an override of Gov. Matt Meyer’s veto of Senate Bill 75, which would have prohibited county governments from creating restrictive zoning regulations on legal marijuana shops. 

The Delaware Senate overrode the veto in January. 

Rep. Shannon Morris (R-Harrington) rose to question why the House would consider the move in the early morning hours on the final day of the Legislative Session. 

“We had six months to do this. Why wait until July 1 when the state of Delaware is asleep,” Morris asked.

Osienski said the override decision came after a Delaware Supreme Court ruling in May that declared the state government has ultimate authority over land-use issues.  

“The General Assembly controls zoning power,” Osienski said. His comments highlighted a persistent debate in Delaware politics around the power of localities to control their land-use decisions. 

Ultimately the House voted to override the veto. Following the vote, legislators turned back to the Bond Bill, which subsequently passed.

Asked about the quiet discussions that preceded the votes, Spiegelman said they were to ensure “we are all on the same page.”

Sexual abuse bill flounders

During the early Wednesday morning hours, after both chambers had already passed the Bond Bill and were nearing the end of a marathon final day, a prolonged debate over a proposal surrounding child sexual abuse legal claims gripped the Senate. 

House Bill 75, originally passed in the House last year, would have removed the statute of limitations on child sexual abuse civil claims. 

The bill also removed the state’s immunity in those types of lawsuits, meaning a sexual abuse survivor could theoretically sue the Delaware government for damages should they believe the state enabled their abuse.

Introduced by House Minority Leader Tim Dukes, HB 75 received strong bipartisan support in the House last year and was sponsored by Sen. Nicole Poore (D-South New Castle) in the Senate.

But a late-stage amendment to the bill, introduced this week by Senate President Pro Tempore Dave Sokola (D-Newark), led to nearly an hour of debate.

Sokola’s amendment added new definitions and clarifying language to the bill stipulating that an alleged abuser and their employer do not automatically share a civil liability for harm done to a survivor. 

The amendment drew criticism from both sides of the aisle, with both Sens. Poore and Bryant Richardson (R-Seaford) condemning its inclusion into the bill. Poore said the amendment would close the door on those looking for justice.

“When a child has lost their innocence, should they also lose their access to justice?” Poore asked during a lengthy speech opposing Sokola’s amendment.

Senators ultimately added Sokola’s amendment to the bill, sending it back to the House for a final consideration with the controversial changes added. 

But once back in the House, Dukes made the shock decision to kill the bill instead of considering it with Sokola’s amendment. Officially known as “striking” the bill, he removed it from consideration before it could be voted on. 

Dukes’ move was met with a standing ovation from the entire House chamber. 

In an interview with Spotlight Delaware, Dukes said it was better to strike the bill than pass it with Sokola’s amendment.

“It really gutted the bill,” Dukes said, “and it weakened the hope for victims.”

Following the HB 75 strike, the House unceremoniously passed the state’s annual grant-in-aid funding package, which allocated nearly $100 million to nonprofit organizations across the state. 

At just before 6 a.m., the House gaveled out for a final time, ending the 153rd General Assembly with a marathon 16-hour day of legislating.

As lawmakers enter their six-month off-season, many are gearing up for what will be contentious elections in an attempt to hold onto their seat.

The post Delaware lawmakers stay up late to pass Bond Bill, veto override, others appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 07:44

Some experts say the Strait of Hormuz will not return to its pre-war state, so what could the future of this vital shipping lane look like?

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 07:30

Theodore Roosevelt protected swathes of land, while Trump has lifted them from more than 86m acres

Donald Trump will attend a ribbon cutting for the new Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library on Wednesday, touting the legacy of a president his own administration is attempting to destroy, critics say.

While in office from 1901 to 1909, Roosevelt established five new national parks, protected swaths of land and passed legislation enabling himself and future presidents to proclaim historic landmarks and other objects of historic or scientific interest in federal ownership as national monuments.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 07:30

These titles, plus the return of Ransom Canyon and a new Heartstopper movie, are out this month.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 07:27

Three-year-old remains in hospital after undergoing multiple surgeries but is now in a stable condition

The family of a three-year-old boy who was seriously injured in a crocodile attack at a zoo have thanked staff at the attraction in a new statement released through the police.

Last month, officers were called to Johnsons of Old Hurst zoo in Huntingdonshire over “reports of an incident involving a three-year-old boy, during which he ended up in the crocodile enclosure”.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 07:26

Unions reject proposed below-inflation increase which comes as corporation prepares to cut thousands of jobs

BBC staff fear a strike is on the horizon at the broadcaster after anger over a below-inflation pay rise offer made amid plans to cut thousands of jobs.

There is widespread consternation among staff at the offer of a 1% increase, seen as derisory given that inflation is running at almost three times that level.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 07:06

Buy it for the display's privacy screen feature (if you can afford it).

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 07:04

Crypto ventures eclipse much of property portfolio, with revenue also coming from Trump-branded products

Donald Trump has raked in more than $1bn from his crypto businesses since returning to the White House, according to financial disclosures, ringing alarm bells over a conflict of interest.

According to a 927-page document released on Tuesday by the US Office of Government Ethics, in all Trump made more than $2.2bn last year, benefiting from a vast global network of businesses and investments.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 07:01

Group confirms it will stop opening new accounts under the name and move existing ones to Lloyds

Lloyds Banking Group has announced it is axing the Halifax brand, meaning the 173-year-old former building society’s name will disappear from UK high streets.

The group will stop opening new accounts under the Halifax brand, and kickstart a process of shifting existing accounts to Lloyds branding over the coming days.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 07:01

One excels at fitness, the other at sleep. After extensive testing, here's what you need to know about these smart health tracking devices.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 07:00

Fans of all stripes pack the bars to sing, cheer and commiserate in city where more than 3m people were born outside US

Almost 200,000 Ecuadorians and Ecuadorian Americans live in New York City, and last week quite a lot of them were in a Brooklyn restaurant called El Encebollado de Victor to watch their football team take on Germany – a traditional World Cup powerhouse.

It made for quite a sight: a sea of yellow shirts under the restaurant’s blue roof, which had been adorned with red, blue and yellow balloons for the occasion. Among the most patriotically dressed was Luis Aguilar, 45, who was born in the US to parents who had emigrated from Ecuador.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 07:00

Figure in John Hutton’s west screen, considered a 20th-century masterpiece, cracked by ladder used in lighting rig

Deep cracks have appeared in one of the huge angels etched into John Hutton’s west screen of glass panels at Coventry Cathedral after a major music event.

It has prompted concern that the increase in cathedrals hosting outside events, a big source of revenue, risks damaging some of the UK’s most important religious architecture.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 07:00

A housing shortfall, record home costs and cuts to subsidies are intensifying the US affordability crunch

Of the various dimensions of the affordability crisis weighing on US families, housing probably weighs heaviest. The typical home price has risen above five times the annual income of the typical family. The monthly cost of owning a home has hit record highs.

The US faces a housing shortfall of millions of homes. But builders are not rushing to meet the shortfall. The supply of new homes declined over 14% in May, compared to May of 2025. Moody’s Analytics expects single-family and multifamily residential investment to contract every year between now and 2030.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 07:00

Shannon LaNier, Jefferson’s sixth great-grandson, reflects on his lineage and the role of African Americans in the nation’s founding

When the US turns 250 years old on Saturday, Shannon LaNier will be reckoning with a fundamental contradiction in its origin story – and his own.

LaNier is the sixth great-grandson of Thomas Jefferson, the founding father who wrote the Declaration of Independence and became the third president.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 07:00

Supporters of the method say it’s foolproof – but forensic experts say it can be ‘excruciating’ amid allegations it’s been intentionally botched

The tangled path of US capital punishment takes a new turn on Wednesday as Idaho becomes the first state to adopt the firing squad as its primary form of execution, embracing the brutal killing technique even as concerns grow that it can inflict excruciating pain and suffering.

The state’s department of corrections (IDOC) says it has met its deadline, set by the legislature, to have its death chamber at a maximum security prison south of Boise retrofitted and open for business by 1 July. It has spent more than $1m in the venture, including $24,000 on a rack of AR-style, .308-caliber, scoped rifles that will be wielded by volunteer marksmen.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 07:00

Whether you want to track your stress, sleep, heart rate, steps or more, these are our favorite fitness trackers.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 07:00

Report points to staffing shortages, procedural changes and lack of a board quorum as contributing factors

Dismissals of unfair labor practice charges have surged at the National Labor Relations Board under Donald Trump, according to a new analysis.

From January 2025 to 29 April 2026, the US top labor watchdog dismissed 34.7% of all unfair labor practice charges filed by labor unions, a 14.2 percentage-point increase from 2024. The agency dismissed 67.4% of unfair labor practice charges filed by workers, 10.7 points higher than 2024.

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2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 06:32

On Tuesday, a divided Supreme Court held that state lawmakers can regulate gender identity in scholastic sports competitions, and in particular, block transgender students born as biological men from competing in women’s and girls’ sports.

On January 13, 2026, the justices heard oral arguments for three hours in both West Virginia v. B.P.J. and Little v. Hecox, a case from Idaho. Tuesday’s decision applied to both cases.

In his majority opinion, Justice Brett Kavanaugh said in West Virginia v. B.P.J. that “Title IX allows schools to provide separate women’s and men’s sports teams defined by biological sex, and West Virginia has permissibly maintained female sports for biological females consistent with Title IX.”

Title IX bans discrimination based on sex in educational programs and activities that receive federal financial funds. However, the Education Amendments Act of 1974, known as the Javits Amendment, allows schools receiving funds under Title IX to establish “reasonable provisions considering the nature of particular sports.”

In the case from West Virginia, a parent sued on behalf of her child, B.P.J., arguing that a state law banning biological boys who identify as girls from competing on girls’ teams was unconstitutional. A federal court ruled in favor of West Virginia on Equal Protection Clause and Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 grounds. A divided Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the district court decision in favor of the student on the Title IX claim and ruled against the state under the Equal Protection Clause.

In his majority opinion, Kavanaugh pointed to actions taken by the former Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW) in1975. “HEW promulgated comprehensive regulations requiring that schools provide ‘equal athletic opportunity for members of both sexes’ and authorizing ‘separate teams for members of each sex where selection for such teams is based upon competitive skill or the activity involved is a contact sport,’” he said.

Kavanaugh also held that “the term ‘sex’ in Title IX, the Javits Amendment, and the Title IX regulations cannot plausibly be interpreted to refer to anything other than biological sex.” He also rejected claims that the restrictions on trans athletes competing on women’s and men’s sports teams violated the Constitution’s Equal Protection Clause.

“The challenged West Virginia and Idaho laws make sex-based classifications in limiting female teams to biological females. Under this Court’s equal protection precedents, sex-based classifications are permissible only when the classification is ‘substantially related’ to achieving an ‘important’ government objective. The States argue—and the Court agrees—that the interests of safety and competitive fairness are important interests for purposes of equal protection analysis.”

Chief Justice John Roberts, and Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, and Amy Coney Barrett joined Kavanaugh’s opinion.

Justices Thomas and Gorsuch also filed concurring opinions. Thomas agreed in full with the majority opinion but he added that “transgender status is not a suspect class requiring heightened equal-protection scrutiny.” Gorsuch said his opinion in Bostock v. Clayton County (2020) supported the holding in this case. In Bostock, Gorsuch ruled that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibited employment discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor concurred in the judgment in part and dissented in part. “The Court should have affirmed the Fourth Circuit’s decision to remand for further factfinding,” she said. “Because of the Court’s decision today, West Virginia, and any other state actor, can deny B. P. J. and others like her these experiences simply because it thinks they have an inherent athletic advantage, even if the facts show that they do not.” Justices Kagan and Jackson joined her concurrence.

Justice Jackson also concurred in the judgment in part and dissented in part. “The Court did not need to hold that Title IX protects against discrimination solely on the basis of ‘biological sex,’ even if only ‘in the sports context,’” she wrote, citing Justice Sotomayor’s concurrence. “The Court should have assumed as much while leaving open the possibility that Title IX’s definition of ‘sex’ is more capacious.”

While the decision clearly establishes that states may restrict competition in women’s and girls’ scholastic sports by biological sex, the next challenge will likely come from athletes who claim harm in states where transgender athletes are allowed to take part in contests that match their gender identity.

Today, 29 states have laws or policies that prohibit transgender students from competing in sports consistent with their gender identity, while 21 states have no such laws.

Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-07-01 06:17

On Monday, a divided Supreme Court held that a police request to obtain cellphone user location data represents a search and generally requires a warrant under the Fourth Amendment. Justice Elena Kagan authored the Court’s majority opinion in the case.

The Constitution’s Fourth Amendment reads, “The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”

In Chatrie v. United States, a Virginia man, Okello Chatrie, claimed a detective did not reasonably obtain search warrants used to track down his cellphone location data. The government later used this data to convict him of robbing a bank.

Law enforcement had asked for a geofence warrant from a magistrate. Geofence warrants set a distance from a certain physical point from which service providers such as Google must provide data to law enforcement about a mobile phone users’ activity.

Chatrie was convicted of bank robbery based on evidence gathered in three different cellphone data requests to Google covered under one warrant, based on a protocol developed by Google and approved by a magistrate.

Justice Elena Kagan, in a 6-3 decision, said the Court was presented with a two-part Fourth Amendment question. “Answering that question in full would mean deciding whether the police conducted a Fourth Amendment ‘search’ when they acquired the cellphone data leading to Chatrie’s arrest and, if so, whether that search was reasonable given the features of the warrant they employed.”

“We decide the first part of that inquiry today, concluding that the police conducted a search when they gained access to [Google’s] Location History data,” Kagan noted. The second part of the question Kagan returned to a federal court of appeals to determine if the search was reasonable, properly described with particularity, and supported by probable cause.

Citing the Court’s precedent in Carpenter v. United States (2018), Kagan said, “The Fourth Amendment protects individuals’ reasonable expectations of privacy, and governmental intrusion into that private sphere generally qualifies as a search.”

Kagan found the question presented in this case closely mapped to Carpenter. “In Carpenter, this Court held that accessing cell-site location information (CSLI) constitutes a Fourth Amendment search because ‘individuals have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the whole of their physical movements.’”

“Everything Carpenter relied on to find that law enforcement officers conducted a Fourth Amendment search when they accessed CSLI records applies as well or better to the police’s accessing of Location History data,” she concluded.

The second part of the question will head back to the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals. “The Fourth Circuit did not address the questions that unusual warrant raises. Because this is ‘a court of review, not of first view,’ the Court leaves it up to the Court of Appeals to decide whether, at each step of the search process, the warrant satisfied the Fourth Amendment’s requirements of particularity and probable cause,” Kagan concluded. Chief Justice John Roberts, and Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Brett Kavanaugh, and Ketanji Brown Jackson, joined Kagan’s majority opinion.

In her concurrence, Justice Jackson wrote the Supreme Court should have settled the question returned to the Fourth Circuit. “As the Court observes, ‘[w]hen officers have obtained a warrant,’ the validity of a search turns on ‘whether a magistrate has properly found probable cause to support a particularly described search.’ In my view, it is clear that at a minimum the second and third stages of the search process here did not satisfy this foundational requirement.”

Justice Neil Gorsuch filed an opinion concurring in the Court’s judgment. But he would have taken a different approach to answering the Fourth Amendment issue. “To decide whether the Fourth Amendment is in play, I would consult its terms, asking first whether Location History qualifies as one of Mr. Chatrie’s papers or effects, and then asking whether the government searched those papers or effects. This traditional approach remains very much part of our law.”

“So just as the First Amendment protects speech over the internet today no less than it did speech delivered in the town square in 1791, it should hardly come as a surprise that the Fourth Amendment might protect as personal ‘effects’ electronic diaries of one’s travels as it always has more traditional ones,” he wrote.

Justice Samuel Alito, joined by Justices Clarence Thomas and Amy Coney Barrett, dissented—arguing that this decision and Carpenter established a “protected Fourth Amendment interest in any sensitive personal information about them that is collected and owned by third parties.” This expanded definition also included a requirement, he believed, that “the police must obtain a warrant every time they access any cell-phone location information from a third party, however brief the duration, however innocuous the request, and however voluntarily that information was disclosed by the user.”

Justice Barrett, in a brief dissent, wrote that she agreed with Alito that “under our Fourth Amendment precedent, including Carpenter, Chatrie had no reasonable expectation of privacy in data about his public movements that he voluntarily disclosed to Google. I therefore respectfully dissent.”

Scott Bomboy is the editor-in-chief of the National Constitution Center.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 06:07

AI company was forced last month to suspend access to its Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models for all foreign nationals

Anthropic has restored customer access to its powerful newest AI model, Fable, after a more than two-week blackout resulting from US government safety concerns that it could be abused to enable serious cyber-attacks.

The San Francisco company said export controls had been lifted, citing a social media post from the US commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick, in which he said: “Over the past two weeks, we have worked closely with Anthropic to analyze and approve Fable 5 to ensure alignment across the US Government and strengthen America’s leadership in AI.”

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 06:01

Apple will release iOS 27 this fall, but don't forget to check out all these iOS 26 features before then.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 06:00

The 41-year-old says he intends to continue his career after his departure from the Lakers. There are several intriguing options to consider

It’s official: LeBron James will not finish his career as a Los Angeles Laker. The talking heads are in a gnashing froth. ESPN’s Shams Charania has become the first human being in recorded history to somehow get less than zero sleep over a 24-hour period. Steph Curry is widening his eyes. Bronny James is secretly relishing the chance to forge his own identity as he says “I’ll miss you, Dad.” James hasn’t been the best player in the league for more than half a decade, but at 41 he remains the most decorated and the one who commands the most coverage. So let’s indulge in a time-honored tradition one last time: wild speculation over where the King will play next season.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 06:00

The short answer is that there’s nothing to disclose. But that doesn’t mean we won’t make contact with extraterrestrial life

Even before Stephen Spielberg’s latest film, Disclosure Day, began unspooling at local multiplexes, the internet was debating whether we would ever experience a real-life disclosure day – when the US government admits that it’s aware of aliens here on Earth, a secret it has supposedly kept since the 1940s.

That would be dramatic news. But don’t hold your breath.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 06:00

The United States of America is … so many things, horrific and magnificent, good and evil, promising and cursed

The United States of America is a truck that has driven into a ditch. The United States of America is a program that has been hacked. The United States of America is … so many things, horrific and magnificent, good and evil, promising and cursed, as it approaches its quarter-millennium mark. I say it as though the US was one thing, but it is a thousand things.

It is the masked ICE agent shooting Renee Good as she stood up for immigrants, but it is also Good herself and the immigrants, and the streets of Minneapolis and their Dakota and Ojibwe Indigenous past – and present and future. The US before 1865 was slaveowners, but it was also the enslaved and the abolitionists.

Rebecca Solnit is a Guardian US columnist. Her newest book is The Beginning Comes After the End: Notes on a World of Change

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 06:00

First of major coverage losses expected as a result of the ‘One Big Beautiful’ bill signed into law one year ago

Nearly 500,000 moderate-income New Yorkers will be dumped from their health insurance plans on 1 July – the first of major coverage losses expected as a result of HR 1, the Republican-led law signed almost exactly one year ago.

The law, sometimes called the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act,” slashed government health spending by $911bn nationally in favor of permanent tax breaks for higher-income families and border security.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 06:00

Richard Trahant fined $400,000 over apparent violation of order in case of priest who admitted sexual misconduct

The US supreme court has rejected an appeal from an attorney who was fined $400,000 after taking steps to get an abusive Roman Catholic priest removed as chaplain of a high school campus.

In a notice on Monday, the supreme court’s justices indicated without explanation that they would not take up the case of Richard Trahant, whose clients include dozens of people victimized by a clergy abuse scandal that drove New Orleans’ Catholic archdiocese into federal bankruptcy court.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 06:00

The hit summer reality show takes Wednesday off.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 06:00

Leaders in the arts, science and business, including Sundar Pichai, Jamie Lee Curtis, Katie Ledecky and Ken Burns shared their reflections on America.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 05:25

The lack of accessible healthcare drives many to rely on social media feeds for medical advice.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 05:10

Consumer advocacy group Choice blind tested 30 olive oils – and found many of the highest ranked came from Australia

Consumer advocacy group Choice has taste tested 30 supermarket extra-virgin olive oils, and found some Australian-made oils rank higher than those imported from Italy and Spain.

“A lot of Australians are after local products, and there are a lot of Australian olive oil makers that have built quite a good reputation,” Pru Engel, Choice audience and engagement editor, said.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 05:00

A preview of the forthcoming sci-fi game from Gareth Damian Martin showcases their unmistakable talent for innovation and game design

Over the past decade, an impression has taken root among gamers that any real creativity and originality in the industry is to be found in the indie, rather than mainstream, sector. Gareth Damian Martin can claim some responsibility for that. Their first game, 2020’s In Other Waters, merged sci-fi and underwater xenobiology in a uniquely calming and thought-provoking manner, while Citizen Sleeper (2022) and Citizen Sleeper 2: Starward Vector (2025) were full-blown sci-fi epics with ultraminimal aesthetics and a rare intelligence.

Martin has broken with tradition by unveiling their next game, Signet City, far in advance of its 2027 launch. Set in a dystopian monochrome city, it’s a narrative role-playing adventure with a curious first-person perspective. “You play as a parasite,” says Martin. “And it felt natural that it should be a game where you see the world through the eyes of your hosts, very literally. You wake up in the mind of a person called Sid at the same time as she’s waking up in the river of a city. You’re coming to understand what you are, why it is that you’re in the mind of this person who doesn’t know that you’re there, along with what your capabilities are, and what the world is, through Sid.”

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 05:00

We want to know which mobile carrier you'd recommend to a friend.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 05:00

From screwworm to flesh-eating bacteria, mounting public health risks are emerging in the wake of deep cuts to federal health agencies and programs.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 05:00

In the nation’s gravest hour, the country’s authoritarian regime has crippled an effective response, say survivors, rescue workers and former officials.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 05:00

The FAA plans to replace its 1973 ban on civilian supersonic flight over U.S. land with a noise-based standard, potentially allowing aircraft to exceed Mach 1 as long as they stay below certain sound limits. The agency aims to finalize the rules by mid-2027, opening the door for companies such as Boom Supersonic and Spike Aerospace to operate quieter next-generation passenger jets over land. Longtime Slashdot reader schwit1 shared the notice (PDF) published Tuesday by the FAA. Forbes reports: Technological advances "will eliminate the old sonic boom," FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford said in a statement. "This means we can ultimately repeal the ban from the 1970s on supersonic flight over U.S. territory while minimizing noise impacts to residents in communities along the route and near airports." The primary reason was public opposition to loud sonic booms. In the 1960s, a plane flying faster than the speed of sound -- about 660 mph at high altitudes -- created shock waves that traveled to the ground and reached human ears as a loud gunshot-like crack or thunder-like boom. Tests during that decade, including the Oklahoma City sonic boom experiments, found repeated booms broke windows, damaged property and generated thousands of public complaints. In its 1973 ruling, the FAA stated that due to the limits of technology at that time, "a prohibition was needed to protect the public from sonic boom .... by preventing operations of a civil aircraft at a true flight Mach number greater than 1." Several years later, Air France and British Airways introduced Concorde, and were allowed to serve New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport as long as flights remained subsonic over U.S. land. Notably, "the prestigious London-New York service was the only truly profitable [Concorde] route, supported by high-powered business and celebrity travel," wrote a former British Airways network planner for Forbes in 2021. Several U.S. companies are working on a new generation of luxurious supersonic passenger aircraft with much quieter sonic booms and improved fuel efficiency. In particular, Colorado-headquartered Boom Supersonic says it has pre-orders from United Airlines, American Airlines and Japan Airlines for its Overture jets, which will carry 60-80 passengers. Atlanta-based Spike Aerospace is developing smaller Diplomat jets for up to 18 passengers. Both companies' websites tout future transatlantic flights in under four hours.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 05:00

A dark shadow falls across the Supreme Court building.
The Supreme Court is deciding more consequential rulings than ever before in secret, issued in unsigned orders with little to no justification. Bryan Dozier/NurPhoto via AP

In its term that ended last October, the Supreme Court passed an important milestone that went unnoticed: For the first time, it decided more cases by secret ballot, and with few signed opinions, than it did for cases argued in open court.

These decisions, which make up the court’s “shadow docket,” are a fast-track way to get a decision from the top court. They rarely include arguments, have limited briefings and have expedited timetables, and justices infrequently provide explanation of how they voted or to cite legal precedent. 

The Supreme Court’s increased willingness to bypass its regular process has empowered President Donald Trump at the same time as the administration has increased use of executive authority. The court has repeatedly green-lit policies of his that lower courts have blocked — and has done so with little to no explanation. 

These emergency decisions have thrown lower courts’ processes into turmoil and have sometimes directly contradicted longstanding legal precedent. The outcomes have been consequential: The high court has used the process to limit federal courts from issuing nationwide injunctions and diminished Congress’ authority over federal agencies, and it has allowed for the detention of American citizens by immigration agents

ProPublica analyzed over two decades of Supreme Court rulings, which cover all of the years under Chief Justice John Roberts and go as far back as the online archives allow. We found that when the last court term ended, justices had issued 63 orders on the shadow docket, as opposed to 56 orders on the more traditional merits docket — where the court hears oral arguments scheduled months in advance and the justices issue signed opinions.

Legal scholars and court watchers were shocked by our finding. They told ProPublica it’s likely the first time in modern history that so many consequential decisions were made in secret by its nine members.

“The patterns show a court going out of its way to enable Trump,” said Stephen Vladeck, a law professor at Georgetown University and a Supreme Court analyst. He said that our findings reinforce the appearance that the justices are voting on their political preferences. 

“That’s the real blow to the court’s credibility,” he said.

Representatives from the Supreme Court did not respond to a detailed list of questions. 

In a statement, a spokesperson for the White House wrote, “President Trump has faced a historically unprecedented number of injunctions by liberal lower court judges, the same judges who would rather push their own policy schemes and undermine the Administration’s lawful agenda. President Trump will not stop implementing the America First initiatives on which he was elected.”

For the First Time in Two Decades, Decisions on the Supreme Court’s Shadow Docket Outnumber the Merits Docket

A line chart shows the number of Supreme Court decisions on the merits docket versus the shadow docket from the 2003-04 term to the 2024-25 term. The merits docket decisions trend downward over time, ending at 56 decisions, while the shadow docket decisions rise sharply in the 2018-19 term and surpass the merits docket in the last term at 63 decisions.
Note: Supreme Court terms run from October to October. Ken Morales/ProPublica

There are two ways to get a decision from the Supreme Court. One is to exhaust your appeals to lower courts and ask to argue your case in front of the high court. The justices determine whether to take the case on, and if they do, lawyers argue their case in front of them. The other is to petition the justices directly via the emergency docket — to freeze a lower court ruling or government policy while the case goes through appeal.

The appeals to the emergency docket have long outnumbered those to the merits docket, but most are procedural requests or requests to stay execution for capital offenses. When those are removed, what’s left is known as the shadow docket — cases that seek to skip the usual order of things and ask for a quick ruling from the court’s justices.

The modern shadow docket was born in 2016 when the Supreme Court issued an emergency stay against President Barack Obama’s Clean Power Plan, experts say. Papers obtained by The New York Times show that liberal justices at the time urged Roberts not to decide the case on an emergency basis because it broke with longtime precedent. The conservative justices, meanwhile, forcefully argued that the president’s plan would eventually be overturned by the court anyway and that it would put too much of a burden on the energy industry.

Driven by its numerous losses in lower courts, the current Trump administration appeals to the emergency docket significantly more often than previous administrations, and the court has increasingly agreed to take quick action on its appeals.

The Obama and George W. Bush administrations together filed just eight petitions in 16 years. The Trump administration filed 32 in 2025 alone, an analysis by the Brennan Center for Justice found.

The increased willingness of the Roberts court to intervene on Trump’s behalf — as well as in other issues that favor conservatives and Trump allies — has upended American life, said Donald Ayer, a former deputy solicitor general and deputy attorney general who served under the Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations.

“On many subjects of real importance to our future, they’ve demolished what used to be the law,” he said.


Public scrutiny of the shadow docket ramped up in September 2021 after the Supreme Court used it to issue a one-paragraph, unsigned opinion that further rolled back abortion rights established in the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling. In the order, the court refused to block Texas’ Senate Bill 8, the “Heartbeat Act,” which banned abortion after an embryo’s cardiac activity is detectable, typically at six weeks of pregnancy and before many people know they are pregnant. Protests erupted nationwide, and the Senate held a hearing on the shadow docket.

In an unusual public acknowledgement, Justice Elena Kagan referenced the shadow docket by name in her scathing dissent, accusing the majority of green-lighting a “patently unconstitutional law” with only a cursory review in less than 72 hours.

“In all these ways, the majority’s decision is emblematic of too much of this Court’s shadow docket decisionmaking — which every day becomes more unreasoned, inconsistent, and impossible to defend,” Kagan wrote.

That an opinion was even issued and that four of the justices signed their names to it was uncommon. On the shadow docket, justices do not have to make their votes known. In rare cases, their votes are revealed in terse indications that they grant or deny the application, or even more rarely, as an opinion. We found that just 17% of votes cast had any sort of public record of a vote or opinion.

Responding to public criticism, Justice Samuel Alito contended that the court isn’t to blame for the rise in shadow docket cases. “We do not file these emergency applications,” he said. “Parties file them.”

The debate has continued. “We cannot expect the public to have faith in our judicial system if, without clear explanation, we consistently green-light harmful acts that do real damage,” Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson said during an April speech on the shadow docket at Yale Law School.

Until this past Supreme Court term, emergency applications fluctuated year to year but showed no clear upward trend. The applications are given first to a single justice, who decides if a case is worth referring to the full court. In recent years, justices have referred more of such appeals for a review and vote by the full court.

Last term, when there were both more cases and more referrals to the full court, the appeals to the shadow docket finally overtook those to the merits docket.

Emergency Applications Referred for a Full Court Vote Have Risen Sharply

Total applications have varied over the last two decades, with a surge last term under President Donald Trump. 

A stacked bar chart shows the number of emergency applications to a single Supreme Court justice and the full court from the 2003-04 term to the 2024-25 term. While the total number of applications received fluctuates over time, the number referred and decided by a full court vote rises steadily after the 2017-18 term. There is a sharp surge in total emergency applications to over 150 in the 2024-25 term.
Ken Morales/ProPublica

The cases were consequential. On June 23, 2025, after a lower court had ruled that eight men being deported to South Sudan should have due process, the Supreme Court intervened after a request from the administration to stop that order. The men were deported. The majority didn’t issue an opinion justifying its ruling.

Three months later, the Supreme Court voted to allow immigration agents to stop people based on racial or ethnic characteristics while still-ongoing litigation against it proceeded. To justify the decision, Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote a rare shadow docket opinion that people who were in the country legally would be “free to go after the brief encounter.” These became known as “Kavanaugh stops.” Last year, ProPublica found more than 170 citizens who had been stopped and detained by ICE agents. The more than 50 Americans held even after agents learned of their citizenship were almost all Latino.

And in May, while an election in Louisiana was already underway, the justices allowed the state to immediately redraw its electoral map, removing one of the two majority-Black voting districts. Louisiana can now use that map for the 2026 midterms as part of a nationwide redistricting battle for control of the House of Representatives — an effort touched off by Trump’s call for Republican-led states to create more safe seats for themselves.

Roberts once signed on to a Kagan dissent that assailed the shadow docket. But our analysis found that he has referred more substantive cases for a vote by the full court than any other justice, going from just one in the 2005 term when he joined the court to nearly half of all referrals in the last term.

There is an additional difference between the shadow docket and the merits docket. After the court holds public argument, the justices’ ultimate merits decisions are closely watched and extensively covered by the press. The summer’s “decision season,” when the final and most significant rulings come down, has a predictable cadence that ends when the justices go on summer recess. Not so with the shadow docket. Increasingly, the justices are making big decisions after they’ve issued their final merits docket decision, when public attention has waned.

A group of Democrats led by Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., have sponsored legislation to make the shadow docket more transparent.

Raskin told ProPublica that the court’s legitimacy has fallen with every significant decision made without “real opinions or analysis.”

“Lower federal courts have been deciding against the Trump administration in an overwhelming majority of cases with weighty and well-reasoned opinions,” Raskin said in a written statement. “Yet when things get to the twilight zone of the shadow docket, the Supreme Court is overturning 100-page opinions with a flippant sentence or two.” He added, “The result is a body that looks less like a Supreme Court and more like a Royal Court rubber stamping the madness and folly of the Trump Administration.”

“The jurisprudence of the Roberts Court today is as murky as the green algae water in the Reflecting Pool.”


How We Reported This Story

To compare the number of cases on the Supreme Court’s shadow docket to the traditional merits docket, we compared emergency applications listed on the court’s online docket search with counts of decisions compiled in Penn State’s Supreme Court Database (Version 2025 Release 01). For the merits docket, we counted only signed decisions in argued cases, the typical format for those rulings.

The court’s online docket goes back to the year 2000, but our analysis looks at Supreme Court terms from October 2003 to October 2025, where emergency applications are easily identified by the letter “A” in their docket number.

We identified more than 27,000 emergency applications during that period, including thousands of requests that are not commonly understood to be a part of the shadow docket. Most appeals to the emergency docket are the type of requests that were traditionally handled there: procedural requests, such as extending the time to file, and requests to stay execution for capital offenses. The remainder are the focus of our reporting.

Substantive Shadow Docket Cases Are a Small Fraction of All Emergency Applications

A stacked area chart shows the number of emergency applications from the 2003-04 term to the 2024-25 term. The vast majority of applications are for filing relief, followed by capital cases. The number of substantive shadow docket cases is a small portion of all applications but has been rising.
Note: The COVID-19 lockdown impacted applications for filing relief in the 2020-21 term. Ken Morales/ProPublica

We defined a substantive application on the shadow docket as any filing where the full court was asked to intervene in the traditional appeals process, such as staying a lower court’s order. 

Most of the cases we excluded are decided by just one justice, each of whom oversees one or more federal circuits and has the power to refer filings to the wider court. When the cases are referred to the full court, they are the subject of a vote by the justices. We ran our approach by multiple experts, all of whom found it sound.

A filer can appeal to another justice if their application is denied. The next justice to receive the application always refers it to the full court. We did not include these renewed applications because our analysis found the court has never granted one.

The court has labeled capital punishment cases only since the October 2017 term. To identify them prior to that, we flagged applications for stays of execution. We then manually reviewed every case referred to the full court. For applications decided by a single justice, we used an AI model to flag potential capital cases by examining the parties on the application and the relief requested. The model flagged over 60 possible capital cases, and those were manually reviewed. Despite our effort, it is possible some capital cases may still be included in our final tallies before the 2017 term.

Although rulings on the shadow docket are typically unsigned and do not include vote breakdowns, we were able to identify how a justice voted in some cases. The analysis is based on either the opinions issued by the justices, most of which are dissenting opinions, or if the justice indicated they would have granted or denied. In some decisions, the justices issued a statement not attached to either a grant or denial. We did not record these as votes.

The post A Troubling Milestone: Most Supreme Court Rulings Are Secretive Votes With Little Justification appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 05:00

The pope's visit to the Italian island of Lampedusa, desperate migrants' gateway to the West, will set up a split-screen moment as President Donald Trump holds an Independence Day rally.

2026-07-02 20:04
2026-07-01 04:34

Europe watches the next American revolution take shape Expert comment jon.wallace

Europe cannot affect the course of America’s latest reinvention, as it did 250 years ago. But it can adapt to a more unhappy relationship.

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London is a fraught place from which to watch an American revolution. 

There is an amusing local story, that King George III spent many hours poring over military plans in a basement near Buckingham Palace, scheming how best to supress troublesome revolutionaries. That basement, the rumour goes, was located in what is now Chatham House: my new professional home after leaving Washington and life as a US diplomat last year.  

Throughout America’s War of Independence, Great Britain’s leaders dumped blood and treasure into securing their rebellious colonies, intent on overcoming their scrappy but capable countrymen: revolutionaries who sought religious liberty and freedom to dissent. Revolutionaries who opposed unjust taxation and exploitative trade relations. Revolutionaries who rejected the status quo.  

King George’s basement plotting was for naught, and a new nation was born. Today, 250 years later, leaders in Britain – and across Europe – once again watch with trepidation as new political currents take root across the Atlantic. 

History doesn’t repeat itself, but in the US its echoes carry a similar spirit of revolt. This movement is not directed at an outside power, but rather at the current system’s ability to address Americans’ biggest worries: the availability and affordability of healthcare above all, followed by issues including the economy, inflation, federal spending and the deficit, and income and wealth distribution.   

While many Americans agree on the diagnosis, there’s sharp division on the remedies. Some call for reining in expansive US military commitments abroad and redirecting war spending to focus on investments at home. Others hope to dismantle the billionaire class and promote greater economic justice. Some seek a consolidation of executive power to unleash the authority of the presidency. These are live debates heading into the November midterms, and they cut across party lines.

Europe’s view

European leaders, observing this storm, wonder what will remain when the tempest subsides. They recognize these winds blowing across the US for what they are: not a short-lived gust but a sustained gale. They know that irrespective of who next presides over the Congress or sits behind the White House’s Resolute Desk, the US is fundamentally altering its role in the world. Plans must be made to account for a more inwardly focused US, one that is less embedded in alliances and less aligned on values.  

This is not a new American story. As the ink dried on the Declaration of Independence, the new United States began an awesome project of stitching together a vision for its role in the world – no small feat given the composition of its often-divided citizenry.  

The US still needs Europe when it comes to global financial markets, emerging technology cooperation, intelligence sharing, select military cooperation and alignment on China.  

President George Washington warned against alliances and entanglements, worried that permanent structures would weigh the new nation down with others’ burdens. His successors largely stayed the course. It took Pearl Harbor to drag a reluctant President Roosevelt into war in Europe. 

The post-Second World War structure was a new, American-crafted design, launching the most powerful set of interlocking alliances the world had ever seen. US troops ensured the security of partners on bases across six continents, paid for with ballooning federal deficits. Liberalized trade brought cheap goods but closed factories in the US. New immigrants made America an engine of innovation but fuelled a nativist backlash. President Trump did not spark such fears, but he stoked them.

As Americans begin the process to select Trump’s successor, competing visions for the US’s future will emerge. Candidates will debate the true nature of the threat from China, how much time to spend on Russia, the contours of a fairer trade regime, the rules of the road for emerging technology, and the future of alliances. 

Whoever wins, Europe is right to anticipate a different relationship with the US. Today’s era, of a Washington that prioritizes American manufacturing and higher trade barriers, is here to stay. A period of greater burden-sharing with partners and a more limited global US defence role will outlast Trump. So too will the president’s transactionalism, and narrower conceptions of national interest.

For those of us who still believe in the value of alliances, it’s not all doom and gloom. These alliances will endure in newer forms. The scope will be narrower, but the US still needs Europe when it comes to global financial markets, emerging technology cooperation, intelligence sharing, select military cooperation, and alignment on China.  

Europe needs the US too – maybe a bit too much, as its leaders have painfully learned. But Europe is now making key investments in NATO spending, an independent defence industrial base delinked from US defence trade, greater sovereign AI capabilities, and space and satellite infrastructure. Fear of US dependency has accelerated these investments, but in the long run, they can be converted into sources of transatlantic strength.

I recently hosted a former US official in conversation with diplomats in London. Like me, this person was pessimistic about the prospects for a restoration of trust with Europe post-Trump. But, the visitor observed, many loveless marriages survive because one spouse keeps cutting the grass and the other keeps cooking dinner. ‘What are these tasks?’ another wondered: that is, what bonds might keep the US–Europe marriage intact?

In my view, it goes something like this: the US provides Europe with a nuclear umbrella, integration in US capital markets and preferential access to American technology. Europe grants the US access to its capital, offers secure supply chains for key technology inputs and extends the reach of its sanctions.

As Europe takes on fuller ownership of its own neighbourhood, especially across its eastern flank, the US will be freed up to look east. The shared language of democracy and universal values are no longer centred. But the US and Europe remain bound together, joyless yet committed.  

The multitude

King George III marched over to Parliament in October 1775 to detail his war plans against the ‘unhappy and deluded Multitude’ in America. He promised to ‘receive the Misled with Tenderness and Mercy’ once they realized the error of their ways.

The revolutionaries may have been unhappy as British cannons tore into their defences, but they were certainly not deluded. The multitude went on to build a nation that has reshaped history, underwriting an era of security and prosperity for many, though not all.  

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 04:33

Why should Delaware care?
High electricity prices have been a top concern for Delaware residents, and many fear proposed data center projects could raise costs further. A slate of bills aiming to prevent further price spikes passed the legislature in the late hours of the session.

A trio of bills aimed at reining in rising energy costs in Delaware passed the General Assembly on Tuesday, the final day of the legislative session.

One would limit the amount of infrastructure spending that the private utility, Delmarva Power, could pass on to customers. 

Another would require power hungry data centers to bring their own energy generation to the state within 10 years of their construction. And the third would designate data centers as the first to be cut off from grid power in a blackout, and other provisions.

In all, they amounted to the latest legislative backlash to proposals to build data centers amid an electricity supply crunch in Delaware. The states’ bills followed data center regulations that the New Castle County Council passed in March. 

The Cloud HQ data center sits in Loudoun County Virginia.
Delaware lawmakers considered bills in 2026 that regulate data centers. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY OLIVIA MARBLE

Gov. Matt Meyer has not said if he supports the bill that would require data centers to supply energy. He has indicated support for the other two bills in recent weeks.

The bills come as Delaware residents have struggled with high electricity bills. Critics say that proposed data centers could make those bills surge even higher. 

New data center proposals in Delaware have a combined energy demand that could double the state’s entire electricity usage. An independent analysis showed that scenario could raise wholesale energy prices by as much as 80%. 

What do the bills do?

Lawmakers passed Senate Bill 326, the infrastructure spending limits, overwhelmingly – an unexpected development after hints emerged Monday that a fight could be percolating with the introduction of an amendment to weaken the legislation.  

Beyond limiting some infrastructure spending, the bill would place several other regulations on Delmarva Power, including mandating audits of management.

Lawmakers also passed House Bill 233, which would make data centers the first to be cut off from power in a blackout and would have strengthened safeguards to ensure they paid the full costs of the energy they use.

Lastly, they passed House Bill 445, which would require data center developers to supply all of the power they use within 10 years of beginning operations and require some of that power to be renewable.

The two data center bills faced late-night deliberations in both chambers.  

Republicans and some Democrats in the Senate questioned why those bills were necessary now, or if they could wait until next session. Sen. Eric Buckson (R-South Dover) argued that lawmakers needed more time to deliberate them. 

“Unless the goal is to outright ban these things [data centers] in the state of Delaware — which might be an option — if it’s not the goal, then we should get the bill right,” Buckson said. 

Buckson introduced another bill to place a seven-month moratorium on data center development, which Senate Democrats shot down without comment. The Senate ultimately passed the bills on party lines.

The post Lawmakers pass bills to limit energy price hikes, regulate data centers appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 04:27
As new Onewheel riders, this is the speed me and my son ride around comfortably 😄

Always a blast though. These things are super fun 😊

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-07-01 04:08

Airlines and airports say passengers are struggling in queues of up to five hours for biometric checks

Airlines and airports have called for the new EU biometric border check system to be suspended during the peak summer holiday period, saying some flights are leaving half full and passengers are struggling in queues of up to five hours.

In a letter to Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, airlines and airports asked for an option to suspend checks under the system over fears the situation will get much worse during the busy summer season.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 04:00

When it's too hot to grill or turn on the range, I turn to this speedy, compact cooker to whip up meals without overheating the kitchen.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 03:00

Fears of resurgence of HIV/Aids amid loss of access to PrEP drugs as at least 40 people arrested in ‘toxic’ climate

A “witch-hunt” is under way in Niger, where dozens of people have been arrested for homosexuality in the west African state following the introduction of a new penal code earlier this year.

Up to 40 people have been arrested and 16 men, including high-ranking military officials, have been imprisoned across the country, according to local media.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 02:44

The roof of a private tutoring center in Lahore, Pakistan, collapsed, killing more than a dozen pupils and leaving at least eight more injured, authorities say.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 02:36

Security footage images show a friend went to Simon Peter Carman’s apartment in Pattaya, Thailand after reporting Thunchanok Donhomla missing

The friend of the 17-year-old girl allegedly murdered in Thailand reported her missing to police and then visited the condo of the Australian man charged over her death.

Security footage images obtained by the Guardian shows the friend at the apartment of Simon Peter Carman. The footage is time stamped 1.49pm on Friday 26 June, although it is not clear whether the time stamp was added manually.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 02:27

US at 250: Separation vs. concentration of power – America’s enduring constitutional debate 17 September 2026 — 17:00 TO 18:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online

The third session in the US at 250 mini-series explores how checks and balances continue to shape American democracy.

Discover how checks and balances continue to shape American democracy.

As the United States approaches the 250th anniversary of its Constitution, debate is growing over whether power remains balanced across government institutions. The US constitutional system faces scrutiny amid disputes over executive, judicial and administrative authority. These debates raise broader questions about the resilience of the US constitutional system.

This event discusses:

  • How has the separation of powers evolved over the past 250 years?
  • Does the Constitution effectively prevent the concentration of power?
  • What impact have the administrative state and judiciary had on institutional balance?
  • Which reforms could strengthen accountability and constitutional resilience?
  • How well is the Constitution equipped to meet future political challenges?

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 02:00

The Trump administration has lifted export restrictions that forced Anthropic to shut off public access to its Mythos and Fable models. After weeks of talks, Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick said Anthropic "has agreed to proactively detect and address security risks associated with the models; to work diligently with the U.S. government on protocols and standards and releases for Mythos, Fable and future models; and to inform the US government of any malicious activity." Access is set to begin returning July 1. TechCrunch reports: Anthropic had already publicly pledged to do much of this voluntarily, months before the export rule existed. That's part of why cybersecurity experts were skeptical of the restrictions in the first place. To them, the ban looked less like a security fix and more like leverage, a way for the Trump administration to punish Anthropic for its executives' public criticism of how the government, and the president's political opponents, might use the technology. Mythos was originally made available to a select group of organizations beginning in April to allay concerns about its ability to identify and exploit vulnerabilities in software, while a version called Fable was released to the public in June with additional security guardrails. However, with Asian AI companies beginning to release their own AI models approaching Mythos-level capabilities -- among them Fugu and Tulonfeng -- the US government was under pressure to ease its restrictions on Anthropic to ensure that American AI could compete globally. Last week, Lutnick cleared Mythos to be released to select customers approved by the White House. OpenAI's latest models were also released to a group of organizations approved by the Trump team, instead of the public. The Trump administration's erratic approach to AI policymaking has left companies across the industry with little clarity about what will govern future model releases. An executive order issued in June that signaled a desire to review models ahead of release was criticized by influential analysts like Dean W. Ball, who recently started a policy position at OpenAI.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 01:44

In today’s newsletter: A country already in crisis since the removal of its leader earlier this year by the US, now has to find a way to rebuild with little state presence in evidence

The shaking seemed to come from nowhere. In a moment captured by fishers off Venezuela’s Caribbean coast, two earthquakes struck seconds apart. Plumes of dust appear where buildings once stood in the recording as the camera rises and falls with the swell. The men rapidly head for the shore in search of their families. “I’m shaking,” says the cameraman.

Since the quakes struck last Wednesday, the search for missing loved ones has not stopped for scores of Venezuelans. Officially, more than 1,700 people have died. But tens of thousands remain missing: desperate relatives are walking up and down streets lined by rubble and collapsed buildings with photos of those they cannot find, asking for help.

World news | A child has been rescued from the rubble in Venezuela, six days since the country was hit by devastating twin earthquakes.

UK politics | Andy Burnham will have to find an extra £4.7bn for defence in his first budget, after Keir Starmer announced a £298bn defence investment plan (Dip) without having fully identified how it will be funded.

US politics | The US supreme court has upheld the constitutional guarantee of birthright citizenship, affirming that nearly all people born on US soil are American citizens and rejecting a central pillar of Donald Trump’s anti-immigrant agenda.

UK news | The European media group Axel Springer has completed its £575m takeover of the Telegraph, ending years of uncertainty over the future ownership of the 171-year-old titles.

US news | Nine matches in the World Cup group stage were played amid potentially dangerous heat and humidity, a Guardian analysis shows.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 01:44

Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser is the winner in the pivotal race to be the Democratic nominee for governor in Colorado, AP projects.

2026-07-01 08:04
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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 00:32

Twenty-nine-year-old beat representative Diana DeGette in deep-blue Denver district

The democratic socialist Melat Kiros unseated the long-serving US representative Diana DeGette in Colorado’s primary elections held on Tuesday, the latest in a string of high-profile victories for the party’s insurgent left.

The Associated Press reported that Kiros had defeated DeGette for the Democratic nomination in the deep-blue first congressional district centered on Denver. Kiros’s triumph came a week after New York voters unseated two Democratic congressional incumbents and replaced a third who was retiring with candidates who had campaigned on standing up to Israel amid accusations that it was carrying out a genocide in Gaza.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 00:18

Co-hosts Mexico reached the last 16 – where England potentially await – with a stirring win over Ecuador at Mexico City Stadium

Mexico’s football culture dates back to the early 20th century, and the country has a place in history as participants in the first ever World Cup match, when they lost 4-1 to France on the opening day of the 1930 World Cup in Uruguay.

The following match against Chile they conceded the World Cup’s first own-goal.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 00:09

Leftists toppled a three-decade incumbent they’d made the face of the Democratic Party’s failures on Tuesday in Denver amid an anti-establishment wave that has powered progressive and socialist midterm victories across the country.

Voters chose democratic socialist Melat Kiros, an attorney who lost her job for condemning her industry’s silence on Israel’s genocide in Gaza, ahead of longtime Rep. Diana DeGette, a Democrat representing Denver who touted progressive positions on domestic issues but drew criticism that she had grown complacent over three decades in Congress and generally followed the party line on support for Israel.

Related

The Democratic Party Gets Its Populist Takeover

DeGette’s defeat in Colorado’s 1st Congressional District brought more bad news for Democratic incumbents reeling after losses in New York last week. Party leaders are facing a surge in public frustration with their brand and a cascade of voters who say they don’t wield power effectively. Though some Democratic leaders have discounted those races and claimed that the ascendant candidates’ vision is out of step with the party’s base, leftists and progressives are continuing to notch wins under their noses as they take the battle over the future of the Democratic Party to the polls.

“In the last week, we have taken out 40 years of incumbency,” said Usamah Andrabi, spokesperson for Justice Democrats, which backed Kiros and two of the candidates who won in New York. 

Members of the Democratic establishment “hate that they can no longer simply spend unlimited sums of money to buy a seat in Congress, and we are truly proving that organized people power and mass movements can beat the money,” he said. “We’re just having an amazing fucking cycle.”

Kiros, who will face Republican Christy Peterson in November, is heavily favored to win in the solid Democratic district.

“In the last week, we have taken out 40 years of incumbency.”

Anti-incumbent sentiment also came through in the tight Democratic race for governor, where the state attorney general framed himself as the choice against the establishment despite holding statewide office. Two-term Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser defeated sitting Sen. Michael Bennet after casting himself as outsider who went after President Donald Trump in court dozens of times and won — a fairly standard tactic for Democratic state attorneys general.

That’s not to say every race in Colorado was a warning sign for the establishment. In the statewide race for Senate, the incumbent safely kept his seat as progressive challenger Julie Gonzales fell short of ousting centrist Sen. John Hickenlooper. (Hickenlooper had refused to debate Gonzales and tried to thwart her run early in the race.)

Mixed Results in Key Districts

In the district encompassing Colorado Springs, Jessica Killin, an Army veteran and previous chief of staff to former second husband Doug Emhoff, easily beat Joe Reagan, a populist second-time candidate and fellow veteran. Killin had far outraised him with the backing of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. 

Days before the 5th Congressional District primary, Killin pledged to sign onto a new pact from conservative House Democrats to promote capitalism, equating socialism with the right-wing MAGA movement and promising to fight both. Killin will face first-term incumbent GOP Rep. Jeff Crank, whose district the Cook Political Report changed from “solid” to “likely” Republican.

State Rep. Manny Rutinel, who has been described as a progressive but recently reneged on some of his policy pledges, meanwhile, beat a former state lawmaker backed by conservative Democrats’ Blue Dog PAC in the 8th District, rated a “toss up” and one of the DCCC’s “races in play” that could help determine control of the House. He’ll face freshman GOP Rep. Gabe Evans, who was ranked last summer as the most vulnerable incumbent in the country.

Rutinel campaigned in the heavily Latino district on fighting the “cruelty” of Trump’s immigration policy and attacked the record of his opponent, Shannon Bird, on the issue. He positioned himself as the candidate who would do more to rein in Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Backed by the campaign arm of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, Rutinel backed off of some of his more left-leaning stances during his campaign, such as Medicare for All and opposing fracking. While he had reportedly been privately critical of Israel’s genocide in Gaza, he said he wouldn’t “boil it down to one word descriptors” and would support military aid to Israel. He ran without the support of the Working Families Party, which had previously endorsed him.

While Blue Dog-backed Bird had the institutional support of the centrist and party-aligned New Democrat Coalition Action Fund and EMILY’s List as well as the pro-Israel Democratic Majority for Israel PAC, Rutinel had the advantage in fundraising and dominated ad space. House Majority PAC — which is aligned with House Democratic leadership — has already reserved $6.1 million in ad reservations for the general election.

Related

Who’s Spending in Your Congressional Election? We Tracked the Front Groups Fueling the 2026 Midterms.

“Voters can see through the hollow words and platitudes of the corporate-backed candidates who have tried to hijack our working families-centered messaging during this campaign,” said Carlos Valverde, Southwest regional director for the Working Families Party. “People are tired of status-quo, do-nothing politics that protect the comfortable while working families struggle with housing, healthcare, wages, and basic dignity.”

In Denver, according to Andrabi, on-the-ground energy from the campaign’s supporters made the crucial difference. While DeGette received a last-minute infusion of super PAC money, the Kiros campaign “knocked 115,000 doors in this race, which is just insane.”

The post Socialist Momentum Grows as Melat Kiros Wins in Denver appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-07-01 00:00

The informal alignment of U.S. adversaries is dangerous.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 00:00

With her popularity flagging and a general election looming, the Italian PM sees a strategic advantage in the rupture

If Giorgia Meloni thought that she could put her April spat with Donald Trump over the pope’s criticism of the US war on Iran behind her, she had not banked on the US president’s capacity to bear a grudge.

Trump reignited tensions by telling an Italian TV journalist that the Italian PM had “begged” him for a picture at the recent G7 meeting in France. The Spanish newspaper El País suggested that Trump’s feathers had been ruffled by a video at the same meeting, showing Meloni appearing to scold him. In any case he doubled down on his tale in a Truth Social post, adding that Meloni wanted the photo to boost her flagging approval ratings, which he blamed on her failure to support the US in the Iran war.

Riccardo Alcaro is head of research at IAI, Istituto Affari Internazionali in Rome

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.

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2026-07-01 12:04
2026-07-01 00:00

If Iran gets a new deal with America, so must Israel.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 23:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Inside Climate News: A new state law limits Florida communities' aims to offset greenhouse gas emissions that are warming the global climate and intensifying disasters such as hurricanes. Specifically, HB 1217 prohibits local governments from pursuing net-zero emissions goals. At least 10 cities and counties have implemented such policies, including Fort Lauderdale, Miami, Orlando and Leon County, where Tallahassee, the state capital, is located. But the new law will not necessarily upend these policies, said Bradley Marshall, senior attorney at Earthjustice, an advocacy group. "It's certainly meant to scare municipalities and local governments from trying to do things to further net-zero policies," he said. "Now, its exact impact and what it exactly prohibits is probably up for some debate. Things that are adjacent to it -- emissions reductions and even climate change reduction policies -- on their face will not run afoul at all of a ban on adopting a net zero policy." The measure requires local governments to submit an affidavit annually to the state Department of Revenue verifying compliance. Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, signed the measure on April 22, Earth Day, and the law will take effect July 1. It states that "net zero policies, carbon taxes and assessments, and emission trading programs are detrimental to this state's energy security and economic interests and inconsistent with the energy policy and the environmental policy of this state." [...] HB 1217 also prevents local governments from purchasing items such as vehicles or appliances based on the fuels they use or production of the items. Local governments may not participate in carbon-trading programs or use public funds to support other organizations with net-zero policies. Cities and counties also may not charge a tax or fee tied with carbon emissions. "This bill is definitely part of a larger coordinated push by the political enablers of the fossil fuel industry to obstruct any tools -- legal or legislative tools -- to hold the industry accountable for its contributions to climate change," said Laura Peterson, senior analyst at the Union for Concerned Scientists, an advocacy group. "Florida is really on the front lines. So I imagine the governor is taking this step because he sees what's coming down the pike. It's not getting better. So I can only assume that this is an effort to satisfy some of the pressures that he's getting from donors and from his party to protect the industry. And he's doing it at the expense of his constituents."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 23:00

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 22:54
GT Tire Change Questions for a First Timer

Hello All,

After nearly 1500 miles it looks like I'm due for my first tire change (see photos). This was the stock slick that came with my board 3 years ago (I think pre the current "performance tire"?). My main questions are:

  1. Based on the photos, how dire is my situation and how fast should I get a new tire? I know the correct answer is "now", but if you have experienced this, how quickly did it degrade after you noticed the first signs? For reference I check my tire about once a week because my city's streets suck, and this showed up over the past 10 miles.

  2. I know there are a million resources out there but are there any tutorials those experienced with this process find particularly helpful, especially for someone's first time doing a tire change?

  3. I ride exclusively in a pretty flat city and very rarely in wet conditions. Is a basic slick the way to go or do you have other recommendations?

  4. For those of you who have done this, is there any other wisdom you have that you think would benefit a rookie like me? Anything from helpful hints, common mistakes to preferred tools would be greatly appreciated. In all honesty I'm a bit intimidated by this project and want to be confident that I can trust my work.

Thanks so much for the help!

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 22:50
custom pint paint job

my bf finally convinced me to buy a used pint off marketplace, so i decided to paint it.
themed after the celica rally car lmao
handcut stencils and rattle cans so not the world’s best finish. i still think it turned out ok tho

submitted by /u/mangomilk898
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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 22:21

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for July 1.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 22:15

Lawyers for President Trump asked for E. Jean Carroll's consent to delay the $5 million awarded to her by a 2023 jury, according to an attorney for the writer.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 21:27

Artificial intelligence giant Anthropic says the federal government lifted a set of restrictions on its powerful Claude Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models, resolving a weekslong dispute.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 21:15

Hernan Gil Flores is believed to still be in the security booth of the building's underground parking garage. His wife says rescuers have been able to make contact with him and get him water.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 20:50

After nearly two weeks of emergency vehicles, the smell of rotting food and a massive warehouse fire impacting Boyle Heights residents, some families are now facing extra financial strain after their vehicles were towed by Los Angeles police in the midst of the firefighting efforts.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 20:48

The US have used outside companies, including one measuring players’ brainwaves, to help them determine who will shoot in a shootout

There is perhaps nothing more polarizing in the game of football than a penalty shootout. But however you feel about them, you can’t deny the drama involved, which was on full display in Monday’s last-32 matches.

Germany were the first at this World Cup to fall victim to the cruel nature of the procedure, with Kai Havertz, Nick Woltemade and Jonathan Tah all missing from the spot and handing a shock victory to Paraguay. The Netherlands, who have plenty of familiarity with the devastation of losing in a shootout, came next, putting in a poor effort against Morocco, who took full advantage.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 20:46

From old PCs to dusty printers, here's where to drop off your outdated tech without paying a cent.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 20:26

The Aspen Acres Fire has destroyed 55 homes in Custer County and more than 100 structures in Pueblo County.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 20:40

Justices to consider whether bans on AR-15s and similar semi-automatic firearms violate second amendment

The US supreme court will consider whether bans on AR-15 rifles and similar semiautomatic firearms are constitutional.

The justices said on Tuesday they will hear appeals challenging bans in Connecticut and the Chicago area in the next term.

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2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 21:30

President unveils plans for Dallas summit, in break with tradition of conventions only in presidential election years

Donald Trump has announced that Republicans will stage their first ever national convention ahead of the midterm elections, a move aimed at energizing voters as the party fights to hold its narrow congressional majorities in November.

The two-day gathering will take place in Dallas on 9 and 10 September, marking a break from the longstanding tradition of holding national conventions only during presidential election years. Trump confirmed the plans on Tuesday in a Truth Social post, describing Dallas as “One of my favorite places in the World”.

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2026-06-30 20:04
2026-07-01 05:01

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for July 1, No. 1,838.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-07-01 05:01

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for July 1 No. 850.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-07-01 05:01

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for July 1 No. 1,116.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-07-01 05:01

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for July 1, No. 646.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-07-01 16:23

The probe focuses on Gallego's use of campaign funds for family trips, a source told CBS News. He has denied wrongdoing.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 22:59

President Donald Trump has announced that Republicans will hold their first-ever national convention ahead of the midterm elections in Dallas.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-07-02 11:18

President Trump earned more than a billion dollars from crypto-related ventures alone last year, according to a financial disclosure, including from his meme coin business and his family's cryptocurrency firm.

2026-07-02 16:04
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Insights about the nation's population, households, education, employment, and income.

2026-07-01 08:04
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Local officials said preliminary reports showed the centre was unregistered and operating inside a privately owned residential building

Fourteen children died after ⁠the roof of a tutoring centre collapsed in Pakistan’s eastern city of ⁠Lahore on Tuesday, ⁠rescue ​officials have said, as authorities opened the way for a possible negligence ⁠investigation.

Punjab’s emergency service said rescuers found children and a 30-year-old female teacher ⁠under the rubble of the private after-school facility. The ​children killed were aged ‌five to ‌16 with most below nine.

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2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 19:30

The company is taking a slightly different approach to previewing its highly anticipated foldables. Here's what the cryptic videos could mean.

2026-07-01 08:04
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w̷̹̓̀̀͌i̷̧̝̼̼̺̅̊̇̄͑͝s̷͍̎͐̎h̷̨̖͍͊̃l̴̹̻͋̑̓é̴̩̿͜d̴̡̗̰͎̂̑̑̂͌̕

crazy wild ride

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2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 19:03

A long-term U.S.-Iran peace deal may depend on a separate agreement between Israel and Lebanon. Analysts say that presents a problem.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 19:01

Doctors say survey shows need for morning-after pill to be available at corner shops, petrol stations and supermarkets

Almost half of the UK population believe it would be difficult to access emergency contraception on a Sunday, while nearly two-thirds think they would struggle after 10pm, according to a survey.

The research, carried out by YouGov, found that only 7% of people believe it would be difficult to access emergency contraception during the daytime on a weekday.

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2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 19:01

Ahead of England’s first knockout game of the World Cup, Love Letter to England celebrates what English people have in common

What does it mean to be English? Ahead of England’s first knockout game of the World Cup, Ian McKellen and the award-winning playwright James Graham have released a short film that attempts to answer that deceptively simple question.

The film, Love Letter to England, explores and celebrates what people across the country have in common. It draws on early contributions to the National Conversation, a UK-wide initiative that began last month.

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2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 19:01

Polyendocrine metabolic ovarian syndrome is underdiagnosed and inconsistenly managed, according to Nice

Up to 4 million women with irregular periods should be investigated for polyendocrine metabolic ovarian syndrome, according to new NHS guidance.

PMOS, previously known as polycystic ovarian syndrome, is believed to affect up to 13% of reproductive age women, the World Health Organization estimates.

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2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 19:00

Amazon says it is ending sideloading on new Fire Sticks because "apps that facilitate piracy, and other apps, can carry malware," adding that there is "a good amount of evidence" that sideloaded apps may contain unwanted code or behavior. However, the company did not provide specific examples of Fire Stick users being harmed. Ars Technica reports: Amazon has released two Fire Stick models that use its proprietary, Linux-based operating system, Vega OS. Previous Fire Sticks ran Fire OS, which is an Android fork based on the Android Open Source Project. One of the biggest differences between Vega OS and Fire OS is that the former doesn't support sideloading. [...] In a recent interview, Or Goren, editor-in-chief of Cord Busters, a UK-based streaming news outlet, noted the negative reaction to Vega being a closed OS. [Aidan Marcuss, VP of Fire TV, advertising, and Appstore] responded, per the publication, by saying that Vega OS was Amazon's opportunity to "innovate and deliver more capabilities, even on the least expensive devices." He also said that making a platform around security and privacy was "sort of utmost in my mind." The statement is somewhat ironic, considering Vega OS blocks custom launchers and other third-party apps that helped users avoid Amazon tracking and ads. Goren asked whether Amazon had evidence that sideloaded devices caused users harm. "Apps that facilitate piracy, and other apps, can carry malware," Marcuss responded. Marcuss also said that there is "a good amount of evidence that apps can carry unwanted code and behavior on them when they're sideloaded." Marcuss didn't provide specific examples of Fire Stick users being hurt by sideloaded apps. There are some potential examples, though. In 2025, Amazon claimed to blacklist (which blocked the apps from being sideloaded to Fire Sticks) four video streaming apps for malicious behavior. At the time, AFTVnews reported that two of the apps served as residential proxy providers and were considered riskware, and that the other two had APK files that were flagged by virus-scanning tools. Safari and Chrome also flagged one of the apps' official websites, the publication reported. And in 2018, a botnet that infected Android devices with cryptocurrency-mining malware appeared on some Fire Sticks, per discussion on XDA Forums. That said, Amazon also has a history of disabling apps that let users circumnavigate its home screen that Fire devices, including Fire Sticks and Fire TVs, have increasingly used for ads. Worth noting: developers can continue sideloading apps onto Vega OS devices if they register them with Amazon.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-06-30 19:00

This undated photo from Winter 2023 provided by Breaking The Silence, a whistleblower group of former Israeli soldiers, shows blindfolded Palestinian prisoners captured in the Gaza Strip by Israeli forces at a detention facility on the Sde Teiman military base in southern Israel. (Breaking The Silence via AP)
An undated photo from winter 2023 provided by Breaking The Silence, a whistleblower group of former Israeli soldiers, shows blindfolded Palestinian prisoners captured in the Gaza Strip by Israeli forces and held at a detention facility on the Sde Teiman military base in southern Israel.  Photo: Breaking The Silence via AP

Editor’s note: This article contains graphic descriptions of sexual violence.

The months after the October 7, 2023, attacks saw a wave of questionable mainstream news stories about alleged sexual assault in Hamas’s attacks that day on Israel.

It would be years before the American press began to deal with sex crimes against Palestinians imprisoned by Israel as part of its brutal occupation.

It’s a reckoning that is long overdue.

Sexual violence by Israeli forces against Palestinians in detention is both a systematic and a decades-old practice — a well understood dynamic that is being put in the spotlight this week in a new report from the Palestinian Feminist Collective, a group of Palestinian and Arab feminist researchers and organizers.

The extensive 188-page report, parts of which were shared with The Intercept in advance of publication, situates recent, high-profile news stories detailing the rape and sexual assault of Palestinians in Israeli detention as part of “a wider system of sexualized and gendered violence spanning detention, warfare, surveillance, reproductive destruction, family separation, domicide, and the desecration of Palestinian bodies” over decades.

The report, “A Predatory State: Israeli Systemic Sexualized and Gendered Violence Against Palestinians,” brings together witness and survivor testimonies; news coverage; academic research; United Nations reports; and findings from human rights groups, like the Gaza-based Palestinian Centre for Human Rights, Geneva-based Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor, and Israel-based B’Tselem; along with declassified Israeli archival material.

A spokesperson for the Israel Defense Forces denied allegations of mistreatment of Palestinians in detention and said the military could not comment on specific cases without more information about the detainees.

“The IDF rejects allegations concerning the systematic abuse of detainees, including allegations of stripping detainees of their clothes and sexually assaulting detainees during interrogations in detention facilities under its responsibility,” the spokesperson said in a statement to The Intercept. “Allegations of misconduct by IDF soldiers are examined and handled accordingly. In appropriate cases, criminal investigations are opened by the Military Police.”

The United Nations added Israel in May to a blacklist of countries found to be committing sexual violence in war zones, citing 31 cases of sexual violence perpetrated in the last two years by Israeli forces against Palestinians from the Gaza Strip and the West Bank. The new Palestinian Feminist Collective report underlines that the U.N.’s findings are merely the tip of the iceberg.

Related

The Story Behind the New York Times October 7 Exposé

The compilation of harrowing details from a multiplicity of sources offers a chilling rebuke to those who have sought to discredit Palestinian victims’ claims or dismiss cases of sexual assault and rape perpetrated by Israeli forces as rare aberrations.

Crushed testicles, genital beatings, rapes of detainees including children and the elderly — the report, like a number of the previous human rights reports it draws from, shows that such abuse is, according to the authors, “institutional practice rather than individual misconduct.”

Rape by Trained Dogs

A section of the report shared with The Intercept includes the detailed testimonies of multiple released Palestinian prisoners. A 42-year-old woman arrested in Gaza while going through an Israeli military checkpoint in November 2024, for example, described being stripped, blindfolded, and handcuffed to a metal table and raped vaginally and anally by Israeli soldiers.

Related

YouTube Quietly Erased More Than 700 Videos Documenting Israeli Human Rights Violations

“I felt a penis penetrating my anus and a man raping me,” the woman said, in testimony originally collected by the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights. “I started screaming, and they beat me on my back and head while I was blindfolded. I felt the man who was raping me ejaculate inside my anus.”

She then recounted subsequent vaginal rapes.

A 41-year-old Palestinian father arrested at Kamal Adwan Hospital in December 2023 and held for 22 months in Israeli prison reported, “One of the soldiers raped me by violently inserting a wooden stick into my anus. After about a minute he removed it and then inserted it again more forcefully.”

Other accounts from boys and men detail anal rape by soldiers and prison guards using carrots, bottles, batons, and other sharp objects.

The report also includes multiple accounts claiming the use of trained dogs as sexual threats and tools of direct sexual violence.

When the New York Times’s Nicholas Kristof last month reported on widespread and extreme sexual torture of Palestinians in Israeli detention, including the use of trained dogs to rape detainees, the backlash from Israeli authorities and pro-Israel mouthpieces was as swift as it was predictable.

The Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs slammed the article as “one of the worst blood libels ever to appear in the modern press” — a typical retort that deems any criticism of Israeli brutality to be antisemitic. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu threatened to sue the Times for defamation. No such lawsuit has materialized, bound as it would be to fail and risk a court process revealing further horrors perpetrated by Israeli forces.

Related

The Media Calls Israeli Captives “Hostages” and Palestinians “Prisoners”

Meanwhile, for Palestinians and advocates of Palestinian liberation, Kristof’s report was perhaps only surprising for its presence in the New York Times. Reports of rape, sexual violence, and sexual humiliation in Israeli custody have been widespread well established for years.

Pro-Israel media outlets like Bari Weiss’s The Free Press attempted to discredit and debunk the testimonies in Kristof’s article, particularly those from formerly detained Palestinians who alleged that trained dogs were used to rape prisoners. Such abuse was impossible, the critics claimed — despite the fact that, according to survivors, Augusto Pinochet’s regime in Chile, as well as Nazi prison commander Klaus Barbie, reportedly used dogs to rape and sexually torture prisoners.

The “Predatory State” report lists 10 specific incidents of rape or severe sexual assault involving trained dogs, as reported to human rights groups by victims themselves or firsthand witnesses.

“The shock came when they forced me to lie down, and a dog climbed on top of me and tried to insert its penis into me,” one detainee testified, in a report first compiled by Euro-Med and cited by the Palestinian Feminist Collective. “At first, I did not understand what was happening, but then I realised that I was being raped.”

“They unleashed police dogs on us again, allowing them to tear into our flesh,” a 48-year-old man arrested at Al Shifa Hospital in Gaza told the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights in further testimony cited by the Palestinian Feminist Collective. He reported that one dog attacked a fellow detainee and “started mauling his genitals (penis). He bled to death in my arms.”

“Violence Across Decades”

The report authors note that “sexual torture has often preceded the deaths of detainees and prisoners and therefore must be considered part and parcel of the crime of genocide waged against the Palestinian people.”

This statement covers more than just Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza: The Palestinian Feminist Collective report is explicit in including accounts of sexual violence reportedly carried out by soldiers as well as settlers in the West Bank.

“They zip-tied my penis, tightened it and then dragged me all around the village,” a Palestinian man, Qusai Abu-al Kebash, told B’Tselem of a reported assault at the hands of settlers in his West Bank village earlier this year.

In response to credible claims of sexual assault, particularly in Israel’s Sde Teiman military prison, Israel’s defenders have attempted to downplay incidents as aberrations or outliers in the fog of war.

“This is a story about how Israel was institutionally overwhelmed by events after October 7,” Jonathan Conricus, a former Israeli military spokesperson, now fellow at the neoconservative think tank Foundation for Defense of Democracies in Washington, told The Free Press.

He was responding to an incident caught on video of Israeli soldiers appearing to beat and brutally sodomize a Palestinian prisoner with a knife. Conricus blamed “reservists without the right training” who “were called up to be prison guards” — but rejected any claims of systematic abuse.

“The Sde Teiman footage should have shattered the fiction that Palestinian testimony is unproven.”

All charges were dropped against the soldiers accused of sexually assaulting the detainee. Numerous Israeli lawmakers, including far-right Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, condemned the military for even attempting to charge the soldiers.

Reports like the Palestinian Feminist Collective’s further give the lie to excuses like Conricus’s.

“The Sde Teiman footage should have shattered the fiction that Palestinian testimony is unproven until Israeli perpetrators record themselves,” legal scholar and human rights attorney Noura Erakat told The Intercept. “Still the debate focuses on whether individual soldiers received direct orders, rather than how a state has sanctioned, protected, and repeated this violence across decades.”

Related

Video of Sexual Abuse at Israeli Prison Is Just Latest Evidence Sde Teiman Is a Torture Site

In a statement shared with The Intercept, Loubna Qutami, a member of the Palestinian Feminist Collective, said, “This report names what Palestinians have long known and what the world has too often refused to hear: Israel’s sexualized and gendered violence against Palestinians is systemic, historical, and constitutive of Israeli colonial rule.”

According to Igal Dotan, an Israeli attorney cited in the Palestinian Feminist Collective’s report, “The situation before the war was very bad, but it is not comparable to what happened in Israeli prisons after October 7.”

Dotan’s clients include a “severely disabled” 14-year-old Palestinian boy, diagnosed with autism, who was, the report notes, “reportedly sexually, physically, and psychologically assaulted while in detention.”

Before October 7

The Palestinian Feminist Collective refuses to begin its history of sexual and gendered violence on October 7. The report includes testimonies of sexualized violence gathered from oral histories, declassified archives and historical documents, dating back to the Nakba in 1948, the expulsion of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from what are today’s Israel’s internationally recognized borders.

The long history of systematic displacement and dehumanization of Palestinians is run through with sexualized violence — as is common in situations of oppressive, militarized violence and population control.

“Sexual torture is a technology of Israeli rule.”

“‘A Predatory State’ documents how sexual torture is a technology of Israeli rule: a means of terrorizing Palestinians and advancing a project of destruction,” Erakat told The Intercept. “Accountability must go beyond a handful of soldiers to reach and tear down the legal, military and political structures that command and then protect these crimes.”

With the genocide in Gaza ongoing and Israeli expansionist violence continuing in the West Bank, Lebanon, and Syria, such accountability seems beyond our current horizons of expectation.

More evidence of the sort compiled by the Palestinian Feminist Collective is unlikely to change that; it is not for lack of evidence that Israeli forces continue to carry out war crimes with impunity.

The urgency is to act on the ample evidence we have.

“The report is a call upon all responsible citizens to stay united,” said Francesca Albanese, U.N. special rapporteur on the occupied Palestinian territories, in a statement on the Palestinian Feminist Collective report, “not just to end genocide, but to fight once and for all this testosteronic model of power that roots and grows through subjugation and repression.”

Update: July 2, 2026
This story has been updated to include a statement from the Israeli military received after publication.

The post How to Show That Israel’s Sexual Violence Against Palestinians Is Systemic — and Has Gone on for Decades appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 18:35

Looking for others' experiences with Indy Speed Control batteries, good or bad.

I bought an 18S2P plug-and-play pack for an XRV build (around $1,080). It failed on its first full charge cycle: the charger cycled on and off, then quit, and the fuse was fine. The app shows Cell 1 stuck at a false 5.112V at 0A with normal temps, so it looks like a BMS fault, not the charger. It was defective out of the box.

ISC told me to ship it back for repair, but I requested a return label days ago and haven't heard back since.

Have you had a pack fail this early? Is this a known issue?

How did ISC handle warranty, repair, or replacement?

Did they provide a prepaid return label, or did you have to pay for the regulated shipping yourself?

Trying to figure out if this is a one-off or a pattern.

submitted by /u/vegasjake
[link] [comments]

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 18:22

The holdouts blocked Speaker Mike Johnson's plan to merge the SAVE America Act with the annual defense policy bill before sending it over to the Senate.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 18:20

Visit to monarch planned for 6 September and will take Jamaica’s mission for reparatory justice to the ‘next level’

Jamaican officials will travel to the UK in September to formally lodge an unprecedented petition with King Charles to seek legal guidance on their slavery reparations claim from Britain, the country’s government announced on Tuesday.

Speaking in the parliament of the Caribbean nation, Olivia Grange, the culture minister, confirmed that the trip was planned for 6 September, and was intended to take Jamaica’s mission for reparatory justice to the next level.

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2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 18:19

A new video shows the $500 Clicks Communicator phone actually working. It offers a preview of all the typing and messaging that's to come.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 18:15
  • Thomas blasts commissioner for silence on player safety

  • Mercury star was suspended for hit to Clark’s throat

  • Play was ‘complete accident’ and ‘unfortunate’, she says

Phoenix Mercury forward Alyssa Thomas said she has received death threats and been called racial slurs in the aftermath of her one-game suspension after she made contact with her fist to Caitlin Clark’s throat in last week’s matchup against Indiana.

Thomas also criticized the WNBA commissioner, Cathy Engelbert, for not doing more to protect players.

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2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 18:12

Trump, who had signed an order to the effect, handed legal defeat after judge sided with Democratic-led states

A federal judge on Tuesday blocked the Trump administration from implementing a new rule ⁠stripping public service workers of eligibility for federal student loan forgiveness if it deems their employers to have a “substantial illegal purpose”.

US district judge ⁠Myong Joun in ⁠Boston sided ​with Democratic-led states, cities and non-profits that argued the US Department of Education’s rule would allow it to target groups supporting immigration rights, transgender ⁠healthcare and other causes the Trump administration disfavors, by disqualifying them from the Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program.

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2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 18:00

Google has shut down the Tenor API, breaking GIF pickers in services that still relied on it and forcing platforms such as X to migrate elsewhere. 9to5Google notes that the library itself remains available at Tenor.com and "integrations within Google products are also still active, including Gboard, Google Messages, and more." From the report: The Tenor API has been rejecting new API sign-ups in January of this year, but existing integrations remained in place. This week, though, they're shutting down, and any integrations that remain in place will stop working on July 1. The support page adds details that "any API or Ads Distribution Agreements" with Tenor will be terminated on June 30, while "current integrations" will be "fully decommissioned" as of June 30. One of the most notable examples here is Twitter/X, which has relied on Tenor for its GIF picker for years. Twitter/X Head of Product Nikita Bier confirmed that the platform has migrated elsewhere, which is why the "recently used" section was purged, and why you might notice fewer GIF options when posting. Other platforms affected include Discord, WhatsApp, and Bluesky.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 17:57

The Supreme Court on Tuesday affirmed the public’s understanding for more than 100 years that the Constitution guarantees citizenship, with narrow exceptions, to people born in this country. But particularly striking was that four justices disagreed with the majority’s interpretation of that constitutional guarantee.

The question before the justices was whether the Constitution guarantees citizenship to children born in the United States of parents who are unlawfully or temporarily present in the country. Under the Citizenship Clause of the 14th Amendment, “all persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”

President Trump’s executive order last year said children born in this country to parents here unlawfully or temporarily are not “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” and don’t qualify for citizenship. A majority of justices disagreed.

Although the decision in Trump v. Barbara striking down the executive order is considered a 6-3 ruling with dissents by Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch, it was actually 5-4. Justice Brett Kavanaugh would have struck down President Trump’s birthright citizenship order because it violated a federal statute, but not the Citizenship Clause of the 14th  Amendment.

That 5-4 split is significant both legally and politically. The dissenters would encourage Congress to use legislation to change the federal statute (8 U.S.C. § 1401(a)) that codifies the Citizenship Clause to add new exceptions to citizenship as in Trump’s order. Such a change likely would face steep odds in the current court because of its ruling Tuesday. But if the narrow five-justice majority were to change in time, the constitutional ruling could be in jeopardy. It would only require one vote.

How could the nine justices divide on an issue that had been settled and reaffirmed for more than a century, and on Trump administration arguments rejected by some of the nation’s most respected historians and legal scholars as “off the wall?” To some observers, the divide is another example of how far to the right this court has moved, particularly with the Trump appointees Gorsuch, Kavanaugh and Barrett.

So why did they split?

Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. wrote the majority opinion, joined by Justices Amy Coney Barrett, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Ketanji Brown Jackson.

Roberts wrote that the story of citizenship in the United States begins with English common law, of citizenship, known as jus soli, or the right of the soil. That common law rule was carried to America and prevailed in all of the states after American Independence.

The common law understanding continued until Dred Scott v. Sandford, which departed from the common law and adopted the view that blood, not soil, determined citizenship, and descendants of slaves were not eligible. The country returned to the common law in the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which made citizens of “all persons born in the United States and not subject to any foreign power, excluding Indians not taxed.”

The 14th Amendment completed what the 1866 act started, according to Roberts. The amendment, he wrote, “was intended to repudiate Dred Scott. This time, however, the goal was even grander—to put the ‘great question of citizenship’ ‘beyond the legislative power’ altogether, to settle the issue once and for all.”

The 14th Amendment, he wrote, “achieved its aim. The Citizenship Clause mirrored the common law’s criteria for citizenship. The Clause starts, like the common law, with territory—a child must be ‘born . . . in the United States,’ not elsewhere (even to American parents). And the clause ends, again like the common law, with sovereign power—a child must be ‘subject to the jurisdiction’ of the United States, unlike (say) the families of foreign ministers. A child born on American soil and subject to American law was made an American citizen. Even the language of the clause is that of the common law.”

Roberts rejected the arguments by the primary dissenter—Thomas—that a person must be “domiciled” in the United States to be subject to its jurisdiction and eligible for citizenship.

“If Congress intended to limit American citizenship to the children of those domiciled in the United States, nothing in the succinct language of the Citizenship Clause conveyed that design. Words appearing frequently in the Executive Order—mother,’ ‘father,’ ‘lawful,’ ‘temporary—are absent from the clause. For a simple reason: they did not matter.”

Justice Thomas, joined by Alito and Gorsuch, said the executive order was consistent with the original meaning of the Citizenship Clause insofar as it applied to children born to parents here lawfully or unlawfully but not domiciled in the United States.

“The Citizenship Clause was enacted for people who were born in this country and called it home,” he wrote. “It was enacted for freed slaves such as Dred Scott, who had ‘a domicile’ here and therefore were entitled to sue as citizens. It was enacted for men such as Frederick Douglass, who demanded citizenship ‘not as aliens nor as exiles,’ but as ‘Americans.’”

That the Constitution requires “domicile,” he argued,” is supported by the constitutional text, contemporaneous evidence, early executive practice, early legislative practice, judicial precedent, and all of the other indicators of original public meaning. The Court’s alternative account does not have a similar degree of support.”

Thomas accused the Court of “repurposing” the 14th Amendment to protect its own preferred rights that were never envisioned by the Reconstruction Congress. “Today, the Court does so again by recognizing a constitutional right to citizenship for the children of all foreign birth tourists and illegal aliens,” he concluded.

Gorsuch echoed Thomas’ primary argument, writing: “What matters isn’t whether a child’s parents are citizens. What matters is whether they (and, by law, their child at birth) have made this place their home and are thus ‘domiciled within the United States.’”

And Alito said the majority’s interpretation of the amendment confers citizenship on “virtually everyone who happens to be born in this country, including the children of ‘birth tourists,’ women who come here solely for the purpose of giving birth to a child and then promptly return home.”

He contended that analysis of the amendment’s text and the history of its adoption “shows that it does not degrade the concept of United States citizenship in this way. Instead, the Fourteenth Amendment confers citizenship on only those children who, at birth, owe allegiance solely to this country.”

Kavanaugh wrote that the court could have struck down the executive order on grounds that it violated the federal statute codifying the Citizenship Clause, but not the 14th Amendment.

The Constitution, he wrote, is “an enduring document, and its principles were designed to, and do, apply to modern conditions and developments. The original constitutional principles do not change absent a constitutional amendment, but the relevant principles— both the rules and exceptions alike—must be faithfully applied not only to circumstances as they existed in 1787, 1791, and 1868, for example, but also to modern situations that were unknown or unanticipated by the Constitution’s Framers.”

He added that “under basic tenets of constitutional interpretation,” other exceptions to birthright citizenship, such as those recognized in the executive order and in the 1898 decision, United States v. Wong Kim Ark, are constitutional.

Tuesday’s opinions are long– more than 200 pages in total– a challenge for readers. But as Justice David Souter once told an audience, the public must read the decisions to decide who is right, whether one explanation of principles and history is more persuasive than a different explanation.

There may be attempts, as suggested by some of the dissenters, to legislate the Trump administration’s views, but for now, the Roberts Court majority has ruled on the meaning of the Constitution’s Citizenship Clause.

Marcia Coyle is a regular contributor to Constitution Daily. She was the Supreme Court Correspondent for The National Law Journal and PBS NewsHour who has covered the Supreme Court for more than three decades.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-06-30 17:47

MILPITAS, Calif., June 30, 2026 — Worldwide 300mm fab equipment investment in the memory sector is projected to surpass $50 billion for the first time in 2026, rising 29% to $52 billion before increasing another 11% to $57 billion in 2027, SEMI reported this week in its latest 300mm Fab Outlook. The growth reflects continued AI-driven demand for advanced memory, supported by rising investment in AI infrastructure, data centers, and next-generation computing systems.

300mm Fab Equipment Spending on Memory Sector

Looking further out, global 300mm fab equipment spending in the memory sector is expected to grow at a 19% CAGR from 2024 to 2029. Worldwide 300mm memory capacity is also projected to increase, reaching 4.1 million wafers per month in 2026 and 4.2 million wafers per month in 2027.

“Strong demand for high bandwidth memory and other advanced memory technologies is reshaping investment priorities across the semiconductor supply chain,” said Ajit Manocha, SEMI President and CEO. “As AI infrastructure expands, memory manufacturers are accelerating investments in both capacity and technology migration to support the next wave of data-intensive applications.”

Memory Segment Growth

The 2Q26 edition of the SEMI 300mm Fab Outlook includes an increased projection in 300mm fab equipment spending in the memory sector driven by continued upward capital expenditure plans among leading cloud service providers and strong demand for AI accelerators. DRAM equipment spending is expected to grow 29% to $37 billion in 2026, supported by strong HBM and DDR5 demand for GPUs and other AI accelerators. Equipment spending on 3D NAND is also projected to rise 28% to $14 billion in 2026, supported by increasing data storage requirements tied to AI deployment.

Continued investment in advanced-node DRAM and higher-layer 3D NAND is supporting a stronger memory capacity outlook, which has been revised upward in the 2Q26 edition of the SEMI 300mm Fab Outlook. Effective capacity growth, however, remains moderated by technology migration and process complexity, including advanced-node DRAM, HBM, and higher-layer NAND transitions.

The SEMI 300mm Fab Outlook lists 413 facilities and lines globally. The report reflects 155 updates and addition of 7 new fabs/lines projects since its last publication in March 2026.

For more information on the report or to subscribe, please contact the SEMI Market Intelligence Team at mktstats@semi.org. More details are also available on the SEMI Market Data webpage.

About SEMI

SEMI is the global industry association connecting over 4,000 companies and 1.5 million professionals worldwide across the semiconductor and electronics design and manufacturing supply chain. We accelerate member collaboration on solutions to top industry challenges through Advocacy, Workforce Development, Sustainability, Supply Chain Management and other programs. Our SEMICON expositions and events, technology communities, standards and market intelligence help advance our members’ business growth and innovations in design, devices, equipment, materials, services and software, enabling smarter, faster, more secure electronics.


Source: SEMI

The post SEMI Projects 300mm Memory Equipment Investment to Surpass $50B in 2026 appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 17:40

Once WhatsApp's username feature is launched, you'll be able to protect the privacy of your phone number for new contacts.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-06-30 17:37

June 30, 2026 — AMD today announced the AMD Versal Premium Gen 2 Memory on Package (MoP) adaptive system-on-chips (SoCs). The MoP architecture integrates up to 32GB of LPDDR5X into a single package, delivering up to 288GB/s of bandwidth in up to 60% less board area, letting engineers build high-bandwidth systems without the risk and time of board-level memory design.

Directly integrating memory into an adaptive SoC package enables faster data transfer, reduces latency and can help lower power consumption compared to standard SoC packages.

As physical AI, networking, and aerospace and defense workloads push more data through ever-tighter space and power budgets, MoP targets the designs that need it most: test and measurement, professional video editing, and VPX systems for secure communications and defense acceleration.

“For years, system architects had to choose between the memory bandwidth they wanted and the space, power and longevity their programs could actually live with,” said Sumit Shah, head of product management and marketing, Adaptive and Embedded Computing Group, AMD. “Memory on Package removes that tradeoff. Our customers can design for the system they want to build, not the one their memory constraints allow, and bring it to market faster.”

Shrink the Footprint and Scale the Bandwidth

With AMD’s new memory on package adaptive SoC, the company is redefining what is possible in compact system designs. By integrating LPDDR5X directly into the package, the device enables higher performance compared to onboard LPDDR5X while using less area than discrete implementations.

This opens the door to form factors that have been difficult or impractical with external memory, such as the Enterprise and Datacenter Standard Form Factor (EDSFF) and 3U VPX systems, while also helping designers meet telecom and VPX requirements that discrete memory approaches often cannot match.

Versal Premium Gen 2 MoP devices integrate CXL 3.1 and PCIe 6.0 at 64Gb/s in hard IP, enabling high-speed data movement when paired with AMD EPYC CPUs to accelerate data-intensive applications. AMD helps system architects gain greater flexibility to scale memory resources with LPDDR5X support of up to 9,000Mb/s and connectivity to CXL memory pooling and expansion modules.

Built for Long Life Cycle Deployments

Designed with demanding physical and enterprise AI environments in mind, Versal Premium Gen 2 MoP adaptive SoCs support industrial-grade operation from -40 degrees Celsius to 110 C. They are well suited for always-on, mission-critical systems where performance and resilience must go hand in hand.

With LPDDR5X and 15-plus-year life cycle support, Versal Premium Gen 2 MoP devices help decouple product availability from high-bandwidth memory’s (HBM) shorter, data-center-driven refresh cycles, reducing the risk of forced redesigns caused by memory end of life or limited accessibility.

PCIe Integrity and Data Encryption (IDE), a feature introduced in PCIe 6.0, helps protect against physical attacks by securing data in flight at the link layer. DDR memory encryption in integrated controllers helps protect data at rest without consuming programmable logic resources. Hard 400G High-Speed Crypto Engines enable high-bandwidth secure processing, strengthening security without sacrificing throughput.

Accelerate Time-to-Market

Versal Premium Gen 2 MoP devices include a pre-validated, in-package LPDDR5X interface that eliminates high-speed memory routing across the circuit board to reduce board-level simulation and validation while helping shorten development cycles, lower design risk and minimize costly re-spins.

Users can begin development today with standard AMD Versal Premium Series Gen 2 devices, which are now shipping. Support for established AMD Vivado and Vitis tool workflows, compatible IP and available reference designs helps quickly move designs from concept to deployment while enabling existing customers to adopt new MoP devices with no rework or relearning.

AMD Versal Premium Gen 2 MoP devices begin sampling at the end of 2026 with production shipments expected to begin in the second half of next year.

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-optimised 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. Learn more at www.amd.com.


Source: AMD

The post AMD Debuts Memory-on-Package Versal SoCs to Boost Bandwidth and Cut Board Space appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 17:36

Williams fell just short on her return, Stan Wawrinka said goodbye to Wimbledon for the last time, while there first-round wins for Iga Swiatek, Alexander Zverev and Elena Rybakina, but exits for Ben Shelton and Elina Svitolina

Next no No 3: Alex de Minaur (5) v Roman Andres Burruchaga.

Next on No 2: Otto Virtanen v Ben Shelton (4).

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2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 17:26

European powers resist Trump administration’s pick for high representative after incumbent pushed out

Diplomats from the US and Europe have been unable to resolve their differences and agree on a new top international envoy in Bosnia and Herzegovina, in a standoff which has become a transatlantic test of wills over influence in the Balkans.

A meeting in Sarajevo to select a new high representative, a post with far-reaching powers, ended without a compromise, in a spat that has undermined western cohesion in the region in the Trump era.

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2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 17:25

The carrier is adding another plank to its budget mobile service offering by bundling wired or wireless home internet service.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 17:18

Story from Nina Totenberg removed and replaced with editor’s note after journalist misheard announcement made by chief justice

The US public broadcasting organization National Public Radio (NPR) on Tuesday took the unusual step of formally retracting a major news story, after it published what seemed like a bombshell scoop that the supreme court justice Samuel Alito was retiring.

The story was written by Nina Totenberg, 82, one of the most prominent chroniclers of the supreme court in American media. NPR later explained that Totenberg had misheard a court announcement about upcoming retirements.

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2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 17:11

Hearing set to begin 6 July would mark the first time Kirk’s family has been in the courtroom with the suspect

Charlie Kirk’s parents and his widow Erika Kirk are expected to attend a key hearing next week in Utah for the murder case against the man accused of slaying the conservative political activist, according to multiple news outlets.

The preliminary hearing, set to begin 6 July, would mark the first time Kirk’s family has been in the courtroom with Tyler James Robinson, the 23-year-old charged with aggravated murder related to Kirk’s death.

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2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 17:00

California's Protect Our Games Act, which would require publishers to warn players before shutting down paid online games and offer refunds or continued access, failed to advance after a state Senate committee vote. Four state senators voted in favor, three voted against, and four abstained. Engadget reports: The committee unanimously voted in favor of granting the bill reconsideration, meaning it could come back before this group of state senators. Assemblymember Chris Ward introduced the bill in February and it passed the California State Assembly 43-16 in late May. That said, the abstentions prevented the bill's progression for now. "Not enough yeses means the bill stops here for this session," a volunteer with the Stop Killing Games campaign (which supported the bill) noted on Reddit. "That is the loss." The volunteer also claimed this was the movement's first attempt to nudge such legislation through in the U.S., and that the bill got this far without paid staff or an in-person lobbying campaign. They said the Entertainment Software Association -- a trade organization of major game industry publishers -- brought in a lobbyist to halt the bill's progress (including by claiming private servers for the likes of Minecraft would be "illegal") and that Stop Killing Games would be more prepared to counter that in the future. "Next session, we come back with an in-person lobbying presence, the funding to do this properly and a long list of organizations and developers signed on in support," the volunteer, u/Mr_Presidentle, wrote. "We are not limiting this to California. We intend to introduce versions of this in other state legislatures, and we are seriously looking at the federal level."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 16:55

The Fourth of July marks a momentous occasion for the US – 250 years of independence – but somehow Donald Trump has managed to make it all about himself. The Guardian's Washington bureau chief David Smith analyses how Trump has hijacked America's 250th and how instead the event should have been cause for a unifying celebration

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2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 16:43

Critics call proposed limits on asylum claims a ‘quick fix that will create long-term chaos’

More than half of the people whose asylum and visa claims will be rejected under tightened human rights laws will continue to live in the UK, according to the Home Office’s own assessment.

Documents released on Tuesday show that plans to set new limits on article 8 of the European convention on human rights are expected to result in another 11,700 people having their claims rejected annually.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 16:43
Tire change question, valve stem remover

SOLVED

Time for a tire change has come, i ordered the float life tire sealant. Unsure of how to use this valve core remover, i can get it in to express air but i can't get a grip on it enough to twist it to pull the core. is it supposed to come with something else to screw in and turn it with?

This is my first tire change, friend of mine did the first change for me many moons ago and he isnt available, this is an XR

submitted by /u/dragonfayng
[link] [comments]

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 16:34

If you want to monitor your heart rate and more while you exercise, these are the chest strap heart-rate monitors you'll want to consider.

2026-07-01 12:04
2026-06-30 16:28

The first cloud environment to receive enterprise authorization to process S/RD will house the NNSA’s inaugural Genesis Mission workloads

WASHINGTON, June 30, 2026 — The National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) has announced a significant milestone in its digital modernization efforts with the establishment of a Secret/Restricted Data (S/RD) Enterprise Cloud environment in collaboration with Amazon Web Services (AWS).

The S/RD Enterprise Cloud environment represents a transformative step in NNSA’s mission to modernize its digital infrastructure while connecting its geographically dispersed sites into a unified, secure digital ecosystem.

“A modern, flexible nuclear enterprise needs seamless integration to build and deliver at the pace the global environment demands,” said NNSA Administrator Brandon Williams. “Our collaboration with AWS in the establishment of an S/RD enterprise environment will connect our labs, plants, and sites, support real-time collaboration with common tools, and provide access to advanced digital collaboration and computing capabilities. This example of public-private partnership in service to national security is what makes America exceptional.”

“AWS has powered NNSA’s cloud transformation from day one; advancing America’s technological superiority when it matters most,” said David Appel, Vice President of AWS Global Government, National Security, and Defense. “Our purpose-built government cloud infrastructure ensures that the scientists and engineers safeguarding our national security have the most advanced, secure computing foundation in the world today.”

This initiative directly supports the President’s commitment to peace through strength — ensuring that America’s national security infrastructure remains modern, resilient, and effective through the digital transformation of the Nuclear Security Enterprise.

As the first cloud environment to receive enterprise authorization to process S/RD, the S/RD Enterprise Cloud supports multiple workstreams including product development and digital engineering, advanced computing and simulation, and secure data analytics. The S/RD Enterprise Cloud environment is enabling design and production agencies to access shared tools in a secure environment while maintaining boundaries that underpin the execution of NNSA’s mission.

The environment will also support NNSA’s efforts under the Genesis Mission, a dedicated national effort launched on November 24, 2025, to accelerate the application of AI for transformative scientific discovery focused on pressing national challenges.


Source: U.S. Dept. of Energy NNSA

The post NNSA Launches Secret Cloud Environment with AWS for Genesis Mission AI Workloads appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 16:24

Justices upheld laws in West Virginia and Idaho, boosting similar restrictions in 25 other states

Transgender youth athletes have vowed to keep playing sports and fighting for equal access to teams after the US supreme court ruled in favor of laws banning their participation.

The court’s conservative supermajority on Tuesday upheld laws in West Virginia and Idaho prohibiting trans girls from participating in women’s teams, finding the laws were constitutional.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 19:51

President reacts to ruling to uphold birthright citizenship after justices strike down executive order aimed at ending longstanding principle

The supreme court’s decision to reject Trump’s attempt to fire Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook yesterday is part of a long-running battle over the independence of the central bank.

Trump repeatedly attacked former chair Jerome Powell for not lowering interest rates fast enough, calling him a “moron” on social media. Powell’s term ended in May this year, and he was succeeded by Trump nominee Kevin Warsh.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-07-02 13:21

July 4th sales are around the corner, but these standout discounts on tech, home and everyday essentials are happening now.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 20:37

Taylor Swift has had a decadeslong history with Madison Square Garden, performing there as early as 2003 and even celebrating her 30th birthday at the venue.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 19:18

James, 41, played eight seasons with the Lakers and led the franchise to its 17th NBA championship in the 2019-2020 season.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-07-02 23:42

Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce's wedding plans include a rehearsal dinner and a late-night celebration at Madison Square Garden in New York City, according to sources familiar with the security planning.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 16:03

John Roberts wrote majority opinion, while Ketanji Brown Jackson wrote concurring opinion and Brett Kavanaugh dissented in part

Supreme court decisions often provide a window into the court’s ideological leanings and judicial philosophies. In recent years, the court, which is composed of six conservative and three liberal justices, has issued rulings that have dramatically reshaped the federal government and American life.

On Tuesday, the court struck down Donald Trump’s attempt to end birthright citizenship, delivering a blow to a central piece of the Trump administration’s agenda in one of the most highly anticipated decisions of the term.

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2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 16:02

Democratic Party leaders in the House reversed course and moved to back a resolution against U.S. involvement in Israel’s war on Lebanon on Tuesday, giving the bill overwhelming support from Democrats for the first time since Congress began seeking to address the conflict.

The resolution sponsored by Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., failed 235–189, with near-universal opposition from Republicans.

The vote was another sign of changing attitudes among Democrats about Israel.

Still, the vote was another sign of changing attitudes among Democrats about Israel: 187 Democrats voted in favor of it, and only 22 voted against.

Tlaib’s resolution marked the second time she has forced the House to go on the record about the war on Lebanon, which Israel says is aimed at Hezbollah but has left a fifth of the country displaced and thousands dead.

Under the 1973 War Powers Act, any member of Congress can force a vote on U.S. involvement in hostilities. Critics of Israel suspect the U.S. military has supported Israel’s attacks on Lebanon through help with developing target lists or refueling military aircraft. (U.S. Central Command, which oversees military operations in the region, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.)

On June 4, Tlaib’s first attempt to pass a war powers resolution about Lebanon failed on a 324–92 vote.

House Democratic leaders opposed that earlier resolution because of what they said were drafting errors that might have inadvertently forced the U.S. to stop protecting its embassy in Beirut or providing aid to the Lebanese Armed Forces, the regular military of the Lebanese government.

Related

The Dam Breaks: Democratic Senators Overwhelmingly Reject Arms Sales to Israel

The more recent version of the legislation gained the support of Democratic leaders by including explicit carveouts for those activities. While leadership did not officially whip the vote, the ranking member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., who is close to Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., spoke in support of the measure on Monday.

Speeches from Meeks and Tlaib, however, revealed a divide in what Democrats thought the measure might accomplish.

Meeks criticized the conduct of Hezbollah and Israel alike, adding that, to his knowledge, no U.S. forces were directly involved in combat in Lebanon. The resolution would prevent the Trump administration from joining in the war, he said.

Tlaib, meanwhile, cast the resolution as a way to cut off U.S. support for Israeli forces. She pointed to Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir’s call “to burn all of Lebanon” as proof of the Israeli government’s intent there.

“I want to make this very, very clear: The United States is not a bystander to these war crimes,” Tlaib said. “It is an active participant. The United States is currently engaged in illegal and unauthorized hostilities supporting the Israeli invasion of Lebanon, in violation of the War Powers Act.

“The United States is not a bystander to these war crimes.”

“Without that support,” she added, “those jets cannot drop bombs to kill Lebanese children. Congress must reassert its constitutional authority and immediately vote to end all unauthorized U.S. participation in the destruction of Lebanon.”

Only two Republicans, Reps. Thomas Massie of Kentucky and Lauren Boebert of Colorado, voted in favor of the resolution. The Republican caucus was officially represented during the Monday floor debate by Rep. Brian Mast, R-Fla., the chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

“This resolution only seeks to embolden Hezbollah. That is the only thing that it does,” Mast said. “There are no U.S. forces engaged in hostilities. Do we train Lebanese Armed Forces? Yes, we do. Do we provide intelligence? Yes, we do. But we don’t have forces engaged there.”

Ahead of the vote, Erik Sperling, the executive director of Just Foreign Policy, a group that is sharply critical of Israel, said he was pleased to see more Democrats backing Tlaib’s resolution.

“Democrats have been pretty unified about speaking out against the killing of innocents and all of the harm by the Iran war, but there has been less vocal outrage about the mass killing and occupation in Lebanon,” Sperling said. “This is just an important signal that Democrats are aware of the way the Lebanon war is a humanitarian crisis and is the key roadblock to ending this war and delivering the peace that Americans are demanding.”

The post Congressional Dems Shift to Overwhelmingly Oppose Involvement in Israel’s War on Lebanon appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 16:00

"Another breach at Tata has leaked details about Apple's iPhone 18, along with documents belonging to several other Tata clients," writes Longtime Slashdot reader Ritz_Just_Ritz. "It's becoming a recurring theme for the company." Reuters reports: Reuters has previously reported the Tata Electronics leak of more than 200,000 files on the dark web by World Leaks had files with purported component design papers of older iPhones and some parts of Tesla -- both Tata clients. They also included documents of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co and Qualcomm, both of which make parts used in iPhones. New documents reviewed by Reuters show there are at least six files that map many components in the iPhone 18 Pro models to the specific company that supplies them. These include details of chips on its main circuit board and parts of the battery and cameras. Apple considers this detail sensitive and is concerned about the documents being shared on the dark web as they relate to unreleased models, according to the person familiar with the matter. The data maps suppliers to iPhone parts, which Apple does not disclose in its public database of suppliers, the person added. In all, the documents detail hundreds of parts to be on the upcoming iPhone 18 Pro models. The records also show where Apple draws a part from several suppliers and where it relies on just a few, laying bare both its bargaining leverage and its vulnerabilities. More broadly, the leak threatens Apple's trust in Tata just as Tata is becoming central to its effort to shift iPhone production away from China. With India expected to produce roughly a quarter of the world's iPhones in 2026, any deterioration in that relationship could complicate Apple's diversification strategy and force tighter security controls across its suppliers.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 15:59

Interest earnings on a $30,000 CD account opened this July will be significant. Here's what savers need to know now.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 15:51

Poll finds use of AI tools for health advice is correlated with belief in vaccine falsehoods, such as shots causing autism

Adults in the US who frequently seek out health advice from artificial intelligence chatbots are more likely to believe myths about vaccines, according to a poll released on Tuesday by health research firm KFF.

The survey, which was conducted in May and polled a representative sample of 2,480 US adults, found that use of AI tools and chatbots correlated with belief in falsehoods such as vaccines causing autism or that the measles vaccine poses more danger than the corresponding virus. The connection remained while controlling for factors such as age, race, education and political partisanship.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 15:40

Geared toward fans who are streaming Spanish-language coverage, the features let you create your own brackets, watch alternate views and more.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 15:37

Debt relief can be an effective option, but the company you choose plays a significant role in the outcome.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 15:26

The court's decisions cemented Mr. Trump's authority over vast swathes of the government, while delivering significant setbacks to his agenda in other areas.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 15:22

Sen. Mark Warner wants to create a federal registry of trusted AI agents and ensure autonomous bots operate like fiduciaries.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 15:21

The new PM must balance the security budget and other urgent spending priorities, with little room for manoeuvre

Keir Starmer’s defence investment plan leaves behind spending problems that his successor will not be able to avoid.

Military budgets will be well short of the UK’s Nato commitments by the end of the decade, and European allies and a combustible White House are likely to notice.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 15:13

The earthquakes that hit Venezuela 6 days ago may have damaged or destroyed 58,000 buildings, NASA says, as rescuers race the clock to find survivors.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 15:09

Officials say coach bus struck vehicle in Queens, triggering chain collision involving four other vehicles

Two people were killed and 20 others injured in a multi-vehicle crash on the Long Island Expressway in Queens, New York, on Monday night.

The deadly collision has prompted a federal investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) after occurring at about 11.45pm.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 15:00

Also arriving this month: the new crime thriller Wardriver, The Real Wolf of Wall Street documentary and more.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 15:00

Anthropic has launched Claude Science, an AI workbench that connects more than 60 scientific databases and tools through a single interface. Through the platform, Basecamp Research is making its EDEN models available for tasks such as designing antibiotic peptides and predicting vaccine targets from simple text prompts, though the results still require laboratory testing before clinical use. Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News reports: In a Claude Science demo, Oliver Vince, PhD, co-founder at Basecamp, uploaded a sample patient microbiology report. When given a simple natural language prompt, the platform designed peptides, predicted their efficacy, and provided a shortlist of candidates most likely to succeed in experiments in minutes. While generating human-ready antibiotics at the click of a button is still a step away, Vince said democratizing these tools is a powerful first step, particularly for researchers in regions where accelerated computing infrastructure is not readily accessible. "Most models require you to be a computational scientist," Vince told GEN Edge. "Now, potentially any clinician in the world can chat with Claude and design an antibiotic that may work."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 14:51

Winchester court hears accusations of offences by former petty officer Allan Grimson against males as young as 14

A former Royal Navy petty officer, jailed for life 25 years ago for murdering two young men, sexually assaulted four other boys and men in the same era, a jury has been told.

Allan Grimson was jailed in 2001 for battering Nicholas Wright, 18, and Sion Jenkins, 20, to death at his flat above a parade of shops in Portsmouth, Hampshire, in 1997 and 1998.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 14:51

Two men and nine companies are accused of being tied to a cartel-linked fuel theft ring intended to evade taxes while generating tens of millions of dollars annually.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 14:46

A high-yield savings account is still a viable option for savers, even those currently looking to home $100,000 now.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 14:42

If you've noticed that Hibernate isn't as visible on Windows 11, that's not by accident.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 14:42

The debt collection process doesn't always end after a borrower's death, but certain debts are off-limits.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 14:32

The House voted Tuesday on an updated version of the measure after Democratic leaders opposed the original language.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 14:30

Three U.S. egg producers will be required to provide 53 million eggs to food banks and to pay a $3.3 million financial penalty.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 14:28
  • Last year’s beaten finalist defeats Gjorcheska 6-3, 6-2

  • Svitolina suffers surprise 5-7, 2-6 loss to Snigur

It will take a lot more before the memory of last year’s Wimbledon final will be entirely out of Amanda Anisimova’s system but the American began the job in convincing fashion on Tuesday, beating Lina Gjorcheska of North Macedonia 6-3, 6-2 in the opening round.

Twelve months ago, Anisimova beat Aryna Sabalenka to reach her first grand slam final only to crumble, her 6-0, 6-0 humbling by Iga Swiatek one of those horrible sporting moments where it almost feels bad to be watching. At the time it seemed like it was a loss that would linger for months but, remarkably, she bounced back immediately, beating Swiatek on her way to the US Open final, where Sabalenka beat her in a tight two-setter.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 14:26

Preliminary analysis of satellite data suggests magnitude of natural disaster could dwarf official estimates

More than 58,000 buildings may have been damaged and destroyed by the twin earthquakes that hit Venezuela last week, according to a preliminary analysis of satellite data that suggests the scale of the destruction could dwarf official estimates.

Last Wednesday’s back-to-back quakes – which measured magnitude 7.2 and 7.5 – killed at least 1,943 people, injured more than 10,571, and left tens of thousands missing amid the rubble. The UN migration agency has said that up to 6.8 million people could be affected by the disasters, and would require shelter, water, sanitation, healthcare and essential relief items.

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2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 14:24

June 30, 2026 — Hypersonic flight exposes materials to brutal conditions. Once a vehicle is screaming through the atmosphere above Mach 5, it’s wrapped in a sheath of superheated gas that can reach temperatures hot enough to melt many metals and chemically eat away at exposed surfaces in seconds.

Stampede3-enabled simulation of a heat-treated silicon carbonitride material, showing how carbon atoms form graphite-segregations over time. Credit: Peter Kroll and Shariq Haseen

To make this kind of flight practical, engineers are turning to advanced ceramics for the outer “skin” and control surfaces. Increasingly, researchers like Peter Kroll at The University of Texas at Arlington are designing ceramics with the help of artificial intelligence running on powerful high-performance computing (HPC) systems like those available by the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) ACCESS program.

“At the speeds and temperatures involved in hypersonics, several problems hit at once,” said Kroll, professor in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry at UT Arlington. “The air itself becomes a chemically aggressive plasma, heating the vehicle, attacking materials at the surface and sometimes blacking out radio communications.”

Kroll explained that ultra-high-temperature ceramics and ceramic composites can tolerate far higher temperatures than traditional alloys, but they are notoriously difficult to design, process and test because their behavior depends sensitively on chemistry, microstructure and how they are actually made. Answering what might sound like simple questions, such as “Which ceramic recipe should we choose?” and “How will it behave during flight?”, quickly becomes a challenge that can only be tackled in detail with large-scale simulation and huge amounts of compute units.

Traditionally, researchers rely on quantum-mechanical calculations, such as density functional theory, to predict how atoms bond and how materials respond under extreme conditions. These methods are accurate but slow; they might handle a few hundred atoms over a few nanoseconds of simulated time, which is far too small and too short to represent a real component.

On the other side of the spectrum, classical models can simulate millions of atoms for much longer, but they often miss important chemistry, especially in complex ceramic systems containing multiple elements like silicon, carbon and nitrogen. That’s where machine-learning interatomic potentials, essentially AI models that learn how atoms interact from high-quality quantum data, are beginning to change the story.

Kroll’s recent study, which was published in the Journal of the American Ceramic Society, showcases this approach for a family of materials known as polymer-derived ceramics, which are made by heating special polymers until they convert into ceramic.

The team used NSF ACCESS allocations to build a new machine-learning model for a four-element system of silicon, carbon, nitrogen and hydrogen, tailored specifically to follow these materials as they transform from soft polymers into hard ceramics. Specifically, they utilized the Stampede3 supercomputer at the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) to train the model on more than 2,000 carefully chosen atomic configurations, including crystalline structures, disordered glasses, real preceramic polymers and high-temperature snapshots from quantum-mechanical simulations, capturing over a million force values at quantum accuracy.

“With the Stampede3-trained model in hand, we could run simulations that would be impossible with traditional quantum methods alone,” Kroll said. “For example, we studied how atoms move in amorphous silicon nitride using a model containing more than 7,000 atoms and still reproduced diffusion behavior that agrees with earlier, much smaller quantum calculations.”

He said that they also examined an unusual ceramic that shrinks when heated, a carbodiimide phase called β-Si(NCN)₂, and found that their model predicts thermal expansion values close to experiment. In another test, they built a virtual composite containing tens of thousands of atoms of silicon carbide and silicon nitride grains and watched how it responds to stress from room temperature up to 2,300 Kelvin, revealing a transition from brittle fracture at low temperature to more plastic deformation at high temperature.

Perhaps most striking for real-world applications, the researchers used their model to mimic the actual processing of a commercial preceramic polymer known as Durazane 1800. They constructed a realistic network of polymer chains, heated it virtually up to 2,500 degrees Kelvin, and followed it over tens of nanoseconds of simulated time while allowing small molecules to escape, just as they would in a furnace. By the end of the run, the model produced an amorphous silicon-carbon-nitrogen ceramic with pockets of graphitic carbon and overall composition and energy that lined up with experimental measurements of similar materials. In effect, they created a “digital twin” of the polymer-to-ceramic process, opening the door to optimizing recipes and heating schedules on a supercomputer instead of through trial-and-error in the lab.

This work fits into a broader wave of innovation in hypersonic ceramics highlighted by the American Ceramic Society. Around the world, teams are combining AI, advanced simulation and novel manufacturing methods to push the temperature and durability limits of thermal-protection materials. Some groups are exploring ultra-high-temperature carbides and nitrides in chemical systems like hafnium–tantalum–carbon–nitrogen, where machine-learning-accelerated simulations have predicted compositions with melting points above 4,400 Kelvin by showing how nitrogen can raise melting enthalpy and lower the disorder of the liquid phase. Others are experimenting with laser-based processing routes, such as selectively converting liquid precursors into hafnium carbide coatings using a high-power laser in open air, a fast and flexible approach that nonetheless requires detailed thermal and chemical modeling to control. High-entropy ceramics, which mix five or more different metal species, and hybrid composites that combine ultra-high-temperature carbides with polymer-derived ceramic matrices are also in play, vastly expanding the design space for hypersonic-capable materials.

​Across all of these efforts, HPC is a common backbone.

Training a sophisticated interatomic potential demands many thousands of quantum-mechanical calculations, each itself a demanding workload on CPU or GPU clusters. Once trained, these models are deployed inside molecular dynamics codes such as LAMMPS, where they drive long-running, massively parallel simulations that can fill nodes for days as they follow bond breaking, diffusion and microstructural evolution. The software stacks are complex, often combining electronic-structure packages, machine-learning tools, and production-scale simulation engines, and they generate large, carefully curated datasets that become valuable community resources for future model development.

​For hypersonic programs, the payoff is a much tighter loop between modeling, processing and testing. Rather than relying purely on expensive furnace campaigns and high-enthalpy tunnel shots to explore the space of possible materials and process conditions, teams can now use AI-enhanced simulations to narrow the field and understand failure modes before hardware is built. Experimental work then shifts toward validating the most promising candidates and exploring edge cases, accelerating the path from lab concepts – like polymer-derived ceramics with embedded carbon phases – to flight-ready leading edges, control surfaces and protective tiles.

As hypersonic systems move closer to operational reality, the limiting factor will not be just aerodynamics or propulsion but the materials that stand between the vehicle and the surrounding plasma. Machine-learning models for complex ceramics, trained and run on modern HPC platforms, are emerging as critical tools in that race, giving scientists a way to design future “plasma shields” from the level of individual atoms all the way up to real components.

“Supercomputing resources like Stampede3 are essential for this kind of research and make it happen,” Kroll said. “Harvesting data at this level of complexity – capturing chemical reactions and phase transitions across millions of atoms in multi-component systems – is what enables us to address future challenges, and it demands computational power far beyond what any single lab can provide.”

Resource Provider Institution(s): Texas Advanced Computing Center
Resources Used: Stampede3
Affiliations: University of Texas at Arlington
Funding Agency: NSF
Grant or Allocation Number(s): DMR190103

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.


Source: Kimberly Mann Bruch, SDSC; ACCESS

The post ACCESS: Stampede3 Simulations Advance AI Models for Extreme Hypersonic Ceramics appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 14:19

Oompa Loompa doompety-doo, Netflix has a Wonka reality series for you.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 14:17

What will Trump do now after justices’ stunning rebuke to his anti-immigration agenda?

In a stunning rebuke to Donald Trump’s aggressive anti-immigrant agenda, the US supreme court ruled against the president’s highly contentious attempt to end the right to US citizenship for children born in the United States.

The justices ruled that the Trump administration violated a provision of the 14th amendment, which was affirmed by the supreme court 128 years ago.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 14:15

Tournament’s serving machine can deliver balls in the style of anyone from John McEnroe to Elina Svitolina

Could you return Emma Raducanu’s 110mph serve, or receive a 145mph stroke from Andy Murray? What about Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard’s 153mph torpedo, which broke Wimbledon records last year?

This year’s tournament attenders have had the opportunity to try their luck on court, facing off against a robotic serving machine rather than their tennis heroes.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 14:10

Now I see the world in purple, purple.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 14:06

This update includes a patch for a vulnerability found with the help of Anthropic's Claude AI model, which has been in the news for its cybersecurity implications.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 14:02

Credit card debt forgiveness could be the solution borrowers are looking for this summer. Here's why.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 14:00

Arctic sea ice is disappearing at a worrisome rate. What if there were a way to slow that down?

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 14:00

Microsoft has released a public preview of Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) containers, adding a built-in command-line tool and API for running Linux containers directly inside Windows applications without third-party software. The update also introduces faster file access, improved networking and memory management, plus integration with Defender, Intune, and VS Code. The Register reports: WSL has always been a handy way to run Linux workloads from Windows, and is particularly convenient for Linux developers who must comply with corporate edicts to use a Windows device. The CLI for end-to-end container workflows furthers this. Microsoft stated, "WSL containers make it easier for developers and organizations to build, test, and run containerized workloads while benefiting from the security, manageability, and integration of the Windows platform." Alternatively, you could run your preferred Linux distribution natively, but that might not be an option, particularly if an organization is keen on the "security, manageability, and integration of the Windows platform." And this is an important point. WSL's existing Microsoft Defender for Endpoint (MDE) has been updated (in private preview) to be aware of Linux container events, and there are settings in Intune for managing WSL containers. Support is also in a pre-release version of VS Code, where the Docker path in the dev container settings can be changed to wslc. There is also a new default file system for WSL container that Microsoft claims makes Windows file access twice the speed. So, going from terribly slow to just slow? We'll wait until general availability is reached before passing judgment. There's a new default networking mode to improve compatibility and better memory reclaim techniques. However, none of these tweaks will be enabled by default in WSL. Microsoft wrote, "Since these changes touch mission critical paths like file system access and network, for now they are enabled just in WSL container."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 13:58

‘That’s one way to spend a layover,’ says gambling company after lucky traveler wins big on $10 stake

Generally people want whatever happens in Vegas to stay there – but this might be an exception!

A lucky traveler transiting through Las Vegas’s Harry Reid international airport on Sunday won more than $3.3m from a slot machine there, prompting facility officials to write on X on Tuesday: “Now that’s one way to spend a layover.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 13:51

Sir Keir Starmer cuts civilian investment while deepening reliance on American power. That doesn’t feel like national renewal

Since Brexit, Daphne du Maurier’s final novel, Rule Britannia, has been seen as a prescient warning about the UK cutting itself adrift from Europe. After joining and then leaving the EU’s predecessor, the Common Market, in a referendum, Du Maurier imagined the UK facing such economic instability that its prime minister submits to a US takeover. Britain is occupied by US forces, sparking an uprising that eventually forces them to leave. Sir Keir Starmer’s defence investment plan (Dip) would not belong in Du Maurier’s novel, but has the same nightmare logic: a Britain adrift from Europe told that fiscal necessity and national security require deeper incorporation into American power.

It shows the strain inside Sir Keir’s government that the plan took a year to move from strategic defence review to partial funding plan. John Healey, the former defence secretary, resigned after deciding that the Treasury’s offer could not fund the strategy. His successor, Dan Jarvis, told MPs that the plan was worth £298bn over four years, which is £15bn above last year’s spending review settlement. Mr Jarvis said that he had secured £1.5bn more than was on offer when he arrived. Against the defence ministry’s demands, that looks less like a breakthrough than proof of why Mr Healey walked.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 13:50

A warning from Latin America about US money, platforms, data and paranoid politics should not be dismissed lightly

When Colombia’s leftwing presidential candidate, Iván Cepeda, conceded defeat last week, he did so with notable grace. His ally, the outgoing president, Gustavo Petro, was much less composed. In a series of social media posts, Mr Petro argued that Donald Trump had interfered in the contest that brought the far-right lawyer Abelardo de la Espriella to power. The claim should not be taken as proof of a stolen election. But nor should it be dismissed as paranoia.

Mr Trump did publicly endorse Mr de la Espriella. His razor-thin win was in contrast to the scale of his alarmingly rightwing programme. He promises mega-prisons, a war on rebels, a shrunken state, renewed oil exploration, fracking and corporate tax cuts. This won’t be easy. Mr Petro’s Pacto Histórico is the largest party in the country’s congress. Unsurprisingly, Mr de la Espriella wants to govern through executive decree coupled with militarised state power. He aims to “disembowel” the left.

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.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 13:44

We've tested and reviewed several major creative AI programs. These are the best.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 13:43

SHENZHEN, China, June 30, 2026 — SpinQ, a leading quantum computing company in China, has completed a RMB 1 billion (~US$147 million) Series D financing round, bringing its total funding raised over the past six months to RMB 2 billion.

The round was backed by a group of prominent institutional and industrial investors, including CICC Capital, Shenzhen TopoScend Capital, Shanghai Semiconductor Industry Investment, AVIC Honghua, and Shanghai SEARI Private Equity Investment Management, among others, with continued participation from existing shareholders.

The new funding will be used to accelerate SpinQ’s full-stack development of fault-tolerant general-purpose quantum computers, upgrade core manufacturing processes, and expand its global ecosystem. The company said the investment will further strengthen its capabilities in quantum error correction, hardware-software integration, and large-scale commercialization.

SpinQ is also expanding its technology exploration into the convergence of quantum computing, supercomputing, and intelligent computing, as well as Quantum + AI. The company believes these directions could help shape next-generation heterogeneous computing infrastructure, enabling QPUs, CPUs, and GPUs to work together more effectively, while using AI to accelerate progress in quantum hardware, error correction, and real-world applications.

As the global quantum computing industry moves beyond a singular focus on qubit count, competition is increasingly shifting toward system stability, error correction, and engineering readiness. SpinQ has made fault-tolerant quantum computing a strategic priority, advancing both theoretical research and experimental development. The company’s research on cascaded quantum Hamming code decoding has been accepted by QCE 2026, while its hardware team is working toward completing validation of d=3 surface-code quantum error correction in 2026.

On the hardware side, SpinQ has established its own superconducting quantum chip R&D and pilot production line in Shenzhen, covering chip design, process development, fabrication, packaging, and testing. The company has completed tape-out, packaging, and validation for its new-generation 25-qubit and 103-qubit superconducting quantum chips, further strengthening its end-to-end capabilities across key technologies and manufacturing processes.

SpinQ has also built a full-stack technology platform spanning quantum chip design, quantum EDA software, control systems, full-system manufacturing, cloud services, and quantum algorithm applications. According to the company, this integrated approach provides a strong foundation for the system-level optimization required to achieve fault-tolerant quantum computing.

The company continues to expand its global commercial footprint. In 2023, SpinQ completed China’s first overseas delivery of a superconducting quantum chip. In 2024, it achieved China’s first overseas delivery of a complete superconducting quantum computer. In 2025, the company began batch deliveries of its“Ursa Major” superconducting quantum computing systems. SpinQ said its products and services now reach more than 40 countries and regions across five continents, serving more than 200 universities, research institutions, and industry partners.

“Quantum computing is a frontier technology that requires long-term commitment, sustained investment, and deep system-level engineering capabilities,” said Dr. Xiang Jingen, Founder and CEO of SpinQ. “With this new round of funding, we will remain focused on our core goal of building fault-tolerant general-purpose quantum computers, while continuing to advance quantum error correction and key hardware and software technologies. We look forward to working with partners across industry and academia to unlock the long-term value of quantum computing.”

More from HPCwire: SpinQ Secures Nearly 1B Chinese Yuan in Series C to Scale Industrial Quantum Computing

About SpinQ

Founded in 2018, SpinQ Technology Inc. is a one-stop solution provider dedicated to the industrialization and popularization of quantum computing. With a strategy driven by both technology research and commercial implementation, SpinQ has established a comprehensive industry layout through superconducting quantum computers, NMR(Nuclear Magnetic Resonance) quantum computers, quantum computing cloud platform, and application software. SpinQ is empowering various cutting-edge fields such as scientific research, education, drug development, fintech, and artificial intelligence, collaborating with partners to build scenario-based solutions that integrate quantum computing into diverse industries, making it a true productivity tool.

SpinQ is founded by a team with both international vision and commercial engineering experience. The team members are experts in quantum computing from distinguished universities and institutions internationally and domestically including Harvard University, MIT, Tsinghua University, Peking University, and Hongkong University of Science and technology etc.. They make significant contributions to developing quantum computer hardware, software and algorithms.


Source: SpinQ

The post SpinQ Closes $147M Series D to Advance Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computing appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 13:39

The typical non-homeowner household earns about $7,000 less than what's needed to buy an entry-level home, according to LendingTree.

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-06-30 13:32

WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 13: Protesters supporting transgender athletes competing in women's sports gather outside the Supreme Court on January 13, 2026 in Washington, DC. Groups from both sides of the debate gathered on Tuesday morning to protest while two cases that prohibit transgender girls from joining girls' and women's sports teams are heard inside the Supreme Court. (Photo by Heather Diehl/Getty Images)
Protesters supporting trans athletes competing in women’s sports gather outside the Supreme Court on Jan. 13, 2026, in Washington, D.C. Photo: Heather Diehl/Getty Images

The far-right Supreme Court majority marked the final day of Pride month with an anti-trans decision upholding state bans on trans girls from playing girls’ sports. That the ruling from the right-wing court had been long expected made it no less horrendous.

With a 6–3 judgment applying to two cases, one from Idaho and one from West Virginia, the court gave states nationwide carte blanche to discriminate against trans girls who want to play on teams consistent with their gender. The ruling does not constitute a nationwide ban on trans athletes, and trans girls can continue to compete in states without bans. Twenty-seven states currently have bans on the books against trans girl athletes. All those bans — and whatever new ones come into place — can stay in place.

One of the cases was just about a single girl seeking to participate in her school sports.

Genital inspection is a next logical step — a step already being proposed in several states.

Pointing to the absurdity, the legal scholar and trans rights advocate Alejandra Caraballo wrote on Bluesky, “Just absolutely insane to me how many millions were spent and the massive political and legal effort exhausted just so a state can ban a single trans girl from playing sports with her friends in school.”

This was always the plan for the anti-trans zealots who saw girls’ sports as an easy entry point from which to decimate trans people’s civil rights protections. It’s no surprise then that the consequences of the rulings threaten to go far beyond school and college athletics.

Related

The Right-Wing Campaign to Purge Women From Women’s Sports

As multiple critics of anti-trans sports bans stress, efforts to exclude trans athletes also open the door to the abuse and harassment of any girls alleged to appear insufficiently feminine. Genital inspection and genetic testing requirements are the next logical steps — steps that have already been proposed by Republicans in several states.

The Supreme Court majority argued that the anti-trans bans do not violate either Title IX, the landmark civil rights law that proscribes sex-based discrimination, or constitutional guarantees of equal protection.

Even the dissenting liberal justices ceded vital ground in the moral struggle for trans rights. Though they sided with the trans students’ claims under the equal protection clause, they agreed with the conservatives that trans-exclusionary, sex-segregated school sports bans did not violate Title IX’s prohibitions in schools.

The liberal stance paints a telling picture of the decimated state of trans rights. The far right has been able to pursue its trans-eliminationist agenda to an extraordinary degree in part because liberals and even some leftists have been willing to throw trans people under the bus, if not fully align with fascistic anti-trans fearmongering.

The idea that trans girls pose a threat or danger to cisgender girls playing sports remains a myth without any evidence or grounding, conjured from whole cloth by anti-trans ideologues looking for a wedge issue to pass overreaching anti-trans laws.

Related

An Anti-Trans Bathroom Bill With a Cruel New Twist

Today, the strategies dreamt up by well-funded think tanks and advocacy groups like the rabidly anti-trans Alliance Defending Freedom have again paid off: According to the highest court in the land, trans exclusion in sex-segregated sports does not violate civil rights.

Even more anti-trans bathroom bans and other policies of exclusion from public life will no doubt follow.

Anti-Trans Eliminationism

The West Virginia case was brought by Becky Pepper-Jackson, a high school student who has identified as a girl since she was 8 years old, takes puberty blockers, has a birth certificate recognizing her as female, and just wanted to compete on the athletics team with other girls.

Writing the majority opinion upholding the ban against her participation, Justice Brett Kavanaugh described trans girls and women and “biological males.”

Related

DOJ Escalates War on Trans Youth Healthcare With Criminal Subpoenas

Earlier this week, anticipating the court’s ruling, the American Civil Liberties Union’s Chase Strangio wrote, “I hope that everyone who, like me, loves sports will pause to think about what it means to exile a group of young people from the social, cultural, and emotional experience of being part of a team.”

The legal arguments for permitting anti-trans discrimination are by now familiar: The bans are not discriminatory, anti-trans bigots say, because they apply equally to those they deem biologically male and those they deem biologically female.

The fact that anti-trans discrimination is unavoidably a matter of sex-based discrimination is neatly avoided in a way that erases the sex-based reality of trans people from existence. Little matter that no current state laws are on the books relating to boys’ sports.

It evidently matters even less to the Supreme Court justices that sex and gender do not exist in the sharp binary that sports bans and other anti-trans policies demand.

In an unnecessary and cruel concurring opinion, Justice Clarence Thomas went out of his way to note, “Men and boys with gender dysphoria are not women or girls, even if they believe they are.”

This tells us all we need to know about the right’s designs on trans existence, reflecting an anti-trans eliminationist ideology that flies in the face of medical consensus and empirical evidence.

[newsetter][/newsletter]

As New York Times Magazine writer Ruth Padawer noted in an extensive 2016 feature on the practice of so-called “sex-testing” in sports, endocrinologists and geneticists have for decades challenged the delineations and exclusions such tests purports to achieve.

“Relying on science to arbitrate the male-female divide in sports is fruitless, they said, because science could not draw a line that nature itself refused to draw,” Padawer wrote.

Not that this has mattered to the sports regulators and gender-conformity zealots, committed as they are to the brutal racist legacy of gender policing, and desperately pushing to exclude trans people from public life.

“No student-athlete on either side of the issue, whether a biological female or transgender, deserves to be ostracized or vilified,” Kavanaugh had the audacity to say at the end of his opinion, upholding laws designed precisely to ostracize and vilify trans children.

The post Even the Liberal Supreme Court Justices Ceded Ground in the Fight for Trans Existence appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 13:31

The Weber Spirit E-325 can fire up perfectly seared burgers, veggies and more while it's on sale.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 13:31

It’s time once again for HPC Career Notes, our monthly feature that’s designed to keep you up-to-date on the latest career developments for individuals in the HPC community, including promotion, new company hires, and accolade. Check in each month for an updated list and you may even come across someone you know, or better yet, yourself!

John Jumper

John Jumper

John Jumper–the Google DeepMind director who was awarded half of the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on AlphaFold along with his boss, Demis Hassabis–has left Google and joined rival Anthropic.

“I am incredibly grateful for my time at GDM,” Jumper wrote on X. “@demishassabis took a real chance letting me lead the AlphaFold team just six months after finishing my PhD, and the entire GDM team taught me so much about how to do great science. GDM is a special place, and I’ll still be excited to hear about what amazing things they discover next.”

Hassabis responded:

“Thanks John for an extraordinary partnership and wonderful collaboration over the past 9 years! What we achieved with AlphaFold changed the world, and showed the field what was possible with AI for science and medicine, lighting the way for how AI can benefit humanity.”

It’s not clear what Jumper will be pursuing at Anthropic; he said he would be taking some time off to “recharge.”

Devesh Tiwari

Devesh Tiwari

During the ISC 2026 conference in Hamburg, Germany last week, ISC High Performance awarded Northeastern University’s Professor Devesh Tiwari the Jack Dongarra Early Career Award.

As the director of Northeastern’s Goodwill Computing Lab and a teacher, mentor, and researcher, Tiwari tries to make large-scale classical HPC systems and quantum computing systems more efficient, reliable, and cost-effective. Tiwari’s LinkedIn page states that his group’s “has also been recognized with multiple awards including the IEEE/IFIP DSN Dependability Rising Star Award, the NSF CAREER Award, and the Facebook Faculty Research Award.”

The ISC 2026 award committee said that it “recognizes [Tiwari’s] contributions to advancing sustainable high performance computing and to developing post-Moore computing systems, including hybrid quantum-classical high performance computing.”

The Jack Dongarra Early Career Award is intended “for an up-and-coming researcher who has been a catalyst for scientific progress in their field. The researcher should have between 4-10 years of experience after completing their PhD,” ISC High Performance states. In addition to a €5,000 reward, recipients deliver a 25-minute talk in the ISC Jack Dongarra Lecture Series.

Saverio Pasqualoni

Saverio Pasqualoni

Saverio Pasqualoni, a PhD student at the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), was awarded the Hans Meuer Research Paper Award last week at ISC 2026.

The award, which is named after the founder of the TOP500 program and a former chair of the ISC organization, was granted to Pasqualoni, who was the lead author on a paper titled “PICO: Performance Insights for Collective Operations.”

In addition to Pasqualoni, the paper’s authors include Tommaso Bonato, Lorenzo Piarulli, Torsten Hoefler, Marco Canini, Daniele De Sensi. The award includes a certificate and a cash prize of €3,000.

Niklas Bahr

Niklas Bahr

Niklas Bahr, a Volkswagen AG employee who is researching optical computing as a PhD student at Heidelberg University, was announced as the winner of the ISC 2026 Best Student Paper Award during last week’s ISC 2026 conference.

Bahr is the lead author on a recent paper, titled Energy Efficiency in Analog Photonic Processors: Conversions and Losses at Scale, along with co-authors Daniel Steinmeyer from Volkswagen AG and Wolfram Pernice from Heidelberg University.

The award brings a cash prize of €1,000. You can view a short YouTube interview of Bahr at ISC 2026 published by the Neuromorphic Quantumphotonics group at Heidelberg University’s Pernice Lab.

Seok-Hee Lee

Seok-Hee Lee

Intel announced that it has appointed Seok-Hee Lee as the executive vice president of Intel Foundry, Intel’s dedicated semiconductor manufacturing division. Lee will lead all advanced packaging, system integration, back-end technology development, and back-end manufacturing in the role, and report directly to CEO Lip-Bu Tan.

“Advanced packaging and system integration are becoming defining capabilities for next-generation computing systems,” Tan stated. “Seok-Hee brings deep expertise in leading complex, high-scale technology and manufacturing organizations, along with a strong track record of operational execution.

Lee re-joins Intel from SK On, a major South Korean manufacturer of electric vehicle batteries. He had previously executive roles at Intel, and served for a time as the CEO and president of the semiconductor company SK Hynix.

“Intel is uniquely positioned to lead in advanced packaging as demand for system-level integration accelerates across AI and high-performance computing,” stated Lee. “I’m excited to return home and to join the Intel team as we help advance the company’s technology leadership, manufacturing capabilities, and customer commitments in this critical area.”

Feng Qiu

Feng Qiu

Feng Qiu, principal computational scientist and group leader for the grid optimization and analytics group at Argonne National Laboratory, has been named a fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers’ (IEEE) Power and Energy Society for his contributions to computing algorithms for grid operations and resilience planning.

Qiu has a strong track record at Argonne in applying AI to enhance power grid resilience, including using AI to analyze signals from energy equipment to predict remaining useful life, thereby helping companies to better understand their equipment health and enabling them to make more cost-effective decisions on maintenance, inventory and logistics. His work helps reduce both planned and unplanned power outages and improves overall grid reliability.

Qiu stated that he’s eager to help foster an environment where early-career researchers can “push the boundaries of artificial intelligence-driven grid planning, ensuring that the expertise we build at the lab continues to lead the grid’s global technical community.”

“This recognition belongs as much to my team as it does to me,” Qiu said. ​“It reflects their talent and dedication, and I hope it helps us attract more top talent and continue growing a strong, innovative research group.”

Scott McGregor

Scott McGregor

Quantum computing company Diraq announced that it has named industry veteran Scott McGregor the new chairman of its board of directors

Diraq is a Sydney, Australia-based company developing a quantum computer based on silicon spin qubits. The company, which has American headquarters in Palo Alto, California, has raised more than $100 million to date and advanced to Stage B of DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking Initiative (QBI).

McGregor has had a long and distinguished career in the technology field. In addition to serving as CEO and president of Broadcomm and Philips Semiconductors (now NXP), McGregor also had stints at the Santa Cruz Operation, DEC, and Xerox’s Palo Alto Research Center (PARC). At Microsoft, McGregor led the development of Windows 1.0. He joined the board of Applied Materials in 2018.

Now the executive with a long track record in traditional semiconductors will get to influence the direction of Diraq’s silicon-based approach to developing quantum chips.

“The quantum computing race will closely mirror the evolution of the classic semiconductor industry, and the ultimate winners will have the most scalable manufacturing economics. Diraq’s silicon-based approach is the most promising path forward,” McGregor stated. “Cost and manufacturability are the key factors in determining which infrastructure becomes the dominant computing layer, and Diraq’s fully CMOS-compatible method is the most powerful, scalable, and economical option. I look forward to helping the team accelerate this phase of the roadmap as the world enters a new era of quantum computing.”

For the previous edition of HPC Career Notes, click here.

 

The post HPC Career Notes: June 2026 appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 13:25

Samsung Messages stops working for US users this July. Here's the fastest way to move your texts and message history to Google Messages before the cutoff.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 13:11

Case stems from 2022 lawsuit challenging FEC’s enforcement of limits on ‘coordinated party expenditures’

One of the last remaining barriers between wealthy donors sending unlimited funds to federal political candidates fell after the US supreme court struck down a lower court ruling that limited spending by political parties in support of their candidates.

“A BIG WIN FOR REPUBLICANS and, more importantly, The First Amendment!” wrote Donald Trump in a post on Truth Social.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 13:02

The vessel, thought to have been carrying 10 people, did not issue a mayday call before sinking in the strait of Georgia

Search teams in Canada have launched a recovery effort for six people believed to have drowned in a “bizarre” sinking of a fishing charter off the coast of Vancouver.

Police and rescue crews praised a couple who were passing in their yacht for making a critical mayday call and saving stranded passengers by pulling them onboard their craft.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 13:02

An anonymous reader quotes a report from 404 Media: On June 26, the County Manager of Henrico County, Virginia, John Vithoulkas, sent an email to thousands of county employees asking them to help the local government conserve electricity. "Beginning July 1st, the rate we pay for electricity used in all Henrico County government and school facilities will increase dramatically -- by 25%, increasing costs by an estimated $5 million next fiscal year. We anticipate more rate increases for electricity in the years ahead," a copy of the email obtained by 404 Media said (emphasis his). Henrico County is a community of more than 350,000 people in eastern Virginia just outside of Richmond. It also hosts 37 data centers and there are plans to build 17 more, including plans to convert hundreds of acres of Civil War battlefields into data centers. Thanks to its proximity to DC and vast amounts of land, Henrico County became a data center hub seemingly overnight and its services clients big and small. Meta built a data center there in 2017. "To mitigate the impact of higher electric costs, I am asking that we, collectively, make slight adjustments to conserve electricity across our individual workspaces," Vithoulkas wrote in the email. "Turn off your lights when leaving your workspace, including when you leave for the day. Turn off your computers/laptops at the end of each workday. If your workspace has windows, adjust the blinds to manage heat from sunlight. Unplug any appliances, chargers, or other electrical items when they are not in use. Please limit use of (or refrain altogether from using) space heaters. A typical space heater alone can cost the county from $150 to $300 per year in electricity costs." "Each dollar we can save by conserving electricity is another dollar the county can reinvest into staff and the services we provide our residents," Vithoulkas email said.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 13:00

Parliament comments follow investigation revealing how man was tried at court martial on US airbase

David Lammy, the deputy prime minister, is raising with the US government the “extremely concerning” case of an American fighter pilot who avoided a trial under English law for strangling a woman at his home in Cambridge.

Lammy, who is also the justice secretary, told parliament that he wanted the US government to give a full account of the case of Sarah Steele, an academic who was assaulted by the pilot.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 13:00

Low-budget film-maker Uwe Boll sets Hammer up for a further fall from grace by cannibalising all manner of tired tropes in this incoherent schlocker

Oh, Armie Hammer! Has it come to this? It doesn’t seem that long since you were in the Oscar-winning film Call Me By Your Name giving a sensitive liberal performance opposite Timothée Chalamet. Now here you are, striding around the streets and public parks of Zagreb, shooting Muslims, tasering teens and topping complicit deep-state judges to protest against what your character robustly describes as an “unfriendly takeover by Islamist extremists and the blind-sided woke left”.

Much has happened to this once garlanded actor and great-grandson of oil tycoon Armand Hammer. His reputation plummeted after allegations of sexual assault by former partners in 2021, relationships that Hammer has maintained were consensual. Criminal charges were since dropped for lack of evidence, Hammer has now returned to the silver screen – and here he is in a very cheap, incoherent and embarrassingly badly acted schlocker, written, produced and directed by Germany’s low-budget exploitation maestro Uwe Boll, which cannibalises all manner of revenge tropes. More importantly, the film has been promoted and publicised globally online with monumental hypocrisy by Elon Musk who like JD Vance is very keen to divert America’s attention from its own issues to the fiercely imagined lawless migrant-caliphate of Europe-stan. It’s another piece of shit to flood the zone.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 13:00

New Jersey’s Tom Kean Jr, who last voted in March, says he was diagnosed with depression after entering hospital

Tom Kean Jr, a Republican congressman who disappeared from the Capitol for nearly four months with little explanation, re-emerged on Tuesday and said that he was absent while dealing with depression.

“Several months ago, due to health concerns, I entered the hospital for some testing. I did not believe that this would result in a long-term stay. I was given the diagnosis of depression,” Kean said in a speech on the floor of the House Tuesday morning.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 13:00

Doom isn't the only game to get weird ports, but it's by far the most famous.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 12:56

The impending wedding of Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce has already generated more than $4.5 million in wagers, according to Kalshi.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 12:55
Technical Issues, Any Recommendations?

My GT’s footpad was acting up so I researched and saw that it was a recalled part. The replacement footpad arrived yesterday and after installing it, it seems like the board’s system is tripping out, showing mixed LED colors of red, green, pink, blue, white… I’m not sure if it’s linked to the footpad, or just coincidental timing, but there’s nothing else I can think of that would have caused it to act up this way.

When trying to use the board it’ll go for a second or two and then just nose dive, or when I go to dismount it ghost rides in reverse at full speed.

submitted by /u/R2Deep2oot
[link] [comments]

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 12:52

On Tuesday, a divided Supreme Court struck down President Donald Trump’s executive order on birthright citizenship and offered a broad constitutional understanding of the right to automatic citizenship for children born in the territory of the United States regardless of their nationality.

In his majority opinion for the Court in Trump v. Barbara, Chief Justice John Roberts held that “[c]hildren born in the United States to parents unlawfully or temporarily present are ‘subject to the jurisdiction’ of the United States and are citizens at birth under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Citizenship Clause.”

The 14th Amendment’s Citizenship Clause reads that “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”

Joining the majority opinion were Justices Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor, Amy Coney Barrett, and Ketanji Brown Jackson. Justice Brett Kavanaugh filed an opinion concurring in the judgment and dissenting in part. Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Neil Gorsuch wrote separate dissents.

The Court had considered the concept of birthright citizenship during two hours of oral argument on April 1, 2026. The justices raised several key questions about an executive order’s definition of a right established in the Constitution’s 14th Amendment.

At issue was Trump’s executive order No. 14,160, Protecting the Meaning and Value of American Citizenship, which claimed that birthright citizenship did not apply in two situations: 1) when that person’s mother was unlawfully present in the United States and the father was not a United States citizen or lawful permanent resident at the time of said person’s birth, or (2) when that person’s mother’s presence in the United States at the time of said person’s birth was lawful but temporary and the father was not a United States citizen or lawful permanent resident at the time of said person’s birth.

The Majority Opinion

“The Citizenship Clause must be understood in light of its historical context, from the English common law to the widespread condemnation of the Court’s decision in Dred Scott v. Sandford,” Roberts wrote. In Dred Scott, Chief Justice Roger Brooke Taney held that African Americans “had no rights which the white man was bound to respect” and that African Americans were not American citizens.

“Under the English common law, children ‘born within the [sovereign’s] dominions’ owed a natural ‘allegiance’ to the sovereign who protected them at birth,’” Roberts noted. “This common law of citizenship—known as jus soli, or right of the soil—crossed the Atlantic and prevailed in ‘each and all of the states’ after American independence.”

Roberts then cited the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which made citizens of “all persons born in the United States and not subject to any foreign power, excluding Indians not taxed.” He said, “What the Civil Rights Act began, the Fourteenth Amendment, and its repudiation of Dred Scott, would finish.”

The Chief Justice then turned to the precedent of United States v. Wong Kim Ark (1898), a long-settled ruling that defines the citizenship rights of people born in territory controlled by the United States. “In Wong Kim Ark, the Court held that the Fourteenth Amendment was ‘declaratory’ of the ‘fundamental rule of citizenship by birth that prevailed at common law,’” Roberts said, with some exceptions. Today, those exclusions include children of accredited foreign diplomats; children of hostile invaders or occupying forces; births aboard foreign sovereign vessels; and children born in American Samoa and Swains Island.

Roberts also rejected arguments made by the Trump administration that birthright citizenship was a right only reserved to those domiciled in the United States.

“Attempts to narrow Wong Kim Ark by noting that the Court’s opinion repeatedly referred to the domicile of Wong’s parents fail because the holding’s underlying reasoning cannot be squared with a domicile requirement,” he concluded. “The Court exhaustively canvassed the text and history of the Citizenship Clause and at no point identified any evidence that the ratifiers thought themselves to be imposing a domicile limitation.”

Concurrences and Dissents

Justice Kavanaugh disagreed with the majority’s constitutional holding, but he concluded that Trump’s executive order violated a federal statute, 8 U.S.C. §1401(a). “Congress could—consistent with the Fourteenth Amendment—amend §1401(a) or otherwise enact new legislation establishing exceptions to birthright citizenship for children born to foreign citizens unlawfully or temporarily in the country. But Congress has not yet done so.”

Justice Thomas, joined by Justice Gorsuch, argued in his 91-page dissent that “the Civil Rights Act and the Citizenship Clause guaranteed citizenship to persons born and domiciled in the United States regardless of their race. Neither guaranteed citizenship to persons who were not domiciled in the United States.” He also called the Chief Justice’s majority opinion “not historically accurate.”

“The Court today takes the extraordinary step of holding facially unconstitutional the President’s Order excluding from citizenship the children of foreign temporary visitors and illegal aliens,” Thomas concluded. “In doing so, the Court adds to the sad history of the Fourteenth Amendment, which was designed and understood to secure equal rights for the freed blacks but has instead been repurposed for political projects that the Reconstruction Congress did not support.”

In her concurring opinion, Justice Jackson, joined by Justice Sotomayor, objected to the dissent from Justice Thomas. “Despite his longstanding endorsement of a ‘colorblind’ Constitution, Justice Thomas now surprisingly suggests that the Citizenship Clause was a race-conscious remedial measure, relating only to ‘freed slaves such as Dred Scott,’ and those who shared with them certain characteristics.”

“It is for this reason, he says, that ‘children who were born in the United States but [to parents] not domiciled here’ are not entitled to claim birthright citizenship. But that narrow vision of the Fourteenth Amendment bears little relationship to the history of its ratification.”

Justice Alito called the majority opinion a “serious mistake.” He rejected the idea that the 14th Amendment confers citizenship “on virtually everyone who happens to be born in this country, including the children of ‘birth tourists,’ women who come here solely for the purpose of giving birth to a child and then promptly return home.” And like Thomas, Alito believed the 14th Amendment confers citizenship on only those children who, at birth, owe allegiance solely to this country.”

Justice Gorsuch wrote to explain his agreement with Justice Thomas. “At the heart of today’s dispute lie two competing views of the Fourteenth Amendment’s Citizenship Clause,” he explained. “On one account, the Clause incorporated the English common law rule of jus soli (literally, the ‘right of the soil’),” he noted. The other account, he said, “adopted a distinctly American settler’s view of citizenship … that promises the full ‘dignity and glory of American citizenship’ to any child born in this country to parents who have made this Nation their permanent home, regardless of their race, religion, or national origin.” Gorsuch agreed with the latter interpretation.

To be sure, today’s 194-page decision from the Court is a landmark decision with many facets to be explored. But for now, birthright citizenship covers anyone born in the territory of the United States, with some very limited exceptions.

Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 12:51

Keir Starmer earlier unveiled a £15bn plan but said defence spending cannot be ‘bottomless pit’ and MoD has to ‘spend better’

Keir Starmer is speaking now.

They are at Malloy Aeronautics, a firm that designs heavy-lift drones, and Starmer says this morning they showed him one of the heaviest drones he had ever seen.

Last year, I made the decision in the national interest to reprioritise aid spending towards defence and achieve the biggest uplift in defence spending since the end of the cold war.

That was the right choice because the world has changed. National security is economic security.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 12:43

More than 2,000 anti-foreigner protesters march through Durban city centre as the arbitrary deadline passes for undocumented migrants to leave the country

South Africa was holding its breath on Tuesday as mass anti-immigration protests were held across the country. They come after a weeks-long campaign against foreigners that has seen at least four killed and tens of thousands fleeing for safety.

In the coastal city of Durban, where violence had been expected, the streets were unusually quiet and shops were shuttered as tension hung thick in the air.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 12:42

I’ve been riding the pintx finding it too weak for my use, being 200punds I thought the gt would make a difference. Endured a couple of hundred miles on that one never to be confident in it. Got myself a x7 high voltage and fell on love. I still have the other onewheels, but I got freaked out today trying to go up a 10° handicap ramp and the GT could hardly do it before whining out to a nosedrop. How weak is it really supposed to be?

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 12:39

The Supreme Court on Tuesday said it won't allow President Trump to remove the nation's top copyright official.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 12:31
  • 41-year-old won title with Lakers in 2020

  • Reports have linked James with move to Warriors

LeBron James looks set to leave the Los Angeles Lakers, with ESPN reporting he has told the team he will leave the team and continue his NBA career elsewhere.

James, who will turn 42 during the 2026-27 season, won an NBA championship with the Lakers in 2020, two years after he joined. His longtime representative, Klutch Sports CEO Rich Paul, said that he is not retiring.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 12:30

Four men arrested and charged for allegedly taking part in ‘jackpotting’ scheme targeting ATMs at rest stops along I-95

A group of four robbers netted more than $500,000 in an elaborate “jackpotting” scheme targeting ATMs at rest stops along Interstate 95 in Connecticut, federal prosecutors in the state have alleged.

The men targeted at least nine cash machines during a 10-day spree in August, according to a press release on Monday by the US attorney’s office, which charged the four with a range of federal offenses.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 12:29

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delmarva Power is the largest energy provider in the state, serving more than 300,000 customers. Proposed limits on its infrastructure spending could help lower energy bills in the long run. But the company argues those limits would hurt reliability. 

The Delaware House of Representatives may be gearing up for a fight after the House Majority Leader filed a last-minute amendment that would blunt a bill meant to lower energy prices. 

Senate Bill 326 in its original form would limit Delmarva Power’s spending on non-mandatory infrastructure projects, among other provisions. The bill’s official summary states that such spending is a “major driver of rate increases.”

But an amendment to that bill, filed Monday night by Democratic Majority Leader Kerri Evelyn Harris (D-Dover), would take away that spending cap. As an alternative, Harris filed a resolution that calls for regulators to “closely examine” non-mandatory spending and suggests a 25% reduction by 2028. 

The bill’s sponsor Sen. Stephanie Hansen (D-Middletown) declined to comment on the amendment. 

But at a press conference earlier this month, Hansen said that Delmarva Power is spending more than it needs on infrastructure, in order to make additional profits from the investments. 

Then it passes those costs onto ratepayers, she said.

“There is evidence to show that overspending… is taking place, and it’s taking place as part of a corporate strategy to increase profits,” Hansen said. 

An electric transmission tower is seen against a dramatic sky.
The cost of electricity is set to rise in much of Delaware in 2026.

Harris said she filed the amendment because the original bill did not have enough votes to get out of the House Natural Resources & Energy Committee so it could be heard by the full House of Representatives. 

She said she drafted this new proposal after speaking with members of the committee and Delmarva Power representatives. 

Delmarva Power has been staunchly against Hansen’s bill in its original form, with the company’s Region President Marcus Beal saying that the term “non-mandatory” is a misnomer. He also argued that Senate Bill 326 would limit Delmarva Power’s ability to do infrastructure projects that improve grid reliability. 

“We can see ourselves put in a place where we’re unable to do what we’re mandated to do in the state, if we’re capped,” Beal said. “And that does hurt jobs, it does hurt the company.”

Harris said the new proposal would allow the Public Service Commission to individually consider non-mandatory infrastructure projects to determine if they were necessary. She confirmed that it does not give the commission any additional powers but is instead a “suggestion” for how to move forward. 

She said the House could still pass the bill in its original form and that either proposal would put more oversight on Delmarva Power, helping lower electricity bills in the long run. 

“Either way, the constituents don’t lose,” Harris said. 

The post Last-minute amendment would blunt bill meant to lower energy costs in Delaware appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 12:23

Court rules against Trump administration on policy that people born in the United States are citizens

The US supreme court has upheld the constitutional guarantee of birthright citizenship, affirming that nearly all people born on US soil are American citizens and rejecting a central pillar of Donald Trump’s anti-immigrant agenda.

The president had issued an executive order on the first day of his second term that sought to deny automatic citizenship to the children born to undocumented immigrants and temporary foreign residents. Writing for the majority, Chief Justice John Roberts said this order violated the 14th amendment of the US constitution.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 12:21

The Supreme Court agreed to take up challenges to so-called assault-weapons bans in Cook County, Illinois, and Connecticut.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 12:14

Normally safe principality left reeling from apartment blast that also injured Vadym Iermolaiev’s wife and child

An international search is under way for a suspected bomber after a Ukrainian tycoon and his family were injured in an explosion in Monaco in an unprecedented attack that has shaken the normally ultra-safe principality.

Stéphane Thibault, Monaco’s public prosecutor, told reporters that a man entered an apartment block on Monday evening, left a package in the lobby and walked away. Moments later, as three occupants of a ground-floor flat approached the entrance, the package exploded, he said.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 12:09

When summer temperatures spike, a mediocre cooler won't cut it. We tracked the temperature retention of 12 new models to find the top six ice chests and electric coolers to help keep your beverages cold and your ice from melting.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 12:00

I spent a few days testing the Reon Pocket Pro Plus ahead of its US launch. Here's how it went.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 11:53

Past and present leaders of wealthy nations such as UK and Germany have argued their actions are insignificant

On first hearing, it is a position that sounds reasonable. “When our share of global emissions is less than 1%,” Rishi Sunak argued when he was the UK prime minister in 2023, “how can it be right that British citizens are now being told to sacrifice even more than others?”

Sunak is not the only world leader to have cited such figures while delaying cuts to pollution. In 2019, Scott Morrison, Australia’s then prime minister, used his country’s 1.3% of global emissions to reject any suggestion Australia was not “doing our bit” on climate breakdown. In July, the German chancellor, Friedrich Merz, pointed to his country’s 2% share of global emissions while supporting loopholes in European climate targets. A few months later the Italian prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, followed suit, flagging the EU’s 6% share.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 11:45

PARIS, June 30, 2026 — Crédit Agricole CIB, the financing and investment banking arm of Crédit Agricole Group, and Pasqal, a global leader in neutral atom quantum computing, announced the signing of a strategic partnership to accelerate the transition from quantum research to operational deployment in capital markets activities.

Building on a collaboration initiated in 2019, the partnership enters a new phase focused on the industrialization of quantum computing applications, with initial production use cases targeted as early as 2028.

An Innovation Trajectory Validated by Concrete Results

Since 2021, Crédit Agricole CIB and Pasqal have conducted several major projects focusing on counterparty credit default risk measurement and portfolio optimization to improve the Bank’s capital efficiency. The results indicate that quantum algorithms can, under specific conditions and use cases, improve performance compared to classical approaches for capital markets and risk management applications, supporting the business case for production deployment. The partners believe there may be an opportunity to unlock additional value as quantum hardware and algorithms continue to mature.

A Clear Roadmap to Production: 2026–2028

The next phase of the partnership will focus on monitoring capital reserve consumption. linked with risk-weighted assets.

This roadmap is structured around three activities:

  • Enhanced classical production: Deployment of quantum-inspired algorithms on existing IT infrastructure, aiming to deliver immediate performance improvements without reliance on quantum hardware
  • Quantum experimentation: Operational testing on Pasqal’s neutral atom quantum computers to validate real-world performance under production conditions
  • Hybrid large-scale deployment: Integration of classical and quantum computing resources with the goal of solving complex problems beyond the reach of today’s systems

Structuring the Quantum Ecosystem: Three Action Levers

To achieve this industrialization, Crédit Agricole CIB is structuring its quantum ecosystem around three pillars: business teams trained in quantum technologies (software and hardware), strategic coordinators ensuring monitoring, and project managers ensuring production deployment. This is supported by access to Pasqal’s platforms (simulators and physical machines).

“Quantum computing has the potential to establish itself as one of the most structurally transformative technological breakthroughs of the next decade. This partnership marks our transition from an exploratory posture to an industrialization logic. By 2028, we aim to integrate quantum computing into some of our daily operational processes, offering our clients an unprecedented level of performance and precision in portfolio optimization. This ambition fully aligns with our technological innovation strategy and our determination to maintain our leadership in capital markets,” explains Pierre-Olivier Pagnon, Chief Information Officer of Crédit Agricole CIB.

“Quantum computing has reached a pivotal moment where its potential is translating into real operational value,” said Wasiq Bokhari, CEO of Pasqal. “Through our long-standing partnership with Crédit Agricole CIB, we are accelerating this shift—combining advanced neutral atom quantum technology with real-world financial use cases to build a clear path toward production-scale deployment. Together, we are laying the foundation for quantum solutions that we believe will redefine optimization and decision-making in capital markets.”

About Crédit Agricole CIB

Crédit Agricole CIB is the corporate and investment banking arm of Crédit Agricole Group, the 10th largest banking group worldwide by total assets in 2024 (The Banker, July 2025). With over 10,000 employees across Europe, the Americas, Asia-Pacific, the Middle East, the Bank supports large and mid-cap corporates and institutional clients, helping them meet both local and global financial needs. Crédit Agricole CIB offers a comprehensive range of products and services in capital markets, investment banking, structured finance, commercial banking and international trade. The Bank is a pioneer in climate finance, and a market leader in sustainable finance providing a full spectrum of solutions to all its clients. For more information, please visit www.ca-cib.com.

About Pasqal

Pasqal is a global leader in delivering practical quantum computing at scale utilizing neutral atom technology and dedicated software for industry, science, and governments. Since its founding in 2019, Pasqal has leveraged Nobel Prize winning research to build high-performance quantum systems and cloud-ready software designed to address complex challenges in optimization, simulation, and artificial intelligence.

Headquartered in France, Pasqal employs over 275 people and serves over 25 clients and partners, including Aramco, CMA CGM, OVHcloud, Thales, IBM (Pasqal is part of the IBM Quantum Network), and Sumitomo.

Backed by more than USD 300 million in total private funding from leading international investors, Pasqal is pursuing a listing on Nasdaq in partnership with Bleichroeder Acquisition Corp. II (Nasdaq: BBCQ) and is accelerating the adoption of scalable, high-performance quantum computing worldwide.


Source: Pasqal

The post Pasqal and Crédit Agricole CIB Advance Strategic Partnership to Deploy Quantum Computing Applied to Finance appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 11:32

The design-forward startup looks like it's getting bolder and more colorful with every product.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 11:25

Scott Bessent says he ‘encourages them to be good actors’ after Trump ranted about prices not dropping fast enough

Scott Bessent, the US treasury secretary, issued a veiled warning to oil and gas companies to lower their prices on Tuesday, a day after Donald Trump berated those retailers on social media for not dropping their prices fast enough and demanded they target $2.50 a gallon.

“I would encourage them to be good actors, especially in the 250th anniversary, because we’re watching,” Bessent said in an interview with Fox News on Tuesday morning, addressing big oil, independent and international retailers.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 11:00

Questions remain as to why somebody would want to kill Vadym Iermolaiev, who has a personal fortune of $225m

Nobody paid much attention to the man with the backpack, as he approached the entrance to a beige-coloured Monaco apartment building. It was 9pm, Monday. The street – rue Révérend-Père-Louis-Frolla – is located in a quiet hillside part of the wealthy principality, close to the border with France.

The man left his bag on the front steps. Soon afterwards, the Ukrainian-born oligarch Vadym Iermolaiev emerged, together with his wife and their 13-year-old child. There was an explosion and CCTV captured an image of the suspect, wearing a black jacket and a bucket hat, running from the scene towards the neighbouring French town of Beausoleil.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 10:46

Thirteen countries with a free trade agreement with Brussels have their quota reduced by just one-third

The EU has halved the amount of duty-free steel it will accept from abroad, but has agreed higher import volumes for more than a dozen trading partners, including Britain.

However, some steel producers have been hit harder than others with Tata Steel UK, Britain’s biggest producer, revealing its duty-free exports have been slashed by 60%.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 10:40

FORT MEADE, Md., June 30, 2026 — The Laboratory for Physical Sciences (LPS) at the National Security Agency (NSA), in close collaboration with the U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command (DEVCOM) Army Research Office (ARO), has announced the launch of the Quantum Ecosystem Advancement, Growth & Leadership (QuantumEAGLe) initiative in support of the President’s Quantum Executive Order. This new program aims to accelerate the U.S. quantum computing ecosystem and strengthen the nation’s leadership in quantum technology.

QuantumEAGLe focuses on five key areas to drive innovation and growth in the U.S. quantum industry:

  1. Industry Engagement: Foster strong collaboration with the quantum industry to align research efforts with commercial needs and opportunities.
  2. Commercial Roadmaps: Enable the development of commercial roadmaps by working directly with industry partners to identify and address key challenges.
  3. Supply Chain Advancement: Enhance the performance, manufacturing, and commercial availability of specialized components essential for building quantum computers, ensuring a robust U.S. supply chain.
  4. Algorithmic Applications: Discover novel algorithms that provide a quantum advantage and develop error correction techniques to make fault-tolerant computation a reality.
  5. Foundational Research: Support research to solve fundamental challenges in qubit performance, simulation tools, and system characterization, laying the groundwork for future advancements.

“Building on LPS’s rich history in Quantum Information Science, which includes decades of foundational research and collaboration with the [Department of Defense], QuantumEAGLe represents a significant expansion of NSA’s quantum computing efforts,” said Liji Samuel, NSA chief of the Laboratory for Physical Sciences. “This initiative is designed to cultivate a resilient U.S. industrial base capable of delivering on the promise of quantum computing for national and economic security.”

According to ARO Acting Director Dr. Purush Iyer, by combining the strengths of LPS and ARO in fundamental research and technical innovation, QuantumEAGLe will accelerate progress toward fault-tolerant quantum computing and ensure the United States remains at the forefront of this critical technology.

“Together, we are building the foundation for future breakthroughs that will benefit both national and economic security and the broader scientific community,” he said.

Dr. Michael Metcalfe, NSA chief of Quantum Information Science, emphasized that the QuantumEAGLe initiative represents a significant step in strengthening America’s quantum computing capabilities.

“By working closely with the quantum industry, we aim to enhance our supply chain, develop cutting-edge algorithms, and overcome fundamental research challenges,” he said. “This collaborative effort will help us maintain U.S. leadership in quantum technology and ensure the security and prosperity of our nation.”

The initiative will leverage flexible contracting authorities and work directly with the U.S. quantum industry to help align research with commercial needs and support stronger domestic capability.

The QuantumEAGLe Special Notice has been posted by the Army Contracting Command on SAM.gov.


Source: NSA

The post NSA, DEVCOM Army Research Office Launch QuantumEAGLe Initiative appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 10:27

Powered by AWS, the University of Utah’s new Secure Research Enclave brings secure, scalable cloud computing to complex research involving sensitive data, AI-enabled analysis and NIST, HIPAA, FISMA and CMMC requirements.

SALT LAKE CITY, June 30, 2026 — The University of Utah has announced the launch of the Secure Research Enclave (SRE) through the Office of the Senior Vice President for Research. The governed, cloud-based research environment, powered by Amazon Web Services (AWS), expands the University’s portfolio of research computing resources and provides an additional option for researchers working with sensitive, regulated, controlled-access, and sponsor-restricted data.

Credit: Shutterstock

The SRE builds on and complements established capabilities across the University, including the Center for High Performance Computing and the Price College of Engineering Secure Computing Environment. Together, these resources give researchers a broader set of secure computing options and help match projects to the environment best suited to their data, security, compliance, and computing needs.

Through the collaboration of the Office of the Senior Vice President for Research and AWS, the SRE provides secure-by-design cloud infrastructure for projects that require advanced security, compliance documentation, and scalable computing resources. The environment is intended to support research involving clinical and genomic information, protected health information, Controlled Unclassified Information, controlled-access datasets, sponsor-restricted data, AI-enabled analysis, and other research subject to increasing sponsor, collaborator, data-provider and federal expectations for secure data stewardship.

“Research competitiveness increasingly depends on our ability to support complex projects responsibly,” said Erin Rothwell, Senior Vice President for Research at the University of Utah. “The Secure Research Enclave helps our researchers say yes to more ambitious work by providing a clearer institutional pathway for secure, compliant, and data-intensive research.”

The SRE addresses a practical challenge facing faculty and research teams: sponsor, federal, and data-provider requirements can delay or limit projects when appropriate controls, documentation, or computing environments are not readily available. Rather than leaving individual laboratories or projects to solve those requirements independently, the SRE creates a shared route through the University’s Research Security Office.

The Research Security Office helps researchers navigate the growing security expectations tied to sensitive data, external sponsorship, research partnerships and federal research security requirements, including NSPM-33. In addition to helping teams identify appropriate secure computing options, the Office supports requirement interpretation, project planning, data stewardship, security review and realistic budgeting for cloud, storage, computing, security and compliance costs in proposals and contracts. The goal is to help researchers pursue grants, contracts, restricted datasets and collaborations that require strong research security and data stewardship.

“The Secure Research Enclave creates a practical bridge between research ambition and research security,” said Lisa Young, Research Security Officer, University of Utah. “As research becomes more data-intensive, collaborative and technology-enabled, researchers are navigating more complex expectations for sensitive data, external partnerships, AI-enabled analysis and controlled-access datasets. The enclave provides a secure cloud environment and a clearer institutional path for meeting those expectations in ways that support discovery rather than slow it down.”

AWS is will provide cloud services, technical expertise and support for the initiative. The collaboration helps lower the initial cost barrier for researchers who need to move sensitive, regulated, or data-intensive work into a secure environment, while helping teams understand the requirements of secure cloud research so they can plan more effectively for future grants and contracts.

In addition to cloud infrastructure and security capabilities, AWS is supporting approved research computing and AI tools, as well as workshops and training to help researchers and technical teams develop secure, cloud-enabled workflows. This enablement role is intended to help the University build not only a platform, but a repeatable model for supporting complex research responsibly and at scale.

“AWS is proud to support the University of Utah in building a secure, scalable research environment that helps researchers move faster from proposal to publication while meeting the most demanding security and compliance requirements. This collaboration gives the research community at the University of Utah a clearer, more supported path to pursue grants, partnerships, and discoveries that were previously out of reach,” said Kim Majerus, Vice President of Global Education and Local Government at AWS.

The Secure Research Enclave is designed to support a broad range of research needs, including externally sponsored research, regulated data, clinical and genomic research, multi-institutional collaborations, controlled-access datasets and emerging AI-enabled research workflows. By expanding the University’s secure research computing portfolio, the University of Utah reduces friction for researchers, strengthens readiness for complex research opportunities, and supports responsible stewardship of sensitive and regulated research data.

The launch builds on the University’s ongoing work to expand secure research capacity and follows the inaugural Secure Research Days, co-hosted by the Office of the Senior Vice President for Research and AWS on May 27–28, 2026. The event brought together faculty, researchers, scientists, and technical professionals to explore secure research workflows, cloud-enabled research, and emerging requirements for data-intensive and regulated research.

About the University of Utah

The University of Utah is the state’s flagship institution of higher education, with 18 schools and colleges, more than 100 undergraduate majors and graduate programs and an enrollment of more than 36,000 students. It is a member of the Association of American Universities—an invitation-only, prestigious group of 71 leading research institutions. Ranked No. 1 public university in the West by the Wall Street Journal, the U strives to be a model public university in delivering unmatched value in higher education and health care while making social, economic and cultural contributions that improve the quality of life throughout the state, the nation and the world.

About Amazon Web Services

Amazon Web Services (AWS) is guided by customer obsession, pace of innovation, commitment to operational excellence, and long-term thinking. By democratizing technology for nearly two decades and making cloud computing and generative AI accessible to organizations of every size and industry, AWS has built one of the fastest-growing enterprise technology businesses in history. Millions of customers trust AWS to accelerate innovation, transform their businesses, and shape the future. With the most comprehensive AI capabilities and global infrastructure footprint, AWS empowers builders to turn big ideas into reality.


Source: University of Utah

The post University of Utah Launches Secure Research Enclave Powered by AWS appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-07-02 16:04
2026-06-30 10:02

Perspectives on Ankara: The security and defence implications of the NATO summit 22 July 2026 — 17:00 TO 18:30 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online

Understand how summit commitments on defence spending, innovation and industrial capacity can strengthen NATO’s future security posture. 

This exclusive event, held in partnership with Turkish Aerospace, will seek to analyse the key takeaways from the NATO Summit and translate them into the actionable insights for public and private stakeholders.

The 2026 NATO Summit reinforces the need for stronger defence capabilities, greater burden sharing and closer public–private cooperation across the alliance. As security threats evolve, attention is shifting from spending commitments to implementation. This places renewed focus on innovation, industrial capacity and alliance-wide resilience. 

This event, in partnership with Turkish Aerospace, will seek to analyse the key takeaways from the NATO Summit and translate them into the actionable insights for public and private stakeholders.   

This event discusses: 

  • What mechanisms can be put in place to ensure summit commitments translate into coordinated action?
  • Should defence investment models be redesigned for future security challenges?
  • What barriers limit effective public–private partnerships in defence?
  • How can regional defence industrial partners help address alliance capability gaps?
  • What conditions are needed to accelerate the adoption of transformative technologies?

 This panel is followed by a reception and networking.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 08:42

Hi everyone,

I'm looking for some advice on what makes the most financial sense.

A few years ago I bought a new Onewheel GT in the Netherlands for around €2,800. It has only 119 km (74 miles) on it. After that it sat indoors for at least a year without being used.

Unfortunately, it no longer powers on. The charger appears to be working, but the board doesn't respond at all. I don't have enough experience with Onewheels to diagnose it further.

I'm planning to sell it because I don't use it anymore. I've had it listed for a while, but the highest offer I've received so far is under €700.

I'm considering buying a replacement battery module from Future Motion (around $600) in the hope that I can get it working again and sell it for significantly more.

From a financial point of view, what would you do?

  • Sell it as-is?
  • Replace the battery module first?
  • Is there something else I should check before making that decision?

Any advice or experience would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!

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2026-07-01 16:04
2026-06-30 07:11

Beijing, whose stockpiles and renewables industry allowed it to withstand energy shock, is now gaining from global solar and EV push

China has emerged as the sole winner in Asia from the strait of Hormuz crisis, according to a report published on Tuesday.

The report by the geopolitical consulting firm Asia Group concluded that China had weathered the storm of the global commodities crisis resulting from the closure of the Middle Eastern waterway, and also stood to gain from the economic and geopolitical trends sparked by the wider conflict.

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2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 07:00

The lovefest from Musk’s conservative fans completely overlooks the unscrupulous tactics behind his immense wealth

For 12 glorious days in June, Elon Musk experienced something nobody else in the history of humankind has ever experienced: trillionaire status.

Did all those zeros make Musk happy? Did the army of children he has sired love him more? Did he find inner peace? We’ll never know because Musk was dragged back to being a boring old billionaire last Wednesday, after shares in Tesla and SpaceX plunged amid a broader tech sell-off.

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2026-07-03 08:04
2026-06-30 06:30

Vanessa Saba for ProPublica

It took less than a day for the detective to give up on the case. A patrol officer had reported a harrowing, violent midnight rape in a Syracuse, New York, park. Hospital records recounted that the victim, an 18-year-old freshman at Syracuse University, was “crying uncontrollably.” Her face was bruised, and she had scratches on her neck. Her hymen had been lacerated in two places. Her urine was “grossly bloody,” according to the hospital report, and there was semen inside her.

At 8 on the morning after the assault, after the victim looked fruitlessly through books of mug shots in hopes of identifying her assailant, Syracuse detective George Lorenz interviewed her. She had been awake most of the night for a first police interview, followed by forensic and medical exams: everything from gathering physical evidence of the rape to X-rays of her skull because the attacker had pounded her head on a brick walkway. To alleviate the pain from her injuries, she had been given Demerol, a powerful opioid.

Lorenz, a burly 17-year veteran of the department who had worked as a meat cutter and truck driver before becoming a police officer, seemed annoyed that she had trouble staying awake, according to her subsequent account. “That’s inconsequential, just the facts,” he barked when he thought she was providing extraneous detail.

The detective was dubious that a rape had occurred, according to his preliminary report. “It is this writer’s opinion, after interview of the victim, that this case, as presented by the victim, is not completely factual,” he wrote. After speaking to the male student whom the victim had been visiting before she was attacked, the detective checked the crime scene for anything his colleagues, who had recovered a knife and the victim’s glasses, might have missed.

That was the totality of Lorenz’s investigation. Five hours after receiving the case, in a report marked 13:00 on May 8, 1981, he placed it in the “inactive file pending further info.” The consequences of that decision are still playing out nearly a half-century later.

Alice Sebold returned to campus for the fall semester that year, aware that nobody was looking for her rapist. She happened to encounter a man on the street and, with a jolt of terrified recognition, was certain she recognized her attacker. Sebold brought him to the attention of the police. Her testimony convicted the man, who spent 16 years in prison and nearly 23 more as a registered sex offender.

Sebold was no ordinary survivor. At a time when few even reported rapes, she publicly described her experience in searing detail — in op-eds, on “Oprah” and then in a memoir about the attack and its aftermath — inspiring others to speak out rather than live in silent shame. That memoir, “Lucky,” was published in 1999, then sold a million copies after her first novel, “The Lovely Bones,” became a publishing phenomenon and, later, a Hollywood movie. Years after that, an attempt to turn “Lucky” into a movie led screenwriters and producers to examine the badly flawed police work and prosecution stemming from the assault of Sebold. The details had been sitting in plain sight in Sebold’s memoir.

The case publicly disintegrated in 2021 when a judge vacated the conviction of Anthony Broadwater and Syracuse’s district attorney said in court that the prosecution “should never have happened.” Involving, as it did, a white woman accusing a poor Black man of rape, and coming back to court a year after the convulsions caused by the murder of George Floyd, the news detonated in the media, with Sebold vilified even after she apologized to Broadwater. The case was yet another reminder, if reminder was needed, of the racism in the U.S. justice system. And what had once been a central identity for Sebold — a person who had built a voice and a career out of standing up to sexual violence — suddenly turned on its head.

As all of those details unspooled in court, on television, and in the pages of The New York Times and the Syracuse press, two former colleagues of mine began to report on the case. One detail lost in the frenzy raised the question of how many other victims had been left behind and what else the police might have missed: The district attorney said in court that there had been other rapes in the same park where Sebold had been attacked, including one a little over a week after Broadwater’s conviction. The DA expressed frustration that “nobody might have put two and two together back then.” My former colleagues moved on to other projects and publications.

Eventually my editors asked me to pick up where they left off. What could we uncover if we tried today to investigate the case that the Syracuse police never truly investigated — Sebold’s — as well as any others that may have been related? Could we untangle how things went so wrong and perhaps even point to a potential culprit? And if the authorities had bungled the case this badly, what mistakes had they made in other cases and what could be learned from those errors?

As an investigative reporter with almost two decades at ProPublica, many of those years focused on criminal justice, I have delved into countless cases gone wrong. On one occasion, I set out to report an article on a man unjustly convicted of murder — a case where an appeals court had belatedly found prosecutorial misconduct serious enough to overturn his conviction — only to have the man confess to me that in fact he had pulled the trigger. He recounted the victim’s dying words and told me, “I did what I had to do.”

Sebold’s case would turn out to be far more complex than that one, and its layers and effects far broader than what emerged in the wake of the exoneration. There were even more turns — including civil litigation that continues to this day — in what was already a baroque narrative.

Or so I would learn after I embarked on what became two and a half years of reporting, trying to excavate the Syracuse criminal justice system in an era before DNA evidence and cellphones, before the Police Department even had computers, a time in which cities all over the country were grappling with a massive rise in violent crime. Reconstructing the truth decades after the fact, needless to say, is even harder than trying to pin it down in the moment.

What’s clear is that no part of the system in Syracuse at the time could be depended on. Police brushed off rapes. Prosecutors bungled confessions or were defeated at trial. Judges overlooked irregularities. And one of the most powerful institutions in the city, Syracuse University, seemed more interested in suppressing news of a rape epidemic than solving it. There were police reports of sexual assaults near the campus marked “no press.” A former detective testified that the files were marked that way at the university’s request.

In this atmosphere, at least one serial rapist was on the streets — and sexual assaults that closely resembled Sebold’s continued for years, even while Broadwater was behind bars. Meanwhile, the case gnawed at former Syracuse detective Paul Clapper. He wondered whether the wrong man had been sent to prison. After he left the force, he raised the name of a confessed and convicted rapist who closely matched the physical description of Sebold’s assailant but committed most of his crimes indoors rather than outside.

That man’s record was lengthy and violent. I eventually found myself knocking on his battered door, wondering whether, at long last, I had found the true perpetrator. Or was I falling into the same trap that the Syracuse criminal justice system had tumbled into when it wrongly convicted Anthony Broadwater 44 years ago?

1

When Alice Sebold arrived as a college freshman in 1980, Syracuse was a city in decline. It had risen a century and a half earlier because of its proximity to the Erie Canal, then for decades was the site of factories for companies like General Electric and Carrier Corp. By the 1970s, those companies were closing facilities. Poverty climbed and the city’s population dwindled, emptying rows of Victorian homes that had housed generations of working-class families. Syracuse’s downtown, already severed by the interstate highway, withered.

One institution, however, was flourishing: Syracuse University. Enrollment surged, its sports teams excelled and new buildings rose. The university was a bubble inside the city, according to former students.

Sebold was drawn by the school’s distinguished poetry program. Raised in a household of voracious readers in suburban Philadelphia, her father a professor of Spanish at the University of Pennsylvania and her mother having worked for magazines, Sebold disdained the university’s frat culture. She preferred to skip the keg parties in her dorm and instead lounged in the basement of the art building, drinking endless cups of instant coffee and reading Emily Dickinson.

A young woman with black hair uses a typewriter at a desk. Beside her are a cup of coffee and notebooks.
Alice Sebold, then a Syracuse University student, at her typewriter Courtesy of Alice Sebold

Just after midnight, on May 8, 1981, the last night of her freshman year, she was attacked. Sebold was crossing through Thornden Park on her way back to her dorm from a friend’s apartment. A stranger grabbed her from behind as she walked along a brick path. He put one hand over her mouth and threatened her with a knife. “I’ll kill you if you scream,” he said. Over a period of more than an hour, according to police reports and Sebold’s memoir, the assailant bludgeoned Sebold with his fists, pounded her skull into the brick and choked her.

Sebold frantically searched for words to deter him: She told him she was a virgin, then an orphan. She offered him the $8 she had in her back pocket. He laughed and said he wasn’t interested in that.

He forced her to kiss him, then to undress. He made clear she was not his first victim. “You’re the worst bitch I’ve ever done this to,” he said.

Then, when he was done, he fell asleep on top of her. She tried to escape, but he woke up and offered a tearful apology. “You’re a good girl,” he said. “I’m so sorry.” He told her to kiss him good night and called her beautiful. “It was a date to him,” she wrote in “Lucky.”

Just as quickly, he reverted to hostility. The attacker pocketed her $8 after all. He let her go, then asked her name as she walked away. “Alice,” she told him, writing later, “I didn’t have a name other than my own to say.”

“Nice knowing you, Alice,” he said. “See you around sometime.”

2

Thornden Park, where Sebold had been assaulted, was both a refuge and a menacing locale adjacent to the university. Once the estate of a salt baron, the rolling 76-acre park had broad fields — with tennis courts, a pool and an earthen amphitheater — as well as dense clusters of maple and oak trees that provided dark, isolated enclaves where an attack might go unnoticed.

The park had been the site of two sexual attacks seven months before Sebold’s rape. A third had occurred a block away. The reports in those cases had also been quickly consigned to the inactive file.

One woman had told police that a man dragged her into a wooded section of the park. When she resisted, the report stated, he “began to punch her in the face” and “ordered her to remove her pants.”

As with Sebold’s case, the police report was dismissive. One officer asserted that the victim was “retarded” and had run away from a nearby halfway house. The staff there said that she had complained of a similar incident two weeks prior and that she was having “difficulty adjusting.” The case was put on ice just hours after it had been reported.

Four days later, another young woman was making her way across Thornden Park when a man in a ski cap grabbed her by the neck and put a knife to her face. As she squirmed and tried to push him off, the man struggled to pull off his pants and hers. The woman suddenly realized the weapon was just a table knife, so she screamed as loud as she could and he ran away.

There was no indication in the police reports that these attacks might have been connected. Nor was there much evidence of public alarm. I found no articles about any of these October 1980 assaults in newspaper archives.

Trying to piece this information together was daunting and complicated. My colleagues and I made more than two dozen requests for all manner of law enforcement records from the Syracuse district attorney’s office, Police Department, the state prison system, local jails, archives and courts. Many were initially denied. After appeals, I wound up with thousands of pages of documents. There was little or no organization among them, and some were scrawled in barely decipherable handwriting. Even the redactions were haphazard, with some names still visible.

I started to map out the attacks around Thornden Park, using police reports and stray newspaper clips for some of the later ones. The numbers and proximity were jarring. More than a dozen women reported being raped or attacked by strangers within half a square mile over four years.

Women were being sexually assaulted in their dorm rooms and in student apartments, walking out of grocery stores or on their way to the library. A nursing student was attacked at the same spot as Sebold, on the same day that her roommate was raped in their shared apartment. A freshman was raped in a sorority house by a man who broke in through a window. The descriptions of the perpetrators were often eerily similar. They frequently carried a knife. And several were roughly the same height, weight and race.

It appeared that there was a public safety crisis emanating from the park area, with no sign of urgency from law enforcement.

3

Syracuse’s criminal justice system was chaotic during the 1980s and ’90s. One prosecutor would get into a scuffle, on live TV, with a candidate who had just won the race for DA. The police crime lab would lose its accreditation. The doctor who led the county medical examiner’s office resigned after an investigation found he had routinely removed organs from corpses without consent from the victims’ families. His employees had posed playfully for photos over the body of a woman who had died by suicide.

Given the level of dysfunction — and the fact that DNA evidence hadn’t yet come into use in the early ’80s — rape was particularly difficult to investigate. Survivors were wary, corroborating evidence hard to find. The Syracuse Police Department had no separate sex crimes unit at the time, and officers were still using typewriters.

“We were doing everything from homicide to robberies,” one supervisor of detectives during this era told me. He remembered nights with 18 felonies and fewer than a dozen detectives to work them. “A person with a knife in their back or a guy who got shot is going to take priority over a two-week-old rape case,” he said.

“A person with a knife in their back or a guy who got shot is going to take priority over a two-week-old rape case,” one supervisor of detectives said. 

There was another impediment in those days: Syracuse University. I found a police report from 1980 on which someone had scrawled the words “NO PRESS.” A 19-year-old university student had been walking near Thornden Park when she, too, was attacked by a man with a knife. She got away by biting him when he tried to force her to perform oral sex.

The “no press” designation on police reports was not unusual, according to deposition testimony by Clapper, the former Syracuse detective, who would play a crucial role in the Broadwater saga. “No press,” Clapper testified in 2025, “means that Syracuse University put their foot down and said no press for any kind of rape, robbery, burglary that’s anywhere in the area of Syracuse University.”

The university had influence in the Police Department, according to Clapper, and an obvious interest in making the campus seem safe: “If your little daughter wants to go to school at SU and calls the police, and says, How is the crime around Syracuse University? ‘No crime around there.’ There’s five girls raped within, let’s say, a six-month period … between campus and Thornden Park. And if it’s marked ‘no press,’ it’s like it never happened.”

4

Sebold’s case had been placed in the inactive file. That meant the police weren’t searching for her assailant. But she couldn’t help herself. According to Sebold’s memoir, she walked the university campus, “looking for Him.”

“I was very aware that he could be around any corner,” she told me decades later. A sense of “hypervigilance” coursed through her like “a bunch of electrical wires,” she said.

Five months after the crime, Sebold saw a man on a street filled with restaurants and bars near the university. She felt a sudden, visceral certainty: “right height, right build, something in his posture.” She wrote that the man walked up to her and said, “Hey girl, don’t I know you from somewhere?” He then began nonchalantly chatting with a police officer across the street. (Both Broadwater and the officer would testify that they said “don’t I know you” to each other.)

When Sebold reported the sighting to the authorities a few hours later, Clapper recognized himself as the cop she saw and Anthony Broadwater as the man he was talking to. Broadwater, then 20, had grown up as one of six children of a janitor who worked for Syracuse University. After a brief stint in the Marines, he was working as a telephone wiring installer. Growing up, Broadwater told me, he’d had run-ins with the police and had served time in juvenile detention for theft. (Clapper had known Broadwater since he was a boy, he would testify years later. When asked if he had ever known him “to be involved in anything like rape,” Clapper replied, “No.”)

A young man in a Marines uniform poses for a portrait.
Anthony Broadwater during his time in the Marines U.S. Marine Corps via The New York Times/Redux

Broadwater was arrested. He vociferously protested his innocence and did whatever he could to prove it. He volunteered a pubic hair for comparison to one found on Sebold after the rape, and he agreed to participate in a lineup.

When Broadwater saw the other lineup participants, he began to worry. None of them looked much like him. They were all too tall or had a lighter complexion or both. He suggested that another inmate closer to his height and build be included to make it more fair. Broadwater’s court-appointed lawyer got the jailer to bring another man down from the detention facility above the police building.

Sebold looked at the row of men and picked the person who had just been added to the lineup. The man was standing next to Broadwater.

The case should have ended then and there, in the view of the DA today. “You know, she didn’t pick out the wrong guy. She picked out the guy. She picked out the guy that she thought had raped her. And it wasn’t Anthony,” Onondaga County District Attorney William Fitzpatrick told ProPublica. “Case is over. Stop.”

But it didn’t stop.

5

The prosecution of Broadwater had been assigned to a young assistant district attorney named Gail Uebelhoer (pronounced EE-bull-hair). Sebold wrote that she felt an immediate connection to Uebelhoer, whom she described as “solid and female” with “sparkling, intelligent eyes.” As Sebold put it in “Lucky,” “She wanted what I wanted: to win.”

After Sebold failed to identify Broadwater in the lineup, she could sense that Lorenz, the detective who had overseen the process, was unhappy. (Lorenz died in 2017.) Sebold said she had been scared and confused, torn between the men in positions 4 and 5. Instead of seeking out additional evidence, Uebelhoer asked Sebold to draft an affidavit on the spot, explaining what had happened. Sebold wrote in the affidavit that she had picked No. 5 because that person had been looking at her. Broadwater was in position 4.

Five young men stand in a lineup photo with serious expressions. They are all wearing the same uniform.
During a lineup, Sebold identified her assailant as the man on the far right; Broadwater was standing next to him. Onondaga District Attorney/New York Times/Redux

The prosecutor then told her it was only natural that she would make such a mistake, according to Sebold’s memoir. “They really worked a number on you. He uses that friend or that friend uses him, in every lineup they do,” Sebold said Uebelhoer told her. “They’re dead ringers.” Both men are adamant that they had never been in a lineup before.

Within three hours of the botched lineup, Uebelhoer presented the case against Broadwater to a grand jury. Sebold wrote that she put on “the best show” of her life and several grand jurors “fought back tears.”

At least one of them was uneasy about the manner in which Broadwater had been identified, according to a transcript. “When someone is picked out of the lineup, doesn’t it have to be absolutely sure that the person that they picked out of the lineup is the one they’ve seen before?” one grand juror asked Clapper while he was on the witness stand.

“That’s correct,” Clapper said.

Uebelhoer quashed the discussion. “He really can’t give you an opinion on that,” she told the juror, adding that Clapper hadn’t been present for the lineup.

The juror asked about it two more times, but Uebelhoer kept deflecting. Broadwater was indicted on every count she had presented, including rape, sodomy and robbery.

Illustration by Vanessa Saba for ProPublica

6

When Broadwater’s case was set for trial, Uebelhoer was visibly pregnant. It was passed to William Mastine. Mustachioed, 6’6” and pugnacious — Mastine is the prosecutor who would scuffle with the DA-elect a few years later — he was known for his swagger and courtroom theatrics. Fitzpatrick, then a fellow assistant district attorney, would dub Mastine the “Garbage Man” in a newspaper profile for his ability to bring cases with scant evidence or, as Fitzpatrick put it to me more pungently, “take shit and make it hit.”

This was no minor consideration. Acquittals in rape trials were common at the time in Syracuse. At one point in the 1980s, a local news article reported that the district attorney’s office had suffered nine trial defeats in a row. Uebelhoer was quoted saying “juries are looking for a perfect victim, but they don’t exist.” She saw Sebold as a standout, writing in a memo as the case was transferred to Mastine: “Good luck. Victim is excellent witness.”

Sebold’s testimony would be crucial at trial, since it was nearly the entirety of the evidence. Mastine repeatedly emphasized that she was a credible witness. She had been a virgin, he pointed out, arguing that it would more firmly cement the image of her rapist in her mind. He said her study of drawing as a high school student equipped her to remember facial characteristics. She was shaken during the lineup. The identification on the street was what mattered, he argued.

Uebelhoer saw Sebold as a standout, writing in a memo as the case was transferred to Mastine: “Good luck. Victim is excellent witness.”

Aside from Sebold’s identification, the only other piece of evidence was the pubic hair Broadwater volunteered, which was compared to a hair found on Sebold after the rape. The two hairs were examined under a microscope by a lab expert who testified that they were “consistent” with each other. That essentially meant that both had come from a Black person. There were approximately 27 million Black Americans at that time. (In the absence of DNA technology, the prosecution could have tested the semen found in Sebold to determine its blood type, but it never did. That would have narrowed the list of possible perpetrators to only those with the specific blood type.)

The trial was peppered with irregularities. Broadwater and his lawyer had opted for a bench trial, hoping that a judge would see the paucity of evidence and wouldn’t be swayed by emotion. But the judge seemed to have a soft spot for Sebold. During a break in the proceedings, he spoke to Sebold privately, according to her memoir, expressing concern about how she was holding up and asking about her family. Had a juror done such a thing, they would likely have been kicked off the jury and a mistrial might’ve been declared. (The judge died in 2009.)

In a final, highly unusual turn, Uebelhoer took the stand herself, as a witness for the prosecution. She testified that Broadwater was unhappy with one of the people in the lineup and that he managed to swap that person out for the man Sebold picked. She seemed to imply that Broadwater was responsible for any confusion in the lineup process.

When it was over, the judge didn’t even leave the bench to deliberate. He found Broadwater guilty directly after Mastine finished his closing argument.

Mastine defends the trial and the verdict. When I reached him by phone, he noted that he was brought onto the case after the indictment had been handed up. Mastine otherwise repeated what he’d said at the time: that Sebold’s identification of Broadwater on the street trumped the one in the lineup room, so it was appropriate to take the case to trial.

Mastine said that Fitzpatrick anointed him the “Garbage Man” after his work on the Sebold case and congratulated him on the victory. Mastine denied that he felt any pressure in light of the defeats his office had endured. “A trial lawyer has to have a bathtub mind,” he told me. “During trial, you fill the bathtub up. When the verdict comes in, you empty the bathtub and start all over again.” (Years after the Broadwater trial, Mastine, by then in private practice, pleaded guilty to possessing a check on which he forged a client’s signature. He agreed to give up his law license.)

Through her lawyer, Uebelhoer declined to be interviewed. In a 2025 deposition, she testified that she could remember little of the Broadwater case. She said repeatedly that she could neither admit nor deny what Sebold had recounted in her memoir. But Uebelhoer emphasized that she had no way of knowing whether the man Sebold picked had appeared in a lineup with Broadwater before. “How would I know that?” she testified. “I’m not down there for every lineup.”

Responding to Fitzpatrick’s assertion that the case should have been dropped after the lineup, Uebelhoer testified that he likely would have been at meetings where the case was discussed but “registered no objection.” (Fitzpatrick denies this. “I’m not saying I don’t have a recollection of the meeting,” he told me. “I’m saying that meeting did not take place.”) Uebelhoer, for her part, added, “I thought that I did my job by putting it all in front of the grand jury to let them hear and see if they found her to be believable or not.”

Two months after the guilty verdict, Broadwater was sentenced to 8 1/3 to 25 years in state prison.

7

Broadwater was sitting in the local jail after his trial, he told me, when a Syracuse newspaper reported that another woman had been raped in Thornden Park. “I told you it wasn’t me! It never was me,” he said he told his attorney. “That guy is still out there doing it.”

A police report seems to line up with Broadwater’s description. The attack happened on May 27, 1982, and resembled the rape Broadwater had been convicted of just nine days earlier.

At about 9 that evening, a 19-year-old actress was jogging through a wooded section of the park when she heard someone behind her. Suddenly she was in the grip of a man dragging her by the neck behind a cluster of trees. He forced her to perform oral sex, then pulled her sweatpants down and raped her. She reported that her assailant was Black, about 5’9”, 140 pounds, muscular and around 16 years old.

Those details did not draw a lot of notice at the time. But they fit the description of a rapist who would soon become well-known to the Syracuse police. Only four months after Broadwater was found guilty, a high schooler named Thomas Weakfall admitted raping five women. The crimes had begun in late 1981, he said in a statement taken by Clapper. Four of them occurred less than a mile from Thornden Park. Weakfall, according to police reports, had provided “certain facts only the perpetrator would have known.”

“I told you it wasn’t me! It never was me,” Broadwater said he told his attorney. “That guy is still out there doing it.”

Weakfall seemed at war with himself, conscious of the brutality he inflicted. “I go to sleep Tommy Weakfall,” he would say in one confession, “and then in the middle of the night I wake up in a cold sweat. … I feel this pressure pushing me to go out side and do something.” He admitted burglarizing houses and raping women. When he was done, according to an account Clapper gave years later, Weakfall would “wrap them in a blanket, hold them in his arms and tell them he was sorry he did it.” Many of the police reports I examined, including Sebold’s, noted that the rapist had apologized to the victim.

There’s no evidence that Weakfall assaulted Sebold, but there’s no denying he matched key elements of the description she gave. Sebold had told police her rapist was Black, 16 to 18 years of age, about 5’7” and 150 pounds. Weakfall was Black, 16 years old, 5’9” and 140 pounds, according to police reports. Broadwater was 20, stood 5’6” and weighed about 175 pounds.

Despite Weakfall’s confession, the rape case against him collapsed. Officers learned — after taking his statement without a defense lawyer present — that he was being represented by an attorney on an unrelated burglary charge. Weakfall’s confession wouldn’t be admissible in court.

He ended up pleading guilty to second-degree burglary. Weakfall’s sentence wouldn’t require a single day of jail time. He got five years of probation and remained on the streets.

8

On the morning of Sept. 29, 1983, a man matching Weakfall’s description led police on a dramatic foot chase through downtown Syracuse after being interrupted while attempting to rape a woman inside her car.

Records show Weakfall was arrested for the offense and released on Oct. 11, 1983. Four months later, he pleaded guilty to a lesser charge, attempted sexual misconduct, and was sentenced to one year.

During the four months that Weakfall was still free, there was another notable assault. Sebold’s roommate was raped that November in the apartment they shared. She was one of five women attacked in the same cluster of blocks over five months, according to news accounts at the time. Police suspected that one man had committed the crimes. The homes had been burglarized and the women had been raped at knifepoint and beaten; some were also bound and gagged.

These elements matched Weakfall’s methods, though the reports suggested a noticeably taller, older perpetrator. Several survivors were asked to look at a photograph of Weakfall as part of an array of mug shots, but they didn’t identify him.

Sebold’s roommate told police that after the rapist broke into the apartment, he gagged, bound and blindfolded her, then became “very gentle” and “took his time.” She added that “he didn’t talk street talk either. He had a good use of the English vocabulary.”

He led her into Sebold’s room, put a “thin metal object” to her throat and told her, “I just want you to be good.” When he finished raping her, he tossed her jeans to her and covered her with a blanket.

The roommate also reported an exchange that suggested her rapist may have encountered Sebold in the past. After the assault, she tried to get him to leave by yelling out that her roommate was coming home. The assailant replied: “I know her, we had a thing, we had a deal in the past.”

Clapper viewed this as significant enough that he put it down in capital letters in his report. But he never followed up, Clapper testified years later. The perpetrator was likely fabricating a connection that didn’t exist, he said. Clapper never suspected that it was Weakfall or that the same man raped both Sebold and her roommate. He said the description didn’t match Weakfall, and Broadwater was locked up by then. He acknowledged that victims sometimes get these descriptions wrong, but he had another reason for ruling Weakfall out: “I think he was incarcerated then,” Clapper testified. But the records I had seen showed that his memory was incorrect: Weakfall had been a free man at the time Sebold’s roommate was attacked.

9

In 1985, three years after Broadwater’s conviction, Clapper encountered Weakfall again. The detective identified him in a surveillance photograph of a man using a stolen bank card at an ATM. Clapper interviewed him again. Once again, Weakfall confessed.

The police reports, along with the signed confession, spelled out in chilling detail how Weakfall had raped at least three women between September and November of 1985. He would spot a vulnerable location — an accessible window, a woman home alone — and climb in quietly, first ransacking for valuables, then threatening them with a knife, sometimes beating or tying them up if they resisted.

When Weakfall was done, some women got an apology. One said he was “soft spoken” and did not use “slang or street type language.” He kept calling another one ma’am. Others got nothing but raging hostility. He told one woman that he felt understood by her, then threatened to burn her house down if she called the police.

Weakfall went on to say, effectively, that he had raped so many women in so many different places that he couldn’t remember them all. In the final paragraph, he made a garbled cry for help. He described sexual violence as a compulsion. The rapes were “accidents,” he said, and the courts “haven’t helped me at all.” He hoped that the next judge would get him some counseling.

This time Weakfall’s confession held up. He pleaded guilty to three rapes and a burglary and was sentenced to a maximum of 18 years. He served 12. While in prison, Weakfall participated in a treatment program intended to stop people from committing sexual violence.

Illustration by Vanessa Saba for ProPublica

10

Accusations against prominent men eventually began bringing the issue of sexual assault to the forefront in Syracuse. In 1986, a star Syracuse University football player was accused of rape. He pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor and was initially allowed to remain on the team. An uproar ensued, prompting the university’s chancellor to intervene and suspend him for five games.

Then, in November 1988, came another attack with a notable defendant, a crime that would inspire a second rape memoir by a Syracuse University student. The book describes how Laura Gray-Rosendale, a 20-year-old sophomore, had fallen asleep while studying in her bedroom when 23-year-old Michael Holm broke in, then bound and beat her. “He raped me every way someone can be raped,” she told ProPublica. “It was excruciating to be in my body.” A roommate called the police and officers kicked down Gray-Rosendale’s door, finding Holm with a screwdriver in his hand, standing over Gray-Rosendale, as he pulled his pants up. Her hands were tied and she was naked from the waist down. Holm tried to flee, injuring three officers, before they finally subdued and arrested him.

The defendant was white, the grandson of Melvin Holm, a former chairman of the university’s Board of Trustees who had been the CEO of Carrier Corp., one of the city’s largest employers and the eponym for the university’s domed stadium. In her book, “College Girl,” Gray-Rosendale recounted getting a phone call from a university administrator who told her the Holm family made major donations to the university. “I’m like, why are you telling me this?” she said. “But I know why. … She’s trying to dissuade me from testifying.”

In an interview, Gray-Rosendale described having a “complete breakdown” in the months after the assault and said that seeing “anyone who resembled [Holm] physically would be like a trigger and send me into a full out panic attack.” Through years of therapy and writing her memoir, she eventually found healing. But, she said, “I was never the same.”

Despite being caught mid-assault, Holm pleaded guilty to burglary. The word rape did not appear in his plea allocution. He ultimately served eight years in prison. (ProPublica could not locate him to seek an interview. His lawyer declined to comment.) “I was very glad that he got jail time,” Gray-Rosendale said of Holm. “But … that term, burglary. It did not in any way account for the multiple crimes that he committed, and that stuck with me then, sticks with me now.”

11

Pressure was building in Syracuse. In 1989, six rapes had been reported in the first two months of the school year, including one on the chancellor’s front lawn. Students began marching, organizing nighttime campus patrols and pressuring university officials. Gray-Rosendale told the university’s trustees at a campus meeting on sexual violence that she had been raped by one of their grandsons. “I’m not a statistic,” she said. The turmoil attracted the attention of media ranging from talk show host Geraldo Rivera to The New York Times.

Finally, that year, the university convened a task force and began to implement security measures that advocates had been demanding for years, including improvements to transportation services off-campus, the expansion of “blue light” emergency phones and the provision of counseling services and public speaking events on sexual assault.

In response to detailed questions regarding events from the 1980s, a spokesperson for Syracuse University said in an email that “we are not in a position to speak to the actions or decisions of prior administrations,” but the university is now equipped with “comprehensive policies, a steadfast commitment to preventing sexual and relationship violence and robust support structures to help every survivor that comes forward.”

By this point, the city had become the leading edge of a national issue. In March 1990, a Syracuse University student named Kristin Eaton-Pollard testified before a congressional subcommittee in Washington. She described being raped as a freshman in 1988 in Thornden Park, which she “later learned was notorious for its frequent occurrence of violent crime, located only about 100 yards from my residence hall.”

Eaton-Pollard criticized the university for being too slow to appreciate the need for the new security measures. “The programs at Syracuse University should have been initiated of their own accord a long time ago,” Eaton-Pollard said. Her testimony helped inspire the passage, that same year, of the Jeanne Clery Act, legislation named for a Lehigh University freshman who was raped and murdered by a fellow student. The law requires all colleges that accept federal financial aid to publicly report campus crime statistics every year.

12

Broadwater was unaware that the issue of sexual violence was roiling Syracuse. He remained in prison and had never stopped trying to prove his innocence. He kept a transcript of his trial with him as he was shuttled among 13 prisons in the 16 years he served for the Sebold conviction. He would show it to gang leaders to prove he shouldn’t be there.

“Rape charges here,” a cousin and fellow inmate had warned him when he entered Attica state prison, “they kill you.” As Broadwater puts it, “I caught holy hell” while incarcerated. He took to wrapping his torso with copies of National Geographic magazine in case an inmate came at him with a knife. In a riot, he saw a friend stabbed to death, took 12 stitches and nearly lost an eye trying to defend himself.

He filed myriad appeals and requests to reexamine the evidence, some without the help of a lawyer. Each was rejected. One petition was handwritten, laying out his logic in angled handwriting across lined notebook paper. Broadwater raised some of the arguments that eventually got him exonerated. He wrote, for example, that Uebelhoer’s testimony missed the point: “Whether or not I know the man … or was happy about the composition of the lineup had nothing to do with the victim’s failure to pick me out.”

“Whether or not I know the man … or was happy about the composition of the lineup had nothing to do with the victim’s failure to pick me out.”

Four times Broadwater came before the parole board. Four times he was denied. He refused to go to his fifth scheduled appearance. Commissioners wanted an admission of guilt, not claims of innocence, and Broadwater wouldn’t apologize. He didn’t come home until Dec. 31, 1998. He was 38.

Broadwater was free but unable to escape the shadow of a rape conviction. Even members of his family shunned him. He was required to register as a sex offender, which made it impossible to get any but the most menial job. Broadwater eventually managed to get a position on an assembly line, stamping the logo of Syracuse China on dishware from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. He liked that he had to punch in, and that the factory was filled with security cameras. Broadwater wanted to work at a place that always documented his whereabouts in case anyone tried to accuse him of something.

13

For her part, Sebold had struggled to get her life on track over the years. Rootless and experimenting with drugs in her 20s — heroin was her favorite, by her own account — it was only as she confronted the consequences of the attack that she slowly began to grapple with her trauma. She began by writing an op-ed for The New York Times on the rape in 1989, then later appeared on “The Oprah Winfrey Show.” By the mid-’90s, she had started work on a memoir about her assault and the aftermath.

Seen through a car window, a woman walks across a vast lawn with trees behind her.
When Sebold began conducting research for her memoir, “Lucky,” she returned to Thornden Park as her then-boyfriend watched from a car. Courtesy of Alice Sebold

Sebold returned to Syracuse to research the book. She nervously walked around Thornden Park while her then-boyfriend stood by and took snapshots. And Sebold met with Uebelhoer at the district attorney’s office.

Uebelhoer helped her gain access to records, including a box of evidence from the original case. Both Uebelhoer and Sebold recall seeing the clothing Sebold had worn the night of the attack, and Sebold remembers seeing the pubic hair that was key to Broadwater’s conviction. (It was yet another example of the scrambled Syracuse justice system: An evidence log stated that all of the evidence in the case had been destroyed in the late 1980s, but both women have said they saw the box of materials years after that.)

The prosecutor helped promote Sebold’s memoir when it was published. Uebelhoer’s sister created a packet of publicity materials that, according to Sebold, included a glossy 8-by-10-inch photograph of Uebelhoer. Uebelhoer, who had left the district attorney’s office by this point to clerk for a judge, spoke at book clubs and introduced Sebold to discuss the book on a panel at a law enforcement conference in New York City. “She was incredibly proud,” Sebold said.

14

Sebold and Broadwater weren’t the only people who couldn’t let go of the case. There was a third person: Clapper, the veteran Syracuse detective who’d been chatting with Broadwater when Sebold first identified the man she thought had assaulted her.

Lanky with striking red hair and a cocky demeanor, Clapper was dogged and respected by his fellow cops. He would stay on cases for months, scouring for witnesses, checking in with informants, interviewing anyone he could find. Clapper’s work was threaded through the wave of Syracuse rape cases. He had investigated many of the attacks in and around Thornden Park and elicited Weakfall’s confessions.

Clapper initially indicated he was open to an interview for this article, then demurred, saying he’d had only tangential involvement in the Broadwater case. When I kept pressing, he eventually sent me a sprawling, 13-page statement that spanned the 50-odd years of his career. It was filled with brackets and parentheticals, written in different fonts and colors, much of it in capital letters, at once detailed and cryptic.

Clapper emphasized that he had been through a lot since Sebold was assaulted. Over the years, he had worked undercover, participated in hundreds of drug busts, been stabbed and “struck over the head with bats, wine bottles, and fallen down several flights of stairs.” He spent the better part of nine years caring for his sick wife and today, at age 74, his hair still thick but now snowy white, he works as an investigator for a district attorney in another county. Given all that, his statement maintained, it would be “close to ridiculous” to assume he could recall the particulars of Sebold’s case or other crimes with much specificity.

Still, the document provided revealing details, including one that hinted at the disturbing scale of Weakfall’s crimes. Not long after Broadwater’s conviction, according to Clapper’s statement, he had become aware of Weakfall’s “first series of rapes” and gotten him to confess. He had driven Weakfall around Thornden Park, during which Weakfall pointed out 23 buildings where he had raped and robbed women. Weakfall wasn’t charged in multiple cases, Clapper explained, because many of the survivors “just wanted to forget it” and refused to cooperate.

Clapper said Weakfall willingly admitted raping women inside buildings near the park but “flatly denied any involvement” in crimes outdoors at the park. Clapper found that distinction persuasive. Noting that the crimes Weakfall committed indoors involved rapes, burglaries and stabbings, he said, “Why would Weakfall honestly admit to all of these other [more serious] cases and not take credit” for those in Thornden Park?

Weakfall was always under scrutiny, Clapper would say in a 2025 deposition. “I know this guy better than I know my own brother,” he testified, repeating that Weakfall never admitted to any rapes in the park.

One by one, the attorney questioning Clapper got him to acknowledge the similarities between Sebold’s rape and those that Weakfall had confessed to: that she had been threatened with a knife, that her rapist took a small amount of money from her, that the rape happened blocks from others that he said he had committed at around the same time, and that afterward, her rapist held her and apologized to her.

The lawyers asked Clapper about four other cases of sexual assault in or near the park, three within months of Sebold’s, the other nine days after Broadwater was convicted. All involved Black assailants, at least three aged between 15 and 20 and nearly the same height and weight as Weakfall or Broadwater. Clapper pursued several of them but never thought to connect any to Sebold’s rape.

“Why would I?” he said.

15

It’s one of the many oddities of this decades-long saga that Sebold’s memoir of her assault — a 1999 book that portrayed Broadwater’s conviction as righteous — is what would ultimately lead to the unraveling of his conviction.

Sebold’s memoir, which ultimately sold 1 million copies after “The Lovely Bones” became a hit, eventually generated interest in Hollywood. Producers wanted to make a film version of “Lucky,” and several contacted Clapper as part of their research for writing a script.

A woman stands in a park with her arms crossed, posing for the camera.
Sebold in 2017 Neville Elder/Corbis/Getty Images

Laurie Parker, a producer then working with director Jane Campion as part of a project that Sebold was cooperating with, reached Clapper in 2013. Parker said Clapper emailed her that there were questions about the case: No. 1, was the right person arrested? No. 2, was Sebold a good witness? No. 3, if DNA testing had been available, would there have been the same outcome? Parker tried to get him to elaborate, but he didn’t respond.

Clapper himself looked into getting a DNA test done on the pubic hair more than 20 years after Broadwater’s conviction, according to his statement. But when Clapper called the Syracuse police crime lab, he was told the hair had been destroyed.

Parker, tasked with writing a script based on “Lucky,” became increasingly consumed with doubts: “I had a feeling, a very strong feeling, that at best it was an illegal conviction and at worst, they got the wrong person,” she said. Her script was rejected in 2014. (The director had gotten busy with other projects, according to Sebold.)

Illustration by Vanessa Saba for ProPublica

16

The next year, in 2015, came an unrelated event — unknown to Broadwater — that further undermined the credibility of his conviction. The FBI, working with the Department of Justice and two advocacy groups, released the findings of a national review of cases in which hair evidence had been used. The study reported that expert hair testimony in 90% of the 500 trial transcripts they’d examined included “erroneous statements” and noted that the FBI no longer used such evidence. The study “strongly” encouraged states to review past convictions in which hair analysis had played a role.

At the time, Fitzpatrick was on a state commission that sets standards for crime laboratories. He was also feuding with the Syracuse Police Department. The two sides publicly savaged each other, with dueling allegations of mishandling forensic evidence, among other things. The Police Department, Fitzpatrick told me recently, was run by “fucking morons” back then and its lab was antiquated. Shawn Broton, a deputy police chief at the time, said Fitzpatrick had used the state commission as a “weapon” against the Police Department and worked to consolidate power for himself.

As a result of the FBI review, Fitzpatrick’s office examined New York cases that had used hair evidence. But that effort did not unearth Broadwater’s case. It relied on electronic searches for the word “hair” in appeals court opinions. The appeals court opinion in Broadwater’s case — all of two paragraphs long — didn’t mention the word. Fitzpatrick told me that his staff had also reviewed all the cases in which the hair analyst in Broadwater’s case had testified, but it concentrated on defendants who were still incarcerated. Broadwater had been out of prison for more than a decade by then. Another chance to reveal the flaws in his case had been missed.

The study reported that expert hair testimony in 90% of the 500 trial transcripts they’d examined included “erroneous statements” and noted that the FBI no longer used such evidence.

Eventually, a second movie producer got interested in Sebold’s story, and like the first producer, he began delving deep into the case. The producer got suspicious enough that he ultimately hired a private investigator to look into it. (The producer in question, Timothy Mucciante, has a backstory that could fill its own movie: He is a disbarred lawyer who served time in prison on an array of bizarre fraud charges. He promised money to finance the movie version of “Lucky” but never delivered, then tried to make his own documentary about the debacle called “Unlucky,” which also fell apart. Mucciante did not respond to requests for comment.)

The private investigator, Dan Myers, called Clapper, who left him with the strong impression that he thought Broadwater was innocent and Weakfall was guilty. Clapper denies he went so far as to say Broadwater was innocent. Still, Clapper acknowledged in his statement that he spoke “cop to cop” with Myers, a former officer, and told him, “Like ANY investigator, you wonder ‘if’ Weakfall was involved.”

That conversation had a domino effect. Myers got two Syracuse lawyers, David Hammond and Melissa Swartz, involved. (Swartz had previously worked in the DA’s office under Fitzpatrick.) They were shocked by what they read in the book and the trial transcript. They filed a motion to vacate the conviction in 2021.

In a matter of weeks, the long-stalled process of examining the conviction was resolved. Fitzpatrick joined in the motion to vacate the conviction, and in a brief hearing on Nov. 22, 2021, the judge agreed.

At the defense table that day, Broadwater, wearing a gray pinstripe suit, choked back sobs and hugged his lawyers. At 61, with hints of gray in Broadwater’s cornrows and a cane in his hand, it was hard to picture the 21-year-old he had been when a judge had found him guilty.

A man with a cane is smiling with his eyes closed while a woman grasps his arm and smiles. Behind them are shelves of books.
Broadwater with his wife, Elizabeth, after his exoneration in 2021 Matt Burkhartt/The Washington Post/Getty Images

17

Unlike Broadwater, who has no criminal record since his release in 1998, Weakfall found it harder to stay out of trouble. He got out of prison in November 1997. Six months later, he was caught stealing speakers and cash from the apartment of a woman he had just met. He told police the burglary was “meant as a joke.” Weakfall pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of criminal trespass and served 135 days in jail. He was arrested four more times through 2015, pleading guilty on separate occasions to patronizing a prostitute and resisting arrest. Records show police responded to multiple allegations of domestic violence against him through 2017, but the victims all declined to press charges. His record shows no involvement with the police since then.

Weakfall still lives in Syracuse, in an area some former officers refer to as “the Gut.” I made my way to his door on a Saturday in the fall of 2024. His apartment was on the ground floor of a clapboard building along a block of dilapidated homes surrounded by overgrown weeds. A gaggle of stray cats curled up against one another around the corner from his front door, which had a bumper sticker on it that read “Let’s Pray for America.”

After a few knocks, the face I recognized from the New York state sex offender registry poked out. He was bald with a full beard. Well-built for a man of 60, with a scar across his upper abdomen, Weakfall was wearing nothing but royal blue boxer-briefs. He said he had just gotten out of the shower.

I knew I might never get another shot to speak to him, so I started talking without giving him a chance to get dressed. We spoke for more than an hour. He never opened his door more than a foot.

Weakfall was, quite reasonably, skeptical of me. He kept saying, “You’re catching me off guard here, dude.” He said he carried a lot of guilt over his crimes and was “disgusted” with himself. He told me he had found religion and wasn’t inclined to revisit a period of his life that he had left behind. Weakfall also said he realized during his 12 years in prison that he may not have served as much time had he not been so open with the police. He didn’t want to make the same mistake again. I assured him I wasn’t a cop.

After a while, Weakfall seemed to relax. He spoke softly in gushes of information followed by sudden pauses. He described growing up without a father in a tough neighborhood; the pressure of bad influences leading to drugs; a graduation of sorts from shoplifting to home invasion, then sexual assault, or, as he put it, “violating someone” when he happened to find a woman home alone.

He acknowledged raping women. But he said that once he began to make admissions, the police saw him as a scapegoat and tried to put “all the load on one person just to satisfy the community.” Once in custody, he said, he was “scared out of my boots.” He said the police had dragged him out of his cell repeatedly, driving him to places he had never been and asking him about rapes he said he hadn’t committed. “Man, they had me admitting to things that I know I did not do,” he said.

Full of contradictions, Weakfall spoke in loops that were hard to follow. He said that he had confessed honestly to the rapes he committed in 1985, but that the confession in 1982 was coerced by the police. (He later said something that seemed to undercut that assertion: “What they didn’t understand in 1982 is that if you’re not really giving me any counseling … it’s bound to happen again.”)

When I started to ask about Thornden Park, describing what happened to Sebold, he cut me off. “More of my encounters was invading a home, if you do the search,” he said. He vociferously denied assaulting any woman in a car and said the police “mixed me up with other people that were doing things at the same time.”

This did not strike me as implausible, given what had happened with Broadwater and all I’d learned about the Police Department at the time, not to mention the sheer volume of assailants and assaults back then.

I kept pressing, asking if he would be willing to go through each case with me. He said no. He wouldn’t be able to remember them anyway, he said. I brought up the rape of Sebold’s roommate and several others, but the whole exercise began to feel futile. I thanked him for his time, handed him my card and asked if we could speak again after he had some time to think. He said he’d pray on it.

Weakfall called me the next morning. He was rattled and rambling. More aggravated this time. He started denying things that he had either confessed to or that were well-established in the criminal records: He claimed he had never stolen anyone’s ATM card; he had never taken property from anyone’s home; he had never apologized to any of his victims.

18

I returned to Syracuse twice more in 2026 and spoke with Weakfall each time. He got more sweeping and more adamant in his denials. By the third visit, he was insisting that he had confessed to only one rape and that the police had embellished or fabricated the rest.

When I called Fitzpatrick, the Syracuse DA, to discuss what I had learned in my broader reporting, he was at a loss. “It escapes me, honestly. I mean, it’s just staggering,” he said of the police and prosecutorial failures in the 1980s. “The level of misattention to detail. I just don’t have an explanation.”

But now it was too late. The best shot at making a conclusive determination on who raped Sebold would come through DNA analysis of the physical evidence. But the evidence from her case is gone.

Even if evidence that implicates a perpetrator were to turn up in a hidden corner of a dusty warehouse, Fitzpatrick couldn’t do anything. The statute of limitations on these rapes expired decades ago. Prosecution would be out of reach, he said.

As it happens, one legal proceeding continues in the Broadwater saga. After his conviction was vacated in 2021, Broadwater filed two civil lawsuits, one against the state of New York for wrongful imprisonment and a second against Syracuse and its surrounding county for constitutional rights violations in his prosecution. The state settled its case in 2023, agreeing to pay Broadwater $5.5 million.

But the city and county are contesting the claims. The lawyers declined to comment for this article, citing the litigation. But expert witnesses they have retained are defending the conduct of the police and prosecutors, questioning the accuracy of Sebold’s book and arguing that there was no pattern of rapes in and around Thornden Park worthy of disclosure to the defense.

19

I met Sebold on a recent, drizzly morning at her home in San Francisco. We sat in a room appointed with an ornate rug, fine photography and rare works of literature hugged by striking geode bookends.

Always an introvert, Sebold sank deeper into isolation after Broadwater’s exoneration. She went from hero to villain overnight. Strangers yelled at her on the street. A tabloid reporter badgered her on camera as Sebold, wearing a COVID-era mask and gingerly carrying a bag of dog poop, walked her sick French basset to the vet.

Afterward, she said, she didn’t step out of her house for a month. Even now, five years on, she can’t bring herself to leave the city limits. “There’s something about the safety of being near my home,” she said, “which has become increasingly important to my sense of mental health.”

As I laid out what my reporting had uncovered, she betrayed little surprise at the number of sexual assaults in Syracuse; she thought there might be more. “It’s my nature to believe that there’s more violence than people like to admit to, especially back then,” she said. It provided no comfort to learn that the police had failed other women, too.

Now fully convinced of Broadwater’s innocence, Sebold looks back on the entire episode with deep mortification. She feels shame that she was ever raped. And she now questions her decision to go to the police. “What if I hadn’t reported my rape?” she said. “None of this would have happened.”

Sebold recently completed a letter to Broadwater. She declined to share a copy but described its contents. It’s more personal and considered, she said, than the apology she released right after the exoneration, which was criticized as tepid and which she said was hastily written. Sebold said the letter takes responsibility for her role in Broadwater’s wrongful conviction and offers details about her recent life, her dog and the Dao, the Chinese philosophy she has come to rely on. The letter describes, she said, “the deep sorrow I hold for what happened.”

It took her four years to compose those three pages. “I’ll never write anything good enough,” Sebold said. It is “probably, in my mind, the most important thing I’ll ever write.”

Through intermediaries, Sebold and Broadwater have broached the possibility of meeting. Like Sebold, though, Broadwater is fearful of traveling. He is worried something bad will happen if he leaves New York state. He has floated the idea of meeting in Niagara Falls. Neither of them have been there before.

I last met Broadwater at his lawyer’s office in Syracuse. Now fixing up a modest farmhouse he bought outside town, he had taken a break from his hobby of barbecuing and still smelled faintly of sweet smoke from a batch of baby back ribs.

He keeps his distance from people, too. He told me that some who shunned him after he went to prison are now reappearing in his life. They tease him about all the media attention he received. Their questions also trigger his paranoia, making him think they got word of his civil settlement and want a piece of it.

Broadwater said the stigma of being a convicted rapist was still hard to shake, even after his exoneration. “I’m still embarrassed that I was convicted and sent to prison for rape for 16 and a half years,” he said, his gentle voice catching as he reached for a Kleenex. He likened the experience to being scalded with boiling-hot water. The exoneration, the celebrity, the settlement, it’s like “a skin graft” over a festering wound, he said. “Still ain’t normal. Ain’t never gonna be normal. How could it be normal?”

The post “That Guy Is Still Out There” appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-06-30 20:04
2026-06-30 06:23

In part one of a two-part series, Charles Sahm examines how Black Americans, free and enslaved, seized on the promises of the preamble to the Declaration of Independence.

The words that begin the second paragraph of the Declaration of Independence are considered our nation’s creed: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”

But that wasn’t always the case. One of the underappreciated facts of American history is that it was Black Americans, free and enslaved, who were the first to interpret the phrase “all men are created equal” as a statement of individual equality and have employed it most often and most eloquently over the past 250 years to advance liberty and equality for all Americans.

As historian Pauline Maier argued in her seminal book American Scripture, in 1776 and for decades after, the Declaration was not regarded as the sacred text it is today. “It was Independence, not the Declaration, that the people celebrated,” Maier wrote. “And when they quoted that document, they cited the last paragraph, the one that proclaimed that ‘these united colonies are and of right ought to be free and independent states.’… There was comparably little attention—indeed, so far as I can tell, none at all—to the document’s second paragraph.”

Maier may have overstated the case a bit. Recent scholarship by Eric Slauter has documented abolitionists such as Anthony Benezet, who citied the Declaration’s preamble, while Danielle Allen notes that James Wilson invoked the Declaration’s preamble at the Pennsylvania ratifying convention. David Armitage has also demonstrated how British observers recognized the glaring contradiction between the Declaration’s claim of equality and the existence of American slavery.

But Maier’s larger point holds true: most white Americans did not view the preamble as a statement of individual liberty and equality in the founding era and early republic. Jesse Wegman in his new biography of James Wilson, The Lost Founder, cites the work of University of Pennsylvania professor William Ewald to highlight the fact that none of the founders besides Wilson, ever used the words “created equal” or any of the other key phrases from the preamble. A survey by the historian Mark Graber finds that before Abraham Lincoln, no president had ever invoked the phrase “all men are created equal.”

But Black Americans quickly seized on the Declaration’s egalitarian promises. It is important to note that the Black freedom struggle predates the American Revolution. However, the Declaration’s preamble handed Black Americans a powerful ideological and rhetorical weapon, which they employed as “a battle cry for freedom,” according to historian Benjamin Quarles.

Just weeks after the Declaration was signed, the mixed-race religious leader Lemuel Haynes’s freedom jeremiad, “Liberty Further Extended: Or Free Thoughts on the Illegality of Slave-Keeping,” used its preamble to advance the legal and philosophical argument for abolition. In 1777, Prince Hall, a formerly enslaved Black Bostonian, authored a petition to the government of Massachusetts, employing the Declaration’s language of “natural and unalienable rights,” linking the colonists’ “glorious struggles for liberty” with the cause of Black freedom.

Citing the Declaration as a promise of freedom

Below are some lesser-known examples of African Americans using the Declaration to advocate for their freedom and civil rights during the 50 years between 1779 and 1829, when it became more common to view the Declaration as a touchstone for equality.

In 1779, a group of 19 enslaved men submitted a freedom petition to the New Hampshire Assembly stating: “The God of Nature gave them Life and Freedom, upon terms of the most perfect Equality with other men; That freedom is an inherent Right of the human Species, not to be surrendered but by Consent.” The group included Prince Whipple, an enslaved aide to General William Whipple, Jr., a signer of the Declaration.

In 1781, the enslaved woman Mum Bet, who later changed her name to Elizabeth Freeman, sued for her freedom in Brom and Bett v. Ashley. (Brom, an enslaved man, joined her case.) Her argument was that slavery violated the Massachusetts Constitution. The jury agreed, and the court granted her freedom (and back wages). Her freedom suit, combined with a 1783 suit brought by an enslaved man, Quock Walker, led to the de facto abolition of slavery in Massachusetts.

In 1783, an anonymous writer published an essay in the Maryland Gazette under the pseudonym “Vox Africanorum.” Although the essay is written from the viewpoint of an enslaved person, the race of the writer is unknown. Reminiscent of the “What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?” speech that fellow Marylander Frederick Douglass would deliver 69 years later, the author notes: “Liberty is our claim…. Has not the wisdom of America solemnly declared it? Attend to your own declarations—‘These truths are self-evident.’ ”

In 1791, while surveying the new District of Columbia, Benjamin Banneker, a Black mathematician and scientist, sent a letter to Thomas Jefferson, then secretary of state, confronting him with his own words from the Declaration. Banneker calls “pitiable” the idea that Jefferson would advocate for these “rights and privileges” while “detaining by fraud and violence so numerous a part of my brethren under groaning captivity and cruel oppression.” Jefferson replied, offering little more than vague hope that someday “a good system” will be “commenced” for improving what he calls “the degraded condition” of the enslaved.

In 1797, Jupiter Nicholson, Jacob Nicholson, Job Albert, and Thomas Prichet—four formerly enslaved North Carolina men living in Philadelphia—submitted the first known African American antislavery petition to Congress. In their request to amend the Fugitive Slave Act of 1793, they appealed to federal “public Declarations in favor of Liberty & the common Right of Men.” Congress, by a 50–33 vote, refused to accept the petition for a formal hearing.

In 1799, the prominent ministers Absalom Jones and Richard Allen were two of 71 Black Philadelphians who signed a petition to the U.S. Congress calling for an end to the slave trade and for African American civil rights, arguing that the slave trade and the Fugitive Slave Act violated the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and “the declaration of Congress. South Carolina representative John Rutledge, Jr., denounced “this new-fangled French philosophy of liberty and equality.” The petition was rejected by an 85–1 vote.

On January 1, 1808, in celebration of the ban on the importation of slaves to the U.S., which became effective that day, Reverend Peter Williams, Jr. delivered “An Oration on the Abolition of the Slave Trade” at the African Zion Church in New York. The published sermon celebrates “that illustrious moment, when the sons of 76 pronounced these United States free and independent; when the spirit of patriotism erected a temple sacred to liberty; when the inspired voice of Americans first uttered those noble sentiments, ‘we hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.’”

In 1813, James Forten, a successful Black businessman who had served as a powder boy during the Revolution and claimed to have been present when the Declaration was first read in Philadelphia, published a pamphlet under the pen name “A Man of Colour” that employed the preamble to argue against legislation being considered by the Pennsylvania legislature to restrict Black civil rights. Forten beseeched the legislature not to deprive its Black citizens of “those inestimable treasures, Liberty and Independence.” Forten’s pamphlet succeeded; the proposed legislation was voted down. Forten would go on to use his wealth to fund the abolitionist newspaper The Liberator and the American Anti-Slavery Society.

On July 4, 1827, William Hamilton, a prominent Black abolitionist, delivered a speech at the African Zion Church celebrating the official end to slavery in New York, which had passed a gradual emancipation law in 1799. Hamilton began by quoting “the ever memorable words” of the Declaration’s preamble. He then assailed Jefferson, who had died in the previous year, as “an ambidextrous philosopher” and attacks the “inconsistency of men holding slaves at the same time declaring in the most solemn manner” their devotion to “self-evident truths.” Portions of the oration were published in Freedom’s Journal, the nation’s first African-American-owned and operated newspaper.

In 1829, David Walker, a free African American abolitionist, published “Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World,” a fiery pamphlet that he distributed throughout the South. In contrast to the pleading tone of many earlier antislavery tracts, Walker blasts Jefferson and the founding generation for their racism and hypocrisy. “See your Declaration Americans!!!,” Walker implored. “Hear your language, proclaimed to the world, July 4th, 1776…. Compare your own language … with your cruelties and murders.” He also invoked the Declaration’s right of revolution: “Hear your language further!... But when a long train of abuses and usurpation … evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government.”

In this era before the abolitionist movement gained momentum in the 1830s and 1840s, these early statements by Black Americans set the stage for a broader discussion for more than a century about what Martin Luther King, Jr. famously called a “promissory note to which every American was to fall heir.”

Charles Sahm is the director of content strategy and program development at the National Constitution Center.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
Last year’s first-in-a-generation property reassessment and its lasting fallout have echoed throughout the state – and particularly New Castle County – over the past year. But as lawmakers propose more reforms and the clock winds down on this year’s legislative session, a last minute bill with the Governor’s backing raises questions about  what exactly comes next in Delaware’s property tax saga.

A late-in-the-session bill that could create sweeping changes to Delaware’s property tax system has been endorsed by Gov. Matt Meyer, but it faces opposition from each of the state’s three counties as well as the financial directors of every school district in New Castle County. 

In a letter to the General Assembly obtained by Spotlight Delaware, Gov. Meyer encouraged lawmakers to pass Senate Bill 350 – which would establish a framework for dividing properties in the state into four distinct classifications that could be taxed at different rates – before gaveling out for the year on June 30.

The bill, introduced by Senate President Pro Tempore David Sokola (D-Newark), would create a pathway for apartments to be considered residential property for tax purposes, potentially ending the cacophony of objections by landlords and property developers to the state’s introduction of split tax rates last summer. 

But the bill, introduced with just four working days left in the legislative session, has not yet been voted out of the Senate Executive Committee. It also faced opposition from county and school district leaders during a committee hearing last week. 

As lawmakers face the final working day of this year’s legislative session today, it remains unclear whether they have the time – or the political will – to enact the reforms before the clock strikes midnight. 

“[Senate Bill] 350 needs work,” Sokola said after last week’s Senate Executive Committee hearing. “But we’re going to work until we’re done.”

What would SB 350 do?

Senate Bill 350 would allow Delaware’s three counties to separate properties within their jurisdiction into four separate tax classifications.

Those tax classes are outlined specifically in the bill:

  • Class A: single-family, two-family, three-family and four-family residential properties
  • Class B: multi-family residential properties with more than five units
  • Class C: all other non-residential properties, including “commercial, industrial, utility, and institutional property”
  • Class D: mixed-use properties containing both residential and non-residential uses

The bill would allow counties, school districts and vocational-technical school districts to charge different tax rates to these different property classes – with certain guardrails. It would also allow counties to create more property classes than the original four outlined in the bill.

Properties in Class B – apartments and other multi-family housing types – would now be considered residential for tax purposes. They could not be taxed more than 120% of their residential counterparts in Class A, according to the legislation. 

The original split tax rates enacted last summer capped taxes on commercial properties, which included apartments, at 200% of residential properties. A new proposal looking to indefinitely extend that split in New Castle County, House Bill 462, lowers the commercial cap to 185%. 

It is unclear how SB 350 would interact with other property tax reforms, like HB 462, that are being considered ahead of the close of the 153rd General Assembly. 

According to the bill, a county would not be required to adopt the state’s new tax classes. County leaders could instead charge a single, uniform tax rate across all properties. 

Relief for renters?

In his letter urging lawmakers to enact SB 350, Gov. Meyer called on the General Assembly to address the “gross inequity” of apartments being taxed more than single-family homes.

“We need to get this right for the Delawareans counting on us,” he said.

The higher tax bills on apartment complexes, Meyer argued, disincentivize more dense types of housing developments at a time when the state is attempting to add to its housing stock. 

Meyer also seemingly took aim at HB 462, which looks to extend the current split tax rate system in New Castle County.

“Asking renters to carry a commercial tax burden and locking that treatment in permanently isn’t consistent with the values I know we hold in common,” he said.

While renters themselves do not pay property taxes, Meyer said higher tax bills on landlords can lead to other consequences like higher rents and deferred property maintenance. 

It is unclear, however, if lowering taxes on landlords would directly correlate to lower rent costs.  

And while Meyer has thrown his weight behind SB 350, the bill also faces opposition from county and school district leaders.

During a Senate Executive Committee hearing last week, A representative from the Delaware Association of Counties spoke against the bill. He said that all three counties have submitted “in-depth letters” detailing their opposition to SB 350.

“In short, the bill creates a myriad of significant, likely unintentional consequences,” said Lincoln Willis, the Delaware Association of Counties representative.

Chief among those consequences was the potential for tax revenue losses for counties, municipalities and school districts, Willis said. 

Emily Falcon, the chief financial officer of the Colonial School District, also spoke against the legislation. Her comments in opposition, she said, were on behalf of every school district in New Castle County. 

A panel of public school leaders (from left: Delmar School District Chief Operating Officer Monet Smith, Polytech School District Director of Operations Nick Johnson, Colonial School District Chief Operating Officer Emily Falcon & Red Clay School District Superintendent Dorrell Green) testified before the General Assembly’s committee investigating the impacts of Delaware’s first-in-40-year property reassessment. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY TIM CARLIN

Falcon said SB 350 would further complicate an already fraught tax rate setting process for school districts as they grapple with a slew of other reforms that have already been enacted or are currently being considered by the General Assembly. 

The bill, she said, would ultimately result in higher tax rates for other property types outside of multi-family homes. 

Falcon also told Spotlight Delaware that school district financial officers in New Castle County were not part of the bill drafting process for SB 350, a departure from previous property tax reform bills. 

Senate Bill 350 has not yet been formally voted out of committee, but that does mean it will not advance during the last day of the legislative session. 

Lawmakers could theoretically vote the bill out of committee and immediately add it to the Senate agenda. It would then need to pass through the House before it could be signed into law. 

The likelihood of those possibilities, though, is unclear. 

None of the lawmakers sponsoring SB 350, including Sokola, Senate Majority Leader Bryan Townsend (D-Glasgow), Senate Majority Whip Elizabeth “Tizzy” Lockman (D-West Wilmington) and Rep. Cyndie Romer (D-Newark), returned requests for comment about the status of the bill on Monday.

The post Property tax proposal raises questions ahead of final legislative day appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care? 
Each year, the Delaware General Assembly allocates its giant-in-aid funding, a bill that provides extra money to nonprofits. Many recurring recipients got more money for the next fiscal year, notably fire companies and housing services. But one Dover homeless shelter got cut short.   

Funding cuts included in this year’s grant-in-aid proposal could effectively shutter a controversial Dover homeless shelter.

While hundreds of organizations are slated to receive more money this year from state lawmaker’s annual funding allocation meant to bolster private nonprofits, The People’s Church – a Dover homeless shelter that has faced resident and local official scrutiny – will go without funding for its winter overnight shelter and meal service program.

The grant-in-aid bill still must pass both the House and Senate during the final day of this year’s legislative session on Tuesday, June 30, and could be subject to change during the floor debate in both chambers. 

Nonetheless, the lack of funding for one of few homelessness service providers in Delaware’s capital city represents a blow to the city’s unhoused population. It also marks the latest development in the debate over loitering that has overtaken the city for nearly a year. 

Lawmakers allocated $55,000 to the church, but the bill specifically limits that funding to be used for after school child care programs, and not homelessness services. 

The organization received $85,000 last fiscal year toward its overnight shelter and meals program, and grant-in-aid funding has always served as the church’s financial lifeline, lead pastor Rev. Derrick Hodge told Spotlight Delaware. 

Hodge described the funding news as “horrific” and “foolish.” 

The grant-in-aid proposal comes after the Dover City Council targeted the People’s Church this spring, as residents in the downtown neighborhood cited the shelter as the reason people were sleeping, trespassing and using drugs in the area. 

The city council voted in March to deny the shelter funding to expand its workforce development program, and later that same month threatened to shut down the shelter for improper zoning to operate an overnight shelter. 

State Sen. Trey Paradee (D-Dover), chair of the powerful Joint Finance Committee (JFC) that makes grant-in-aid funding allocations, represents a district that includes the People’s Church. 

Hodge said he believes the funding decision is state lawmakers “caving to pressure” from Dover residents claiming that the church is causing the homelessness and drug use issues, instead of listening to rational arguments. 

“We will continue to do the best we can, within the limits of our available resources to help people get back on their feet and help the neighborhood hungry survive during this terrible time,” Hodge said. “I don’t know what that’s going to look like.” 

Other shelters see increase 

Sussex County also saw a shift in funding for homelessness services, as faith-based service provider Love Inc. of mid-Delmarva received a more than 1,300% increase in state dollars from $11,000 last year to $150,000 this fiscal year. 

Love Inc. currently operates winter overnight shelters across Sussex County and provides case management services to individuals, associate director Kathryn Alban said. 

The organization has been lauded by town leaders in Georgetown as a more accountability-focused approach to ending homelessness that they would like to see brought to Georgetown, as a group of residents have spent the past year criticizing the effectiveness of existing resource providers in the county seat. 

Alban said Love Inc. is currently “in conversations with leadership in Georgetown,” and the funding increase could help them expand to have more of a presence in town.

Delaware officials have reached an agreement to convert hundreds of Delaware State University dorms into a new homeless shelter modeled after the New Castle County Hope Center. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JACOB OWENS

However, she said Love Inc. does not have any intention of taking over current service providers, like Springboard Delaware, but rather would like to work alongside them. 

Other housing services, including the Central Delaware Housing Collaborative, Sussex Community Crisis Housing Services and First State Community Action also received large funding increases. 

The Ministry of Caring, which also provides sheltering, received a $208k increase. 

A new homeless shelter in Kent County, which recently announced its plans to convert Delaware State University dorms into housing, also received a one-time grant for the project. 

More money overall 

Compared to last year, the bill proposes a modest increase in funding allocations to government agencies and senior centers, county funds and paramedic operations.

The bill proposes awarding a total of $99.4 million, a slight increase from last year’s $98.2 million.

The biggest appropriations are slated for statewide government programs, the largest of which being $40 million for government units & senior centers. That allocation is followed by $22 million for public health emergency medical services and $19 million for paramedic program operations.

The Wilmington Senior Center, which abruptly closed its doors in March without an official statement as to why, is slated to receive more than half a million dollars to be put toward reopening. 

A Spotlight Delaware report found the center had struggled with financial difficulties in the past. 

A state audit investigating fraud within the Marydel Volunteer Fire Company revealed tens of thousands of dollars of unaccounted spending. It also raised concerns among elected officials about lacking oversight for fire companies across the state. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY MAGGIE REYNOLDS

Funding for volunteer fire companies also is set to increase across the board. Every Delaware fire company will receive $1,500 more than last year, totaling a $90,000 increase across all three counties.

The bill includes a specific set of provisions for the Marydel Volunteer Fire Company, which was recently found to have been spending tens of thousands of dollars without oversight, according to a state audit. 

These extra requirements include Marydel Fire Company leadership submitting a written report to the Joint Finance Committee about how they are addressing the allegations in the auditor’s report, and whether they have completed an independent audit of the fire company. 

Completing these steps will allow Marydel to receive its roughly $300,000 in grant-in-aid funding.

The General Assembly’s grant-in-aid bill will first be heard in the Senate, which is set to convene for the final time this year at 2 p.m. on Tuesday. It must then pass in the House of Representatives.

Funding disclosure: Spotlight Delaware received $50,000 in grant-in-aid as part of this year’s bill.

The post Dover homeless shelter effectively shuttered by grant-in-aid cut, others see increases appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-06-30 16:04
2026-06-30 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
A recent shooting of a 19-year-old has quickly become one of Wilmington’s highest-profile police use-of-force cases in recent years. With differing accounts from police and community members, a Delaware Department of Justice investigation is expected to be closely watched as residents look for answers.

Days after a Wilmington police officer shot and killed a 19-year-old during a foot chase, calls are growing louder from some elected officials and community advocates for a stronger response from the city, including the release of police body camera footage.

In response, Mayor John Carney and the chief of police said investigators need more time before details can be made public about the fatal shooting of Kadir Skinner. 

The lack of information has fueled frustration, fear and anger in Wilmington, where residents and City Council members say the mayor’s response has been inadequate. The shooting has become one of the city’s most closely scrutinized police use-of-force incidents since the 2015 fatal shooting of Jeremy McDole, a man who used a wheelchair.

“It’s just a continuous ongoing thing, and the people are tired and the people are fed up and we can’t take no more,” community activist Mahkieb Booker said.

The shooting took place in northeast Wilmington, near 24th and Jessup streets. It is currently being investigated by the Wilmington Police Department and the Delaware Department of Justice. 

According to police, officers were monitoring a large crowd in the area prior to the shooting when they observed Skinner leave a home. Police say he then pointed a gun toward the crowd. 

When officers approached Skinner, he began to run, police said, leading to a foot pursuit that ended with one officer shooting Skinner. He later died after being transported to a hospital, according to the public alert from the Wilmington Police Department

Police said they recovered a loaded firearm from Skinner.

The police officer who shot Skinner is on administrative leave, according to the Wilmington Police Department. 

In a statement from Mayor John Carney’s spokeswoman, Caroline Klinger, she noted that the officer involved was wearing a body camera and that the footage has been transmitted to the Delaware Department of Justice for their independent investigation.

In the days since the shooting, many have posted videos to social media of the aftermath of the incident, showing neighbors gathered near the scene as police officers blocked off the street with caution tape.

Some of those videos also included witness accounts that differ from police statements.

In one bystander video recorded at the scene, a woman can be heard claiming that an officer picked up spent shell casings and placed them in his pocket. That allegation has circulated widely on social media. 

Spotlight Delaware also spoke with a woman in the neighborhood on Monday who similarly said she witnessed a police officer picking up shell casings shortly after the shooting. The woman, Latiya Greene, said the officer picking up the casings was not the shooter. 

“It was a detective, with a bald head and caucasian,” Greene said. “He came and swooped up all the shell casings from off the ground, put them in his pocket.”

 City and police officials have not responded to the specific claim.

Skinner’s family members have also spoken out in recent news articles about the shooting, urging police officials to provide more details about what happened during the altercation. 

“The community is saying something different than what the police officers gave me. Make it make sense to me,” Durell Dollard, Skinner’s father, said in a video on social media, a day after his son’s death. 

Community advocate Jakim Mohammed also told Spotlight Delaware that several area residents have contacted him to express a belief that “this was not only an unjustified shooting and an unnecessary shooting, but definitely too much use of force.”

Elected officials respond

In the days following the shooting, advocates and elected officials expressed disappointment in what they said was the city’s lack of communication. Before Monday evening, Carney had not released a statement beyond a short Facebook post, letting residents know he was aware of the situation.  

In response, City Council President Earnest “Trippi” Congo posted a statement to Facebook on Saturday criticizing the mayor and city police for what he said was an inadequate public response to the situation.

City Council President Earnest “Trippi” Congo | PHOTO COURTESY OF WILMINGTON CITY COUNCIL

“If an officer had been seriously injured or killed, we would have addressed it immediately,” Congo wrote in his social media post. “Release the Body Cam Footage. Say something.”

By Monday, Carney issued a public statement, expressing his condolences to Skinner’s family, and noting that the investigation remains ongoing, and urging anyone with information about what happened to come forward. 

Carney acknowledged that the community has questions but said “answers must come through a thorough, independent, and transparent investigative process.”

He said neither he nor members of his administration would comment further while the investigations remain active and ongoing. 

Before Carney’s response, City Councilwoman Shané Darby released a statement calling on the city to conduct an independent assessment of the Wilmington Police Department to determine whether its officers are adequate and aligned with the needs of the community.

Wilmington City Councilwoman Zanthia Oliver is seen at the Kingswood Community Center groundbreaking in August 2024.
Wilmington City Councilwoman Zanthia Oliver. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JACOB OWENS

“The community cannot be expected to place full confidence in a process where police investigate police,” Darby said in the statement.

Zanthia Oliver, who represents the district where Skinner was killed, said she is also hoping for a full and transparent investigation into the shooting and expressed confidence that the investigation will be handled properly. 

“I do think the family deserves answers, but I do also believe in due process for the full investigation,” she told Spotlight Delaware. 

Neighbors respond

Nearly a dozen residents who live in the area around the shooting scene spoke to Spotlight Delaware on Monday. They shared how their community, which is predominantly Black, is both angry and scared following the shooting. 

Joanne Williams, who has lived in the area for several decades, said the surrounding streets have been largely calm in recent days. Some children could be seen playing nearby while she spoke. Elsewhere a group of people sat around a card table on a sidewalk in front of their house. 

Williams said she felt that the neighborhood’s normal chatter had been muted. 

“Something like that happens, it gets quiet out here,” Williams said.  

Several other residents said that much of the reaction among neighbors has been about the lack of information released. 

One resident Jeff Hill contrasted the city’s response to Skinner’s shooting with one that followed a shooting at ChristianaCare’s Wilmington hospital earlier this month. 

“On the 6 o’clock news that evening, they had the mayor, the hospital CEO, [Delaware Attorney General] Kathy Jennings, everybody up there, gathered all them together for this news conference,” Hill said. “Why did they just wait until today to make a statement [for this]?”

On June 30, community advocates and several City Council members will host a town hall to discuss next steps following the shooting and outline the community’s demands for greater transparency and police reform.

Advocates will be joined by City Council members, including Congo and Darby, to hear from residents and discuss potential actions moving forward.

The meeting will be held at Mohammed Mosque in Wilmington at 6 p.m.

The post Wilmington neighbors, advocates demand details about police shooting of teen appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-06-30 04:51

Rep. Diana DeGette has had a tough few weeks. 

The Colorado Democrat is facing her first competitive primary in her 30-year House career on Tuesday. After a series of confrontations with voters — including a public meltdown in a coffee shop — an unfavorable poll kept out of public view, and speculation that she called on powerful allies to pressure venues to cancel planned participation in a rally for her opponent, a slew of new super PACs swooped in to keep DeGette’s campaign afloat in the final weeks of the race — including one funded by the pro-Israel lobby. 

While DeGette has spent the campaign’s home stretch defending her record as a progressive, her leading opponent, democratic socialist Melat Kiros, has never been more optimistic. 

After leftist candidates rode to victory in New York last week on a growing wave of anti-incumbent sentiment, Kiros said her campaign saw a major uptick in donors and volunteers. A coalition of leftist organizations backing her has run an aggressive field campaign and say they’ve out-organized DeGette, who didn’t take the challenge seriously at first and was almost kicked off the ballot in March. In a district full of the kinds of young voters who helped socialists win last week in New York, Kiros’s backers say a similar coalition could power another socialist challenger to topple the Colorado incumbent on Tuesday.

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She Lost Her Job for Speaking Out About Gaza. Can It Power Her to Congress?

“While the Democratic establishment reveals its contempt for its own voters by lashing out against the candidates their base elected, our candidates keep winning by taking on the corporate interests raising our prices to deliver a positive vision to make life more affordable for working class voters — from Medicare for All to ending taxpayer-funded genocide,” said Usamah Andrabi, communications director for Justice Democrats, which is backing Kiros.

DeGette’s challenge is emblematic of a wake-up call for many Democratic incumbents this midterms cycle, Andrabi said: Even being relatively “progressive” is no longer enough to fend off a challenger from the left, let alone to keep your seat

“Voters are done watching Democrats take corporate PAC money and then wonder why nobody trusts them to fight,” Kiros said in a statement to The Intercept. “They are done with representatives who show up six weeks before a primary because a challenger finally scared them into it. The energy that showed up in New York is the same energy that’s showing up in Denver and we are ready for Tuesday night.”

Another progressive strategist who works with congressmembers and candidates and requested anonymity in order to speak freely said DeGette’s backers were worried. “Across multiple districts we’re seeing Dem primary voters unwilling to accept the usual platitudes from incumbents about their work ‘standing up to Trump’ as sufficient to earn their support,” they said.

“Voters across the spectrum are deeply frustrated with the Democratic Party’s ineffectiveness, and feel like many of these incumbents have been all talk and no action in this term,” they said. “There is broad anti-establishment sentiment that creates real opportunity for a next-generation challenger like in CO-01.”

The influx of super PAC spending for DeGette in the final days of the race came even as she had painted herself as further to the left. The incumbent has name-dropped Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., for example, in campaign ads, a candidate forum, and an interview.

Related

Who’s Spending in Your Congressional Election? We Tracked the Front Groups Fueling the 2026 Midterms.

And while DeGette has said repeatedly she isn’t backed by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, pro-DeGette super PAC money came from one of several groups used this cycle by United Democracy Project, the super PAC for AIPAC, to back its preferred candidates without publicly getting involved in races. United Democracy Project provided more than a third of the money raised this year by the group behind the ads.

“AIPAC’s desperation to stop the pro-Palestinian movement’s momentum and our candidates bringing this fight forward proves just how much they are losing the Democratic Party,” Andrabi said. 

DeGette has banked her reelection on reminding voters that she’s a progressive. Pointing to her three decades in Congress and a late endorsement from her Congressional Progressive Caucus colleague, former chair Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., DeGette has warned that electing Kiros — who was born the year after DeGette was first elected and who the incumbent says has no political experience or capital — comes with risks. 

Kiros’s backers are using DeGette’s long record against her. They argue she has little to show for her 15 terms in Congress and say the wave of young voters turning out to oust incumbents and back leftist candidates across the country will work against her.

Throughout her time in Congress, DeGette has expressed her support for all the right marquee progressive priorities. She’s reminded voters that she helped write the Medicare for All bill and is the top Democrat on the committee that could make it a reality, and led fights to protect healthcare, the right to abortion, and the environment. 

But her critics, including Kiros, say she’s rested on those laurels and done little to leverage her seniority in the Democratic caucus to pass meaningful legislation on those issues — and that part of her inaction is tied to her donors. 

“The DeGette team clearly was not in the community talking to voters, because that is the only way they could have missed the energy behind our campaign and the hunger for leadership that is unbought and unafraid,” Kiros said. 

Kiros and others have pointed to DeGette’s longtime support from the pharmaceutical industry, one of Medicare for All’s greatest foes, as a major reason she’s allowed the legislation to languish. DeGette has promised voters that if they reelect her and Democrats win the House this year, she’ll finally take over the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee on health, where she has served as ranking member since January 2025 and been a member since 2017, and bring the bill up for a vote. 

There’s also the issue of Israel and Palestine. Despite naming her progressive bonafides, DeGette has described herself as pro-Israel and has a mixed record on related legislation. She’s not endorsed by AIPAC, but its super PAC is funding one of the groups spending against Kiros, an outspoken critic of Israel’s genocide in Gaza who was fired for writing a post criticizing big law firms, including her employer, for blacklisting pro-Palestine protesters.

The group running the ads, Pro-Choice Majority Action, formed in May as an affiliate of EDW Action, which received $1 million from United Democracy Project between April and May. That’s about a third of the $2.7 million EDW Action reported since January. Another pro-Israel group, DMFI PAC, gave EDW Action $37,750 in April.

“Our endorsements are based on a candidate’s record of fighting for women and families, not on foreign policy,” a spokesperson for Pro-Choice Majority Action told The Intercept. “In fact, our endorsed candidates have held a wide range of views on Israel and the broader foreign policy debate within the Democratic Party. When other organizations support one of our candidates, we sometimes work together to amplify our message about that candidate’s record of fighting for women.”

United Democracy Project and DMFI PAC did not respond to requests for comment.

“Their support for a 30-year congresswoman who they don’t even publicly endorse is far less about Diana DeGette and far more about the extremes they have to go to blunt the momentum of first-time candidates like Melat who represent the will of the Democratic majority,” Andrabi said. 

“We are seeing a new generation of leaders elected by a new generation of young people who are approaching politics with moral clarity,” said Denae Ávila-Dickson, a spokesperson for the youth-led Sunrise Movement, which is backing Kiros. “These elections make one thing clear: Candidates who are unapologetic about opposing the genocide in Gaza, willing to take on billionaires and corporate power, and committed to fighting for working people are the ones inspiring young voters.”

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The Democratic Party Gets Its Populist Takeover

The winner of the Democratic primary in heavily blue Denver is almost certain to be elected in November. And if Democrats win the House — the party in power tends to lose midterm seats, but Republicans are pushing forward aggressive plans to gerrymander and pass new voting restrictions — DeGette says Democrats will finally have the leverage they need to really stand up to President Donald Trump.

The DeGette campaign did not respond to The Intercept’s request for comment.

DeGette’s detractors say a lack of urgency beyond just Medicare for All characterizes her record — and that she’s only been beating the M4A drum because she’s facing a credible challenger. Only seven bills she’s sponsored over her 29 years in Congress have become law or been enacted through other bigger bills, according to GovTrack. Most representatives pass zero or one bill each term, and Congress is in an era where historic levels of partisan gridlock mean it’s passing fewer bills than it ever has.

While legislation passed is only one of several measures of a member’s activity in Congress, DeGette’s Colorado colleague, Rep. Joe Neguse, a member of House Democratic leadership first elected in 2018, had 22 bills enacted in his first two terms — the most of any member last session. In 2024, the four Republican representatives with more than 10 years in office who had the most legislation enacted into law passed six bills each.

“No seat is safe when an establishment Democrat is taking millions from corporate PACs and calling it representation,” Kiros said. “The voters are ahead of the party establishment, and they have been for a while. The question is whether the party is finally ready to listen or whether they’re going to keep learning this lesson the hard way.”

Update: July 1, 2026
This story has been updated with a comment from Pro-Choice Majority Action.

The post Socialists Are Surging. In Colorado, a 29-Year Incumbent Is Sweating. appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 03:00

I love the extra power and punch I get from PintV in my PintX. But there is something magical about this flowy carvy thing in Pacific that I miss with VESC. Even if I dial down aggressiveness and turn up carviness in custom tune settings, it behaves more like Skyline.

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2026-07-01 08:04
2026-06-30 02:41

Hi fellow wheelers! I have a +XR and need an update for a need of longer range and torque. Many are recommending X7 of Fungineers. Does anyone have experience of ordering boards from Fungineers to Finland? How about custom taxes etc?

submitted by /u/Illustrious_Waltz566
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2026-07-02 08:04
2026-06-29 06:37

Can Iraq’s new government survive Middle East instability? 21 July 2026 — 14:30 TO 15:30 BST Anonymous (not verified) Online

Learn how the new administration in Baghdad is navigating regional tensions and internal divisions under a fragile political settlement.

Learn how the new administration in Baghdad is navigating regional tensions and internal divisions under a fragile political settlement.

Iraq’s new government enters office after months of paralysis, shaped by domestic rivalry and external pressure. The incoming administration faces early challenges, as conflict involving Iran, Israel and the United States has intensified economic pressure through disruption to energy markets and supply. Can Iraqis be confident in Prime Minister Ali al Zaidi’s ability to crackdown on corruption, stabilize the economy and assert Iraq’s sovereignty?

  • What does al-Zaidi’s appointment reveal about Iraq’s political balance?
  • How likely is it that the government’s actions against corruption succeed?
  • How vulnerable is the government to domestic unrest, economic strain or fragmentation?
  • Do shifting regional dynamics create space for the new government to better defend Iraq’s sovereignty?
  • How will regional tensions shape Iraq’s ties with the US and Gulf states?
  • Can the government maintain stability under external pressure?

2026-07-02 08:04
2026-06-28 11:02

Document appears to have been subject to conflicting interpretations on key issues of Lebanon ceasefire and strait of Hormuz

The sudden eruption of fresh hostilities in the Gulf – just 10 days after Iran and the US signed a memorandum of understanding to end the conflict – threatens to put the two countries back on the path to war.

It appears the deliberately opaque wording in the memorandum has been unable to withstand the pressure of conflicting interpretations, and as a result supporters of the deal inside Tehran are on the back foot. Statements to the effect that Iran’s government should never have agreed to reopen the strait of Hormuz are proliferating – and not just among the country’s hardliners.

Continue reading...

2026-07-03 12:04
2026-06-28 07:00

What are the essential American songs? To mark the nation's 250th birthday, we asked that question to Sunday Morning's familiar faces, from performers to artists and writers to community leaders.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-06-26 05:00

The Central Oregon Irrigation District diverts water from the Deschutes River through hundreds of miles of canals, pipes and ditches to irrigate high desert lands near Bend and Redmond, Oregon. Brandon Swanson/OPB

Chris Casad awakens each day before dawn on the Central Oregon property he bought nine years ago, the farm where he once grew tons of potatoes before water shortages forced him to fallow fields and take a job feeding someone else’s cattle on someone else’s land. 

At 38, he’s got tractors older than he is. His two kids are under 5. His wife, Cate, has two jobs. They’re staring down a pile of debt from their 85 acres and its unending supply of things in the process of breaking. 

The crisis for their farm started in drought — three summers during which starving grasshoppers descended on the area’s remaining crops, tepid reservoirs bloomed with toxic algae, nearly 1,000 Oregon wells went dry and the springs feeding the Deschutes River shriveled to their lowest recorded flow.

But the death knell for Casad’s crops was Oregon’s century-old law, which protects some water users at the expense of others. 

The couple saw the state cut their community’s share of irrigation water from the Deschutes in the name of that law. Farmers in Jefferson County, where they live, stopped cultivating a third of the county’s irrigated land. “There were a number of suicides, let alone people who closed up shop, older farmers just not wanting to waste their life’s worth of work and their savings on just trying to keep it going,” Casad said.

A man and a woman stand together in front of a tractor. Behind them is another tractor, cars, a wide-open landscape and, in the distance, snow-capped mountains.
Chris Casad, left, and Cate Havstad-Casad bought their Madras, Oregon, property in 2017 with hopes of expanding a vegetable growing business. Leah Nash for ProPublica

At the same time, a few miles upstream, state law encouraged landowners to soak some of Oregon’s most expensive real estate and least productive farmland, a ProPublica and Oregon Public Broadcasting analysis of water use has found. These water-rich Oregonians live in the Central Oregon Irrigation District, a quasi-municipal corporation — part public utility, part homeowners association — that manages and distributes the lion’s share of the Deschutes’ water.

Six irrigation districts together take more than 90% of the river in Bend from May to September. COID is, by far, the most powerful. It has rights to more than half of the volume of the river because when the state was carving up the Deschutes, back in the early 1900s, COID was near the front of the line with a plan to use the water. And in Western water law, that place in line — senior rights — guarantees that when drought hits, your share is protected. 

The Central Oregon Irrigation District Diverts More Water Annually From the Deschutes in Bend Than All Other Irrigation Districts Combined

Note: Estimates are averages during peak irrigation season, May to September, from 2015 to 2022.
Source: Oregon Water Resources Department

That same law also says COID can keep taking all that water as long as it can prove that landowners in the district are putting it to “beneficial use.” Waste is forbidden.

But Oregon policymakers have such loose definitions of what’s beneficial and what’s waste that, during the drought, our reporting found, only 1 of every 4 gallons COID took from the river was absorbed by crops. 

The news organizations shared our analysis of state-commissioned satellite data with both officials who manage water for Oregon and with COID. While the state did not dispute the numbers, irrigation district leaders said they didn’t trust the state data, which Oregon lawmakers created to study water availability. COID also said that the drought years were anomalous; however, our analysis across wet and dry years showed crops drank a similar share of the diverted water each year. 

Other records from the district and the state describe how most of the water percolated into the ground, evaporated into hot, dry air, or drained off fields into scrubland and desert. Some fed the aquifer. Some went back into the river downstream, where environmental regulators have found waterways warmed and polluted. 

And that one gallon that quenched crops? Almost all of it went to grass and pasture. 

“We’re Just Wasting Water” 

Casad grew up in Bend, the region’s biggest city, where he watched developers slice farmland into subdivisions. The lumber mill became a shopping mall anchored by an REI. An economy once dependent on timber and agriculture turned instead toward tourism and recreation.

Canals from the Deschutes still wind through Bend’s neighborhoods of single-family homes, and then to the estates, farms, ranches and destination resorts on the city’s outskirts. Among those sits a horse ranch owned by Phil and Penelope Knight of Nike fame, one of the wealthiest families in the world and, our analysis found, one of the largest consumers of COID water. The ranch raises “high-end” horses and sells hay, its website shows. A manager declined to comment on how it manages water. 

Another long, gated driveway leads to an 80-acre property that was once dry scrubland. Cinematographer Byron Garth bought water rights from another landowner through COID a decade ago to irrigate part of the property. 

The water helped him transform a rocky hillside into an “exclusive compound paradise,” as an auction listing last year put it, with a 6,300-square-foot mansion with radiant heated floors, three guest houses, a 10,000-square-foot garage and a swimming pool — all surrounded by a carpet of soft green grass. 

For a few years, Garth used his water rights to grow hay for about 15 alpacas and goats, but in the end, he said, “it was cheaper to just mow it.” Garth said he did have reservations about using so much water during the drought, but he reasoned that somebody had to use it. 

“For the aesthetic value,” realtor Jen Bowen said about the grass last year, as she gave OPB a tour of the estate shortly before Garth sold it for $4.8 million.

“I think most of us would agree — it’s nicer to look out over a lush pasture than it is the high desertscape,” Bowen said.

One of the district’s thirstiest developments is Ranch at the Canyons, a gated subdivision of dozens of multimillion-dollar Tuscan-style mansions whose residents mutually own an equestrian center, a luxury wedding venue, a winery and a nonprofit farm run by “dedicated ranch management and local farmers.” A development manager did not respond to a request for comment. Its website promises homeowners “the peaceful rhythm of agricultural life — without the work.” 

A similar property listed for $15 million invites its future owners to imagine more than a residence or a cattle ranch, but “a Playground for Ambitions, for Imagination, for Dreamers, and for Doers.”

Our analysis of the most recently available state data, covering 2015 to 2022, found that more than 9 out of every 10 acres in the district were growing grass — pasture and hay fields for livestock as well as landscaping. 

Casad started his life as a farmer in the district, but he was not one of those grass growers. He began leasing land near his hometown in 2010, and within a matter of years was turning a profit, annually growing thousands of tons of organic potatoes, pulling them from the earth with a gargantuan harvester he called “the white whale.” He liked the idea of farming in a region that once sold 1 of every 4 bags of potatoes in the state. He leased more land, sold out at farmers’ markets, supplied a local brewery with spuds for its fries, and welcomed school field trips, “just to show kids what a working farm is, where their food comes from.”

A young boy sits in the driver’s seat of a red truck, holding the steering wheel and smiling. He is framed by the open car door.
Chris Casad and Cate Havstad-Casad’s oldest son, Hesston, 4 Leah Nash for ProPublica
A woman in a denim shirt with a bandana tying her hair back holds a small child.
Cate Havstad-Casad holds her youngest son, Crosby, 2 Leah Nash for ProPublica

COID’s water was a boon.

“It was just always on,” Casad said. 

But the glut of water became a problem. He couldn’t just cut off the flow without risking his landlord’s water rights. So he did what others in the district do: figure out a way to use the “overabundance” or capture it in ponds. When one pond was full, Casad started digging a second one so the excess water wouldn’t inundate his neighbor’s property.

On more than a third of COID’s acreage, landowners irrigate their crops by intentionally flooding the fields. Water flows directly from ditches across the land — saturating plants, pooling and running off as it evaporates or seeps into the ground. 

Water experts are quick to point out that water running off fields or leaking out of canals filters into aquifers or drains back to the river. That is not waste, they say, because it recirculates in the river basin. 

This recycling takes time, while the consequences on the Deschutes are immediate. Farmers are drying up acreage and, for about 40 miles downstream of Bend, fish habitats suffer, state scientists told us. Once irrigation districts take their 90% of the river during the growing season, average remaining flows over the last decade have been about half what the ecosystem needs, according to stream gauges and state conservation targets. “The river always loses,” former state biologist Brett Hodgson said. 

The fact that much of the irrigation water is, in some form or fashion, recycled elsewhere doesn’t put COID landowners like David Fisher at ease either. Fisher said he flood irrigates about 60 acres of his property to grow hay and pasture for cattle.

“We’re just wasting water. Really. We are,” remarked the 72-year-old butcher shop owner. “Don’t get me wrong, I’m not a tree hugger or one of those people that think that we should stop this for the frogs or the fish. But there’s got to be a middle of the road.”

Only a Quarter of the Water the Central Oregon Irrigation District Diverted From The Deschutes River Was Consumed by Crops

Most of it leaked from open canals, percolated into the ground or ran off fields before returning to aquifers or to the river downstream.

Three streams representing water diverted from the Deschutes River show that 45% leaked or evaporated from canals before it reached landowners; 29% percolated into aquifers, ran off or evaporated after being delivered to landowners; and 26% was consumed by crops (mostly grass and pasture).
Note: Estimates are averages for irrigation season, May to September, from data covering 2015 to 2022. 
Sources: Data for how much water is lost on the way to landowners or after reaching them comes from Central Oregon Irrigation District estimates provided to the Oregon Water Resources Department. Data regarding how much water is consumed by plants comes from the Desert Research Institute and the Oregon Water Resources Department.
Lucas Waldron/ProPublica

“Waste Is Like Pornography”  

Both how much water the district uses and what its landowners are growing have the state’s blessing. Oregon, like other Western states, says that as long as irrigation is put to “beneficial use without waste,” no one can take your water rights.

But growing anything is considered a beneficial use as long as it’s planted, irrigated and not a native species or noxious weed. Policymakers and courts have labeled so few uses as waste that one of the most well-known legal precedents was set 90 years ago by a California court, said Colorado-based water law attorney Sarah Klahn. The case forbade the use of irrigation water to drown gophers. 

Water rights are a form of property rights, Oregon-based water law attorney Karen Russell said, and although the law is designed to adapt to changing times, the courts have typically allowed past practices to dictate how much water landowners can use.

In the eyes of Oregon courts, “waste is like pornography,” she said: “You know it when you see it.” 

So it doesn’t matter if landowners are watering the prized crops that decades ago were celebrated by the Deschutes Basin’s annual potato festival, when local women vied to be crowned “Miss Spud,” or the grass and hay for today’s “Playground for Ambitions.”

This is the point COID’s Managing Director Craig Horrell, who is in charge of the district’s day-to-day operations, tried to drive home at a town hall meeting in Redmond last March. The moderator read a question asking about incentives that might make “hobby farms” more efficient. Horrell bristled at the term, calling it a label intended to “shame and coerce us into change.” 

“We as district managers don’t get to decide whether we like somebody growing carrot seed or somebody having two llamas and a Prius in the driveway,” he shot back. “If you’re using your water beneficially and growing a beneficial crop, that is what we manage. We don’t have the right to say whether it’s a good thing or a bad thing.”

The district is vigilant about ensuring one thing — that landowners are growing a non-native crop, which the district checks through field visits and by aerial reviews, COID’s Deputy Director of Water Rights Jessi Talbott said in a recent interview. 

Every summer, a COID-hired plane flies over the district’s more than 70 square miles of fields, an area larger than Salem, Oregon’s capital city, looking for brown patches. If landowners aren’t using the water exactly where they are supposed to at least once every five years, the state can cancel unused water rights. Oregon regulators have canceled irrigation water rights just four times since 2020, and none of those were in the COID. 

“Nobody else in the state does what we do to try and encourage use,” Talbott said. 

Since 2021, the district has sent more than 1,000 letters to landowners warning them they were in danger of losing water rights. The intent of the letters isn’t to scare people, but to educate them about water stewardship, Talbott said. If landowners suspected of not using water don’t take action, COID can and will confiscate rights itself, she added, but this rarely happens.

Casad’s landlord got a letter from COID in 2016, after aerial surveillance spotted “specific dry areas” on the property, district records show. Casad and his wife, Cate Havstad-Casad, had turned one rocky corner into a compost pile and parking area for their equipment.

“In order to satisfy the powers that be seeing that we’re using the water, there was an entire season where we had to water that compost pile and equipment yard,” Havstad-Casad said. 

By the next year, a COID inspector’s report noted “enough growth to avoid confiscation.” In 2023, on another property, Andria Truax and her husband Dan Baumann got a COID warning letter that sent them into “panic mode,” they said. The couple owns a nursery raising drought-tolerant landscaping plants on a 10-acre property near Bend. 

“We’re supposed to keep some of these areas green that are next to impossible to grow anything on,” Truax said. 

They didn’t want to douse rocky soil and fight back the weeds that immediately sprang up. The irony struck her because “farmers are getting cut off from water downstream and meanwhile we’re being told to water more.”

Still, to protect their water rights and property values, they turned on the sprinklers. 

COID doesn’t tell people to water rocks or compost piles, Talbott said in an interview last year. In a more recent interview, she said OPB and ProPublica’s finding that only about 25% of the district’s diversion was consumed by crops was “infuriating.”

“We do so much to educate our patrons and for them to use the water right and make products out of it, feed the community, feed cows, whatever is in alignment with water law,” Talbott said. 

In the same meeting, Horrell said the district not only doesn’t overdeliver water, but some properties don’t get enough. COID doesn’t directly measure how much water landowners use, only how much land they’re irrigating.

In its water management conservation plan, which covers 2015 to 2020, COID approximated how much water crops required, based on surveys of its landowners about what they were growing — largely pastures — and federal weather data. Those averaged estimates showed crops required about 27% of what the district took out of the river annually. That roughly mirrors our own finding of what crops actually drank, based on the state’s study of satellite data. 

Horrell and other district officials did not respond to multiple questions about the numbers in COID’s own conservation plan. 

“They Have All the Cards”

State leaders have long wrestled with how to divvy up the Deschutes Basin in the face of increasing drought, booming population and growing demand. Bend and Redmond, the basin’s two largest cities, are facing uncertain future supplies; during the drought of 2022, COID diverted over 12 times more water than both cities combined, with their then roughly 132,000 total residents. While farms are, by far, the biggest water users in the nation, the COID’s contribution to the state’s agricultural economy is among the lowest in Oregon. The region leads other Oregon counties only in horse sales.

Republican state Rep. Mark Owens, a hay farmer from Eastern Oregon and one of the state’s leading voices on water management, said the district’s hobby farmers are getting excess water “which they do not need, should not have to utilize and should not be delivered to them.” Oregon, he said, is long overdue to look again at how it manages water. 

The beneficial use rule was designed, he said, to build up rural economies, and “it’s what allowed some of our communities to prosper.” But now, “you have a group of folks that employ nobody, harvest nothing, so how are you actually providing a public benefit for that water?” he said. “So is there something broken? Yeah, there is.”

How, he asked, “do you get the most crop per drop?” 

Rather than mandates, the Legislature has turned to incentives, like authorizing programs that pay people to leave water in the river without losing the right to it. Baumann and Truax eventually did just that with a sliver of their water rights. But the state doesn’t dictate how irrigation districts use those incentives. COID’s board of directors has capped participation so that very few properties are eligible. 

Horrell said the district has to limit enrollment in water-sharing programs because its 120-year-old delivery system will fail if the canals aren’t brimming full.

After the Central Oregon Irrigation District delivered water to landowners near Redmond, Oregon, in July 2025, what’s left pooled in a silty pond where it eventually drained away or evaporated. The district said it has 24 ponds that catch water at the ends of its system. Brandon Swanson/OPB

The district’s hundreds of miles of open, unlined waterways rely on gravity to push huge volumes out of the river and propel the water that ends up on fields more than 30 miles away. When COID has reduced the volume of this “carry water” too much in the past, Horrell said, farms at the ends of the system suffered. 

But the district acknowledged in public meetings and in our interviews that all the water leaking and evaporating along the way is wasteful. To change that, it’s seeking more than $700 million in public funding to replace the canals with new, pressurized pipes. It’s already gotten more than $65 million for piping since 2015.

“There is no dispute that we all want a better, more equal, more balanced water delivery system that benefits our river, our partners, districts, cities. That’s a given,” Horrell said, “How we get there is what we argue about.”

COID is a business, he emphasized, one that he said does need to become more sustainable as the climate changes.

COID’s rights allow it to take even more water from the Deschutes than it does. Even so, Horrell pointed out, it has voluntarily scaled back over the last decade of droughts. Thanks to piping, he said, it sends some water to downstream farmers when it doesn’t have to.

But, he said, that “doesn’t mean that it is not ours.” 

The Deschutes, like rivers across the country, is owned by the public, and taxpayers are spending big to conserve it. But irrigation districts still have all the power, said environmental advocate Yancy Lind, who contributes to a state-supported water planning group with districts, cities and state managers.

“We live in the West and in the West, water is power and the irrigators have the water. It’s that simple,” he said. “They have all the cards. We’re just trying to pull little crumbs out from them.” 

“It Doesn’t Have to Be This Way”

After seven years of leasing land in the COID, Casad headed north to nearby Jefferson County and the North Unit Irrigation District, where he now lives. He moved because he could afford to buy there and the land was more fertile — it produces more than half the world’s supply of carrot seed. Plus he wanted to live among people like him, dedicated farmers, someone like Jos Poland, “a tough dude” and the lifelong dairy farmer who became his new neighbor.

A landscape of green farmland, with irrigation sprinkler lines across it, and in the distance a snow-capped mountain.
The peaks of the Cascade Range are visible in the distance from Casad Family Farms. The mountain range forms a wall dividing wet, coastal Oregon from semi-arid high desert. Leah Nash for ProPublica

The move came with one big tradeoff. Casad went from a district with plentiful water to one that has long had to make do with less. North Unit is the first to be cut off during a drought. Compared to the COID, even in a wet year, North Unit promises half as much water per acre, and it loses an even higher percentage in leaky delivery canals, but its crops still consume a much higher percentage of what the district takes out of the river, our analysis found. 

North Unit’s farmers pride themselves on that efficiency. Drive through Casad’s neighborhood and you’ll see rows of water-saving sprinklers, and pumps churning to recycle and reapply the runoff captured by specialized ponds. “It’s the only way we’ve been able to survive,” said one of the district’s longtime farmers, 80-year-old Gary Harris.

Casad knew this, so he calculated that half as much water on fertile land would be enough.

And it was, until the drought hit in 2020. To keep his farm going, he started drying up two acres of land for every acre of potatoes he planted. Down the road, Poland’s organic cow pastures died. He had to sell half his herd. 

“I was losing money so fast that I couldn’t afford to feed my animals,” Poland recalled. “That threw me in a big depression.” He struggled to get out of bed. Casad started helping him with the dairy, working through the night on his own farm. 

“I remember watching the lights of the tractor out the window,” Cate Havstad-Casad said. She was pregnant with their first child, sitting in the bathtub having contractions, she said, but she waited hours to call her husband inside “because I understood the pressure on his shoulders.”

Casad wept as he dredged up memories of the drought. “Some of this stuff you just bury,” he said. “You bury it down deep.”

During those years, which overlapped with the pandemic, Jefferson County Commissioner Kelly Simmelink said he heard from farmers dealing with falling commodity prices, rising operational costs, “and then the real fact of water availability — I don’t know how you continue.”

As the drought wore on, the suicide rate in Jefferson County nearly doubled. “Our farmers and ranchers face immense pressure,” he told the Legislature in early 2023, successfully urging it to launch a state-funded suicide prevention hotline for agricultural producers. 

Two years into the drought, Casad learned at North Unit’s spring meeting that he would have to cut back his water use even more. For every acre of vegetables he could plant, four would have to go fallow. He called his wife to break the news when she was out of town. 

After she hung up, she sat alone in her hotel room and broke down.

Cate Havstad-Casad reacts to the news that state water cutbacks mean her family will need to dry up most of their farm in this excerpt from a March 2022 video diary. Courtesy of Cate Havstad-Casad

“It doesn’t have to be this way” she said through tears in a video diary she recorded at the time. “It is Oregon water law which will give a very wealthy person with a hayfield that they literally mow and leave in the field and do nothing with because their life has nothing to do with the land, …  that person will get twice as much water as any professional farmer will get in North Unit.”

Casad no longer grows potatoes. The bins where he once stored them sit empty in the barn. Now he grows mostly hay and grass for cattle — crops that he said need less water. 

Inside a barn sits a large yellow machine with wheels and an angled chute. The machine is surrounded by hay bales and a cat walks by.
A potato harvester in the barn at the Casad family farm has been idle for four years. The children now use it as a slide. Leah Nash for ProPublica

But rough years are coming for farmers in the Deschutes Basin. This year Oregon’s snowpack is one of the lowest it’s been in recorded history. That snow takes years to percolate and it’s what feeds the mountain springs powering the river. More than half of Oregon counties have already declared droughts. 

The Casad farm is still paying down the debts from the last drought. Chris Casad worked part-time at a feedlot this winter. Now he’s a school bus driver. 

To his two young children, his “whale” of a potato harvester has never been anything other than a slide, their playground for make-believe. 

A man holds the hand of a boy as the two walk down a dirt driveway toward a house in the distance. Two dogs follow behind them.
Chris Casad and his oldest son, Hesston, with dogs Beth, left, and her pup, Rue, walk along the driveway of the family’s farm. Leah Nash for ProPublica

The post An Oregon Law Lets One Wealthy Region Turn the Desert Green. When Drought Hits, Farmers Pay the Price. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-07-03 08:04
2026-06-26 04:55

A river, seen from above, flows into a dam, and then emerges without 90% of its water. A row of houses overlooks the river on the left side, and a highway runs alongside it on the right.
A dam across the Deschutes River in Bend, Oregon, diverts water to irrigation district canals in July 2025. Brandon Swanson/OPB

Every year, about 90% of Central Oregon’s Deschutes River disappears into networks of canals and pipes traversing high desert. Between April and October, what’s left in this major river — one of the largest spring-fed waterways in the U.S. — looks more like a creek trickling out of Bend, Oregon.

Six irrigation districts — quasi-public corporations — divert the water to green up the properties of about 7,500 landowners in one of the state’s driest regions. Of the six, none is as powerful as the Central Oregon Irrigation District. It has rights to use more than half of the Deschutes’ volume — more than all the other districts combined. And under state law, in times of scarcity, most of the others must cut back to protect COID’s share of the river. 

During the last drought, state water law forced commercial farmers downstream to fallow their land while COID diverted four times what its landowners’ crops consumed, an Oregon Public Broadcasting and ProPublica analysis of state data found. 

Our analysis showed similar ratios across both wet and dry years, roughly aligning with estimates of what COID told the state its crops required. While state water managers did not dispute our analysis, the irrigation district said it didn’t trust the satellite-based data we used, which Oregon lawmakers backed to study water availability.

COID landowners are doing exactly what the law encourages them to do, state legislators said. To keep rights to the water, districts have to prove to the state that their customers are consistently using it “beneficially.” In the district, our reporting found, more than 9 out of 10 acres were pasture — grass for grazing or landscaping, or hay for livestock — considered beneficial under the law.

Oregon and other Western states have so far rejected any legislation that restricts what people can grow or how efficient they must be: Opposition to change is strong because water rights are a form of property rights. Water rights also raise property values and can bring agricultural tax breaks.

If lawmakers took on bedrock water law, “we’d get crushed by the powers that be and we might even not be reelected,” said state Rep. Ken Helm, the Democratic co-chair of the House Committee on Agriculture, Land Use, Natural Resources and Water.

“What should we do? I think we should leave more water in the river. Legally speaking, that doesn’t have to happen,” he said. Helm, a land-use lawyer, grew up in Bend and has watched the region transform. “Affluent people are moving into Central Oregon for reasons that have nothing to do with growing a crop,” he said.

A wide, sweeping landscape photograph showing mansions, large, lush green lawns and pools of water, with mountains in the background.
The Central Oregon Irrigation District diverts water from the Deschutes River through roughly 30 miles of canals and pipes to irrigate fields and estates at the Ranch at the Canyons development in Terrebonne, Oregon. The subdivision’s website promises those who own its multimillion-dollar mansions “the peaceful rhythm of agricultural life — without the work.” Brandon Swanson/OPB

As things stand now, COID’s Managing Director Craig Horrell said he “can’t tell people what they can and can’t farm, if it’s allowed.” The district’s job is to distribute water to its customers and to “deliver it much more efficiently and sustainably in the future,” he said.

The question is how.

Oregon has pushed three main solutions: 

1. Pipes

COID delivers most of its water through open canals built 120 years ago. Blasted from porous lava rock, the canals have to be completely full for gravity to push water across the district’s more than 42,000 acres. Nearly half the water evaporates or seeps into the ground under the canals before reaching its destination. COID’s state water rights factor this in.

Replacing the canals with pressurized pipes could save a lot of water. It could also take 50 years and cost more than $700 million. The district is in the final planning stages of what could be a $360 million project to pipe a main artery leading to more than a thousand landowners between Bend and Redmond, Oregon. Few make their living as farmers, our reporting found. In exchange for federal and state funding for piping, COID has pledged to send water downstream to farmers outside the district.

The plan has gotten broad support, especially from Oregon Sen. Jeff Merkley: “Repeated severe droughts make every drop of irrigation water highly valuable, and the best way to preserve irrigation water is to pipe it,” he told OPB and ProPublica.

The catalyst for focusing on COID, he said, was a threatened species of frog, which lives exactly where irrigation districts have long siphoned water, destroying its habitat. To stave off lawsuits under the Endangered Species Act, the districts agreed to leave more water in the river over time. 

As it switches from canals to pipes, COID is supposed to send the water it saves to a neighboring district that will have to take less from the river as part of the plan to restore the frog’s home. That district, North Unit, serves a valley famous for commercial farms, but it’s already water-poor. It has rights to far less water from the Deschutes than COID does. Evan Thomas, a fifth-generation farmer and leader of North Unit, put the stakes plainly at a March public meeting in Redmond: “This pipe has to go in the ground by 2028 or North Unit, all of Jefferson County, basically quits farming.”

But even those who acknowledge that piping is a critical solution note that it won’t stop COID from diverting more water than its customers need — or from sending that water to a lot of residential properties growing grass and pasture. Last year, the nonprofit Central Oregon LandWatch pushed for a bill to put limits on overwatering. Helm and Republican state Rep. Mark Owens started drafting legislation, but they never introduced it. Owens, a hay farmer in Eastern Oregon, said irrigation districts weren’t happy with the proposal. “I weakened,” he said. “We weren’t going to get it through the building. We lived to fight another day.” 

2. Sharing

The Deschutes has never had enough water for all the landowners who laid claim to it more than a century ago, said Deschutes River Conservancy Executive Director Kate Fitzpatrick. Leaving water in the river for fish and wildlife wasn’t even considered a legal, beneficial use of the resource until the 1980s. 

A group of eight people wade in a muddy pool of water holding bright yellow poles with fishing nets on the end.
Kathryn Styer Martínez/OPB
A group of people stand next to or immersed in a large body of water, dragging a net that extends from one bank of the river to the other.
Participants in the Deschutes River fish rescue event use nets to catch and move fish trapped in a side channel of the Deschutes River above Bend, Oregon, in 2024. At the end of each growing season, irrigation districts reduce flows in the river to refill upstream reservoirs, stranding fish. Kathryn Styer Martínez/OPB

“So that’s what we’re working with,” Fitzpatrick said. “We’re not going to win the game by pointing fingers at who’s doing what with the water.”

With more demand than supply, her nonprofit works with irrigation districts to roll out incentives for landowners to be more efficient or share voluntarily. One program pays landowners to dry up land so COID will leave more water in the river. But the district limits participation, and the program’s efficacy has plateaued for decades, state data shows. 

State lawmakers last year also created a pilot “water bank” program. The concept marks a big change in the law and could allow COID landowners to keep what water they need and rent out the excess to farmers downstream without losing rights to it. 

But since Oregon’s governor signed the bill into law nearly a year ago, COID and other key players haven’t signed anyone up. That’s because the canal system fails if it doesn’t have enough water in it, Horrell, the district’s manager, said. Piping could allow the district to scale up these other solutions in the future, he said.

There’s another problem, too: To rent out part of a water right without completely drying up their property, landowners would need to measure their use precisely — something many don’t want to do.

3. Data

COID said it doesn’t measure or report the volume of water it delivers. This is typical across Oregon, where the vast majority of water goes to agricultural lands. But policymakers and experts have long said the state can’t tackle water shortages unless it knows how much the people with irrigation water rights use on their properties. 

The Legislature’s attempts to require meters on all individual farms and wells have faced fierce public backlash. “At one point my office was getting a call a minute,” Owens, the state representative, recalled of an effort last year. The fear, he said, is that the state will use data to take away water rights or to try to charge by the gallon. 

Owens has given up on trying to force statewide metering for now, he said. 

On his own Eastern Oregon hay farm, he started a pilot project that uses a weather station and satellite data to track how much his fields drink. He can look on his phone and see how many days he should irrigate the following week, he said. He also led the charge for Oregon to invest in a cutting-edge study to apply this technology to statewide water planning. Scientists with the Oregon Water Resources Department co-authored a report with researchers from the Nevada-based Desert Research Institute. It provides estimates over nearly 40 years of how much water crops consumed on every irrigated field in Oregon. The data, which OPB and ProPublica used in our reporting, was published last year. Horrell said such data has too many variables and is not ready to guide how the district monitors water use.

State managers are not currently using that data to regulate how water is used, but instead to account for where it goes, Oregon Water Resources Department Director Ivan Gall said in a recent interview. He said tight state budgets have so far kept his agency from sharing it “with the public and decision makers in a way that is understandable and meaningful.”

Owens and Helm said they tried and failed to make it easier to learn from critical data about Oregon’s water — how much there is, how clean it is, where it’s coming from and where it’s going — but a pilot project ground to a halt after state funding dried up last year.

The post Oregon Leaders Are Trying to Save the Deschutes River. Here’s Why That’s So Hard. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-07-01 20:04
2026-06-25 18:30

President Donald Trump has repeatedly blamed vandals for damaging the new blue lining of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, which is now peeling, as well as for algae in the water. But the administration has not provided evidence to back up the president’s claims. Experts say the pool’s ills have a variety of plausible explanations that do not involve intentional harm.

Installing linings on pools and making sure they properly adhere is challenging, experts in pools and waterproof coatings have told news outlets, and improper surface prep or water intrusion can cause peeling, they said. Meanwhile, algae would be expected in a shallow, still, unshaded pool fed by nutrient-rich water that had been painted dark blue, Steven Chapra, a water quality modeler and professor emeritus at Tufts University, told us.

Despite these competing explanations, Trump has repeatedly asserted that vandals are to blame. “You know, we have 100- … I think 290-, 300-foot slit right through it,” Trump said at a June 22 press event, after news reports surfaced of blue pieces of the pool’s lining separating from the bottom. “Probably a box cutter or a knife of some kind.”

He claimed at the same event that someone may have put fertilizer in the pool, part of a series of claims that someone had poured in some substance or chemicals. “They did something to create the algae,” he said.

Trump’s comments on vandals cutting the pool’s coating with a knife echoed theoretical statements he had made on May 4, before reports of damage to the pool. “It’s very strong. You couldn’t — if you had a knife — I don’t want to give anybody ideas,” he said, referring to the pool’s new coating. “If you had a knife, you can’t even cut it, so strong, so powerful.”

The president has since spoken or posted about alleged cuts in the pool at least daily, with the “gash” — or “numerous slashes” — growing to cover a length of 350 feet and the possible implements used including “a very sharp knife or razors.”

On June 24, Trump posted a photo of the dark blue bottom of the empty pool, stating, “This is the hard rubber surface — No Paint — Before the Vandals cut and pulled it apart!” On June 25, he specified that the vandals had gone to the “bottom” and “started ripping it up,” as well as cut “this very expensive stuff” at the “side of the pool right at water level.”

The White House replied to our request for more information on the vandalism with a June 25 press release claiming to have surveillance video, previously shared by the Department of the Interior with Fox News, of someone vandalizing the pool. The June 19 video, taken in the middle of the afternoon after news had broken of the damage to the pool, appears to show a person reaching into the water and pulling something out. However, it is unclear whether this individual was engaged in vandalism. The White House has not provided evidence of people causing long gashes or a series of gashes. The press release also included links to images of damage to the pool, including a jagged line on the bottom of the pool posted by a TMZ DC reporter on X, but it was unclear what had caused it. Nor has the administration provided evidence someone illicitly dumped something in the pool to cause algae growth.

The White House press release linked to a court filing from Frank Lands, deputy director of operations for the National Park Service, stating that police on June 9 responded to an “NPS report of damage to the reflecting pool, including a caulk over the foam sealant that was cut with a sharp knife or razor and destruction of delaminating surface material.” Lands also said that “approximately 70 fence post tops were thrown into the pool.” It is unclear who is alleged to have made these cuts or thrown the fence post tops.

The Department of the Interior sent us a link to one of its X posts, which said, “Six individuals have been arrested for vandalism at the Reflecting Pool.” The post added that seven others were given federal citations and that 17 police reports for vandalism had been filed. The department would not give us further information about these arrests and citations, including any details of the individuals’ alleged infractions. Nor did they provide the names of the alleged vandals. The White House press release said that there had been at least seven arrests, seven federal citations and 18 police reports filed but again did not provide more details, other than to link to multiple news stories mentioning an Olympic canoeist who has disputed that he vandalized the pool. Washington, D.C.’s Metropolitan Police Department referred us to the NPS.

Brady McCarron, a spokesperson for the United States Marshals Service, told us that as of the morning of June 24, “we are showing 5 arrests” listed as being by the DC Safe Task Force, including one on June 19 for “vandalism (attempted destruction of property/defacing public property)” and four on June 20 for “Destruction of government property.” He did not provide further details on these arrests. The DC Safe Task Force is a multi-agency federal body created by Trump “to surge law enforcement presence in public spaces, strictly enforce ‘quality-of-life’ laws, and maximize federal immigration enforcement within the District.”

Meanwhile, experts in pools, waterproof coatings and algae have said that there are many possible causes for the reflecting pool’s issues that have nothing to do with vandalism. Below, we will discuss competing explanations.

Peeling Problems

Despite Trump’s claims of vandalism to the more than 100-year-old reflecting pool, it’s not clear what caused damage to its new lining. When pressed on June 22 on whether he had proof that vandals had made cuts in the pool, the president seemed to suggest the cuts themselves were the proof.

“Well, let’s put it this way. When you have a 350 — I think it’s 350, not 250 — a 350-foot slit from one end to the other, you think that’s proof? You think that’s proof?” Trump said to a reporter. He later suggested that there was photographic evidence, but when a reporter asked the president to release those photos Trump said, “You’ll see it in court.” He also suggested contacting the Interior and Parks departments.

Pieces of blue coating partially detach from the bottom of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool on June 21. Photo by Pete Kiehart for The Washington Post via Getty Images.

What is known is that the Department of the Interior awarded a no-bid contract on April 3 to Atlantic Industrial Coatings to paint the reflecting pool, with supplemental agreements issued through June 15 to total $14.7 million. The agency justified not getting bids from various contractors by saying the project was urgent and needed to be completed by July 4.

The plan was to install an epoxy primer on top of the pool’s concrete slabs, followed by a polyurea lining tinted “American flag blue,” Superintendent of National Mall and Memorial Parks Kevin Griess explained in May 18 court filings.

“The rehabilitation incorporated a combination of repair materials, epoxy priming technology, elastomeric waterproofing systems, and protective finish coatings,” a June 18 press release from Rhino Linings, the company whose products were used for the new liner, said.

The idea of installing the lining over the full bottom of the pool was first suggested by the Trump administration, Griess said, and not initially by his staff. The original focus was on replacing the failed expansion joints, a major source of leakage. The project did not address the pool’s leaking pipes.

On June 18, around two weeks after the pool was refilled following the renovation, news outlets began reporting that blue material was peeling off the pool’s bottom. The New York Times later reported on June 23 that workers had identified the peeling at least two days earlier, while also noting separate damage to foam in the pool’s expansion joints as of June 9. These joints — which go around the perimeter of the pool and horizontally across it in several places — allow the pool’s concrete slabs to expand and contract as the weather changes.

However, experts in pools and waterproof coatings have said that there are many possible reasons that a coating can improperly adhere.

“You have to account for ambient conditions like rain, sun, humidity, moisture control in your substrate, thickness, evenness, and chemical compatibility,” Steve Goodale, a swimming pool consultant, told Wired, speaking about the difficulty of applying a waterproof pool lining. “There are so many things that can go wrong with that process. If the material hasn’t bonded to the substrate for any number of reasons, then ultimately, the entire system will fail.”

Goodale told the Washington Post that improper surface preparation or water seeping into the lining from the pool or from under it could also contribute to the peeling. He also said that the hydrogen peroxide that the Interior Department had used to try to treat the algae in the pool could have had an impact on the coating, although he said that this would be more likely to lead to “fading, hazing or breakdown of the material” than peeling. News outlets reported that the department had said it was using hydrogen peroxide to treat the algae starting as early as June 16.

David McFayden, CEO of the paint and inspections services company KTA-Tator, told Scientific American that the available information was too limited to blame any one factor for the peeling, but he said issues worth investigating include how the surface was prepared before applying the coating and the water chemistry.

Atlantic Industrial Coatings, the contractor for the project, said in a June 21 statement that it and the NPS had “identified some areas in the Reflecting Pool that require repairs,” which will be done under warranty, and that these “do not indicate a failure of the liner.” The following day, Rhino Linings, the company that made the pool’s liner, said in a statement that the issues constituted “localized areas of finish coat separation,” and not an issue with the “underlying waterproofing membrane.”

“Was it manual intervention that made those few places peel, or was that the chemical composition of what was in the water?” Rhino Vice President Francois Rivard told Politico. “We don’t know until we have further results at this point, but it is not problematic,” he said, explaining that the peeling only appears to affect the outer blue layer that is for aesthetic purposes.

Unclear Timeline of Damage

Concerns about the pool’s new coating predate the most recently identified peeling issues.

Tim Auerhahn, chairman of the pool training and consulting company the Aquatic Council, told the New York Times for a May 8 story that he would want to look closely at the impact of Trump driving his motorcade over the newly coated surface of the pool the day before. The Times reported May 12 that Department of Interior staff had expressed concerns about bubbling and small holes in a layer of the waterproofing material. And the Times report from June 23 and court document linked to in the White House press release indicated that Park Police were aware of damage to or near the pool’s foam expansion joints by June 9.

A worker cleans the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool on June 25. Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images.

This timeline indicates the new material in the pool had problems before the June 19 and 20 arrests the U.S. Marshals spokesperson mentioned, and before the June 19 surveillance video of someone removing something from the pool the White House press release linked to.

Few details are available about the arrests. An Olympic canoeist, David Carter Hearn, told news outlets that he was arrested on June 19 for alleged destruction of government property. He said a piece of the blue lining had already partly peeled off and he touched it out of curiosity. He said he did not destroy anything.

There are some images and videos from reporters that indicate people on June 19 — once the peeling pool was already a major news event — broke off already-peeling coating or held pieces in their hands. However, there isn’t evidence of people making gashes with a knife.

The Washington Post also reported on June 20 seeing a U.S. Marshal detain someone for allegedly taking paint out of the pool and on June 21 seeing a Park Police officer issue someone a citation for allegedly removing something from the water.

A Surge in Algae 

Beyond stopping leaking, Trump’s reflecting pool project aimed to reduce algae, which has been a recurring issue for the reflecting pool.

The project included $1.7 million in funding to Greenwater Services to install a new system for algae control. Nanobubble systems for algae control, such as the one installed by Greenwater Services, work by introducing tiny ozone bubbles to a body of water, which can kill algae.

But despite efforts to mitigate the algae, an analysis done for the Washington Post indicated that the level of algae on June 13 — the week after the pool was refilled — was higher than in other June images going back to 2021.

Trump claimed that someone may have added fertilizer to the water to cause the algal growth, but he didn’t provide any evidence for this claim.

Chapra, the water quality modeler from Tufts, told us that the reflecting pool represents “the recipe for growing algae,” without needing to invoke vandalism.

The pool is “shallow, there’s no flushing, they don’t run water through it on a permanent basis,” he said. “There’s no mixing, because they want to keep it nice and flat, so you get a reflection.” Furthermore, he said, “there’s no shading anywhere to keep solar radiation out, and somebody decided to paint the bottom dark blue,” even though this makes the pool retain more heat. The pool probably also uses high-nutrient water, he added.

The president has blamed the pool’s past algae problems on a change to the pool’s water source made under former President Barack Obama. In 2012, the government switched from filling the pool with municipal DC water to ozone-treated water from the Tidal Basin, which is fed by the Potomac River.

“He took the water from the river,” Trump said of Obama on June 22. “It turned out to be putrid and it destroyed the whole thing. Spent over $100 million.”

That total is incorrect. As we previously wrote, the Obama-era restoration, which also reinforced the pool’s sinking foundation and replaced its concrete bottom, cost around $35 million.

When the reflecting pool was refilled in early June, a spokesperson for the Department of the Interior told us, it had been filled with “DC Water,” or municipal water. Even after the Obama-era renovations, the pool had periodically been filled with city drinking water when there was substantial algae in the Tidal Basin.

Chapra said that feeding the pool from the Tidal Basin would be the “worst” in terms of algae, given that the Potomac River has “plenty of nutrients” and algae.

However, using DC Water does not eliminate the potential for algae. Ashley Bair, a researcher at the water treatment company Usalco, told Vox that a type of phosphorus added to municipal water to form a coating on the inside of lead pipes could feed algae if the water were not treated properly. DC Water has added orthophosphate since 2004, according to its website, after a switch in disinfectant and a change in water chemistry caused lead to be released into the water from pipes.

Chapra also said that regardless of water source, feces from animals and fine particulates with phosphorus in the air can add to the nutrients in an open pool. He added that he was skeptical of the ozone nanobubble technology for the project. “High enough concentrations of ozone will break the cell walls of the algae, but that releases the nutrients back into the water, and it’s not going to kill all of them,” he said. Ozone also breaks down in sunlight, he added.

Given all these factors, he said, vandalism simply “wasn’t the first thing that popped into my mind” upon seeing the algal growth in the pool.

“Like I said at the beginning, shallow, no flushing, no mixing, high-nutrient water, no shading, dark blue bottom, go figure,” he said.

Update, June 29: After this story was published, the New York Times reported that prior to the noticeable algal growth in the pool, NPS had asked Greenwater Services on June 12 to remove several large nanobubbler machines from the edge of the reflecting pool. This occurred in advance of an event at the Lincoln Memorial promoting Trump’s Ultimate Fighting Championship birthday party. The machines, which were temporary because a permanent system wasn’t yet ready, were reinstalled within 36 hours. Algae, however, had already bloomed in the meantime — although it is unclear what role the machines’ removal played. A permanent system, located farther away from the pool, took over in full on June 25, according to CNN.


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 Trump’s Unsupported Claims About Reflecting Pool Vandalism appeared first on FactCheck.org.

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